Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
I'm Brandon. And I'm Jesse we're.
Cannabis school having cannabis infused conversations with
everyday. People.
Cannabis companies. Celebrities.
And your mom? Welcome to the sesh.
All right, well, we're back and we're here to be able to have a
fun sesh episode Before we get into all that one, we got to
(00:25):
tell you a little bit more aboutDoctor Dabber because not this
isn't a promotional thing. What we want to do is we want to
give him a lot of love because we, we had asked her like, Hey,
we, you know, we're huge fans ofDoctor Dabber.
Brandon's been rocking the Doctor Dabber switch for a long.
Like 5-6 years. Yeah, it's a great device.
I mean, that's, that says a lot when a device can last that
long. Oh, yeah.
And one of the things they we had talked to him and were just
(00:48):
like, yeah, we'd love to show everybody about the new stuff at
Doctor Dabber and all that. And they not only sent us like
I, I asked him for the excess. I was like, yeah, send us out
this. We just wanted something for
Jesse because I had a doctor dabber.
Yeah. And I was like, this would be
cool. And they went crazy and they
sent us the excess. The Evo.
(01:08):
The Evo. And the switch too.
Yeah. And so Brandon's now upgraded,
but I got to tell you that is a slick looking device and it's
you turn up a temp. Just one.
Dude it looks that's a better temp.
And we're dabbing on some super lemon G cured resin batter from
(01:30):
Dragonfly. Dude, honestly, I, I was beyond
excited because Jesse and I wereon the phone clear that out last
night. And as we're on the phone, he's
like, oh, dude, it gets all excited and he's like, I'm going
to send you a pic and I'm like, I don't want to see a Dick pic.
And then? No, you'll want to see this
thing. Yeah.
And then he sends me a picture of like all three of these.
And he's like, holy shit. Because we had just messaged
(01:52):
them, like you said, seeing if they'd send one out, and it'd
been a while and we hadn't heardthe thing.
And and then all of a sudden, bam, just on his doorstep, the
whole slew of slew of goodies there.
So while we're getting into Super Lemon, I'm going to ask
you something, dude. Pokémon Go, did you ever play
it? Yeah, for a while.
I did too. I played a little bit.
I remember like going around theneighborhood and catching
(02:15):
random. I mean, it was kind of.
Cool, so Utah had that massive group that would go to the
library. Some.
Oh yeah, you. Ever do that?
You hear about people getting hit by cars or walking off
cliffs, Yeah, people got. That's insane.
They were just all into that game.
That's terrible. But the crazy thing is the the
person that the people that built it, yeah, were CIA funded.
(02:37):
You were saying that? Yeah.
Tell me more about that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, dude, it's
super dope. So this.
And they also originated before Google or before Pokémon Go.
It was like. Yeah, the so the guy that set it
up is John Hankey, and he was running a company called
Keyhole. And Keyhole was bought by
(03:00):
Google, which is now Google Earth.
And so he had created this software.
But that software, Keyhole, was backed by the CIA.
So the CIA has an investment. They have several investment
groups, one's called. In Q Tel.
In Q Tel, yeah. In Q Tel, yeah, they are a CIAI
(03:20):
mean it's, it's a very well known venture capital.
Now, why would the CIA be investing into it?
They invest into a lot of thingsall the time.
New emerging tech on communications, on surveillance,
any of those things, they'll, they'll fund it to get built if
that's what the people are looking for.
And you have people that are contractors like that, like the
(03:41):
guy who invented the Oculus. Lucky Palmer.
That's his name, dude. What's that?
Was that another government contract?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I'm just saying like Lucky
Palmer who created the Oculus. That's a funny name.
Dude, he is. I mean, you see him and you're
like, yeah, that guy's named Lucky Palmer because he's, but
he had the Oculus and when he sold it to Facebook, he had all
(04:04):
these visions of where I was going to go.
And he didn't like the direction.
And when he had his own opinionsabout his political views, they
came to him, said, you have to take it offline because we don't
agree with it. And he's like, fuck you, I'll do
whatever I want. And they threatened him and
threatened him. They finally, like pushed him
out. So he got fired from Facebook.
(04:24):
I mean, he he's not sad. I mean, he got billions.
He got so. Much money.
So what did he do with it? He invested into a military
enhancement tech company. He is creating exoskeletons that
he's already used, going throughthe mountains and totally fine
(04:45):
feeling dead or anything like that.
All sorts of new tech that he wants to be able to do to make
warfare safer but more effective.
Yeah. And because he's just like,
look, I see the writing on the wall.
It's not that I want to get richdoing it is that I want to win.
And I believe in this part. He's like, so he's like, I had
this big vision for Oculus. He's like, I can't touch VR ever
(05:07):
again, even though he has all the idea.
Did the original creator of Doomwas a part of his startup with
Oculus? That's crazy.
I mean, it was super cool that he helped design a lot of the
things because of Doom. Doom was like the game that
changed the industry. But you can see like that's
really clear. He's like, yeah, I'm going to
(05:27):
build military tech. And then this guy is just like,
yes, it's cool. Why would the CIA put all that
money into something that can track Google Earth?
Because now I can see things like gridded out.
So why does it make sense with Pokémon Go?
Well, because it became way morein depth than Google Earth.
(05:49):
It gave access to cameras and GPS stuff and 3D.
Like way more block speed. Yeah.
Habits. Yeah, even other people you
might be in distance for like, 'cause it would track everything
through there. And so then that gave it the
ability to 'cause it first became the guy became wow.
(06:10):
So in Q Tel that CIAVC funded Keyhole, Keyhole is what became
Google Earth and then after thatthe guy behind both launched
Niantic and Niantic was what became Pokémon.
Go. And so all of that center, just
like everything just kind of intermeshes there and it does
create, like you said, these very interesting thoughts.
(06:33):
Yeah. Well, because you think about it
like in a in, in a way of like trying to put together like this
puzzle. And it's like, well, how Google
Earth is great. You can use Google Maps and you
can go to Street View, but you're just seeing like from the
street. Yeah, but Pokémon Go was able to
do things beyond that. How many people were trespassing
(06:54):
on properties because there was a Pokeball, but there was places
where it weren't allowed to do it.
Russia outlawed it. Yeah, different countries there
was. Who else did?
There was another. Military installations or
anybody who worked for a federalgovernment agency was not
allowed to. Have it?
Yeah they couldn't play it cuz it was like that.
Gives access to too much data. Yeah, because now you have real
(07:16):
time data. Now you think from a now I'm
thinking like, I don't know if you ever played like the old
Ghost Recon Future Soldier. Yeah.
So that one, it's like they could get a grid of everything
right there in real time, which they already have this
technology. They have this technology where
you can look through a lens and they can see the battlefield in
real time from Predator drones marking good guys, from strobe
(07:40):
lights or from having some type of identification thing.
And then they could see anythingelse that wasn't that as a
threat. And so it's like, that's
straight up Future Soldier. But this is even deeper because
now I can get real time data. I need to get into that building
with my team. Yeah, I need to know every door.
(08:00):
Every angle, every like what's in there?
What? And you will literally get all
the camera data from all of it. And so it's like, cool, well, I
can see desks, I can see office layouts, I can see lots of
stuff, any stuff that's not on. Now you plug that in with AI,
Yeah, Build me a tactical plan to be able to enter the building
(08:21):
from this data set. Yeah.
And now they have a full tactical plan.
And it's smart. I could see the implications
doing really well for law enforcement and all that other
stuff. But The thing is, and the reason
why this got me peaked was there's women was noticing that
there are these strange flight patterns because you can have,
you can actually see in real time flight patterns and stuff
(08:42):
like that, like where planes aregoing.
You can go to various websites because it's public knowledge.
It's not like you can plan something, but you know where
things are and they have direct air spaces where you can't fly
in. And they noticed that there's
this really weird pattern that these airplanes are flying in in
restricted airspace. Airplanes or just something?
(09:04):
They said, well, it could be drones, more likely Predator
type drones because I mean, you don't want a person to because
it was doing these types of formation, not a zigzag, but and
it was it was using probably, you know, LIDAR imaging stuff
like whatever type of imaging they could do.
But then you think about like what if on the back end you
could use it for this and being able to use for troop movements
(09:27):
because the Marines and the National Guard are there around.
I will be in. And what I mean, I'm not
thinking that's going to be likea Tiananmen Square where they're
gunning down hundreds of people.I don't think that at all.
But I can see it in the practical matter going cool,
they can do that. They could actually set up for
safer ways. They could set up blocks and
barricades to be able to make sure that they don't keep
(09:49):
attacking people and that they could keep it in an isolated
area because that's all they're doing.
They're not going there to arrest people or anything.
They're just a show of force, saying you can't be burning
things, you can't be throwing things.
See I've seen videos of also LA that someone else who lives
there posted and it was like peaceful.
Literally look like a concert. People passing out water, no
(10:10):
burning, no anything crazy. Well, and you can hear of a lot
of the other ones. Downtown LA.
Yeah. Well, I mean, that's downtown LA
and this was happening in Burbank.
So this is a different area of that one.
And we have to remember that LosAngeles is a massive county.
It's the size of states, it's bigger than some countries, and
so it's some. Countries are tiny.
Yeah, well, a lot of European countries are tiny, but you
(10:32):
know, just just the county of Los Angeles is pretty big.
And I get that there's there's there's a lot of different areas
over there that are being affected.
But in those core areas, that's why it's around the ICE
detention center. It's not all of it.
I just for me, I look at that and it goes.
That's a lot of control. It really is.
And but it's what we've given willingly because we download
(10:55):
the game. We walked around we, you know,
and it, but most people didn't think.
I wonder who backed this. I wonder who originated and
built this company. I wonder who funded that one.
I wonder where this data goes toand is collected.
Like how many of us think that for all of the stuff, like we
willingly open social media all the time and well, we give it
(11:17):
access to our microphone and ourcamera and our every photo in
our camera roll because, well. Now we know it's listening to
us. We 100%.
I mean, how many times have you just talked about something and
then you see? It in social media feed
constantly you're like and it's like oh, our phones are
listening Well, yeah, but the thing that we're not thinking
about is. In your user agreement, you're
(11:38):
probably already going. To what is that data being
shared with? You know, like you said, what
does it be for? Yes.
What is it being used for? Control and consumption.
There was there was ATV show. Gosh, what was it?
Called this feels nice. It does feel quite pleasant.
I like this. Keep thinking about that.
Yeah, so. We'll, we actually, I think
because we have a coupon code from Doctor Dabber as well,
(11:58):
we'll make sure that's in the show notes because honestly, I
know we've talked about them foryears because Doctor Dabber has
been my favorite device, but this thing is.
Did you? What you?
What do you? What do you enjoy about that?
Do you like I? Love it.
The new airflow control. Obviously my phone's recording,
so I don't have the app right now, but it seems like you can
(12:20):
do so much within that, that youcan do full temperature range
control and stuff. Yeah.
What so obviously I have an iPhone, so I have to use the web
interface app because but past that, I'm sure it's still a
fantastic design through there. But I like I like the bass, I
like how flat it is. I feel like the hits were
(12:42):
fantastic. Yeah, Oh yeah, dude, those are
better than than your doctor. Dev Yeah, they still beat it
out. This, this, this.
The Evo has a really cool bass. It's a solid banger in there.
It's really solidly built. It's it's it's stainless steel.
It looks like stainless steel orit's nor it's aluminum.
It's got to be I don't know whatit is, but I'll tell you this.
(13:05):
The base is really solid. It's not overly heavy.
This one isn't the Evo is more of an economic one.
But the cool part is this like see this base, it's all magnetic
and I just go, yeah, it is equal.
It has this little carb right there for the airflow.
So genius. Have you dabbed out of either of
(13:25):
them yet? No, I haven't.
I was it was late, but you see like this like this is perfect
where a guy that's awesome, it'sgot great airflow and like dude,
it's just perfect like right there like on other ones.
I can't adjust it like that, butfor here it goes wherever I want
it to. On honestly it's 220 bucks for
(13:45):
the doctor dabber. That is cool.
It is super cool. And right now it actually comes
with a custom glass free upgrade.
Really. Yeah.
So that's dope. You can get a different glass
attachment. For that would be I like the
glass attachment on this. I'm so excited to be using this.
Yeah, this will probably be my go to.
Like I love the BOM, BOM from. Sky Cloud, Cloud BOM, Cycloud.
(14:10):
BOM Cycloud. Yeah, great, great product.
I love that E rig. This one is cool.
This one's 400 and 20 for the doctor Dabber switch too, It
said it has like 50 sessions. I think that it can be used on a
charge. Like, yeah, that's a lot.
Well, and you know what, like your other one is so much older.
(14:32):
The battery technology is way better now.
Yeah, and but. It's still that.
Much battery. Is insane.
It's still like a a a meaty piece.
Oh yeah, it is. It's heavy, It is.
But the cool thing I like about it, there's not as much glass as
the other one. Because that was the one thing I
did have to replace on mine is Ihad accidentally knocked over my
(14:52):
glass and broke it and I had to.Replace that.
Easy to replace too. Look at that.
You just slide it up and clean it out.
Dude that's a super sweet piece.I'm super excited they have.
And you got temperature control.Such great designs, yeah.
Dude that. Is and the excess it looks like
is $159 for it, but they also sent us this nifty it's called
(15:16):
the drop and it's there hot knife and that's 40 bucks.
But these are We've been so excited for one of these for so
long. Oh yeah.
This one's a very like live resin.
This one is such a cold like nota very sticky 1 so I don't feel
like I have to worry as much buta lot of my other ones.
This will be perfect for any waxy no buttery type of product
(15:42):
it just. Buttery, cheesy, chewy.
Yeah. Do you guys have a Doctor Dabber
product? If so, what's been your favorite
one? What do you use?
What are your thoughts on them? Or do you have a different
device that you go to for dabbing?
No way. Oh, this is.
Cool. But that show that I was talking
about, I can't think of what it's called, but it basically
has AAI that this guy has designed and he built it to help
(16:08):
protect people. And that AI ties into, no, it
ties into every camera, every cell phone, every, every,
everything. It's a whole TV show from early,
mid to maybe late 2000s. Trippy.
But they, so then the guy has this like FBI agent or whatever
(16:29):
kind of guy who's helping him. And the guy's like a really
nerdy kind of guy. And they go around and the AI
will call the like pay phones orwhatever and talk to the FBI
agent kind of guy to help him save people or find people that
are going to kill a bunch of people.
Because it'll predetermine, lookat everyone's faces and this and
(16:50):
go, oh, this person is more likely to it'll.
Predict my minority report. Minority Report, that's what.
It did, yeah. I don't.
Know it's ATV show though. Oh yeah.
It's kind of like a different. But but it will go through and
it like scans people's faces andthat and it predicts this
person's more likely to bomb this thing or do this.
You need to do this because thisis going to, you know, 'cause
(17:12):
this chain of events. And it's very, very interesting.
But that concept or the realization of like that in
depth level accessibility to everything is just kind of scary
on that level. Oh yeah, dude.
Like in the fictitious realm like you're.
I don't know if you remember themovie Winter Soldier, the
Captain America movie. I mean, I know.
(17:33):
I love Captain. I think I've seen it once, but.
And so their big thing was to beable to have SHIELD, to have all
this control in these helicarriers.
And their primary goal was to eliminate all of those who can
be seen as defiant and causing issues for the government.
And they were going to go up andthey could all of these guns and
(17:55):
like they would go just merkin all these people from wherever
they were at all from surveillance and having all
their identification over there.And The funny thing is, is that
we we look at these movies and we go, Oh yeah, but that's a
movie, dude. That shit's like real life now.
Yeah, that's what it feels like.And that's like, that's kind of
a scary level. Like as much as AI is cool, the
(18:17):
other part is it's fucking scarytoo because it's like how fast
it's learning. If you looked about anything
about their quantum computer that Google is we're building
out and it was able to perform amathematical equation that would
take all of the supercomputers on Earth, which is all relative.
I mean, who can measure that? But I know they're doing
mathematically. But anyways they said that.
(18:39):
It would take them eons of time basically.
And this did it in an hour or minutes.
Well, it's because quantum computing is a whole different
level that we. Can, yeah, it's just a
different. It's using light and all sorts
of things like, which is cool, dude.
And that kind of goes to that whole thing.
Like if the electromagnetosphereis pale back and we're getting
(18:59):
straight light coming from the sun, what will that do?
Data comes in that if also that is like.
It's like fiber optics, but it'sdone in a different way.
I'm curious what data is transferred normally through
other like natural light throughthose same particles because
that's or what can be passed through those same light
particles in the same way that we use this fiber optics or like
(19:23):
optic audio cables where it's just glass that's sending light
down there. Or being able to use glass to
harbor information. I don't know if you remember, it
was long time ago where these guys had developed a type of of
glass that they could store petabytes of information into.
Sure. Yeah, that would be cool.
(19:45):
Or if you could trap it in lightitself without having to capture
it in glass. Like if a beam of Here's a
question, does a beam of light continue endlessly?
Like say I turn on a really sharp laser pointer and I point
it into space and then I turn itoff.
Does that beam continue endlessly until like it
dissipates and it can't be stronger than or I have no idea.
(20:08):
Or does it endlessly continue because it's light and it still
is there even though it like it's gone so fast so far?
I have no idea. Or is it the light beams ability
to reach a certain distance? Kind of like laser pointers can
only go so far and you can buy astronger one that can point
further like. I don't know, I just think it's
(20:30):
so crazy, like how much can be? I don't know man.
It's it just well, one, this is a good dab.
Yeah. Thank you, Dragonfly.
Yeah, this is awesome. One super lemon G it's.
Thank you, Doctor Dabber, you guys.
Oh. My gosh.
The dab gods have come through. Yeah, dude, seriously.
Like this is the this is the stores and bickles of dab like
(20:51):
legit. Yeah, this is the stores and
bickle of I mean, these are the these are the Ogs.
These are the guys that. Puffco might be older but I
don't know. I just have found I've preferred
Dr. Dabber over Puffco. 100%. I haven't had one in years.
I'm actually really excited to try both of these out, the Boost
(21:11):
Evo and the excess, see which one.
I think I'm going to be probablyleaning towards this one.
We'll have more back later. Yeah, we'll, we'll definitely
review a lot of these, but Doctor Deborah switch to it's
awesome. Oh yeah.
But going into like we, we already know we live in a
surveillance state. It's a surveillance world.
I just, I don't think a lot of us truly think how in depth of a
(21:35):
surveillance state it really is.You could push it again, though,
because yeah, we it is a surveillance state, but I don't
think a lot of us realize how much we've given up in
surveillance with these. Yeah, and I mean, I don't think
it starts out as clandestine. It just you, I can see it from
like tactical cuz I mean, I've never done a mission, but I'm
(21:59):
saying from a tactical advantage, I think it'd be
really cool because now you haveaccess to everything.
I mean like, yeah, the movie Batman when they're like, oh,
that'd be crazy If you could do that.
They probably can. Yeah.
Oh, triangulating everything andlook, this is what it looks
like. And yeah, and create an image
out of. It but that's what that show
would do because it would be like, oh, we can triangulate
everything from these audio fromall of these cell phones and
(22:21):
that we can pinpoint and make this image and it was like, holy
shit. But I love that like in in in
Batman where Lucius Fox is like,he's like the moral compass and
he's just like, Nope, you do this, we're done.
I don't. I am not going to work with you.
Like I won't come back and tell this thing is destroyed because
as long as it's here, I can't be.
(22:41):
Yeah, I can't trust you. Yeah.
And it was. It's too much power.
But that's the thing, man, it's like, where?
Where's that threshold and whereare the people that are supposed
to be on that wall protecting us?
You know, we we talk like the movie comes to my mind is a Few
Good Men. I don't know if you've ever seen
that movie, but it's about like this whole problem happens in
(23:05):
Guantanamo with the Marine base that was there at this time.
And this guy was killed. He was, he was, what is it
called? Like hazing and it went too far
and ended up killing the kid. But the guy, this colonel's
talking about it, he's like, youknow, you, you don't, you don't
like me and you don't need to like me, but I'm on that wall.
(23:25):
You need me on that wall becauseI'm willing to do things that
other people are not to protect those people who live here.
As long as they're actually protecting those who live here,
yes, I think so. But to me, it's when that
changes and they don't protect those who live here, but.
What do you mean by that? If they overstep those.
(23:46):
What do you mean by that? I think if it becomes a police
state and military comes in and does things, that doesn't make
it safe for people who live here.
I think that it oversteps rights, which, you know, for
those who live here, doesn't make them feel safe anymore.
But that's Jesus stabbed in the throat.
Do you not have your own? Shit back there.
(24:09):
So that's all. But for me, there's nothing.
I think someone in the military would do that.
I wouldn't if I had to. What do you mean?
Like where it's like, oh hey, I'd kill someone to defend my
country. Well, how many of us would too
if it came down to it? You know, it's A and there are
some who definitely wouldn't. No 100%.
I'm sorry, I touched that. Mike, I agree with you And I, I
(24:32):
would say from a different pointof view is that you don't know
unless you've been there and there is a different mindset.
What? But if I.
Something is a. Family.
No, totally. I would kill for my family.
Oh, totally. But I'm, I'm saying like it's,
it's a difference on that. Where, if, if What's the
difference between a soldier andyou?
You know? They work for the military,
(24:54):
which. Is that's their job, That's
their job, right? I mean, anybody who's like an
infantryman or something like their job isn't like
humanitarian aid know it's to shoot weapons and move
tactically and take over positions.
Yeah, just. Usually not against American
citizens. OK, so you're, you're going
somewhere specific, so go where?Go where I would say yeah was
(25:16):
it's when it's against American citizens.
So past that, I think military and its defense of protecting
American citizens rights is is what it's for.
But if they're overstepping and not protecting American citizen
rights and fighting American citizens, that's a different
story. So I want to know where that's
coming from. Nothing.
No, no, no. I mean, if you're talking about
(25:38):
California. I'm not, that's what I'm saying.
I think you're referring thinking this.
That's why I'm asking for clarity.
That's what. I'm saying it's not stemming
from that, it's just stemming from the overall idea of this
much control and saying that if a military comes in, well, we've
got this much eyesight, well, that's great if it's defending.
OK. Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. But if they're not, well, that
(25:59):
puts a lot of fear in the citizens of, well, we've given
this much power to this entity who's coming in.
So no, totally. It has nothing to do with
California. No, no, no, no.
And I'm glad. No, I wasn't.
I wasn't trying to incite anything.
I was like, I really, it was very vague for me, so I wanted
to ask more questions. Because it is.
It is a very vague no. No, no.
And I get that. Scenario.
I totally get that. And thank you for clarifying
(26:20):
that because that that means so much more.
And I can really understand yourperspective on that.
And, and with that, I will say, like, yes, I totally get that,
but the American populace has been bamboozled for decades to
allow that power to come in. And then they bitch about it,
but they don't do anything aboutit.
You know, when, when I have people that I know, not us, I
(26:43):
mean, we, we agree and disagree on lots of things.
And we, we now have learned a lot about our perspectives as
far as things are concerned, right?
I, I'm not all for one side. I'm not all for another side.
I, I think for myself in real time and I try to make the best
decisions of what I can do for where I'm at and how I can be
(27:05):
able to affect maybe those around me in a little way.
But The funny thing is, is wherewe feel that voting is, it's a
buzzword. It's a buzzword because it's
it's not real. I don't think voting is what
does it. I think no, I'll have to do more
than vote. No, but that's the thing.
Like when people start talking about voting, that's all they
talk about but they just want tobitch from the armchair or
(27:29):
they're. Going to sit and post
constantly. Yeah, and it's their posts.
But at the end of the day, we can be a what is it, a keyboard
warrior? Or whatever.
Armchair expert. Or we can actually do something
because. Yeah, go run for City Council.
Go do those things if you're so concerned about your community.
And even go do it too, because the problem is most of the
(27:49):
comments that we're typing out on the Internet, they're not to
our congressman, they're not to our Senate.
They're not our actual, actual complaints to our mayor, to our.
And holding them. Accountable, none of that.
So no, that would even be a first step.
You don't have to run for it, No, but you have to actually
talk to them, show up in your communities and go, this is
what's wrong. If this is what I want.
(28:10):
And if more people showed up, they would have to be held
accountable because it would be like, oh shit, hey, we don't
just have compliant complacent people.
They're actually saying we're not OK with this.
Yeah, well, we don't. We just sit and.
No, we get distracted. I'm going to post and share this
and cool. Share And then the next second,
Blake Lively. Did this and it's like, OK, well
(28:31):
sharing it. What did that really do?
Did nothing. It showed it, so the few people
you follow saw it and then maybea couple other people saw it.
But what change came out of? That right, right.
There's like what impact came out of that, what what leader
who can actually dictate or makeany impact words say anything on
any level can look at it and go thank you for your opinion.
(28:54):
Dude, it's it's like that thing I talk about where stupid people
rule the world. You know that movie I talked
about? Idiocracy.
You got to watch it. It's it's it's.
Very intriguing. It sounds like so.
Well, definitely be very elevated on a happy strain
because you'll laugh, but then after you're done with it, think
about it in a philosophical sense and it has come to
(29:15):
fruition. It has come to fruition.
And it's not just government, it's the people.
Because I think that's where people have forgotten is that
you control what you do, but yougive up so much because you want
comfort, you want accessibility,you want luxury.
(29:36):
Where we have been able to be fooled as a society that
everybody wants to be in luxury.But that's excess.
And when excess happens, that means less get more, and the
people on the top get all of it and they distribute.
They don't. They don't trickle down.
No, it's not trickle down economics.
(29:56):
As much as a lot of people want to believe that guys like Elon
or or submit if, what, why if? They did.
They wouldn't be billionaires. No, because it would.
There would be no such thing. And it's but there are and it's
just greed and selflessness and that.
Well, and that's why I don't agree with taxation the way it
is now because it's like, yeah, you're giving them a lot of
(30:16):
loopholes to get out of, but they would need to be those
loopholes are guaranteed jobs, growth in wages, contributing to
local education. Municipalities like big, like
those billions and trillions of dollars could be going to
effectively not rely upon the government, but rely upon the
(30:37):
communities and the businesses that support it.
The government isn't supposed toget to this level.
That's why I see go from one swing to the next.
It's straight up dude. Our world is a pendulum that's
constantly moving. Like one second everybody's
like, I fucking hate this guy. And the next, well, he's pretty
cool and he smells like sandalwood.
(30:58):
And then the next time it comes over here, if I ever see that
motherfucker, I'll kill him, right?
It's just like, it's like, no, like, hey, let's meet in the
middle. Let's have some civil discourse.
Let's talk about Pokémon Go and why everybody should get it off
your fucking phone. It's made me very curious like
that has just made me think about what other apps have all
(31:18):
my accessibility and data and what ones share that.
I actually I recently upgraded my phone which I have a love
hate relationship. I love it because it's a better
camera. It's bigger.
Story Yeah, you're a big camera guy.
But I hate it because I no longer have a show phone which
had TikTok and Instagram and that on that one.
(31:41):
Now I have to have all of it on my personal one, which I don't
like. Yeah, the new tech comes with a
lot of guardrails, you know, andthat's where Apple, like a lot
of people have a love hate relationship with Apple.
It's a walled garden. And you have to remember that
the walled garden isn't just to protect you, it's also to
control you. So you can't, I mean you again,
(32:04):
that's where we've traded a lot of things.
We've traded things for luxury and comfort and for the idea of
what we want. Like it, if we look back into
the past and all the psyops thathave been done on the American
people to use for control by government agencies, not always
the top is we've been seeing a lot and it's kind of weird,
(32:26):
dude. This is the thing that I've
noticed. Like I pay attention to news
just because I want to know what's going on, but everybody
stop talking about the CIA. Why?
I don't know. They were one of the most
crooked organizations out there.Were.
Are. I was like, sorry, I cannot
imagine that it no. But it, I said in the past
tense, because I'd like all of asudden it just dropped off a
(32:47):
Cliff. We're hearing everything about
the FBI. Well, it's because it's always
something else comes up and we're in the era of 15 minutes
or a three day cycle or whateverit is where something's in the
news. And then, well, it's gone
because, well, now, like you said, Blake Lively, this or
Taylor Swift is dating this guy or, or like this new movie came
(33:09):
out or like this stupid thing. And so it's you're like, what
the fuck? Nothing important stays there
because our brains are so like TikTok ADHD that we're what's
the next shiny object in front of us dude?
If we get like old onion articles and old onion videos
like where they the the this study on monkeys and stab
(33:33):
wounds. Goes stab.
Wounds. Yeah, that showed like abuse and
goes, yeah, we we would get those little puffy monkeys with
white Tufts of hair around theirface and we repeatedly punched
them in the face with this, withobjects.
And then we use knives. And then that's where we knew
that that was the end. We knew that blades kill
(33:54):
buggies, which will kill people.But it's a funny thing.
It's a it's all satire. But the reason why it's because
it's, it's just like most of thenews now.
It's like, check out this bleeding monkey like and just
dumb shit. Like what?
I mean, we see it all the time. One person flip flops on weed
(34:17):
every every month, oh I hate it.And the other one's like, well
actually it's pretty good. And then that same person will
say later on, oh, it's bad for you.
Yep, hey. Fuck dude, it's just like, who's
paying you to say that? That's how I feel.
Yeah, well, that's what I hate with it too, is it?
Like you said, it's always whosedollar has made you pay.
Say this at this moment because the only, and that was what I
(34:40):
was disappointed with here was the only legislature in Utah
that I felt like actually spoke to cannabis in a real sense.
Had gone to Nevada because they were legal, tried a gummy.
Yeah, yeah. Made a video and resigned from
his position and wasn't going tomove in the next campaign.
And I was like, this is stupid because you're the only person
(35:02):
here who can truly speak to thisbecause everyone else is afraid
of it, treating it like it's this terrible drug because they
are still stuck in the Reagan era mindset.
Yeah. And unfortunately is those,
it's, it's the boomers before, before my generation that still
have that in their mind. Oh yeah, my dad is very much.
(35:23):
Even though he's used it for occasionally for the needs that
he has and it's helped his mom, he stills somehow sees it as
like, oh, it's bad. He he remind.
Marijuana brain makes you stupid.
How about say this? But it just reminded me of,
like, that show Mad Men or Don Draper was like, he's always
(35:43):
having an affair on his wife. Yeah.
And then he always treat a side chick like dirt.
She'd be like, look, I love you.Like, ah, bitch, get away from
me. Just like, no, you were there
for me to do all those fun things.
And now I want to love you. The cock.
Bitch. Get away.
Yeah, it's the same thing. Your dad's off.
Oh, I love you Cannabis. Yeah.
Fuck you, bitch. You get away.
(36:04):
Oh, you're ugly. Yeah, don't come around and
until I really need you, just use you.
But I mean, it's, it really is that way.
I mean, and I'm, I'm so glad that, you know, going through
this, you know, it's a lot more people are, are being more awake
to this because with more. And that's the scary part too.
(36:24):
It's like what is real now wherepeople get fooled by videos,
like really freaky videos. Like I've seen some of these
ones, like where they did this breakdown and these look really
good, like good quality videos where this girl's like grandpa
don't send any. She's like tied up grandpa,
don't send any money there. I am AI and it's like when you
(36:47):
see that it's it just reminds meof that movie Vanilla Sky, where
the saying was you can't experience the sweet without
tasting the sour. And so everything comes at a
cost, everything. Well, it's the better with the
sweet. It's like there's the good side
to cannabis, there's the bad side to it, the drug wars, the,
(37:08):
you know, cartels that come through it.
They're really shitty stuff laced on your Wii.
Malicious. There's all that side and then
there's the good side of it of like, hey, you don't even have
to have it and someone will share it with you like a random
stranger will dude, like. Did I send you that video?
This is what love looks like. And the guy's like, yeah, man.
(37:28):
He's like, he's like once you roll up a couple papers and he's
like, man, I ain't got no flour on me.
He's like, oh for real. He's like, we'll do let's roll 2
joints and then roll two more for you to take with you.
Like that's cool because you seethat in cannabis communities,
like people will take care of each other.
Like I've had people reach out to me going, hey, you know,
what's it like getting a card and da da da.
(37:51):
And I'm like, do you need something?
They're like, well, I mean, do you have any gummies or
something like that? And like, yeah, but come over
and I'll explain to you how to take it.
And he like, yeah, yeah, yeah. And you know, like, how much do
I owe you? Like, for a gummy, They're like,
going to give me 50. And I'm like, whoa, dude, no,
just take it. Oh, yeah.
And let me know if it works for you.
(38:11):
And then I'll guide you towards some other products.
Like it doesn't. We don't have to have this quid
pro quo movement. No.
And that's where I find that a lot of people right now, like
that's why they get so fooled into following one side or
another instead of just standingyour ground, instead of rushing
to one side or the other and just saying, hold on, I need to
(38:32):
see everything. And then going, how can we
civilly talk amongst ourselves there?
We're not it it The funny thing is it's it's almost like the
pawns for each side. We are fighting this proxy war.
Because most of the time if you actually truly.
Granted there are differences, there are some people who you
cannot see eye to eye with because they are just so close
(38:53):
minded and it is hard to have those discussions.
It really is. But there are so many of us that
even like having discussions with my dad where he argued that
we were not so like nothing was the same.
We didn't see eye to eye. And I was like, dad and I listed
off everything that was important to him.
And I was like, all of these things that you think are so
important to you, all of those are things that are important to
(39:16):
me too. Like it's, it's all these
differences that we think we have, but at the same end of the
day, there's just way more similarities most of the time.
And it's like those little differences really aren't as
drastic as we're thinking. No.
And that's where you've got to find time to slow down.
And and that's where I find thata lot of us within the cannabis
(39:36):
community need to be open to being able to have those
conversations. Not that you have an agenda, but
more of like, I want to gain a perspective of where you're
coming from, not just a perception, because the
perception is not the perspective.
Something that I Emily sends me videos all the time on TikTok or
Instagram about all sorts of stuff.
How to communicate better as couples, how to build like
(39:59):
everything. And one of the videos she sent
was actually, I thought it was really insightful because it
it's not just couples, it's every interaction was a lot of
the time they will when they feel like they need to react,
they'll ask the other person like, what did you say?
And they'll go, well, what did you hear?
Because a lot of the time we hear something that's not maybe
(40:20):
necessarily what the person intended or what they said and
whether it's tonality and like all of these things that could
play into that. And maybe what we heard wasn't
what they said. And so just asking, I'm going
well, you know, hey, what did you hear?
Yeah. And it's, it's, you know, it's
something like, even though I practice a lot of these things,
like what I call cognitive tone dynamics is understanding tone
(40:43):
and intent behind that. And then it's, it's for me to be
able to understand where they'recoming from.
And even though like, it is justlike communicating with anybody
else, it is a muscle, It is trained.
You got to train it. And there are times like I was
having an argument with my wife and we were going to the gym and
(41:04):
we were just, she was saying some pretty heated things.
I started to say and I stopped and I said, good for you, We're
not going to talk anymore. Let's just go to the gym.
And I didn't say a fucking word.Yeah.
And she probably thought I was super mad at her what she did.
She confirmed that later. She's like, I thought you were
so bad. I'm like, no, the reason why I
had to stop was that I am feeling all this emotion.
(41:27):
And that's where a lot of peopledon't have that self regulating
thing because it it's. It's hard and you we don't catch
every time, you know, but it's apractice and maybe one time you
do catch it and maybe the next time you don't, and that's OK
too. But it's like patting yourself
on the back going Hey, I fuckingcaught that.
I didn't lash out and say, well,this, this, this, because I was
(41:50):
just feeling emotional and at the end of the day, I didn't
those things to the person I love isn't really what I want to
say. I just felt hurt.
And so this childish need in allof us that we're like, well, I'm
hurt, so now I'm going to hurt you.
It's like, do we really want to do that to the people we love?
No, we sat back. Most of the time we would go
(42:10):
fuck, I wouldn't be doing this. Well, but think about it this
way, man, I mean, like there area lot of we, we deal with a lot
of complex technology in our day-to-day lives.
A lot of us do and and not it, it's never been really, I mean
until now, it's never been a push button, get it done type of
thing like with AI. But we will put so much time and
(42:33):
attention to learning how to make more money, be a better
athlete, be a better expert in whatever you do.
Yet we put very little into understanding how others
communicate, how we understand our own emotions and how to be
able to call yourself out or stop right.
(42:55):
And then it it, it's so funny because there are a lot of
different tools, like 12 shapes is really great for
relationships, the relationship with yourself and relationship
with others. I think it's a great tool for
that, But I think it's the end all be all.
No, I think there's a ton of tools.
It's just a tool. It's like AI have like a, a tool
set of things. I want to I, I, well, if you'd
(43:15):
be open to it, but it's, it's still just, it's just about.
Communication. You got a lot of stuff in your
till. Belt.
Yeah, I've been doing a lot of the.
But like it. It really is like what you were
talking about. It's exactly that.
What did you hear? I actually had said that to my
wife while we were arguing, Like, wait a minute.
And this actually relates a lot to what's going on now is that
we respond to things that don't have a tone.
(43:37):
We respond to words on a page. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, you know, it was like, and, and the best way, I mean,
I'd have no idea if it's true ornot.
But the funniest thing I saw wasis that you saw Elon and Trump
had a little falling out and then they kissed and made-up.
Probably. I bet there's a million memes
(43:57):
about their breakup. No, it wasn't even about that.
It was. Was it set up?
Was it a psyop? Were they just fucking with
everybody? Were they trying to get the
Democrats to really do crazy shit going?
Oh yeah. Because that's.
And theory, yeah. Dude, I just oh, yesterday I
just saw a Tesla truck pulling out.
(44:20):
OK, spray painted all over like graffiti.
Like yeah. Oh wow, graffiti.
Sucks that's fucked up. Right on the side.
That's super fucked. Up at least they were nice.
They did it on both sides, same same tag.
OK. Right, kind of looks but.
See, I wonder, so that's nuts. I have a cousin out in Missouri
(44:40):
and he's got a cyber truck and he said even before 2025 and all
of this as soon as he got it just because.
People inquest you. Know people slip him off, people
yell at him, people cuss at him just cuz he has a cyber truck
and he's like I went from my Ford F-150 to this and everyone
just isn't instantly like an asshole.
(45:02):
That crazy dude and I can only. Imagine that it's way worse now.
Oh, it's it's well in different areas, though.
It's like flip-flopped. And then I mean, if I was here,
might be like, hey, look, Mr. President, I need to step away.
I don't think I do you think this is good for me, right?
(45:23):
I mean, he goes right it. I mean, just like they're
burning my dealerships, OK? I I'm not cool with that.
They're hurting my customers andit's really fucked up that.
People or customers would be super fucked up.
Dude. It's like still think it's it's
your own way to retaliate. I think it's childish and to
burn someone else's business because it's not just like him
(45:45):
that gets hurt. It's all of these other people
tied with it and that's just their livelihood.
Like it's just someone working at the company right now.
And that doesn't mean that they're fascist or that they're,
you know, whatever that they work at that company.
It's just. But that's what happens, right?
So many companies get destroyed like just because somebody wants
(46:06):
to voice their opinion, which ifyou own a company and you have
opinions, keep them to yourself because I don't.
Think I would be so public with my political statement if it
was. Look, look in, look in the
media. Pedro Pascal is in every fucking
movie coming out right now for the last three years.
He's in everything and people are done.
(46:27):
And then he started going into his politics.
Fantastic Four is circling the drain and it hasn't even come
out. I was like, I didn't.
Know he's a part of that and he's a part of all these other
movies that are coming out and people are done with him They're
and they're digging. Into he is an act I don't know
he's. Been in Game of Thrones, he was
in The Last of Us. In the Game of Thrones.
(46:48):
Oh, is he the main guy in The Last of Us?
Yeah, the old. He was in Narcos the first and
second season. OK, I he's.
The Mandalorian I have. Not seen that.
That's I, I don't it, I'm not into it, but it's a huge in the
Star Wars universe. Like it was like everybody was
like, Oh, this is awesome. Like true to form old Star Wars
(47:10):
like this is what we want. And then they went real woke and
there it was like, no, they, they just don't do well.
And even Bob Iger, he's he's outat the end of the year, he is
gone. He is the CEO of Disney.
OK. He is gone.
And Kathleen Kennedy, who's beenrunning Star Wars, she's going
to be gone soon because they have lost so much money,
(47:33):
hundreds of millions of dollars,and flop after flop after flop.
And it's not because it's going to one side or the other.
They just forgot what their purpose is, and that's to
entertain. Everything that I've
entertained, everything that looks like it's coming out as a
remake. Hey, this is live action.
Hey, this is. And the games too.
It's a remastered. Yeah, where is anything new?
(47:55):
Why is there no creativity? Why is nothing there's?
Plenty of creativity. Yeah, but nothing.
They don't come. To meet it, No, it's all the all
these. You have any indie like
backwoods kind of stuff and you're like totally holy shit
why have I never heard of this? But they don't have the same
funding. Yeah.
And so they don't have the same recognition, no visibility.
And you're like. Ah well, those studios have to
(48:16):
bend the knee to whatever the backers are into.
And a lot of these private equity and VC companies, these
are the ones that build the games.
It's not us purchasing the games, it's these big companies
that are money backing all of that.
I wouldn't be surprised if BlackRock was deep in the video
game world because of how big they are.
(48:36):
Yeah, I mean, people go, oh, they're they're horrible.
No, they're opportunistic and they grew fast.
They saw the trend and they tookit.
They they got a hit. Dude.
They bought all those homes during the pandemic and now
they're trying to get rid of them.
They can't sell them. There's whole like ghost towns
because these homes are just, they lost their value and
they're like fine, fire sell still can't sell them.
(48:57):
So it's like they're not always going to win.
But when we just keep accepting that this is what's coming out,
like Grand Theft Auto 6 is coming out next year.
Yeah, they're talking about it'sgoing to be 100.
Dollars, yeah. And it's going to happen.
Oh, but everyone's going to buy it.
I mean, I won't but. I won't I but I that's not my
jam. Yeah, but that's what it is,
(49:18):
dude. Like every game out there, it's
just a way to be able to just spend copious amounts of time
doing repetitive actions. Like I like my online shooters,
but I've been pushing, I've beenpulling away from it because I'm
just so bored of it's just the same thing.
Like there's no, there's no entertainment.
Like online shooters are cool, but it's any multiplayer online.
(49:42):
Oh, but I'm playing with other people.
Well, why don't you play with yourself?
Because it's, it's exploring imagination.
Yeah. And and I miss those fun games
like I'm replaying The Witcher 3on my Switch.
That's cool and I love it. That's a good story.
Right. But The thing is, it's like we
as the people allow these thingsto deteriorate.
(50:04):
We allow these things to be taken over.
Only keep buying shit so they keep making it.
Dude, the best way to be able tocontrol the government is to
control your wallet. Yep, stop your spending where
you don't want to. Stop putting it to don't like
companies and things that you don't want it to go to.
Think the companies are too expensive for their product?
Don't buy it. Honestly.
(50:24):
That's why it's not a boycott. Just it's just like, no, I'm not
doing that. Well, it's even most of the
time. If there's stuff I can get on
Amazon or if I could get it at Trader Joe's, I'll go to Trader
Joe's because I'd rather give mymoney to Trader Joe's than to
Amazon. Well, and it's, you know, if you
could look for I, I do that all the time now.
I'm like, I, I try not to go to Amazon just because I'm like,
(50:47):
what, what good is that going todo?
Like I get to see Doctor Evil and his Dick spaceship.
Yeah, probably. Right.
I mean. I mean, that makes me made me
laugh. Well, dude, watch that if you
see access, like The funny thingis like, did you see that they
send all these women up into they didn't go to space.
(51:08):
Katy Perry. No, Yeah.
They just went almost to space. Yeah, but it was.
Cool. Oh.
I'm sure it was. I'm sure it was an amazing
experience. Totally.
But they killed her career literally overnight because.
Katy Perry. Katy Perry's.
She was working in Vegas like like a Céline Dion thing, which
is kind of like a sign of you'rebeing set out to pasture.
(51:30):
See, Emily just told me things that like, Emily's never liked
her apparently, 'cause she givesvery rapey vibes, like she
forced guys to kiss her, you know?
I'm like, oh. She's very.
Yeah, if, if that was like, I wouldn't, I didn't know that.
And I wouldn't give her my entertainment like I would.
It's like with the whole Drake shit and that and I was like, or
(51:50):
Diddy. I'm like, yeah, I just, I won't
listen to their music. I won't give them the royalty.
I don't need to give money. It's fine.
I don't need my money, my time, my energy to go towards people I
don't respect or value. Well, I mean, it even goes for
like Spotify if you're not wanting to support somebody over
there because they have made their views very apparent.
Like, you know, what if if you are this like really big
(52:14):
celebrity and you've got some kink that would probably mess
with people like Diddy did, hey,find yourself a small group of
friends. It's cool about that whole
thing. And don't tell anybody.
Yeah, and only keep and don't invite.
People to be a part of it, like just go good being do that.
Pull in more and more and more and more.
(52:36):
It's sad dude. It's.
Sad. The crazy thing is too that
whole mess, there's like all this AI shit.
There's so many fake videos thatcame out.
Emily was saw one that supposedly Jennifer Lawrence was
one of the victims. But then if you go dig into it,
it was like, well, there's no proof of that.
That was just this deep fake shit that was made and it's this
(52:58):
whole thing about it. Oh yeah.
Do you see the RFK one where he says he is placing a war on gay
fat kids because Because I don'tunderstand why they're so gay
and so fat. It was just like, but it sounds
like him. It looks like that's.
Something you could honestly imagine him saying like it's,
it's not like that's too far fetched where you're like, I
(53:19):
mean. No, like when you listen to it,
you, you can tell like midway cause at first I was like, did
he really just say that? And then you start listening to
it and you're going, no, he doesn't.
No, that's not his tempo. And because I like that's.
Way too fast. That's what it was.
It was way too fast and, and, but I mean, it was, it was
funny, but at the same time it'slike how much of that gets put
(53:42):
out there and how much will? Go.
And so that the only way to be able to start.
Because when Emily sent me that,I looked up, like, after I
watched that, I looked it up andI was like, is there any truth
in this? Like, where?
And all I could find was just from uncredible sources.
Everything else was like, yeah, there's a lot of fake videos out
about this. And I'm like, cool, yeah, that's
(54:03):
unfortunate because there is a lot of misleading data out there
all over on all sorts of stuff. Well, you're, you're going to
see it in every industry too, where AI is going to be
completely be able to get rid ofpeople, but it's still going to
feel like it's real and where I think is going to go where you
know, and, and AI is already going in that way.
(54:24):
Am I real? It's not that kind of.
Strain No, I smelled your breathearlier.
You're pretty real. Just kidding.
But it all like, I mean, this comes up because it's it's such
a massive industry that I think will go away.
And that's porn because it will be artificially created because
it's just a voyeur. Yeah, no one and they can do
anything and they could take anycelebrity.
(54:45):
I mean if you see these celebrity fakes but all of a
sudden now you can pay a companyto create you custom porn.
Or even not, it becomes such an app that you just pay for the
app and you can design your own within it.
Totally. I like the Kim.
Kardashian app you dress up yourporn.
Star, I want it to do this. I want it to talk like this.
I want it to, you know. I wouldn't doubt if those who
(55:06):
own Onlyfans and any of their counterparts of people that are
trying to do the same thing are putting all of their money
because they're making billions of dollars.
I bet they're putting all their money into developing high value
technology. And I wouldn't be surprised if
they sold that to other people to be able to utilize some dudes
and deep fakes. Because you think about it like,
(55:29):
what's an industry like? Because.
Because, you know, there's probably some of us on there
that do only fans. That's fine.
That's great. But I'm saying like, that is
something that can be easily replaced.
Yeah. And then where did the money go?
Now I don't have to pay a content creator.
Yeah, I make my own and I can designer to look like anything.
(55:50):
I can pull a person out of history and then slightly
augment them. Yeah.
And then they could be the biggest star on social media.
Yeah, and all fake all. Fake.
Yep, every photo and then the. Time you see him for real.
It's an Android. Oh, that would be weird too
that. Would be so crazy dude.
Oh God. Could you imagine that?
(56:11):
Yes I can. That's weird as fuck.
Because the autonomous robots are on the they're coming like
we're getting those like shitty robots from the Tesla Star Wars
1-2 and three the the ants. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We're going to get those at first.
But dude, I mean, I've got Parkinson's trying to walk.
Or or think about Blade Runner, if you've ever seen that movie,
(56:32):
old Harrison Ford movie like that one's creepy where the AI
was only allowed to live for so many years.
And then one of them goes no andhe tries to get the creator of
him to change it and he says I can't.
So he kills the creator. Oh shit.
And this whole thing is like you're wondering if this one
(56:53):
character is actually an Androidor a person or a person.
Oh, and so it's like, what the fuck?
It's it's crazy, but it's so like, that was science fiction,
then yeah, it will be a weird. Reality.
Yep, it's gonna be a weird reality here.
Somebody tried to tell me like, oh, AR and VR will be the
(57:15):
future. I don't think so.
It will be in a different way. It won't be with helmets, it
will be with lenses. Well, yeah, 'cause you've seen
Ray Ban Mehta already, they havecautions for it, and they had it
with Slick Thor and the guy fromWow Big Park.
I can't think of either. Chris Pine.
Chris Chris. Chris Pratt.
Chris Pratt and then the guy whoplays Thor and both of them were
(57:36):
wearing it and they were just looking at this dinosaur and
they were talking about it and they're like, oh, Meadow, what
type of dinosaur is this? And it's like, oh, it's this,
but it that type of AR where AI just integrates into everything.
Hey, I'm looking at this or if I'm in this area, find me
something near here. Oh, cool, I see you're here down
this block on this way is here like that type of AR and stuff
(57:59):
where or VR where it's a integrated lens of just.
Like Apple's attempt, right for VRAR where you can actually like
see your environment but also beonline and then have calls and
then pull up tabs. And I've seen people use it and
it looks like a fucking hot mess.
But as AVR interaction with likecalls and FaceTime, that's cool.
(58:23):
That's really cool. Like and and it's just a start.
I don't think that Facebook is anywhere done.
No playing with VRI think that. I mean, Mark Zuckerberg, that's
all he talks about. Well, there you.
Go that he knows it's the future, that social media will
be different, will be connected all the time, 100% directly to
(58:44):
our heads. Those glasses will be that.
They'll have interfaces where you can do everything right
there. Yeah.
And it was like, oh, you can move your hands around.
Why when voice can do it for me?Yeah, why would I need to move
my hands? You just literally go hey do
this, say this, send this message.
Dude, it's start. Trust for me.
Yeah. Like go back to start.
The the generation the. Guy it's the guy in his headset.
(59:05):
He's like Jarvis, do this. No, OK, cool.
Thank you. Compute this.
Oh run this diagnostic for me. Turn my pee into water.
Yeah, well, maybe you didn't do that, but.
This goes into wine, but it's wine, you know.
Is that a Merlot? How did you make it dark with?
Asparagus hints. That's not very nice, is it?
(59:26):
Thanks for timing in for a random weird ass sesh, Yeah, and
check out Doctor Dabber if you guys haven't yet.
Yeah, get that code so you guys can save on that Awesome stuff.
Check it out. We'll be reviewing more of these
things as we go along, but. Yeah.
Love you guys. Yeah, take care.