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June 5, 2025 51 mins

This week on The Sesh, things get weird — in the best way possible. From edible-induced life reflections to that one story we probably shouldn’t have told (but did anyway), this episode is one big hazy ride of laughs, WTF moments, and surprisingly deep thoughts.


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Transcript

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 sash.
Yeah, they've been able to decipher quite a bit of that
Mayan glyphs. They got about 80% of them
deciphered. Holy shit that's crazy.

(00:25):
And the glyphs together have been mapping like their
cosmological cycles, which aligned with eerily with solar
flares and orbital events. Yeah.
So they're, they've got. What they can track?
Right. But but how were they able to
track it? Just peered into the sky like
it's got to be. Cyclical.
But not only that though, I meanthe well, the the idea though,

(00:46):
it's like. Right.
Isn't that most are things we track?
Is cyclical stuff most? Somewhat, but I mean a huge,
huge, vast of time, yeah. Extended ones.
Yeah, where? And this is something like, you
know, I've pondered on like because there's a lot of people
that want to be able to. You got your secularist and then
you got your crazy evangelical devotee to a religion, right?

(01:11):
Not necessarily a belief, just areligion.
And one will always try to say that the other one doesn't have
anything to stand on. Right that.
Because it's to discredit the other.
Because it's the ultimate truth.But the, but the problem is, is
that they'll go, well, how do weknow this?
Well, historical facts. OK, well, how about this one?
These are historical facts. Yeah, but they're not, they

(01:33):
don't fall in line with my beliefs.
And so that's where it's got to be like it's got to be
completely Gray and it's got to be a what if scenario because we
don't know. We're not going to know.
It's even, I feel like that's even science as a belief is it's
very dogmatic even within there.You know that they're like,
well, that doesn't fall within my like you said what I what I

(01:55):
think is real. And so it's interesting that so
many of our minds are very different in that.
But where you were saying like it would have to be tracked over
such a long period of time. I was thinking that's probably,
that's multiple generations, Like how would they know, Hey,
look for this thing or maybe it's a story that had been

(02:15):
passed down so long. It was like, hey, and this and
we saw it again and this time and then we saw it and, but
like, what things have we reallyhad?
I mean, the moon, the sun, you know, the rotations of the
Earth, the seasons, those thingshave been the cyclical patterns
that we've found. But like, how would you track
something that is multiple generations?
You think like 5/10/20 generations long between a cycle

(02:38):
happening? That's an insane type of
trackable sort of data. Well, and, and, and here's the
part that comes along with it, that it's a fallacy in its own
because the way that people believe is that the science has
proven it, then it's that it's true.
Correct. Yeah, in science, but.
It's not Science is undeniably false.

(03:00):
Because it's new data or new things.
That's why it's not. True.
Continuously changing. Yeah, it's always.
Further furthering your education, furthering your
knowledge on what's going on with that.
And the problem is you got individuals who are really smart
people in one specific field like Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Fidget. I can't fucking stand that guy.

(03:22):
The reason why is that he dips his toes and things that he
doesn't know anything about. Yeah, butt stuff.
What the fuck? Yeah, Brandon knows all about.
That yeah, check out my Only Fans.
Dude, this thing is brilliant. I know, right?
Bonsai Cloud. That see, I love that little
one. Got a code for us cannabis
school? Save yourself 10%, get yourself

(03:45):
a bomb, Cycloud. Yeah, and cop yourself a little
bit. Bama.
It's a Bama. It's Obama.
Obama. Boma.
Obama. OK.
Bomb a cyclone. Interesting, I thought it was
bomb Bo. MB that's funny.
It's just the way the A is shaped.
I didn't give it that much. Or maybe it is AB.

(04:06):
Or no, it is bomb shit. I don't know, I smoke weed.
Oh, there's still plenty in there.
Oh, you shut it off. Yeah, so we don't burn it out.
Oh well, you just said it's still going.
Oh, was you have enough in there?
Yeah. All right.
Go ahead. I was like, I'd still hit that.
So that's something that I was going going through like my

(04:29):
notes and stuff and and looking up certain things is that
science is supposed to be provenwrong.
You're supposed to prove it because there's it's just the
theory. And the problem is, is that you
got a lot of really simple minded people who go, well, that
guy's smarter than me. Let's just listen to him or her

(04:50):
or them or whatever the fuck. But.
It well, I think it's because science and Jesus, science in my
head, my mind is about discovery.
And you might not discover always the truth, but you're
discovering new things. Well, but.

(05:10):
You don't. We don't know everything.
And so we can't assume that whatwe've learned is the last data
point or last thing we will learn and we're going to be
correct. And that in the field of
science, we found so many times that other theories and that
have disproven other theories. So right.
But it would be weird to go. Hey, would you not?

(05:31):
Well, I wouldn't. I wouldn't.
To have a dogma of like it is. Dogmatic, though science is
super dogmatic. Yes, just like religion, but
it's, it's that like having thatmind of like, OK, well, if we
approach science of hey, this isjust discovery.
It's always discovery. There's no, there's no truth.
It's this is what we found out now, and we'll probably find

(05:51):
something out later that we don't, we don't know because,
well, we also don't know it now.But if we keep trying to
discover things, we will learn that there's something else that
we haven't discovered and there's something else we
haven't discovered. And sometimes that will alter
other things you've already known because, or known because
hey, that we didn't know. So that actually alters what we
thought reality or what we knew was because it was based on our

(06:14):
previous flawed belief system that didn't have this new
information in it, which. It would be nice.
It would be nice. But that's it's the same with
most thoughts. Well, no, I mean the reason why
that science is the way it is now, at least my belief and what
I've been able to see quite a bit and I've done a lot of
digging, not beyond the YouTube realm, lots of research.
It's money when money gets tied to somebody's well-being where

(06:39):
they can actually provide a living by being able to be a
scientist such as Neil deGrasse Tyson.
He is an astrophysicist. Astrophysicist now he gets into
quantum mechanics and then he's into biology and science and any
kind of science beyond his expertise.
The you know the only person I've heard recently.

(07:02):
Talking to a doctor. How many doctors speak in
expertise outside of their fieldof expertise?
Often well. You got, but that's the reason
why we've got a lot of specialized doctors, which has
been nice. I I saw a General practitioner
not too long ago and I was talking about hormone treatments
and he says I don't know enough about that to prescribe that.
I know it's like, cool that transparency.

(07:23):
I feel there's not enough of that.
With but the prop, again, it's tied to livelihood.
Most doctors and P as well. You take APA or a doctor right
now or a nurse practitioner, they don't make very much.
They don't bring home very much,especially especially when it
costs you hundreds of thousands of dollars to go to school, to
have a profession, to help otherpeople that you can't help

(07:44):
yourself for many years, many, many years.
And that's why they specialize. And if they specialize, that's
great. But now it limits the amount of
people that are out there to be treated on the basic stuff.
So it's like, it's like when people wanted to be surgeons in
like the late 80s, early 90s, everybody went to plastic
surgery 'cause you would make hundreds of thousands of

(08:06):
dollars. Now tie that to science, right?
You got Michu, that Japanese dude, he's got the white hair
who always speaks in very weird tones.
Like it's just like really sing songy.
But he, he just. From their culture or.
No, he doesn't. He doesn't sound Japanese.

(08:27):
He is white. Because the the most
interesting. Japanese don't speak.
Most interesting thing to me wasthe conversation with Nerith
over lunch when he was talking about all the inflection tones
of all the Asiatic like people and stuff.
I don't hang out with tons of Asians.
I don't know tons of Asian people.
Yeah, I went to China, but that's been most of my

(08:47):
experience aside from televisionor, you know, with that type of
culture. So I didn't know the depth of
inflection and that that came with like Vietnamese or other
stuff. And so when he was saying stuff
and talking in certain dialects and I was like, that's fucking
funny because I I've not been ingrained in that.
You probably way more with all the like martial arts and going

(09:10):
to Asian countries in the. Military, I studied Mandarin and
learning about the four, four different tones and that's what
I based my cognitive tone dynamic.
Japanese don't really do that, no.
Interesting. It's, it's, but it yes and no.
The the Asian dialects as some of them, not all of them, but

(09:30):
primarily those ones. I mean, like one of them, he
said, was like 9 tie, There's 9.In their tie.
And so it's like, OK, cool. But in, in what I learned in
Mandarin was that there's an upward inflection, a downward
inflection up and down and then a flat where one thing you could
say would mean mother with an upward inflection, but with a

(09:52):
downward inflection, it means horse.
So now you're like, OK, how did that change?
But in the Spanish language, very same.
If I say PP, that means dad or it can also mean different
inflection. And so it's how you say it.
They will do that. Now English language we do it

(10:13):
too. It's like 2-2 and two.
Well, it's it's exactly, it's like, let's same words.
If I say this, if I say this term, let's go in four different
ways. Let's go.
Let's go, let's go. Well, it still means the same
thing, but it has. It's not like potato and mother.
No, but there's a different. It is a different like tonality

(10:34):
and implied hate mood associated.
Yeah, other languages don't havethat.
They have. Defined like you know, you take
Spanish and Latin and Portugueseand Italian.
There's a lot of base. Masculine, yeah, feminine tones,
right? But.
Even the base of their words, there's so many similarities

(10:57):
with all of those too. Like a lot of people believe
that the English language originated from Latin but it
didn't. It was like from a Germanic and
Norse and another language whereit started to go like the way we
speak now. Like if you read a King James
Bible, an original King James Bible edition, they have

(11:19):
different new ones, yes, but theif you have that one, we can go
back to that time and probably do well enough to understand and
then acclimate into their society and understand what's
going on A. 100% well cuz we canread books and stuff from that
time and go oh this is what theyit makes sense.
The Old English going back to like the four hundreds, 5

(11:41):
hundreds. That would be a whole different.
Just totally different language.It totally sounds different.
That's where like Gaelic and allthose other things started
coming from. With Gaelic I think is a
beautiful language. It's so crazy the way it's and
why it's there, I think. Emily has some Gaelic singer
female things that I've heard before and it is very beautiful.

(12:04):
Watch the show Outlander, they speak Gaelic in that they're
talking about the Jacobites whenthey were fighting against the
British. This is like time where they
still had swords, but they also use guns, the flintlocks and
stuff like that. So very cool timepiece, pretty
intense show. I couldn't get past the first

(12:26):
season because the last of it was.
Too intense for Jesse. Holy shit.
Dude, it's pretty intense now. I mean, a lot of people got.
Past it, do you have any other any other shows or movies that
you can think of that have been that same way for you?
Just to give me a perspective oflike, maybe what is too much for
Jesse. Oh no, there's very few things

(12:47):
that are too much for me. Yeah, so I figured.
That one has to do with it. Rape in general is not something
I'll be cool with on saying is. My biggest?
But nowhere else have I ever seen male rape done in a way
where it made me so uncomfortable.
Not that I'm OK with male rape. Let's just let's clear the air

(13:07):
on that. But it like you see a prison
movie or Pulp Fiction. Yeah.
Like it's implied. Yeah.
This one is so intense and so graphic that it hurts you like.
I was like the hills I rape For me I it makes me feel disgusting

(13:28):
inside, like the when it when it's in shows or movies I don't
like watching. OK.
The Hills Have Eyes I I love horror movies.
Nothing in a horror movie. I'd watched all the Saw ones,
like everything else. Hannibal Lecter, like Chainsaw
Massacre, none of those. It was fun.
It was just a movie. But then it got to The Hills

(13:48):
Have Eyes. It's not as scary, but they and
they were like they were rape going to rape this woman in her
trailer and and I just I turned it off.
I was like, fuck this, I this ismessed up.
I can't watch this because it was like it was so that I don't
know. That's see.

(14:08):
It's a difference, right? A sex scene is different from a
rape scene because. It's consensual because
consensual is like, hey, that can be beautiful.
It can be totally different. Even if it's weird and freaky,
it can still be beautiful. It's consensual.
It's a whole different thing than taking away someone's right
of choice on that and like. Then here's the Here's the part
of me that goes I can't look away because if a writer for a

(14:36):
creator can pull me into a situation that's completely
fabricated, everybody's safe. So fake.
But it still makes you feel likethat.
Like that's what I don't understand about actresses like
Brie Larson Back in the day. She was in this movie where she
played this real life girl who was held underneath the ground

(15:00):
of the house in a in a dungeon for most of her life.
She was kidnapped. She had a daughter or a boy or
something, raised the kid in there, never been outside,
finally escaped. She played this woman.
She did so well. Oh yeah.
And then she comes out with likea bunch of trash.

(15:23):
And the reason why it's trash isbecause it's not acting.
Marvel is not acting. Marvel is a is neat.
I've seen better acting in videogames.
Oh yeah, than I've seen in the all the Marvel movies.
They're super fucking lame. Like it's like just.
They're. It's a fun idea.
They have like a couple of really good characters that
you'd like, and then everybody else is kind of like anecdotes,

(15:44):
like nobody's excited. The Black Black Widow, she was a
cool character. It's the friend showing up to
the party, the sesh with a distigoing.
Oh, I got all my disties. Yeah, like we got joints.
Fuck off. Yeah.
And he's like, but I got Disney's and you're like, go to
the corner with the other kids and play with your dusties.
But that's the thing, man. There's like no real testing of
it. And like those movies, like

(16:05):
horror movies, don't get me. Horror movies never get me.
It's not. They're boring to me.
I laugh at them and I'm like, OK, like, that's not real.
That's stupid. The ones that usually get me are
the ones that I'm like, that felt more real to me.
Most horror movies are like so fake and it doesn't like no
sense of it feels real and I'm like, this is so cheesy.

(16:28):
That's why you knew nothing about this that.
Good suspense films like you ever seen the movie Prisoners
with Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhaal?
And I think it's Terrence Howard.
It's about these two girls. They go missing and they're
kidnapped, but nobody knows where they went.
And this these two fathers are trying to do everything they can

(16:51):
to find their daughters who werefriends.
And this detective, he's kind oflooking all these things and
it's it's somebody in the town. But he has these like kids put
away somewhere, right? And the fathers take it upon
themselves to find them. And they start getting hints and
stuff like that. And they start trying to take

(17:11):
the law in their own hands. And the cop is trying to help
capture the guy and all this crazy shit.
But it is one of the most it's called Prisoners.
It is an intense film and that'swhat I'm talking about.
Like I, it's not that I like intense films.
I like to see like raw motion. Like yesterday I saw this clip.
I saw this thing on Tom Cruise and it was funny because the guy

(17:35):
was right. He's like, he's one of the best
actors of our generation. He's right.
Like I can remember so many movies growing up where I
watched him in it from Top Gun, but he's been in everything.
He's been in ROM coms, he's beenin dramas.
But the one movie called Magnolia, have you ever seen
that where he's got long hair? Dude this movie, it was crazy

(17:56):
because after this movie he stopped doing drama and he only
did action. Interesting, and just because of
the role he played. Well, dude, the the this guy,
he's like supposed to be like the ultimate pickup artist and
he goes in like his lied. He goes was something about, you
know, glorify the cock and tame the cunt or something like that.

(18:20):
And I mean, it was fucking funnydude, But he is like this
ultimate, like I'm the cool guy.Like you see him all the time
now. Like the guy they they've got,
they've got fucking digital billboards up there.
Like, Are you ready? And it's got some old dude's
face who's all like angry maybe he's got tattoos on his arm and
shit. They're all fresh.

(18:40):
He just got his new sleeve and he's like, oh, this guy seems
like he knows what's going on. He's going to help me make
millions by me giving him money to go listen to him and a bunch
of other fucking guys who are trying to figure out how to keep
making money. But it it felt like that.
And then this woman interviews him, but she had done her
business and really researched this guy and knew that he

(19:04):
changed his name. Tom changed his name.
He just got rid of his last name.
Yeah. He took his middle name as his
last name. That's hilarious.
And his dad was really abusive to him and his family.
I think mom left him and she struggled raising him and even
when Tom was an actor, his dad never saw any of his movies.

(19:30):
Holy cow. Yeah, like, he had this horrible
relationship. And you saw Tom throughout his
early career, he was taking on, like, emotional roles.
Yeah, and and he would go reallyin.
But this one, this guy has this theory that it broke him because
the guy wrote it all like this character for this show, and

(19:51):
it's about regret. OK.
The whole movie is about regret and this guy's dad is dying of
cancer. They tell him he's dying of
cancer and he fucking hates thisguy.
But when he goes to him and and go and watch the same, maybe you
know what, I'll find the clip and we'll put it down there in
there. Why not?
You guys can watch it. But it is one of the most raw,

(20:14):
emotional and everybody in the room.
Philip Seymour Hoffman, you knowwho he was?
No, he was a really good actor. He died of a heroin overdose.
He had such a crazy range of acting skills.
He looked like nobody, but he was.
He would take a role and he would become that person.

(20:37):
And it was so crazy, but. It is really crazy to think
about. I never gave it a lot of thought
until probably the last more handful of years.
And it was more just realizing because half the time it would
be watching a show with my kid or with Emily or something and
make a comment because they're like so drawn into this reality.
And I'm like, well, that's what they're scripted to say.

(20:59):
Because I'm like so pulled apartfrom it that I'm like, I'm just
watching it as like this compilation of things.
And I'm like, I love when the story actually draws me in, that
it pulls me into that because that's what I'm looking for most
of the time. But most of them are so terribly
written. The acting is pure shit.
The story is just garbage that I'm like, OK, this is like mind

(21:20):
numbing dumbness. Like it's it's just background
noise. Dude, it's, it's pretty like
after watching this thing, I hada lot of respect for actors who
really practice across, you know, like.
That they get, they become that character, like they embody that
so much into like their role they're playing.
And stuff. It's like, you know, even Hugh

(21:42):
Jackman, I never really considered him a great actor
until I saw The Greatest Showman.
And the only reason why I like that because it totally blew me
away. Now I know you've got negative
feelings with that one. I was impressed because I never
knew that he was like a Broadwayactor, singer before and his
vocals, I was like fuck. That's cool.
I was really impressed with that.

(22:03):
That's why I appreciate real. Actors.
I hadn't seen that versatility, that side of Hugh Jackman.
I knew him as Wolverine and Wolverine, you know that.
That was the only aspect I really knew of him.
And then? It's like Mel Gibson back in the
90s, like he was an action dude and then he makes one of the

(22:24):
biggest films of all time. Or like.
Multiple He's done some amazing films.
Jim Carrey, not Jim Carrey. Yeah, Jim Carrey.
And then he did that one seriousone about numbers or whatever it
was #43 or. Yeah, he did The Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind as well. It's.
Just so weird to see these characters who so much and like

(22:46):
have one persona almost in theirentire career and then one or
two like just outliers that are just what in the fuck is this?
Dude, you want to get a big crazy?
Like what the fuck? Yeah, go watch Uncut Gems
starring Adam Sandler. He is in a serious role.

(23:06):
It's about a a shy state guy in New York who deals in diamonds.
Dude, it's crazy. It's like Steve Carell in
Foxcatcher. He plays the schizophrenic
billionaire from the DuPont family.
DuPont. And I think I, I mentioned it on
one of the Yeah. So that one watching his acting

(23:28):
credits, then go watch him in The Big Short.
Huge difference. Huge difference.
And then go watch him in the Evan one.
What's the one, Evan? Almighty, yeah.
Doesn't he play like a mentally challenged or someone else in
another? Oh no, that's the ringer.
And that's, that's someone. Else Oh no, like if you want to
talk about that Leonardo DiCaprio did in What's Eating
Gilbert Grape? He plays a mentally retarded kid

(23:51):
and he doesn't, I mean, and and what I be my mentally retarded
is that literally like when you think of lower developmental in
a he's like a 16 year old. In the movie, Johnny Depp is the
older brother. The mother is this gigantically
fat woman. And back then they didn't have
CGI. So it was a giant woman and she

(24:14):
was prisoner in her own home andthe oldest brother has to stay
there and take care of everybody.
But he wants to get out of this shitty little one stop town.
Like it literally has one light.He delivers groceries.
That was Santa Quinn years ago. 11 little stop light.
Yeah, and it's. Like and it was a four way stop
sign light. Exactly like they have one of

(24:34):
the the light right there. And dude, it's like this whole
town and it's about this guy whojust can't escape his life
because he's got to be the good guy.
He can't, he can't do anything for himself.
He's got to take care of his mom, his retarded brother, his
sister. Yep.
And then he's having an affair with this woman in town because

(24:54):
it's the only thing. And she's like, she's like, I
need something. I'm going crazy.
And she's like, I'm going to bang the grocery store guy.
And and dude, it's just, it's just crazy.
Like it, it's anxiety inducing because you're like, yeah,
because he is so passive the entire time.
And you could just feel it boiling.
And then on top of it, you've got his mentally retarded

(25:17):
brother. Like the best scene in that
movie, dude, Leonardo Dicaprio'sin the bathtub because his
brother had to wash him still. And so he totally forgot about
him. And then it's night time, and he
remembers, and he goes upstairs and he's in the water just
shivering. And he's blue.

(25:37):
He's cold. And you can see it in his eyes.
And this is like an older Leonardo DiCaprio.
And you're like, holy shit. Like, he is like, you believe
what he's doing. Yeah.
That's cool when you can see an actor go really deep and become
something like Christian Bale. Oh, yeah.
Christian Bale is one of the best actors.

(25:59):
Have you ever seen him and Hugh Jackman in that like Magician
movie? What's that called?
Was it early 2000s? Yeah, I don't.
I have. There was a couple of them that
came out at the same time. Where?
The guy could like it look like he died.
Yeah, I can't think of what it'scalled because there was 2
magician ones almost that came out.
Yeah. There's one with Edward Norton

(26:19):
and stuff. Yeah, I can't.
Think of their names right now. But that one was so.
Illusionist. Yes.
Is that one of them? Yes, that's the one.
OK. I was like, there's two and.
One of them. I can't think of the other.
It's sad that now we don't have that.
It's really sad we don't have that anymore because that was
something I looked forward to was the good movies coming out

(26:40):
in the summertime. And I loved going to the film.
I loved going not because of I didn't care how much I spent on
it. You know people bitch about.
It. But it was the experience.
You don't get a good experience.Like it's fine.
I go and I'm like, well, I'm just watching a movie at the
theater now, but it's not a great movie half the time.
I can watch a shitty movie at home and I can smoke weed the

(27:02):
entire time. I can eat whatever fucking
snacks I want and I'll pause it when I have to go pee and then
I'll be like, all right, cool. But there's something about that
when you go to a theater and expect like Lord of the Rings.
Oh yeah, if it was an amazing movie, that's a different
experience. But they have to write and make.
A good movie. Good movie.
And the actors have to really bein there as the role, like they

(27:26):
have to live and be that role init.
And it's I don't know. I can't do that probably dude.
I don't think I can. Streaming has killed off
creativity. Yeah, I bet indie stuff would be
better than mainstream stuff most of the time now.
Yeah, just because you get more of the creativity, the stupid
garbage from Hollywood that's been coming out is like disties.
It's disties. Here's another thing of toilet

(27:48):
water. You want some hot dog water?
A Hollywood's got something new.There was a show in the early
2000s called The Shield. Did I ever tell you about that
one? I've heard of it, but I've never
seen that. So it's about this narcotics
team in LA, but they're crooked,so they're working.
And this is like one of the first crooked, crooked, crooked

(28:10):
the well, what do they call them?
It's something hero the anti hero.
OK, Yeah. They're anti hero shows.
This same guy did Sons of Anarchy.
OK, Yeah. And then after that, you've got
every other one that's just the same fucking show now, like
Yellowstone. Yellowstone is Cowboys and

(28:32):
anarchy. Yeah, yeah.
Would take him to the train station, right?
Did you watch Sons of Anarchy? Yeah, I finished the whole
thing. I watched a good portion of it
and then I got bored with it like the.
Same fucking show. But the thing that really,
really disappointed me because Iwas riding a motorcycle all the
time when I watched it was afterI learned that none of them were

(28:56):
riding. They were all fucking on
training wheels the whole time for that.
And I'm like, this is. And so I stopped.
I was like, this is dumb. Not gonna watch that again.
Well I mean most of them aren't Tom Cruise and most of them are
like most of them have no idea how to ride bike.
Rider who rides all the time andI was watching it and then I was
like none of them are riding. This is dumb.

(29:17):
I always thought it was funny. Like, you know, I remember this
friend of mine, she's like all into Harleys and stuff and only
like Harley guys. And I'm like, what are you and
your boyfriends do during the winter?
Just snuggle up, watch Sons of Anarchy?
She's just like, shut up. And I'm like, well, I'm just
saying like kind of limited there unless you live in in like
Arizona or California. Now she lives in Arizona, dude.

(29:40):
So I mean whatever. I mean, I'd take my bike out
even in the winter when it's above 50°.
I'd put on my cold weather gear.But then the problem.
Is get that you? Still are frozen through by the
time you're moving because 50° when you're moving is like mid
30s and you know about an hour you're chilled to the bone
stealing. Like I think I'm good.

(30:00):
I got my right. In No man, but it just the you
see these things and it's still the same thing.
It's like Yellowstone. I really liked Yellowstone.
But then you know what I did? I just like the characters of
this new exact same trope being told over and over and over
because what if it happens towards the end?
Everybody dies. It's like music, you know, or,
or stories. Everyone just retelling a story

(30:21):
in their own, in their own method.
It's hey, I learned this information or I heard this
story and I can make it. I get that, but it it's like
Quentin Tarantino, they're not all in the same universe.
No, his are very unique. Every single one is very
different from the next. The guy who wrote Sons of
Anarchy wrote The Shield. I'll take a little bit more.

(30:43):
This stuff's freaking awesome. Yeah, it's been a day of candy
gas. So, you know, I don't know what
you guys are dabbing on, but candy gas has actually been
quite pleasant. Go check it out if you guys
haven't. Yeah, and use code.
Cannabis School. Check out, get yourself one of
these rigs. This is by far the best E rig we
have ever tried up to this pointand we like it a lot.

(31:07):
Stay tuned. I think we're going to get some
type of giveaway set up on that one too.
Oh yeah, man, we have. Man.
We went way off, but that this has been a cool direction.
So yeah, man, it's it's hard because nowadays, like even with
my kids, like when we watch movies, like I really got it,
like we watch the Minecraft. Yeah, so did I.
You know what? It's not bad.

(31:28):
It's just entertaining. It was fun and it was, you know
what? It wasn't it it, it made fun of
itself because it was in the universe it's in.
That's pretty fucked up right now where I go.
The best movie that I've seen, new movie that I've seen.
Is Minecraft. Is Minecraft.
That's sad. That's really sad 'cause it's a
it's a dumb kid movie. It is.

(31:49):
But that's OK. It's supposed to be a dumb kid
movie. It's supposed to make believe.
It was the intended purpose. Right.
And they did awesome. Jason Momoa, great character, he
was funny. And Jack Black.
You know what? I love Jack Black.
I feel bad dude. Check your diabetes, bro, check
your diabetes. Just from one diabetic to
another bro, check that shit. You don't don't lose all the

(32:12):
weight, but you got me concerned.
Dude. Looks like growths.
Yeah, but. It's brutal.
It's just, you know, I want to show my kids movies from the
past, but when that even starts to go, like, were they really
that good? And I go back to the 80s.
Movies. Some of them are some.
Are 80s movies? Yeah, they still are.
They're the exact same movies I remember as a kid.

(32:33):
They're good. Did you ever watch Undercover
Blues with Dennis Quaid? And Dennis Quaid and Kathleen
Turner. Yeah, probably.
That was like one of the, for some reason my parents loved
that movie and even though it said fuck, we were allowed to
watch it and we were allowed to watch it since I was like 6,

(32:54):
like I was. I probably quoted that movie all
the time growing up. Well, yeah, it's the only movie
you guys could watch in your home.
I was. Like what the hell, My parents
were so anal about everything except for music.
They didn't ever check my music ever right?
But like anything else, no, definitely not.
And so that one was surprising because our cousins would come

(33:15):
over and we showed it to Wimmersand they were like, wait,
parents let you watch this? Like, yeah.
And all we would do is we'd turnit down when it said fuck.
And that was it. You knew exactly when.
Because we Yep. And that was it.
You walk over to the receiver, fuck like.
Yeah, I remember the first two movies that I watched over and
over was The Heavenly Kid and Back to the Future.

(33:39):
OK, because my dad went to this Reams.
Remember the big skating rink? Yeah, with the giant pair of
pants hanging from the rafters. That's many ages.
And he went there and off to thecorner did their video store was
this janky setup, did somebody had enough leftover wood that
they built themselves these likesteeple shelves for the videos

(34:04):
with the with the plywood back and and then they built shelves
into this nook. And then there was this wooden
shelf made like do this. That's inside the IT was.
Inside the rainstone and you go over there and you would rent,
you could rent videos, the cassette tapes in there and the
big fat plastic clicking ones. Yeah.

(34:26):
And not the squeeze bottoms. And so you, you'd take that over
there and you could rent anotherVCR.
And my dad had got AVCR. And so that's how you can record
if you had the cables. And my dad's friend says, hey,
if you take these cables and youput them in here, you get that
shit going, bro. And so it's just like he, my dad

(34:48):
was he, he only ripped 2 movies.He made copies of them.
And that was the heavenly kid and Back to the Future.
And back then it was like 375 torent.
But back then in the 80s, that's.
That's a lot. Good amount of money dude.
Oh yeah, that's like 8 bucks today or something.
I want a movie and so but you know, there's something to be
like that whole process. Like I still remember that.

(35:08):
I remember how big of a dude thethe fucking VCR came in this
like giant gun Pelican case. Like it was like you hold it.
It was like and you. Go.
I didn't know they rented VCRS. Oh yeah.
We had one at one point. I don't know when we I don't
remember when we got one. I just remember having ATV and a

(35:28):
VCR at one point like early whenI can remember stuff and then
all. Like I remember having a
computer when I was like 3 and then my dad always had massive
stereo speakers that tall. Yeah, my dad.
And a record player and a million records and you know, it
went from that to surround soundand stuff.

(35:49):
So it is. Dude, I, I, I had a pretty, I
mean, I've said multiple times, I had a pretty liberal parents
growing up because they were gone and they didn't get along
with each other. So, you know, we were kind of
left to do whatever. Yeah.
But I, I mean, I have fond memories of watching, you know,

(36:09):
Army of Darkness and Evil Dead and, and all of Belle Brooks
films, watching Blazing Saddles and.
Did you did you ever watch the 28?
Like Days Later, 28 Weeks later,the 28 Years Later is coming
out. I saw a thing that they used for
some of the recording 20 different iPhones for certain

(36:30):
scenes that they would use. And I was like, that's very
interesting. Like we wanted to make it in the
very same style of like the selffilmed and that and well, we're
in the era of everyone has an iPhone or a smartphone.
So they created these special things and that was like 20
iPhones and that mounted to it for specific scenes.
And I was like, that's very unique style.

(36:52):
I wonder if they're going to usethe same character because like,
if you go remember in 28 Weeks Later, Jeremy Renner was like
this special forces guy that wasdropped into Britain.
It's been so to. Extract people.
I I just had that. I've got to go rewatch it I.
Saw that when it came out. I've never seen it again.
Makes me want to go see it again, yeah.
I haven't either. That's how my the.
First one was cool, like when they would get like the blood in

(37:13):
their system, it would just makethem angry.
They weren't zombies. Yeah.
They were just angry. And.
But yeah, dude, I I hope that you'd like.
He is this guy. He saves these two kids to get
him out of the city, and he, I think he sacrifices himself or
something like that, Something noble.
Yeah. But it was really cool because

(37:34):
if now we're seeing this guy with long hair and a beard and
I'm like, dude, I wonder if it'sthat kid.
And I'm hoping it is because I saw the trailer and I was like,
it's been a while since I've seen a good zombie film.
Right. That's what I was thinking.
Like, oh shoot. Like Dawn of the Dead watch.
Oh dude that movie is so dumb too.
Dawn of the Dead. It's so funny.
Like my wife, that was one of our first marriage.

(37:55):
She was like, oh, I think this movie would be fun to go see
with my sisters because my buddyTaylor and I, yeah.
And this was funny, dude, because like, we.
OK, so here's the story. My buddy Taylor and I, we we're
watch it. We will go, oh, the zombie
movies come out, let's go out. And we both are just, we're just
comedic all the time and we're really funny together.

(38:18):
And dude, it, we just feed off each other and we are cracking
up the entire feeder because we're like, there's a dude, he's
walking in this like giant mall and he's got a crowbar and he
switches it out for a croquet mallet.
Look, what the fuck is this guy doing?
Just like what? And of course it breaks and he

(38:39):
uses it to shove through something's head.
But I'm just like. Yeah, dude, what?
And. That's my first thought.
Like why would you ever switch asteel crowbar for a fucking
wooden mallet? But the whole time, I mean, we
watched that movie and that movie is intense.
Like when they go down to the parking garage and they think
they can get to there and like they're running, Adam like

(39:00):
zombies are always slow. But in in George A Romero's
universe, they run, and that's fucking.
It's like that game you played. Oh, day's gone.
Yes, I love that because the zombies and there's hordes of
them, but they run, they will chase you and so you're like
jumping on your motorcycle trying to get away and if you're
not fast. They will like dude, that's why
I like I just said no, it it it's those types of things that

(39:24):
I love watching, even the games like I like watching someone
play it like I got to be on the same couch.
I can't sit there. I mean, I got to.
Hang it, watch. Now I feel like I got to go get
the upgraded version for the PS5because now I'm thinking about
how cool it was even on the PS4 version and I'm sure they have
like so much more. Feeds, but that's true, but that
game, I mean it's it's like zombie thing.

(39:46):
Man, that'd be so cool to see. I just want I just want better
entertainment, not that I need to be distracted.
I just like being entertained. That's why one thing that I
heard recently and and I'll shutup cans the the big Film
Festival that they do in France,they gave Robert De Niro a
lifetime award, right? They're like, hey, crusty old
fucker, there you go. And he gets up there just to go

(40:10):
off about Trump. So then somebody starts
interviewing Tom Cruise for his last, his last Mission
Impossible film. And they're like, what are your
feelings about the politics? And he goes, Hey, we're here to
talk about movies. I don't talk about that stuff.
It's not important. I'm here to entertain you.
I've worked hard to make movies for you.
I made this for you and I want you to enjoy it.

(40:31):
And I was like, dude, it is the same thing in that video, dude.
Everybody's like Tom Cruise usedto be controversial.
He used to say shit. He used to get mad at people if
you asked him about Scientology or anything.
And then all of a sudden he justwent flat.
He's like, no, interesting. I'm just going to no hang off

(40:53):
airplane, dude. Watch that scene from that
movie. And this guy's like, yeah, this
broke him. Philip.
Philip Seymour Hoffman said thatthe entire scene was made-up by
Tom. You'll have to send it to me.
Like it's intense, it's intense,but it's cool.
Like that's what I appreciate from people who are really good

(41:13):
actors is that they can that's. What I've loved like The Dark
Knight with Heath Ledger, where he was the Joker, that was one
of my favorite movies for so long just because of like the
character playing how well. Where did that come from?
I have no idea, right? Blew me away and then it was so
heartbreaking to go he Od'd. Fuck.

(41:36):
One of his best plays, like bestrole acting I think I've ever
seen him do. And he just, yeah, you know.
Yeah, dude, I he him. Matthew McConaughey.
Matthew McConaughey. Watch him in True Detective.
First season of True Detective. OK.
Whoa, he he goes dark, really dark, with one of his best

(42:00):
friends, who possibly is his actual half brother, Woody
Harrelson. Oh shit.
Yeah, Woody Harrelson's dad was a hit man.
In real life. Or in real life and his dad had
hooked up with Matthew's mom. Oh, Jesus.
Yeah, so they don't know. That's wild, right?
But I. Don't think that's in green

(42:21):
lights in Matthew Mcconaughey's book so.
Oh no, it's something recently that he's.
Kind of aftermount, yeah, OK. It was kind of like a
coincidence. I mean, it may not be, but
maybe, you know, just crazy, crazy intersections, right?
But they kind of look similar. Now they're way off topic, but
kind of funny thing I saw was with all this AI stuff coming
out, there was this AI company called Builder AI.

(42:43):
I'm sure you've seen never heardof it.
Supposedly they were coding and building apps for people and
saying it was AI doing it. It was actually just a bunch of
Indian coders on the back end coding and it came out
supposedly that that might be. I haven't gotten to look more
into it. I was like.
Is that actually, dude, it's, it's so, well, that's the thing.

(43:06):
Like the reason why, like it's so funny is because the people
believe that AI can do all thesethings.
Look, it's, it's just a mirror. It will only be as good as the
wielder who wields it. Yes.
And if you can use it to teach you more about things and then
being able to apply that, you'llbe surprised what you can

(43:26):
create. But you still have to be the.
It's still. Human driven.
Yeah, The funny thing that I I read yesterday was, gosh, they
were going into, I don't remember if it was JFRFK or
Trump's administration, but it was a specific report they were
going over. And it was saying that a lot of
the claims that were in there were on data points that didn't

(43:48):
exist, on studies that had neverbeen done.
What are we talking about here? Just things that like RFK was
claiming there were certain studies and stuff and it was
like claims that were like, hey,this study here did this and and
they like that had gone out to the people that they said the
studies came from asking them about him.
They're like, we've never done astudy on that.

(44:08):
We've never written a paper on that that's never even existed.
So he's going to resign? But they're like AI actually
creates articles as well. So mostly they said that
probably was an AI generated thing that was like, hey, find
us all this stuff. And it was like, they create
articles sometimes that don't actually exist or data points
that will go, hey, well, this one here.

(44:29):
And it's like, well, but if that's not actually real and
that's what's being pushed out too, like that's also a very
different narrative, even just general AI.
No, that's a good point because AI has actually, so I've got a
friend who is transitioning. Well, he's transitioning from
SEO because SEO is a dying part of marketing.

(44:52):
And the reason why is because itit, the new driver is AI driven
a even what's his name? What's it called?
Google's AI, Their original. Gemini are their original 1, no?
No, no, no, no. The original 1 is.
No, it's the one that's that's the head of it now.
But they've got a newer 1 that was able to use for quantum

(45:14):
computing. And the craziest thing is
quantum computing uses light. It doesn't use typical, it's
completely different. But they use this quantum
computer to be able to do a calculation that would have
taken all the supercomputers on Earth.
Ages to do. Septin I mean the numbers.

(45:34):
Endless. And yeah, endless.
It's beyond millions. And they did it in an hour.
And so they're, this is what they're trying to mesh in with
AI. Yeah.
And so, you know, ethical, we don't know it, it could be the
atom bomb like Oppenheimer thought, because their belief

(45:54):
wasn't like, oh, we'll build this bomb for the US and we'll
be able to win. They they literally thought like
if their calculations are wrong they would destroy the entire
world. Oh yeah.
And, you know, I mean, to them, they, they literally did.
They knew what they were doing. Yeah, kind of a similar thing,
what these guys are doing, but they're doing it real like
Cavalier just running at it and doing whatever they want.

(46:18):
And the reasons why is just because, well, they're going to
do it. Why can't we do it?
Someone's going to so we need totoo and it's, you know, I mean,
that's why there's so many all hopping out at the same time.
All we need to and instead of well, we can just use this
backbone re like white label. It's we need to create our whole
backbone, do our own independentone, start from scratch.
And it's like, OK, well, is thattruly necessary?

(46:39):
But you know. No, it's like the Facebook AI
Center and Facebook's AI like, you know, somebody could argue,
yeah, it's great. No, I don't think it's great.
I've tried it multiple times. I it's it's ChatGPT 2.5.
That's what it feels like. Oh, so old chat.
It's super old and it's it's good.
They even have it built into like my Gmail and everything

(47:01):
else. Now it's like, oh, have this and
like, no. Well, and that's the thing
that's here's the statistic thatthey've actually been able to
pull from mid 2024 to now, 70% of the content that is online is
AI generated. Yeah.
That's the reason why is becausethose people out there are

(47:21):
going, hey chat, create me a blog about my business and how I
help my customers. That's it.
That's what it gives them. You have to go so in depth.
But it's so boring and so very. And that's why right now people
are going well. Why are these no name people
popping up in the algorithms of YouTube?

(47:42):
Why are these no name companies coming up to the top of my
Google search ranking is no longer relevant.
It's resonance. I have to resonate with my
audience through original content.
AI can help you create it, but you can't have it make it for
you. And that's why it is like people
are trying to change their position in marketing.

(48:03):
They're like, yeah, we have to big SEO companies that are
around here in Utah, they're doing something else completely.
They're going away because. You either have to what is it
restructure, realign, or you have.
To create a whole new system, it's like going back to the
beginning. And that's why every like, well,
why would Google do that? Well, why?

(48:24):
They're creating one of the mostsophisticated AIS out there.
And yeah, that would be used by again.
Well, Google how many people have been Googling for the last
20 years. Dude, everybody's in a race to
be the monopoly because not onlyGoogle will be able to power
your car, it'll power your phones.
Maybe you won't even need phones.

(48:44):
Like as fast as we are going with it.
On technology side, there's somecool stuff on the science side,
on language side, like stuff we've been able to find out
about our past. Like, it's so cool.
I can just imagine like the ability to translate and do
other things that we just the time and the manpower and like

(49:05):
the work put into to do that seconds, seconds.
Do for people who are getting into it, who are learning with
it, who are creating their own partner with that AI.
If you're just having it create random shit and then you just
take it, then you get RFK crap. Yeah, well.
They and they said no, I'm. Not going to make fun of him but

(49:27):
I mean. He does it on his own.
Dude, oh dude, you got to see that.
There's an interview with this comedian.
He's hilarious and he's really good friends with RFK, and he
makes fun of RFK to break to hisface doing the same voice and RK
takes it. I mean, it was something that
happened and he's like, whatever.
But you know, it's like that. That's that weird fear.

(49:48):
Like people go, Oh well, Chat told me this.
Like no, no, you have to talk with it.
And you have to Fact Check and you have to source check
sometimes and you have to like it's not.
Always ask for sources. It will be sources but say I
need you to list out all the sources over here and they all
need to be credible. No third party, no anything from
like tabloid ish. Yeah, random shit.

(50:10):
Yeah, no entertainment, no big name news like.
I and I don't want to check. I'm like, and I want to check
from all these perspectives because I don't want to get the
one nerd if I want to get yeah. I, I trust independent media now
way more than I will ever trust.And even if the bigger name
YouTube shows, dude, they all feel like they're bought and

(50:30):
paid for. I'm like, yeah, and that's the
hard part. But no, I think it's.
And we're not bought and paid for it.
Go check out our Only Fans, you'll find out.
Gross. That's Brandon.
Has Brandon all over there and yet another pose.
All right, guys. Hey.
Put my foot. Behind my you imagine that
somebody in there somebody's imagining right now they're like

(50:51):
hey, you know they're. I'm on the right strain.
I'm about you freaks. Out there.
Send a private message over there to Brandon.
Get the deets. And TuneIn next week.
Yeah. Hey guys, Take care.
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