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October 25, 2025 70 mins
Welcome to Brew Crime News with Paige of Reverie True Crime and ⁠The Pop Culture Diary! Your daily news, monthly! ;-)

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is brew Crime News, your daily news once monthly.
Here are your hosts, JT and Mike. All right, we're
back for brew Crime News once again, your daily news,
once monthly. This is Mike and my co host for

(00:24):
today Page. Hey, it's Paige again.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
I haven't been here in a long time.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
You haven't been and JT got held up. He was
supposed to be here and I was going to surprise
them with Page and now he's going to be really
surprised when he hears this and doesn't see himself.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Well, what we're hoping is that maybe he'll come in
in a little while and y'all have it to record,
and hopefully, you know, he'll come in and I'll still
be here chilling and hanging out crossed.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
All right, Well, quickly before we actually get started here,
why don't you quickly tell them about your new podcast?

Speaker 2 (01:11):
Oh okay, So yeah, so you know how true crime
really can drain you and burn you out and just
kind of put you in a really dark space sometimes. Yeah,
I was kind of I was kind of filling that
and I just wanted to do something lighter because I

(01:32):
was sitting around and I was like, I just can't
not create something. I have to be doing something, and
so I was like, well, what if I do something
that's just a little more lighthearted. It's still going to
have some you know, crime bits in there and some
sad stories and stuff, but at least it's not the

(01:55):
kind of deep dives and stuff that we do. It's
it's not super dark. So I was like, okay, one
of two of my favorite things in the world pop
culture and nostalgia. So I was like, Okay, I think
it would be cool to let's try to go back
from nineteen eighty to like twenty nineteen, twenty twenty, and

(02:21):
so season one is going to be, like, it's a
basic overview of each year. So nineteen eighty was episode one,
nineteen eighty one was episode two, and so on, and
we're just going to do an overview of each year.
So I think that's going to be around forty episodes itself.
So season one will just be that overview, and then

(02:45):
I have already six or seven seasons planned out and
I don't want to give anything away, but it this
is just an overview to prepare for those seasons. Yeah,
So yeah, I'm really excited. We're I'm doing the like
the big news. I'm doing celebrity gossip, movies, TV toys,

(03:10):
video games, you think of it, and I've probably got
a segment in there fashion so all of that. So
but if anyone listens and has suggestions for other segments
and topics, like bring it on, I'm having a lot
of fun with it.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
Did you say the name of the podcast? I can't remember.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
Yeah, I think I did the pop Culture Diary.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
There we go, just to make sure.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
Yeah, I'm not sure. I thought I did, but I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
I'm not sure either. All right, Well, let's get into
our news stories. Then we wait and do the honors.
Why don't you go first page?

Speaker 2 (04:05):
Okay, so I have two stories that kind of it
was funny that these two things we were in the
news at the same time. I thought, So we need
to meet Ned the snail. He's a garden snail in
New Zealand and his shell spirals left instead of the

(04:28):
usual right, So it is a super super rare trait
that it's only affects like one and four forty thousand.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
I didn't know they only spiraled one way.

Speaker 2 (04:41):
Yeah, I didn't either.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Had like an Australian snail because flush the other way
right right.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
Oh my gosh, yeah, it only affects one in forty thousand,
but it's kind of screwing up his chance at any
like hopes and dreams of having some kind of romantic life. So,
because his show is that way, his genitalia doesn't align

(05:10):
properly with most snails. So that is so sad. Oh man,
oh man, poor guy, poor guy, Poor Ned dude. There
is hope. There is hope though, so Ned got to

(05:33):
hang in there. But this snail was actually found in
August by Gardner and illustrator Giselle Clarkson. And I am
so sorry for mispronouncing this, but it's w A I
R A r A pa, So way rap up. Okay.

(05:54):
So the place, yeah, in this place, Ned was immediately
he just whisked away into a tank and turned into
a minor celebrity. New Zealand Geographic has since launched a
nationwide please saying quote if you find another left spiraling snail,

(06:16):
call us. They named him Ned after a left handed
Ned Flanders from the Simpsons.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
Oh, I didn't know he was left handed, and I
don't watch no Simpsons.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
I thought that was hilarious. And he's about six months old.
And they only live two to five years.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Oh man, he should be married now, then.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
He should have been married at first. Oh goodness, he
doesn't have long hang in there, buddy, Oh two to
five years really quick?

Speaker 1 (06:56):
I guess maybe not when you move that slowly.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
Yeah, seem like forever.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Oh oh my god.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
Because New Zealand's biosecurity rules are so strict, importing snail
suitors is unlikely, so Ned's best shot is locals rummaging
around in the gardens. So he's gotta just, you know,
if it's if it's meant to be, it's meant to be,

(07:26):
and it'll find Ned, or Ned will find that, you know.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
So yeah, oh my, oh sorry.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
So there is hope though, because there was a similar
case in the UK where a lefty snail named Jeremy
eventually found a mate and they reproduced, so they all
had right coiled shells. So so far, Ned's dame profile

(07:58):
inboxes pretty dry. But he remains alone and hopeful and
under obsessed care from what the I think it's. The
AP says he's under snail care, So that's good.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Come on, come on, Ned, slime rate, slime rate, dear
best go Ned go?

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Okay, so this is from the Guardian. It's from September eighth.
This is another place that I cannot pronounce, but I
will try my best. Residents in Schwabach, Bavaria were repeatedly
jolted awake by late night doorbell ringing. Okay, they didn't,

(08:50):
you know. At first, they were like, of course, these
are kids, these are pranksters, and they called the police,
but no one was at the door. Motion sensors didn't
even go off. So eventually they did discover who the
culprit was, and it was a slug creeping across the

(09:12):
metal bell plate and triggering the buzzard. Slim trails confirmed.
The so called prank police were amused, and they relocated
this mollusk to nearby grass, giving it a stern lecture
about these boundary rules. Now we cannot have this happening.

(09:35):
So the next time your doorbell rings for no reason,
don't automatically assume that it's teenagers or what even robbers.

Speaker 1 (09:44):
It just could be like a snail ding dom slime. Yeah,
oh my god, that's wild. I'm gonna go a little
cuddlier than this.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Ooh yay.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
Torn Gat Mountain vis gets front row seat as a
black bear fights polar bear.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
No way, how does this even happen?

Speaker 1 (10:08):
Mike, Ah, Well, you know, if you're north enough, this
can happen. And there's gonna be some names here. I
don't say so. John Sigurdson, who's from some crazy place
in Iceland that is spelled h A f n A
R f j O R d u R.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
Yeah, buddy, h Iceland's place.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
So he is traveling in Northern Labrador in Canada. Earlier
this week he captured a site on his camera he
thought would he would never see a mother polar bear
fighting a black bear. Sigurdson described the encounter as remarkable
and unexpected. He had been traveling down from Baffin Island
into the Target Mountains with others on an expedition. He

(10:54):
told CBC they had been seeing plenty of polar bears,
but on Tuesday they saw a mother and her cub
on the shore eating a seal. Quote. This was quite
enjoyable to witness. We kept a good distance, and all
of a sudden we saw another mother and cub, also
polar bears, and then Quote, and they approached and there

(11:14):
was a little fight between the mothers. But apparently there
was enough seal And then I said, the pair of
mothers and cubs shared a seal carcass. But with what
happened next that was extraordinary. We could see a black
bear a little bit further up the hill, approaching the
polar bears, and we said to ourselves, this is not
going to happen. There is not going to be any

(11:37):
sort of confrontation. But the black bear continued and it
made its way all the way to the polar bears,
and the polar bears were not happy with this, and
there was an attack. And I will an image right now.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
Please. This is fascinating to me in so many ways.
But one, I didn't know that black bears and polar
bears lived so close to each other. That's just something
I didn't know.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Yeah, polar bears live like in the north, in the Arctic,
but black bears can go that far up north too.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
Yeah. You travel far enough, you can get there. Yeah. Yeah,
And that must have been a really long way that
and maybe he thought, hey, maybe these are my I
can make buds with these guys. And they're like, oh,
hell no, I you better.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
Get Did you see did you see the picture of
the chat there?

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Yeah? Yes, oh, the polar bear.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
Yeah, and then the black bears on the left. Yes,
So that polar bears are the only bear on earth
that are only meat eaters like black bears, grizzly bears.
All of them eat berries and meat and stuff. Oh
scary fight. So eventually the mother bear scared off the
black bear, he said, adding he had never seen anything

(13:00):
like it in as many years of traveling. Sigurdson had
previously heard stories of other folks in the same area
seeing polar bears and black bears at the same time,
but nothing like his encounter. Along with his colleagues, he
hasn't been able to find similar encounters when searching for photos.
You'll share share another one here. They're not as cute
when they've had a kill.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
Oh wow. Oh that's just heartbreaking, dude, because those moms
were probably like, we have to protect these babies in
Oh they.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Won anyways, the black bear left.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
Yeah, all right.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
And I've got another one here. Scientists using muscles as
messengers of water quality testing for chemicals in Ontario's Grand River.
So by studying muscles in the Grand River Branford, Ontario,
a team of scientists hopes to better understand how some
chemicals are affecting the environment. Patty gillis a research scientists

(13:57):
with Environment and Climate Change Canada. Studies aquatic contaminants with
her team based in the Canadian Center for Inland Waters
in broins And, Ontario. She and her team use native
freshwater muscles as messengers of water quality to answer questions
about the distribution and effects of contaminants. Muscles don't move
around much. They bury themselves in sediment and filter water

(14:21):
through their gills, meaning they are exposed to contaminants from
the water and riverbed.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
So quote, maybe they've been exposed to something like a
metal or pharmaceuticals in the river that makes them not
as healthy. So we can quantify some of those things
by taking a piece of their tissue.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
I mean, how cool is that? How cool?

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Well, it's one of the dangers too of eating like
mussels and clams and all that. Yeah, what else is
the muscles? Clams? And I don't eat shellfish, but yeah,
to be careful because if the water's contaminated, they filter
all of them through them. Yeah, so it can be
a bad thing too.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Yeah, I don't. I don't really eat seafood at all,
So yeah, I didn't. I wasn't even thinking like, oh shit,
people are eating that though too.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Yeah, your team is sampling at the river downstream of
the municipality's waste water treatment plant. They're hoping to understand
how individual chemicals and mixtures of chemicals affect different muscle
species by studying their population, analyzing stresses. The mollusks are
under and testing their bodies for metals and chemicals. Other

(15:35):
teams are doing similar work by looking at other species,
including snails, birds, and fish. The overall initiative is to
a pilot project called the Integrated Chemical Mixture Project, which
is studying species in Brafford and Windsor, Ontario.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Well, I was gonna I was gonna say though that
Ned could come do a good thing for a good cause,
but he's in New Zealand and they're just right. Ah sorry, Ned, Sorry,
But I just think science is just the coolest thing
in the world, and just learning more and more about

(16:11):
how to do those things where you can tell okay,
this is contaminated, this is whatever. Like I think bioscience
is just really cool. Yeah, I agree, but that is
very scary for people who who eat that.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
Yeah, well, these ones are not meant to be eaten anyways,
They're they're putting a river that's obviously having some problems
with contaminants, but they're just using them as a great
way to.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Study it, right right, because the fish and stuff are
definitely ingesting it. Yeah, you think about that when you're
eating your next big seafood meal. Think about all the
contaminants and radioactivis in there. Bro.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
It's in all of our food and water and beer
and drinks and air and everything except in the States
because they're not testing for it anymore, so it doesn't exist.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
You are not wrong, my brother, at all.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Speaking of that, Do you want to move to politics.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
Let's go.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
I did not.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Have sexual relations for that woman, and then we're going.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
To watch it in DC to take back a White House.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
There you go, Why don't we just ask.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Obama? Obama, what is since he wind buys ut a
big amount.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
This will forever be my favorite sting of all time
because no matter how many times I hear it, I
laughed so hard it is crazy. Okay, Well, first, we
have Pokemon pushing back against ice deportation. Videos would advise
gy News on September twenty sixth, so someone in the

(18:20):
government decided that it was just this great idea to
splice up Pokemon footage and borrow their phrase got to
catch them all and pair it with clips of people
being deported, and to nobody surprise, the Pokemon Company International

(18:41):
was not amused. They made an official statement saying that
it had no part whatsoever in creating or distributing this
video and did not grant permission for its use of
its trademark material. So the footage surfaced on the Homeland
Securities X account and the White House is TikTok like

(19:07):
you know, businesses usual, and it racked up millions of views,
and when asked, a DHS spoke person cheekily like rift
on the Pokemon theme quote to arrest them as our
real test, to deport them as our cause. Okay, but

(19:38):
Pokemon is now a part of a growing list of
artists and brands that have publicly distanced themselves after their
work was used without consent by him. And these are
just some past grievances. I think this was recently when
THEO Vaughn was hurt and mad the podcaster THEO von

(20:04):
I'm not sure if you ever watch him or know
who he is. No idea kind of big time over here,
and he was upset. And he is a right leaning
kind of guy. I feel he tries to be neutral,
but he feels more right leaning. But he was like

(20:26):
upset about it, and DHS he let them know, like
take my voice off of there, that that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Yeah, yeah, I know. Don't use Pokemon for that kind
of bullshit. I misunderstood whether that was going actually because
I was like, yeah, Pokemon, Oh wait, no I have,
but Nintendo don't use don't use Pokemon for just poor
people trying to survive exactly exactly.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
I mean, you're using cartoons. That's yeah, dude, that's so dark,
honestly created by people from outside the United States. Yes,
that's really dark, you know. In twenty twenty four, Freedom

(21:19):
Beyonce a song that Kamala used for her run. He
used it without permission during one of his campaign runs
in twenty twenty four, and she was like, oh, hell
to no, you are not going to be playing my
song Freedom by like with Trump walking.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Out to that.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
No, I don't know. This band, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
issue to cease and desist over a DHS video using
their cover of a folk song The Rolling stones. British
singer Jess Glynn said, Oh, she actually said she was

(22:00):
sick after her song was overlaid on arrest footage.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Yeah, I bet so.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
You know, using music or video for promotional content typically
requires licenses from rights holders. Skipping that step can lead
to copyright trouble. So yeah, absolutely, but yeah you said
Pokemon of all things.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
Yep, damn all right. Canada issues warning for citizens with
gender neutra passports traveling the United States. Canadian government is
warning citizens who list X as their gender on their
passports they could have problems entered the United States or
other countries. In a change made in recent days, the

(22:49):
Department of Global Affairs added an advisory to the United
States Travel page for LGBTQ plus Canadian passport holders. Quote.
While the Government of can issues passwords with an ex
gender identifier, it cannot guarantee your entry or transit through
other countries, It wrote, you might face entry restrictions in
countries that do not recognize the ex gender identifier. The

(23:13):
notice advises that Canadians quote may still be asked to
provide your sex or gender information as either male or
female when entering. The move comes months after US President
Donald Trump signs an executive executive order directing the US
government to only recognize two sexes, male and female. The
order also directed that all documents issued in the US

(23:35):
federal government refer to sex rather than gender.

Speaker 2 (23:39):
Well, here's the thing, I'm so sick of these goddamn
executive orders. Number One, they're not federal law, so they're
just I mean, they haven't been signed into law or
anything like. You can't fucking do that.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
Yeah, it's stupid. So in January, the Canadian government said
an estimated thirty six hundred citizens have listed excess their
gender on their passports, an option that has been available
to Canadians since twenty nineteen. And I'm sure part of
that is because it does exclude them from some countries,
so there's probably less doing it than you'd expect.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Yeah, but still, oh my god, I just want to
know what does that matter. I need to know why
it matters. I agree, I think it matters to me
with all of these things, Let's get down to the
root of why it really matters. Because when you dig
deep enough, when you hit that route, it is gonna

(24:40):
be the Oh. The reason is, I'm actually a hateful
person who might be a bigot, a racist, you know,
anti all of this stuff, and you just don't want
to say it. Yeah, because this should not matter.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
I love this to this next sentence here. It's hilarious
because didn't the American government just shut down because they
couldn't sign Yeah. So, Jennifer Young, spokesman for the US
Embassy in Canada, said the current US government shutdown prevents
the embassy from commenting on the change. And this was
we know what. I guess this article was just updated

(25:18):
because it actually is now the first Okay, but yeah,
it's like, come on, Canada is now adding even more
travel advisories for com I mean, that's just wild.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
It's said, Okay, we have to talk about this. This
is what I've been hearing about on Twitter ever since
it's been announced. It's all I've seen in the news
is about Bad Bunny at the super Bowl and Maga
throws a fit. This is from the USA today. Megastar

(25:57):
Bad Bunny is going to be headlining the twenty twenty
six Super Bowl halftime show in Santa Clara, California, and
most people responded with excitement, but Maga World responded in
Maga fashion. I guess you could say. The objections are

(26:19):
he sings in Spanish, advocates for Puerto Rico and isn't
particularly fond of Trump.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
I mean, I've also heard they're saying that they should
be an American that.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Performs you know what. People are so damn dumb, my yes,
you don't even know.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
Puerto Rico is an American protector. Riever, they are American citizens.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
Yes, my.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
God, if they didn't speak Spanish, they would be a state.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
Right, we'll get to that. I have so much to
rant about about that. This is quote, does does this
guy really scream American football to anyone? One? Conservator influencer asked,
and the next thing says, apparently forgetting Puerto Rico is
part of the US. There you go.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Supporters do point out that Bad Bunny's resume blockbuster albums,
sold out residencies, Hollywood roles, which you know would be
to me, exactly the kind of person that you would
want at the super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
Also a pre super Bowl.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
Yeah yeah, yeah, oh my god.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
People are so fucking dumb.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
I can't. His critics, however, are saying that this performance
might turn into a giant anti ICE rally. Bad Bunny's
presence matters because it slams head on with the politics
that normalized scoffing at Spanish in public and brushing off

(28:05):
Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. He's long refused to play
US shows, you know, because he quit and he left
for a while and wouldn't do any shows here yep,
because it was putting his fans at risk of ice raids,
and so he just didn't do it. Now he's taken

(28:25):
that stance to the to America's biggest stage. One TikTok
influencer said, quote, it's representation, it's defiance, it's joy and
the face of people who tried to shrink us. So
while Maga is melting down online, you know, Latino kids

(28:46):
get to prove that they don't need to code switch
to belong and the rest of us get a halftime
show that's actually worth watching and we love to see it.
I mean even if some of the so I know
he does English and Spanish, but like some of the
songs are in English and whatever. But my question is, okay,

(29:11):
this is my whole thing about the executive order shit earlier,
because Trump had an executive order that America's official language
is English, but that is not federal law, so it's
I mean, it's still not an English only speaking country,

(29:32):
like that's that was just an executive order. It's not law,
so exactly, and people are saying, all right.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
Also, baby Metal is a massive band in the United
States now for metal music, and they mostly sing in Japanese.
Yeahign has always been popular in the United States and
they sing in German. Yeah, just because they're suddenly super rate,
well not suddenly, but they're super racist against Hispanic people.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
So they're kick, they're outwardly brave now dumb. Yeah, but
so since he said, you know, English is America's language
or whatever, and it just people are so cruel just
to be cruel because they're like why even have him

(30:25):
there if none of us can understand him?

Speaker 3 (30:27):
Or like.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
This is America, you should have to speak English, Like
what are you talking about? We are a big melting pot.
Puerto Rico is part of the United States. It's literally
like why does everything have to be for the whites
for it to be okay? You know the ones that.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Stole themous people?

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, those those ones. They're always like if
it's not Metallica or kid rock or like I don't know.
I hate to say Metallica because I do like Metallica, but.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Yeah, they hate people that download their music.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Right, Oh my gosh, Napster throwback. I'll at the pop
Culture Diary because I'm sure we'll be getting.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
To that like in like four years.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
But yeah, I think that the other people who live
in this country who don't speak English that are around
English speaking majority all day long, or you know, they
I don't know, they don't get to experience their culture
on display like this. Why can't like last year you

(31:50):
were on they were on Kendred.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Lamar for.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
The same thing, different different prejudice. You know. It's yeah,
it's disgusting.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
It's so frustrating because it's just like in Canada with
the CFL, the Canadian Football League, we have the Gray Cup,
which is our super Bowl, and it's often not Canadian bands.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
So yeah, and last year here in Vancouver we had
the Jonas Brothers, which are an American band, and then
we had Green Day the year before in Hamilton, Ontario.
A couple of years ago we had who's this person,

(32:44):
Tyler Hubbard, I don't know who that is, Jordan Davis
and Josh Ross. I'm not sure who they are. We
had the Rcels the year before that, Keith Urban in
twenty nineteen, but who cares.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
It's just exact exactly exactly Shania.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Twain in twenty seventeen, which is Canadian, but yeah, yeah,
who cares, Like you go back even like imagine Dragons
in twenty fourteen, like exactly, they're not Canadian and we're
not all pissed off people were.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
Talking about like the Who, and like just so many
other people who even if they were from Canada to
wherever else like Australia, Germany, like they were all they've
all done.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
It, and I mean, you know what, like the Who,
good band. Yeah, but the whole idea of these acts
are supposed to be bringing in younger people and new
people to the sport. So you're not going to play
some friggin stupid act that isn't like at all relevant anymore.
You play somebody's relevant to bring in. And the NFL

(33:53):
is trying to be a global sport, so the last
thing they need is some friggin nobody act that the
maga idiots love.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
Yeah exactly, I just yeah, I totally agree with that.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
Oh yeah, yeah, all right, Well I've got one here,
so I always forget his freaking last name, Pierre. We
call it Peepee. The leader of the Conservative Party of
Canada our a little like mini Trump loser. He claims
that Christians may be the number one victim of hate
based violence.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
Oh, come on.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Right. Considered of leader, Peepee said on Monday that Christians
and their places of worship are being targeted and infelected.
He will cracked on a religious based hate through tougher
sanctions on crimes like arson speaking reporters. In an announcement
on food inflation, Pierre said that he watched with alarm
at the terrible spat of church birnings, incidents he described

(34:54):
as terrorist attacks. I've not heard about these church burnings,
he claims, one hundred urches of being burned. Christians maybe
number one group that are victims of hate based violence,
but of course it's not politically correct to say.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
That mean perpetrators of YAH perpetrators one percent.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
According to the most recent Statistics Canada data, the majority
of hate crimes targeting a religion reported by police in
twenty twenty three were directed at Jewish people seventy percent
and Muslims sixteen percent. There were a total of twelve
hundred and eighty four hate crimes targeted or targeting a
religion that year, a sharp sixty seven percent increase from

(35:38):
twenty twenty two, and the phenomenon largely driven by more
police reported incidents against Jewish nine hundred hate crimes and
Muslims two hundred and eleven communities. Right, so this is
all just bullshit drummed up by conserative losers.

Speaker 2 (35:54):
The thing is, they know if they just fucking say
it online or if they just say anything anywhere now
on national television, international television, no matter if it's a
lie or not, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter because
people are not gonna believe otherwise and they know it.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
Yeah, so it does, say Staff's Canada does show there
was an uptick in hate crimes directed at Catholics in
twenty twenty one, a religion based violence that came after
the Unfortunately I can't pronounce these first nation's reserves here
or these nations, but they were grounds of the former

(36:35):
Catholic run Kamlops Indian residential schools indicated as many as
two hundred and fifty children had been buried on these sites.
So that's not like This is just because Indigenous people
are fucking sick and tired of being perpetrated against. Exactly,
there were forty three police reported crimes turdeting Catholics twenty twenty,

(36:55):
and that did jump to one hundred and fifty five
the year after, But it's sharply less than Jewish and
Muslim people.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
Oh yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
Then again in twenty twenty two that dropped significantly against.
This is just more fear and hate drummed up by
this loser, Pierre. Yeah, he just just wants to be
the little Canadian Trump and he's just try to sell
us out to the United States.

Speaker 2 (37:20):
That's disgusting. Okay, so so we know apparently he's got
to be working with somebody in America. Oh yeah, to
make this little crossover.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
I'm gonna send it a picture of him. He even
looks like a fucking asshole.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
Oh god, oh god, I just want to punch him
in the face right, not even doing anything, not making
a facial expression or anything. But he has such a kickable,
punchable face.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Yes he does. He is. He is so unpopular that
he lost his seat in Ontario and he had to
kick someone out of their Alberta seat and government because
they've never basically been anything but conservative there. But the
fun part about Battle River, Alberta, where he won and
finally got back into government as the leader of the

(38:16):
Conservative Party in like the nineties or whatever. They had
a freaking neo Nazi music festival there, so you know
they've got some issues there.

Speaker 2 (38:26):
Oh my god, right, yeah, they there's always silence when
we see live on our feeds on TikTok these neo
Nazis and prow boys and straight up Nazis KKK members
in their outfit walking down the streets just like taunting people.

(38:50):
It's like, where are they?

Speaker 3 (38:53):
Then?

Speaker 2 (38:54):
Where have they been when all of these black men
have been found hanging lately? Yep, Like where hello? Crickets?

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Of course, because they're not Christian nationalist whitefuckers. Yeah, alright,

(39:28):
organized crime figure dead, two others injured and shooting at
laval Quebec Starbucks.

Speaker 2 (39:34):
Holy shit, tell me that all the details.

Speaker 1 (39:38):
A manmatized organized crime was killed and two others were
seriously injured in a daylight shooting at a Starbucks and
a busy strip mall leave al Quebec, which authority said
bore hallmarks of a planned hit. Radio Canada. Sources have
confirmed that victim Oh God, Charle Bois, Oh Jesus, I'm
gonna send you this name. I'm gonna keep trying, but

(39:59):
I'm not saying gonna know, but holy shit.

Speaker 2 (40:01):
Oh yeah, I'm definitely probably.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
Not Lumba's Theologo.

Speaker 2 (40:08):
I don't know Sharlabas Theogo.

Speaker 1 (40:13):
Okay, there we go. He's also known as Bobby the Greek.
I'm gonna go with Bobby the Greek.

Speaker 2 (40:17):
Oh, Bobby the Greek is, dude, you just said that.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
I haven't read that far ahead yet. Two people injured
in the shooting were members of his gang, the Chamblay Greeks.
Lavelle police rushed to the Starbucks, located at the corner
of Highway four forty Service Road and one hundredth Avenue
after seeing an I'm on one call at ten thirty
am reporting the shooting. At the time, the busy complex,

(40:44):
which features other restaurants and businesses, was packed with people.
Public Safety Minister Ian Lefrenier I Think told reporters in
Quebec City that one person had been killed the two
others injured, but he said that the shooting appeared to
be a targeted One acted with organized crime, and he
didn't think that any innocent victims had been harmed. But

(41:06):
still happening in the Starbucks at ten thirty am in
the morning. This is not something I'm happy about, he said.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
So he was known for his involvement in oversight of
an extortion ring in Laval. His criminal record includes multiple
convictions for conspiracy, weapons charges in drug trafficking. He was
sentenced to four years in prison for conspiracy and aggravated
assault in two thousand and seven, and shortly after he
was released to five years in prison for drug trafficking

(41:35):
in twenty ten. CBC has verified a photo of Circumling
on social media taken inside the Starbucks, which shows three
men lying on the ground, one with a visible wound.
The man appears to have been seated in a lounge
arey near the back of the cafe.

Speaker 2 (41:52):
Oh my gosh, were there any children there or any
It doesn't.

Speaker 1 (41:58):
Say, but I mean it said it was full ap people,
full of customers.

Speaker 2 (42:01):
Oh god, that is terrifying. Like that has to be.
One of the worst scenarios for me is to like
be out somewhere like shopping, and then all of a sudden,
the person in your line or anywhere in the store
just starts losing their shit and you're just paralyzed in fear.

(42:28):
That's That's one of the worst things I could ever imagine.
That's why I like instacart, Instacart's Great door Dash, anything
like that, because being out in stores, especially after you know,
doing true crime for so long, the first thing I
think about when I step into a store is like, God,

(42:53):
I really don't want there to be a shooter in
here today, Like, go, just let me get out of here.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
America. See, I don't even think of that one, you know,
living here. I mean, this was in Canada, still gun
to islands here, but not like it is in.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
The States, right right, all.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
Right, go for it. That's probably good enough.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
This is interesting because it could have gone in the
animal part or the crime part. But I think it
belongs here for sure, more than our animals, because those
are usually you know, compassionate. I don't know, more cuddly

(43:36):
filly animals stories that we do. They're funny. This is horrible.
So this was from the AP News and Huffington Post.
I don't know the date except September twenty twenty five.
To look on here I've just wrote my sources down.

(43:56):
In Hudson, Florida, a sixty one year old man decided
just a normal neighbor dispute was apparently too boring. So
the owner, the sixty one year old male, he had peacocks,

(44:18):
and so since they were in an argument, he went
and killed, cooked, and ate two of his own pet peacocks.

Speaker 1 (44:28):
Holy chick.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
Why because his neighbor had been feeding them. Okay, his
neighbor had been feeding the peacocks, and he left a
letter promising more bird carnage if the feeding didn't stop.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
Oh my god. People are fucking stupid god.

Speaker 2 (44:53):
As they usually are. But because like, you're feeding my peacocks,
I would read, other, go kill them then you feed them?

Speaker 1 (45:02):
What I don't, I don't get either.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
Authorities charged him with aggravated animal cruelty, which is a
third degree felony. He also admitted to cutting their necks,
bleeding them, and frying them up, and planning to dispatch
the rest of his peacocks to avoid future metaling.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
I laugh here because it almost sounds like he did
these peacocks in a halal fashion.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
I mean, seriously, but.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
When like for how for hulal? For what I understand
for like, yeah, for Muslim people, the animals are drained
the blood right away.

Speaker 2 (45:48):
Yeah, yeah, so weird. Oh my god. But you know,
I just don't. I don't understand the mind of these people.
And thank goodness, right, but yeah, most of the people
we've written about. It's like, how does your mind work?

(46:09):
Like I need to know how and why you think
killing your peacocks just because this man is feeding them?
Like what what made you come to that conclusion in
your mind? Like that was a good idea?

Speaker 1 (46:25):
Yeah, something's wrong with that noggin for sure.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
Oh I do have one more crime.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
Go for it. I dope, but go for it.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
This is a quick one, okay. September thirtieth, in sam Bruno, California,
police doing a DUI operation watched away MO self driving
taxi commit an illegal U turn. Well they pulled it over,

(46:55):
but they looked in the driver's seat and there was
no person there, and I guess that shocked them. I
don't know, It's like, what did you expect? But the
officers declined to issue a ticket because one person noted
on social media too that their citation books don't have
a box for robot, so they basically were thinking the

(47:19):
same thing, and the department's post added no driver, no hands,
no clue. They contacted WAIM to report this glitch, and
the company says that it's investigating and committed to road safety.
Under current law, only people can get moving violations, so

(47:40):
the car was left off of that for now.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
It's almost like the laws need to change there because
if there's a vehicle driving on the road, exactly.

Speaker 2 (47:51):
Here's the laws yesterday. Oh my gosh. Oh but there
is hope. There is a new California law taking effect
in July of twenty twenty six that will allow police
to report autonomous vehicle violations to the DMV. Because you
got to think they have those little robots that also

(48:14):
carry food to people. Yeah, they have all different kind
of stuff like that. So I mean, yeah, who gets
the ticket? That's so they are putting a new law
into effect in July in California. We need that pretty
much everywhere now.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
I mean, like I don't trust the police, but also
if a car is driving by itself, someone should be liable.

Speaker 3 (48:38):
Yeah, but come on, well, I'm gonna do this because
I've been getting more vocal lately.

Speaker 2 (48:57):
Oh goodness, it's.

Speaker 1 (48:59):
Real forces board Gaza flotilla detained Greta Thurberg other activists.
The Israeli military has intercepted several ships from the flotilla
of vessels carrying humanitarian aid to the besieged Gaza Strip,
detaining many of the activists on board. At least three
ships from the global simooed flotilla, made up of forty

(49:20):
four vessels and some five hundred activists, were intercepted approximately
seventy nautical miles one hundred and thirty kilometers east or
from the coast of Gaza, according to organizers. Israel's the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs set in a post on AX
on Wednesday that several vessels of the flotilla were safely
stopped and their passages or passengers are being transferred to

(49:43):
in an Israeli port. It's remote that a Swedish activist,
Greta Thurberg, was who had been on board the lead
ship Alma, and her friends are safe and healthy. The
mister also shared a video showing Thurmberg. So far, at
least six ships have been intercepted by Israeli navy, according
to an activist group. The names of the vessels are

(50:04):
the Der Yassin, the Mali, Huga, Specter Adara, Ala and Syrus.
Several ships were targeted by acts of quote active aggression.
It says Florida vessel had been deliberately rammed at sea,
Lara Matique and others have been targeted with water cannons.

(50:28):
All passengers on board were unharmed and added before being intercepted,
the vessels had succeeded in sailing beyond the point where
the Madeleine flotilla was intercepted by his ready forces. And
I'd seen another one that said that most of the
boats were still continuing on and they had made it
to like fifty kilometers from shore. So I'm reody hoping
that they make it because what Israel's doing and blockading

(50:51):
Aid de Gaza is absolutely fucking disgusting.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
Yeah, and it wasn't gosh, or maybe it was. Wasn't
it a while back when we weren't even sure if
Greta was okay because the video that had come out
that when they were on the boat that had been
that's been like what two months ago, So they're still that,
you know.

Speaker 1 (51:15):
Oh, they've been using fear tactics and blowing up munitions
near the boats to scare of them.

Speaker 2 (51:23):
And it might not have been two months ago, so
I just feel like it's been a long time ago
since I've heard about it. But yeah, that that's just
so cruel.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
So yeah, it looks like they're still a Malaysian PM
denounces ISEAL's intimidation protesting Argentina in capital over Israeli raid
on flotilla. It looks like they've detained more than two
hundred people an hour ago, but it just said there
was like five hundred people, So there's still a lot
of people going. Yeah, they've only they've only got thirteen

(51:56):
vessels so far as of two hours ago, so hopefully
some of them make it, and uh.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
How are the other ones making it through? Making it
past that point?

Speaker 1 (52:07):
There's only Israel has a pretty small navy. It sounds
like there's only so many navy ships that they can use,
and there is over what did I see forty four vessels?
So yeah, so many vessels. Yeah, So, like I said,
I hope some of these get through with aid because
Israel is literally burying and burning aid that's supposed to

(52:29):
go there, and they're murdering people try to bring aid in.

Speaker 2 (52:33):
Yeaheah, Okay, your turn Okay, well, this one isn't too
uh too light, But going from that subject to this one,
they're both just as dark to me. During a routine
maintenance at Charlotte Douglas International Airport, workers made a discovery

(52:56):
of a deceased stowaway hid inside the landing gear compartment
of an American Airline flight that had just arrived from Europe. Okay, Jesus,
this is insane. The body was pronounced dead at the scene.
The police have launched a homicide investigation, but so far

(53:19):
they're not disclosing the identity, the cause of death, or
the flight's original origins. They just are saying from Europe
to here. So experts warned that this sort of an
attempt is extraordinarily risky and most don't survive the cold,

(53:39):
low oxygen, or the mechanical forces that are involved when
the wheels retract or extend. So like that. I don't
know why anyone would do that on purpose, but they're
basically saying, like, don't because you're not gonna survive the
cold of a low oxygen. I mean, I am on

(54:05):
the side of I don't think he did that by choice.
I haven't looked further into it. It's something I definitely
want to keep an eye on.

Speaker 1 (54:14):
Yeah, for sure, I.

Speaker 2 (54:17):
Might even like this is this kind of thing is
so interesting to me when people are found in weird
places and it's just, you know, remains a mystery until
twenty twenty five years later they finally figure out what's happened.
You know, it's just stories like this. I don't know.

(54:37):
The mystery of it is interesting to me.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Agreed. I'm afraid being famous isn't the same being a
true heros. Ladies and gentlemen. Please clear that's all right,
Beloved children's writer Robert Munch for assisted dying. Robert Munch

(55:02):
has been approved for medically assisted dying in Canada at
the age of eighty. The children's writer, whose eighty five
published books include Paperbag Princess and Love You Forever, was
diagnosed with dementia in twenty twenty one and also has
Parkinson's disease. Talking with The New York Times magazine, he
said that a confirmed date of his death has not

(55:24):
been confirmed. However, said he would go when I start
having real trouble talking and communicating, then I'll know. Canada
first legalized euth in Asia in twenty sixteen. For people
with terminal illnesses. In twenty twenty one, the law was
changed to include those with serious and chronic physical conditions,
even in non life threatening circumstances. Munch has sold more

(55:49):
than eighty million copies of his books in North America alone,
and they have been translated into at least twenty languages,
including Arabic, Spanish and oh It's an indigenous language of
North America that I care.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
Not read oh Wow.

Speaker 1 (56:02):
In the interview, the celebrated author said his decision was
influenced by watching his brother die from Louke Garrick's disease,
the most common form of motor neuron disease. Much recalled,
they kept him alive through all these interventions, I thought,
let him die. So In Canada, people over the age
of eighteen must meet several requirements to be eligible for

(56:24):
assistant dying, such as having an incurable illness. Their quest
should not be made under any kind of external pressure,
and be in an advanced state of irreversible decline and
capacity or capability. Much's daughter Julie posted on Facebook that
her father's decision to pursue medically assistant dying was made
five years ago, discussing the interview, she said, nowhere does

(56:48):
it say my dad isn't doing well, nor that he's
going to die anytime soon. Court to Canadian law, the
person must be able to actively consent on the day
of his death and medically. This is a dying accounts
for four point seven percent of deaths in Canada in
twenty twenty three, as for the most recent official guidelines, Like,

(57:08):
I was a big fan of Robert Munch when I
was a kid, and I know he's a Canadian children's author,
but I didn't actually realize he was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
and then he moved to Canada in nineteen seventy five.

Speaker 2 (57:19):
Oh, I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (57:22):
Yeah, he came up to work at the University of Guelph, Ontario,
and he was born in nineteen forty five, so he
became a Canadian in nineteen eighty three, so I was
one years old.

Speaker 2 (57:36):
Yeah, I know, that's that's very tough talk to have.
But yeah, if you know, if I needed to have
that talk with somebody, that's if I could, you know,
if there was any way in the world that would
be how I would want to go.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Yeah, on your own terms, right.

Speaker 2 (57:58):
Yeah, I know people have so many different takes on it,
but you know, he the most important thing is is
he went the way.

Speaker 1 (58:07):
He's going to go. He's going to go. Yeah, yeah,
I did it. He wrote a book. His latest book
came out last year, so he's even now with his
health dropping in twenty twenty one or was it nineteen,
he's actually written a bunch of books. Still.

Speaker 2 (58:26):
Oh that's amazing.

Speaker 1 (58:29):
I actually got to meet him when I was a
fairly young kid at a book signing and reading. Oh
and as a child, I was so confused because he
autographs Bob Munch, not Robert Munch.

Speaker 2 (58:44):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (58:46):
Yeah, I don't know what book it was that got autographed.
It's been lost to history, right, my god. It's sad,
but good for him.

Speaker 2 (58:56):
Yeah yeah, Well, just so people don't get too upset.
This is another very very dark one, but very important
as they all are, but you know, significant as sad.
It's sad. Yeah, it's goads sad. But we've hit you

(59:18):
with so many sad ones back to back. Just know
there is one coming up that be Okay, it's coming
up next, so won't be sad. But Jane goodall the
renowned British primatologist and conservationist. She passed away today. She
passed away today, was this man? Yeah, she passed away

(59:43):
actually today. So she passed away earlier today and at
the age of ninety one. The Jane Goodall Institute confirmed
her death, noting her like lasting impact on the study
of chimpanzee ease in her lifelong dedication to environmental and

(01:00:04):
animal welfare causes. Jane's pioneering research in Gombay Stream National Park,
Tanzania challenged previous scientific assumptions about human uniqueness, specifically regarding
tool use among chimpanzees, and her work not only advanced

(01:00:30):
primatology but also showed the importance of conservation and ethical
treatment of animals. She founded the Jane Goodall Institute in
nineteen seventy seven and it continues to support wildlife research,
conservation efforts, and community centered programs. She has the Roots

(01:00:52):
and Shoots program, which empowers young people to engage in
environmental and and humanitarian initiatives, which is really cool.

Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
I definitely know her name, but I didn't know much
about her life, so.

Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
It's really yeah, you know, and everybody I remember when
I was growing up, people that would see her on
television or whatever. They would kind of label her as crazy.
They would just say, wow, you know this woman, I

(01:01:27):
can't believe she's doing this, or you know, it was
just like unreal to people that she was doing it,
but you know, living out there with them like that.
So Jane received numerous accolades, including the Templeton Prize in
twenty twenty one and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in

(01:01:48):
twenty twenty five. She was always active as far as
being an advocate for the planet, stressing the urgency of
addressing environmental challenges, and her pass I Seeing marks the
end of an era in primatology and conservation, but her
legacy will live on through the ongoing work of her

(01:02:11):
institute and the countless people who are inspired by her
and who are also dedicated to understanding and preserving the
natural world as Jane did. So a good.

Speaker 1 (01:02:25):
Person was lost, for sure. Yeah. Yeah, Well, I'm just
glad she did all the heart of the good work
she did.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
Yeah. Yeah, me too. It's hard to put into words
how shocking it was. I mean, I knew she was
kind of up there in age, but I hadn't heard
about her in so long, and to see that the
first thing I read on her and forever is that
it just hit me in the chest.

Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
How about we end on somebody with a really weird
looking chest with a weird looking abdominal situation going on.

Speaker 1 (01:03:00):
I didn't know he had that, but here we go.
Some people think I'm an alien. I mean, what would
you rather have, like a gasoline cell phone or about
your cell phone? I mean it was like no brainer.
You know, I didn't really have a business line. Yeah,
I haven't had a bus. I had a business plan
way back in this the two days. Much less than

(01:03:24):
we spend on healthcare, but maybe more than we spend
our lipstick, you know, and something like that. And I
like lipstick blooded.

Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
Like if you had like crack cocaine on Mars, like
in prepackaged you know, palettes, it still wouldn't make sense
to transport it back here.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
My god, he says a lot of stupid things.

Speaker 2 (01:03:56):
Yes, that is an iconic sting going on there. I can't.
I love it all right, So I guess we can
end on the fact that Elon Musk his intelligence company
x Ai, is developing a new online encyclopedia named Grockipedia. Yeah,

(01:04:29):
so Elon thinks that he or is aiming to or
thinks he can go beyond Wikipedia when it comes to
accuracy and objectivity, which.

Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
So Nazi propaganda.

Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
Okay, yes, yes, that is what that is code for.
And Elon criticized Wikipedia for alleged bias and claimed Grokipedia
would be a massive improvement. The platform will utilize xai's
chatbot grock to autonomously assess and enhance the content. While

(01:05:14):
Grockipedia is still in development, Elon emphasized that it was
important for xai's mission to understand the universe. The project
has sparked discussions about AI's role in how it curates
information and the challenges of ensuring neutrality in automated systems.

Speaker 1 (01:05:36):
Oh my god, there's no neutrality in anything to do.

Speaker 2 (01:05:40):
With x No, no at all. And the times that
it will sometimes lean left and sometimes lean right, and
then sometime like it is so weird the way if
a Republican asks something, they'll give them the answer they
and then somebody else will have to have a follow

(01:06:02):
up question and then it says yeah, actually, and it's like, well,
you're not being accurate from the first place.

Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
What every time that it gives something that's centrist or
left Leaningon goes and like guts it again so that
it only talks Nazi.

Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
Headpoints exactly exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Starts to go and read these again and start to
go back to the senator. Yeah, and Eon has to
with it again and then go for genocide again.

Speaker 2 (01:06:33):
Yes exactly. I was gonna say, it's yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1 (01:06:40):
Definitely it fucking Elon.

Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
Dude, this is what I'm scared of, Like what this
world is coming to with not just AI, but AI
in the hands of people like Elon, and what he
can afford to do with it, you know, yea creating
your own grockopedia. It's just that the scary thing to

(01:07:09):
me is is how people like Elon have the most
access to AI and can manipulate things very easily depending
on his hands. AI is in you know that and
the and the future is AI.

Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
So fortunately, well we'll see all the AI companies are
losing so much money that they might fail to so
we can hope.

Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
I mean, you would think they would eventually be able
to just tell chat GPT to rewrite a whole new
history book where white people were perfect this, this, that,
and this, you know, to fit their narrative. I mean,
it could literally happen, and I know it sounds crazy,
but they could do it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
And there's only half the pop is population United States
believe it.

Speaker 2 (01:08:03):
Yeah yeah, more than half. Way more than half.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
Maybe I'm trying to be uh positive, but trying to
be optimistic.

Speaker 2 (01:08:15):
I wonder hoping if it's more bots that we see
online and not in real life.

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
It's just there's a lot like Twitter's always claimed or
acts whatever, it's always claiming that there's no bots, blah
blah blah. No, it's fucking riddled with bots.

Speaker 2 (01:08:33):
Oh yeah, I get followed by fucking definite bots every day.
So yeah, if.

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
There's letters and then a whole string of numbers, it's
probably a bot.

Speaker 2 (01:08:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
Well, why don't you tell the people your name of
your podcast again? One more time?

Speaker 2 (01:08:51):
Okay, So the name of the podcast is The Pop
Culture Diary and it has episodes nineteen eighty one eighty two,
and new episodes will be released every Friday at eight
seven Central. I used to love how on tgif they
would put like eight seven central. So that's how I

(01:09:12):
kind of that's how I kind of tell people all
the time. So uh yeah, I'm on Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram,
if you type in the pop culture Diary in any
of those places, you should see it pop up. So
reach out. Let me know. Also any topic segments, anything
like that that you'd like to dig more into, because

(01:09:36):
I'm totally down for that. But yeah, Pert, thanks, thanks
for thanks for letting me plug again. I appreciate well.

Speaker 1 (01:09:45):
Thanks for tuning to brew Crime News, and thanks for
supporting us. See you next week. Bye.

Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
Thanks for having me on Mike course. Miss you.

Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
So make sure to behave yourself or fuck around and
find out you might find yourself on Brue Crime News.
For all of the sources of this episode of Brue
Crime News, head to the Brue Crime podcast feed. This
has been a production of Brue Crime
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