All Episodes

August 11, 2024 • 63 mins

Join The Community:
https://discord.gg/dTb9HDmPhW

Consider Supporting Us For A Few Bucks A Month:
https://himedia.gg/tip

Podcasts:
https://himedia.gg/podcasts

Subscribe On Youtube:
https://bit.ly/himvideo

Social Media:
https://himedia.gg/
https://facebook.com/HIMediaTV
https://instagram.com/himediatv
https://bsky.app/profile/himediatv.bsky.social
https://twitter.com/HIMediaTV

Merch Store:
https://himedia.gg/merch

Support HI Media!
💵💵💵💵💵💵💵💵💵💵
You Doing Content Creation? Get 9 Bucks Off A Streamlabs Sub With Most Of The Tools You Need To Stream/Create Content. Its A Decent Quick And Dirty Way To Get Started:
https://streamlabs.com/refer/evanhaggard-1599-10?t=2

Want The Games We Play? Buy Them On Our Nexus And Support the Show!:
http://bit.ly/himnexus

=======================
Big Thank You To VLNS BEATS for making the Outro music you heard In This video
https://msha.ke/vlnsbeats/

Big Thank You To Mikel From Gamechops for making the background music you heard In This video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQ2OhGwZaK4

#HIMedia

-

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-rundown--6168942/support.



Join The Community:https://discord.gg/dTb9HDmPhW 

Get Cool Rewards For Supporting The Show:https://himedia.gg/perks

Podcasts:https://himedia.gg/podcasts

Subscribe On Youtube:https://bit.ly/himvideo

Social Media:https://himedia.gg/ 
https://facebook.com/HIMediaTV
https://instagram.com/himediatv
https://bsky.app/profile/himediatv.bsky.social
https://twitter.com/HIMediaTV


Merch Store:https://himedia.gg/merch



Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, ladies and gentlemen, Welcome back to the twentieth Rundown episode.
I know, wild right, we're almost half a year. Almost
half a year we are. It's uh. Once we hit
the twenty five mark, we will it'll be uh. I'd

(00:22):
say once we hit the fiftieth episode, I'd say that
should probably be season one fair, very fair that or
or you know, yeah, just because like that's a whole year.
But we have a few things today. We're gonna start
with like the political shit for like the next fifteen
to twenty minutes, specifically Biden dropping out and so in

(00:45):
the shoot with Tenacious D. Then we're then we're getting
and then we're getting and then at the twenty minute
mark we're going to start talking about noble shit. So
you feel free to skip ahead if you don't want
us listen to that if you do, stick around. So
let's start with the elephant in the room, Biden stepping down.
It was announced at nine pm. This is a good thing.
We are in agreement with this. There is no debate

(01:07):
needed to be had.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
I think me and Evan, to take it even further,
agree that Trump is a genuine enough threat that regardless
of experience or age in a particular field. A new
face was just needed.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
I think that Kamala. While I do have a lot
of criticisms of Kamala Harris's policies and politics specifically she's
a cop for one thing, I will say though, it
will be fun to start writing all of them. Seeing
all these thin pieces written about Donald Trump, about how
he's too old, about how his gaps are too much,

(01:45):
and how he should be the president. And the thing
is is that Trump has too much of a need.
Don't get me wrong. Biden absolutely had enough of an ego,
but he was also, like, you know, not a bad president.
So I think Trump will very much.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
End up.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
I think I think Trump will be very mad by
those things. Things as hell, I'll write a think piece
like that. I'll post it on my fucking medium. Fun fact,
before we get back, before we get continue on this,
I actually started releasing the show notes on on my
medium page. So if you want to go listen to
that from folks as well, that's there too. The rundown
yea at least.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
Yeah, I just want to say quick, I hope back
to the karma versus Trump now, I just hope that
people's dissatisfaction with Karmla, doesn't you know eclipse the dissatisfaction
slash hatred they have for a Trump esque figure. I'm
just I don't know. I'm very anxious to see what

(02:50):
the election of results you're going to be. Now. I'm
excited to see the debate. We're actually going to have
a debate where they debate point yeah, finally.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
And I'll give coma credit. She's a sassy bitch, so
she's gonna like fucking There is nothing more entertaining than
watching a black woman bully an old racist.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Man, exactly, and for that I'll be here for it.
And I really hope that you know the points of
politics when we get back to that, because it's well,
I mean.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
I mean, if we were talking, if we were looking
at this from the perspective of just like political points
and policy, Biden would have had to step down. And
it wouldn't have been a question because Biden's policies from
like the labor, economic, and in certain situations social have
been relatively stellar. The only downsides, the only things that
I can think that are negative that are negative but

(03:45):
were negative about his presidency for the last four years,
most left wing president in my lifetime. Was he continued
Donald Trump's border policies in terms of like you know,
internment camps at the border and his enable lientment of
Israel's genocide of gossam in Palestinians. So it's like he's

(04:06):
eighty percent I, which is still better than like every
other fucking president we've had so far.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
I just want to say, I think the reason that
he had to step down is because it's not the
eighties anymore. You can't Ronald Reaganett. You really can't. People
have eyes and ears and social media, you know, the
big difference between now in the eighties. I would definitely
say that, Yeah, having a brain dead president, no matter
how good their policies are, it just won't vode well

(04:35):
for the American public, especially when people were telling the
American public this is the threat to democracy.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Yeah, I'm worried about some of the labor victories we've
gotten with Kamala as a potential president, just because again
she's a fucking cop and she's a shit.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
Lit Well, have you guys I could still hear me?

Speaker 1 (05:05):
Uh? I agree, Evan, Yeah, I'm really sorry about that.
Snap who everyone. My computer just randomly had a stroke.
I don't know what happened. It just got was weird.
But what were you saying.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
I believe you were talking about how Carmela was a
ship lib and then you cut out.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
Kama's a shit lib. She. You know, I don't know
how the labor victories and the economic victories and the
AGA and the more left wing you know, economic changes
that Biden has done are going to I don't know
if they'll survive under her presidency. Unfortunately, I think I'm
worried that she because here's the thing. To Biden's credit,

(05:51):
he was always like, especially later in life, he was
very much more on like recognizing, hey, we gotta throw
a fucking boat to the work to like the middle
and lower classes. You know, he was very much like
which you know, he was very much He's no Bernie Sanders, obviously,

(06:11):
but you know, but he.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Was doing it as best he could do with like
a corporate not necessarily corporate, but corporate democrat is in
that framework.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
It was about as far he was about. He was
almost not a corporate democrat, you know what I mean.
He was just like a hair's breadth away, like he
was always just off being based. He was based in
a lot of shit, But there's just like he was
all the vibe was always just like one dope thing away.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
From being who And I think, especially with the last
three weeks, with all the interviews he's been doing since
the debate, if he came off more charismatic then narcissistic,
I feel like he would have never stepped down. But
a lot of the interviews and a lot of reaction
to the interviews Democrats included, have been he's being way
too narcissistic and acting like he's the only one who

(07:05):
could do this, and realistically he just doesn't have the
sauce like that.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
He did have the sauce in the past. I don't
know if I don't know why they've been giving him
the long last thing, a dream come instead of the
fast acting of dream.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
If this was twenty sixteen, if this was twenty sixteen
Biden versus Trump, I without a doubt Biden would have
took it, and twenty twenty the same results would have happened.
I just don't understand why they really, really fucking tried
so hard to shoehorn Clinton into this whole thing like
it's so funny.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
I think it was because Hillary Clinton had paid her dues,
she had made all her friends, and she was like,
I want the presidency in enough party big weights were like, okay,
you can have it. And they threw her. They threw
their back behind her. You know, it's it's Obama one,

(07:57):
Obama one, because he was just the more popular camp it.
He was just the more popular candidate. If Obama didn't
run in Oe, Hillary Clinton probably would have won the
Democratic primary, I mean the primary and probably won the presidency.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
It's just she against yeah probably yeah.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
Like and and and she probably would have won against
Romney too, because that forty seven percent comment sunk his
fucking campaign. But you know, I digress. I think ultimately, yeah,
I'm I do you.

Speaker 2 (08:34):
Feel this is just what I want to ask. Do
you feel as confident about Karmela or more confident about
Karmela than you did about Biden?

Speaker 1 (08:44):
I don't know because when I before the first that
first debate, I was confident with Biden because we had
not seen him be you know, an issue like, his
policies were good, he talked good, which he came out

(09:04):
usually he was like on his ship. The State of
the Union address was a really great example of that.
He was good, and.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
Every reporter that was close to him was literally saying, Oh,
he's perfect.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
He's so sassy, and he talks he talks ship like
a dude from the Northeast, which I like, which I like,
you know what I mean, Like we're Northeast guys, like
like like that isn't that? Yeah, Like you know exactly.
So it's like he's a smarmy dickhead, but like in
a way but in a way that like had has

(09:37):
policies and in a way that we like are find
more medical. He's not good and and and and like
you know, there's a reason why they had to make
ship up about his economy being shipped about, like in
terms of like, don't get wrong, the economy is ship
but it's not his fucking fault. But you know, the
repercussions we're dealing with with the economy are are are

(09:58):
are the result of of Trump's changes to the economy
plus COVID accelerating them. Like we would have been seeing
Trump's change COVID never happened. The issues with the economy
that we're currently dealing with we would have been dealing
with about four or five more years from now. But
because like just COVID kind of accelerated everything. It it

(10:20):
showed how worse it was. Best. Part of the reason
why Trump had, you know, a good few or a
couple early years, is because if you actually extend the
economy bars and stuff like from the start of the
presidency and you push it back four to five years,
you see a large incline starting from the beginning of
the Obama presidency to when Trump takes over. So you know,

(10:41):
Trump was not good for the economy, and he inherited
a good economy from the Democrat, from a Democrat who
fixed up the economy after a Republican fucked it up.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
And I ran a four billion dollar deficit, which was
also a reason for our fucking economy being in the shitter,
and then the COVID.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Yes, And so I think that a lot of the
economic things that Biden has done to sort of help
with the economy. So we're going to see those changes,
I think over the next few years. And and if
Kamala wins, to God, she wins, she will be able
to hopefully inherit that and not do anything to fuck

(11:23):
it up. And the reason why I say that it's
going to start getting better is because the CPI consumer
price indics went down some points. Okay, like it went
it went down for the first time. The coluser presents
being the you know, like rough level of like how
much people are willing to spend and shit, you know,

(11:47):
and it shows and what it basically shows is that
if people are not spending money, it goes down, and
this in turn makes it so businesses like start lowering
their prices and ship and so that shows that the
brief flationy stuff that's happening. Uh, companies kept trying to
pinch workers and see how much that the market would bear.

(12:10):
They found how much the market would bear, kept pushing.
It didn't work, and they brought it back down. And
it's like hopefully and will most likely continue to lower
if we're lucky, so things will hopefully get a cheaper
with time. Housing is probably still fucked, but that's what's
the housing market. You and I were never going to
buy homes anyway.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
Yeah you telling me, man, unless this takes.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Off, Listen, man, this is not my only iron like
iron like like like a poker in the and the
iron of the fire. But as far as like content's concerned.
But let's uh, we still got eight we still got
seven and a half minutes before.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
We h yeah, let's talk.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
This might be a little more contentious. So give your
feel on it and tell everybody what happened, like non
Parson Lee. Then give your opinion and then I'll do mine.

Speaker 2 (12:58):
So tenacious the great Man Jack Black and Kyle Gas
started in the eighties or nineties, one of the two
nineties and nineties. Yeah, that's what I thought. And you know,
great movie comedy duo, fucking great game brutal legends if
you ever play it. They are performing in Australia on

(13:21):
the day that Trump gets shot, the night of the
day that he got shot. Right, Kyle Gass's birthday is
the night of the performance, and Jack Black does a
whole number sing some happy Birthday and then brings out
a cake. He asked Kyle Gas to say, you know,
what's your wish? Your birthday wish? And obviously he assumed

(13:42):
he was gonna be like, oh, being here with this
many people or my music or something, you know, not
what he said.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
After being fair, what he said, I wish he didn't
fucking miss which, to be fair, we were all thinking it.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Yes, obviously I'm not disagreeing with that at all. However,
when you're standing in front of.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Thousands of people, physically.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Standing in front of thousands of people, you gotta have
a little bit of a filter, especially when your buddy
is in every major movie ever. He's in Borderlands, He's
he's playing Steven Minecraft. I mean, he's everywhere. Wasn't he
also with something else? I can't remember? But he's in everything.

(14:30):
So that's like corporates. He's like the rock tier level
of I'm in everything literally and nothing as jact black
fucking hope all the success in the world for him.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Same thing with the same thing with Gas, but.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
Like they were gased, So I just want to finish
the story after that happens. Uh, They released a statement
that Tenacious cy is going to cancel their tour and
Kyle Gas gets dropped from his talent agency. Now I
want behavior some hours, bullshit, the whole nine yards. Yes,

(15:04):
we agree, shouldn't have said that ship in front of
that big of a.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
But as consummate professionals, like if we take our own
personal feelings out of it, you probably shouldn't be saying
that when you've got like when when you're at that
fucking level, not saying that you're not right. I'm not
saying that I don't agree, but the right wing are
fucking crazy and they and and like they will they
they will fuck you like they're like there, they will

(15:30):
come out in another like there were motherfuckers going out
finding like little Grandma's and ship at their home depot jobs.
They harassive and ship overlight saying like I wish they
didn't like saying that, like talking about I wish they
didn't miss Trump's head, you know. And don't get me wrong,
I will say I'll be the first person to say
here he shouldn't have missed. But you know, no, I digress.

(15:55):
It's not because I agree with like, that's not why
because I agree with political violence or or anything. I'm
just saying it would probably take a load off for
me anxiety wise, if you know, Trump's ass is dad.
But you know, I don't know. I don't think. I
don't advocate for that violence. I don't think it's a
good idea. I don't want the Secret Service to come

(16:16):
visit me in my house at two o'clock in the morning.
So all of this is in minecraft.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
So and yeah, I just I want to I want
to call this out because I feel like a lot
of people might have this perspective, but nobody seems to
really be saying it on a grand scale. Not that
ware a grand scale for it. What's it going? The
inconsistency of political violence on the left versus the right
is just straight up wrong, if you can, Yeah, I understand.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Remember Nancy Pelosi's husband with the hammer.

Speaker 2 (16:51):
Everybody's talking for a second, right, I think we all
can agree. What do you remember what Kathy Griffin did
and leading into twenty sixteen holding up Trump's severed head.
I think we can agree that that too far that's
too far right.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
It's it's I think, I think, I think I agree
that like saying that.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
Like you're a random fucking person. Let me let me clarify.
If you're a random fucking person less than a million
subscribers on YouTube, what the fuck ever? You're a random sure,
say what you want, do what you want. But if
you're an actual celebrity in the celebrity world, I.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Wouldn't even I wouldn't even call Kathy Griffage like, I
don't fucking like Kathy Griffin.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
I'm saying you got an agent, You're a part of
a talent agency. You got people that need to do
your pr shut the fuck up. It's not in your
best interests.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
Yeah no, Like, don't get me wrong, Like you can
absolutely opine on politics. That's your god given right as
an American to waffle on and on about as much
as you want. Exactly, Like, literally, podcasts exists, so mediocre
white men can talk about bullshit on daily for no
fucking reason. And I know that. But on a daily
fucking news podcast that I cover a news story and

(18:05):
talk about my opinion, I am the textbook definition of mediocre.
But I digress at the end of the day, Like
if I do agree that while I agree with her
message and I agree with the sentiment, I do think
I do. I do think that, like from a professionalism standpoint,

(18:25):
not in the sense of like it's art, go for it.
I don't give a funk who gives a shit. Two things,
One kind of kind of like rough to do if
you're like God, if you've got people that depend on
you having be getting paid work. But the second thing
I will say, I think that the I think that
the difference between I think that political violence is actually like,

(18:48):
like you know, there might be some extremes like the
Catholic Griffin stuff for you know, things of that nature.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
I also want to clarify this. I'm not saying rhetoric
is compared terrible to political vibence.

Speaker 1 (19:03):
It is the right wing in this country that literally
carries out real political violence based off of rhetoric.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
And I think that's kind of what I'm commenting on.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Like everybody, left wing people do not hear rhetoric from
you know, pundits and politicians and then go out and
execute that rhetoric. Right wing people hear rhetoric from right
wing pundits and politicians, and they do go do that.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
Obviously, not every single fucking conservative is going to go
out and kill somebody, but there is obviously a percentage
higher on one side of this issue than the other.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
No, I would I would even argue that if you
look at the numbers of like political like like like
like the number of mass shootings that happen, like just
if you just look at mass shootings in general, the
number of people who had a who the political alignment
of mass shooters over ninety percent of which skew right. No, no,

(20:09):
I know specific and when you just when you only
when you only account for political politically motivated violence. It
is less than two percent of people that come from
a left wing. In fact, when when left we people
do because violence, it is usually violence. It is usually

(20:32):
self flaglatory like Aaron Bushnell, the airmen who EMOLDI who
did the self immolation?

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Log what happens? Log what happened with the Black Panthers.
That's why liberal based political violence is not a thing
in this country. It's KKK. Although being called a terrorist
group by a name only I guess can still fucking
gather in this country, like it's legitimately illegal. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Yeah, So you have you have to do. You have
to remember, you have to remember that, you know, you know,
and even uh, you know, Destiny that fucks people said
it himself. You know, he got bandon ship off of
all types of streaming platforms because he said he was
glad that you know, you know, he wished Trump had

(21:21):
got had had got killed and he went and he
doesn't care that like MAGA tards like died in the
audience and he said that's wrong. Well, here's the thing,
have you no no you say, but I want to
be very clear, I don't agree. I don't agree with
the harshness there. But I do want to say for
the record that you want to know the type like

(21:43):
the people are like lion like, like like lionizing this
firefighter dude who got killed. You know you want to
you know what else, though, you should look like, let's
look at let's after the show, we'll look at his
fucking Twitter feet. It was fucking heinous, filled with all
of the most hate. And he also pomented on getting.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
Understood, understated, Uh, the whole nine nerds, I get you.
My only thing is if somebody is contributing to society,
in the case of a firefighter that legitimately saves lives,
say what you want about his political opinion. I don't
give a fuck. That doesn't add or take away necessarily
the value of a human life. I'm just saying, you

(22:27):
can't outwardly say that even the people who are getting
killed don't fucking matter that.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
I think I will say, I will say, I will say.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
Not defending the man's choices or actions while he was alive.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
He gets a lot of leeway from me for being
a firefighter. He does get a lot of leeway for
me from you being a firefighter. He's still a fascist,
piece of shit.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
I'm understand.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
I'm not his death. I'm just when people with those
level of heinous beliefs die, I don't necessarily celebrate their death,
but I do celebrate their removal from the gene.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
I'm honestly hit or missed about this because you know
my opinion about political perspective and that above all else.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
But you dick ride that census angle, bro.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
You do, and unlike you, I actually believe in modernism anyway.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Doesn't exist in this country.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
It's just because just because the federal government puts in
a binary does not mean that that it's truly a binary.
Fuck all that anyway, because there's so much gray, my nigga,
I mean, first and foremost. I also got to say
this from this perspective, when you are literally born as

(23:53):
a gray area racially, being in that moderate middle ground,
whatever you want to call it, is my whole identity.
Ah be so damn real Like. It's a perfect example
for bipartisan uh ism. Right. If you are claimed to
be not enough for one thing to be on one

(24:15):
side and not enough of another thing to be on
the other side, where do you see yourself in the middle.
That's the only other place you could possibly be the
I get you.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
Where you're coming from, but the whole notion that you,
you know, are what You're not a white man, you're
not a black man. Both of those because of because
of your your.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
No no, no, no, not that perspective is not on myself.
That perspective is what other people perceive of me.

Speaker 1 (24:44):
That yeah, that perception, that perception, both of those on
the white side and black side, are both rooted in
right wing lenses of social identity.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
You're not seemingly understanding my point on how it equates.
I'm saying, no, no, no, no, oh, I understand what
like how you're trying what you're trying to put. What
I am saying is is that the reason it doesn't
wait is because both because I think you're missing the point.
I'm not saying that black people saying to black people

(25:19):
are liberal, and white people saying to black people you're
not white half black people, you're not white enough, is conservative.
I'm saying when you are literally in a gray area,
when everybody around you is saying politics is black or white,
you're literally saying to them, no, no, no, no, no
oh no time out right now, everything is being presented

(25:39):
to you as black and white, red or blue, but
there genuinely is a purple in this country, people who
genuinely don't have a you know, claim against a trans
person's life. But it's genuinely like, Hey, that's just not
what I want to focus on, or the same thing
about any societal issue. Abortionate what I do.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
Want to That's what I'm saying. I hear where you're
coming from, but just I want to just correct the
record because I got trans friends and shit, I do
want to say that most people on the left, all
people on left, don't want to talk about trans issues
and trans people sit We're not. Just this year alone,
three hundred and fifty five bills have been put forward
in state houses at different levels of government, all across

(26:21):
this country to h to restrict the presence of trans
people in public, criminalize their existence in different aspects of
daily life, and prevents them from getting the drugs and
treatment that they need. So I'm just very quickly, I
want I want to be very clear that the reason
why we talk about it so much is because the

(26:42):
right wing makes it an issue, and we and you
cannot give ground to the right ever in a culture war, issue.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
The point went right over your head. Again. I'm not
saying that the left and the right does this. What
I'm trying to say to you is if we can
accept that they are extremely extreme, even conservatives that are
putting forth these three hundred and fifty plus bills regarding
trans people. My point isn't that liberals should stop talking
about trans people. My point is the moderates of this

(27:11):
country are saying, genuinely, we don't have a feeling regarding
it either way. Let them do what they want to do,
and there shouldn't be any bills put forward that restricts
their access. I think that's like the would be the
moderate view? Is that fair? That here?

Speaker 1 (27:30):
The thing is is that that is the The problem
is that the trans issue has been because it's been
framed by the right wing as either you're against you,
you're against it, or you're foreign.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
And that's why I say that the binary cannot be
what people operate under because if you assume, oh on,
just very quickly, if you assume that people are either
with your existence, they stand by your ability to exist,
or they don't stand by your ability to exist, then yes,
there is no middle ground there. But what I keep

(28:08):
trying to say to people. I think my point over
the course of these almost six months is stop having
that perspective because you are being forced into a binary.
There is that loud majority that says, I genuinely don't
have an opinion on this subject either way. Let them survive,

(28:30):
don't add any laws that restrict their access. Simple right there.
But when it is let me finish, just when it
is presented to you from conservatives that either people agree
with your existence or they don't agree and they're going
to go out and try and kill you, then yes, obviously,
when somebody says no, I don't have an opinion either
way about it, I can understand why you then automatically

(28:52):
assume they're just lying to try and say a face,
when in reality the people were just like, Hey, this
isn't my issue to worry about. Same thing about abortion.
I'm a fucking man. Abortion should not be a conversation
that I have outside of my personal relationship. But society
has made this thing a full blown conversation with all

(29:12):
parties involved. And it's like, hey, realistically, unless I'm facing
it in my personal life, I don't really want to
hear the word abortion. But yes, I'm aware that conservatives
are putting so much emphasize on banning it, and yes,
I am aware that some I'm not saying all but
the extreme positions of both sides, that some people are

(29:32):
trying to also do extremely late term abortion. Not really,
not really, that's not a fucking thing.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
Yeah, it's like, I just want to legend if you
need emotionally to think that those are the are the
centrist positions, they're the centrist positions.

Speaker 2 (29:57):
I just made the argument that not all conservatives are
exactly like I'm saying here, fitting in that binary of
they should exist or they shouldn't, or abortion should be
fully done or it shouldn't. There used to be a
perspective of it's not right for me, and I value
that opinion a lot that hey, uh, you know the

(30:19):
free abortion here it is abortion isn't right for me
and my family, but if it happens to you do
what you gotta do to survive. That used to be
the old head perspective what my grandparents, how my grandparents
used to think and shit like that, outside of being gay,
and obviously because at the time, but that return to

(30:40):
what I call normalcy, the acceptance but not being enthusiastic
about it is what I always try to, you know,
convey I hope that my position is clear and that
nobody feels like I am against their existence. I love
you all.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Yeah. And the last thing I'll say about that before
we move on to the act like other stuff is,
you know I recognize you because I'm like, how do
I how do I fucking say this without there and
like turning into a whole nother like you're saying it
all over again, because it's like, do you remember how

(31:19):
I said how the right wing sort of like it
is such like frames things as an extreme in that
those kinds of moderate conservatives don't necessarily you.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
Know, yes, I agree with you. Yeah so, And that's
why I say, like the evolution of what Trumpian republican
republicanism has become the middle ground of being like, yo,
I am not touching this subject. It doesn't affect me,

(31:49):
I have no opinion on it. Either way is now
seen as either a cop out or you're secretly a
conservative and you just don't want to explain your true feelings.
And I think I'm just saying if you push people
into that, then it does become a binary. And I
don't see a lot of suit rules coming out of it.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
Because here's the thing, Like I think what a lot
of people think when they they're asked that, they're like
they ask what is your like, Like, what would you
personally do? That's not Like, here's the thing if you
if if a person says to me, I am personally
for my own life pro like wouldn't ever abort a
child under any circumstances. But I have no reason to

(32:30):
tell anybody like how they should or should not live
their lives. And they vote along those lines and support
candidates in their lives along those lines. There is nobody
short of the of like a you know, fourteen year
old Marxist Leninists with a sickle and a sickle and

(32:50):
hammer and their Twitter bio that is going to like
be against that. Like that is you know that being
pro choice is means, you know, you choose what you
want for your life and don't shit on it and
don't try to prevent or shame anyone for the choices
that they made.

Speaker 2 (33:09):
Like I think we agree when conservatives try to put
forth liberal and what I mean when I mean liberal,
I mean the government controlling this aspect of life. When
the When conservatives do that, it is immensely unpopular even
with the people who share that opinion.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
People do not like the government interfering in things in
ways that makes their lives worse.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
And that's a conservative point, Like that is what Republicans
used to stand.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
For, right They They've got to kind of mixed up
now in the sense of, you know, you hate the
idea of, hey, you lose your job, you're poor, you
don't have any way to like pay your bills. Here's
a here's a government subsidy, like a government program for houses,
food and in a jobs program that is looked down

(34:05):
upon and vilified by the by conservatives because because of
like fucking like the like the Reagan Revolution. Meanwhile, they
love things like, uh, you know, having God talk to
all kids in public schools within in the Bible study.
They love controlling women's bodies by way of like policing

(34:27):
abortion and ship like that. Like they they love just sorry,
I'm they love, uh, you know, preventing people from being able.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
Themselves identifying themselves. No, I'm with you, and I think
inherently that's why I'm so anti anti current conservative and
why I do still claim in the moderate position because
I'm like, yo, realistically, there are some things that Republicans
could say that would hit nowadays, but god damn it,

(35:02):
they're not saying it. Well, if this was the nineties
or the eighties, it would have been so fucking different.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
That's because of the conservative the conservative conservatives in this country,
like specifically the far right conservatives of the Public Party,
which is just the Public Party. They their economic policies
are deeply unpopular. Democratic economic policies are more popular, even

(35:29):
like even corporate shit live. Democratic economic policies are more popular. Right.
The problem is is that you know, conservative The thing
is is that conservatives realize that we can talk about
black people they're being welfare queens and trans people and

(35:51):
gay people grooming children and shit, and we can talk
about that all day long and then and just illicit
feelings of Great America and we don't in and we
can just turn around and just fuck them now. Democrats
like will do the same thing. They will fuck us
economically in certain aspects, but like, you know, you're more
likely to get you know, welfare spending even if it's

(36:12):
a mean test and you're like, you know, it's it.
The American health like the American Healthcare Act, you know, Obamacare,
they sat uh them, not health Care Acts, American whatever
was a Britain like of sensibly like not a bad bill.

(36:33):
It wasn't single payer, it wasn't a public option, but
it was still pretty damn good. And you want to
know why so many people in red states don't like it,
It's because it's because a bunch of fucking governors for
conservative states sued the federal government on whether or not
on the fact on not being able to accept having

(36:56):
to be forced to accept the money from the federal government.
And then they could just choose, oh, nope, we're not
gonna be and they won that court case at the
Supreme Court, and then they just know we're not going
to take the money to subsidize the health and the
healthcare and then they're they're well, financial books immediately got
burdened with these things. And then they could point to
this and say, see them, see Obamacare is fucking killing

(37:18):
our states, our state, and it's the reason why are
it's harder to play our federal employees, and it's harder,
why you're not able to get certain things that you need,
and and they used it as a cudge and that
was the that was the first linchpin into turning Obamacare,
which should have been which OS sensibly is should be
beloved as.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
Ye as close as we'll get some universal outcam and we're.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
Not going to be because it's been picked apart to
such a degree.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
I will. I think we'll end on this just the
I I hope people share in this opinion. I hope
Democrats one day gain the ruthlessness that conservatives seemed to have, uh,
because there's definitely a difference in the play on the.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
Field, agreed. I want I want Democrats to start bullying concernatives,
calling out their mistresses and ship calling out the fact,
oh this policy that like you didn't oh you say
you're like four workers and your four workers and using
this stuff, didn't you vote on this bill that makes
it harder for unions to be able to survive, to
be made. And then just like constantly picking them apart,

(38:27):
like just well, I want smarmy, bully bully Democrats and
we and we do get them and sometimes those enough
sometimes they bully. Sometimes those smarmy dickheads on the Democrats side,
just like on the Republicans cheat on their wives, like
Anthony Wiener and Anthony Wiener was dope as ship he was,
but he should have kept he should have kept the

(38:48):
stick in his pants and honestly, in hindsight, and that
ship came out today that he was out like he's also.

Speaker 2 (38:54):
I just hope you realize I don't think you understand
what you just said here. If Anthony Wiinner kept his
fucking dick in his pants, Clinton would have won twenty sixteen.
How do you think it was his wife who got
either arrested? No, no, no, it was his wife's laptop
who they found out the information regarding the emails and

(39:15):
the DNC about because when he got arrested, because it
was about a minor. You're right, and this man just
kept in his pants.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
I didn't know. Wait, I didn't know he texted a minor.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
I think it was a minor because they had a
police investigation something investigation. Wait, I thought maybe wasn't a minor.

Speaker 1 (39:37):
But I don't think it was a minor. I think
he just texted a hooker.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
They investigated him for some reason, and then that was
the reason why. Or the wife who was Hillary Clinton's homegirl.
I can't remember what position she was in, but yeah,
that was the whole reason for that, because then that's
when Komi did the whole fucking thing about her emails
and was like, yo, I don't know if we could
actually talk vote for her, like a week before the election.

(40:04):
What the fuck ever? Yeah is it? I'm just noticing
the differences between this election and a fucking twenty sixteen one.
And it's crazy because it seems like the more bullshit
there is, more Trump wins. Last thing, last point, final point.
Go watch the newest episode of the Daily Show with
Jon Stewart. He invites Bill O'Reilly on fuck Bill O'Reilly,

(40:27):
but goddamn if they don't debate amazingly, and they've been
debating for the last twenty years together, so go out
and do that.

Speaker 1 (40:37):
So I just saw it. So he was, in fact
sexting with a fifteen year old girl from North Carolina.
I did not know this, yep, And that was the
thing that ended up like getting the Hillary Clinton stuff. Okay,

(41:00):
so you.

Speaker 2 (41:02):
Hey, thanks for fact checking me.

Speaker 1 (41:04):
You're good, you were right. I was just like, I
was like pretty sure, like he only takes an adult
women like the youngest because they had to.

Speaker 2 (41:12):
Investigate him for them to find out the info on Clinton.
But yeah, it's just crazy. You know how simple that
shick could happen. Message for all the boys out there

(41:32):
choosing to go into politics, God bless you if you
choose to do that. Ah, keep your digging your pants.
You could change the future.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
I've said so much handish shits about cops that I
would not be able to be.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
I believe, I dude, I do not like cos.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
All right, let's get all right, let's stop all this
Elvis ship and move on to some actual fucking thanks.
Shall wait? All right, let's start with this uh still
vaguely political, but in the gaming space, workers at Pathetic
Games Studios have fully unionized, as they should a wal
to wall union with workers across divisions. They have joined

(42:14):
the Communication Workers of America. They say they're the first
Microsoft video game studio to form a wal to wall union,
and the total of two hundred and forty one workers
have signed either an authorization card or indicated they want
to join a union through online portal the walt wall
nature their organization needs a CWA will be representing the
war of workers across job descriptions and divisions, not just
one type, including artists, engineers, programs designers. But this is

(42:37):
the developer behind Starfield, though we know who they are.
Microsoft has already recognized the union, so workers at the
studios Maryland office have officially joined the CWA Locals twenty
one oh eight, while those in the Texas office have
become member of the CWA Locals sixty two fifteen. We're
so excited to announce our union, becas of the games
studio and join the movements across the media industry. This

(42:59):
is really good, this like, this is fucking huge. This
is like big simply for the reason that Bethesta Game
Studios is one of the most valuable video game producers
in the industry.

Speaker 3 (43:13):
Like between them and two, yeah, between them and Take two,
like between that with like Take two, there's a couple
other like like, but the Bethesda makes very valuable games
on on like lower budget teams and ship like they
they are like really like they're like there's no like

(43:33):
and and here's the thing, because Bethesda Game Studios, especially
in the Maryland office, is filled with an old guard
people that you know, have worked like the youngest person
there like uh, like last I heard have been there
like ten years and he was the youngest person, like
the person big league amount of time.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
These are like the backbone of Skyrim, your fallouts, uh Starfields,
which let's be real, was fucking taught how pet project
but whatever. Ultimately, Ultimately, uh, this is dope. This is
really good And I'm I think this is awesome because.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
I would just say I wish it does it give
them access to like uh ability to like say yes
or no to projects, choose what they want to work on,
and ship like that.

Speaker 1 (44:22):
They are the way the way that you know studios
like bethest the work. They already kind of have that,
like they have the ips that they're working on, but like,
for example, that there's one dude made the entire Dark
Brotherhood quest line for for for Oblivion, So you know
it's they're they're very much they're very much a now.

(44:45):
Grants that they're a little more corporate now because the
Microsoft and stuff. But what this does is this insulates
them from being what they make Els six and then
the studio and then fucking Microsoft fires them and ship
like they did the people.

Speaker 2 (45:04):
If only I five fucking Russia's studio Larry and actually
got this, ah.

Speaker 1 (45:12):
Yeah and and and I remember and like this is
like you know this is uh, I think like this
is you know, because it's wal to wall. I think
it's like more of a workplace democracy and you know,
in in this in this kind of and I think
they do have more and they might have more control
over projects being tackled and stuff like that. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
After Microsoft, I'm just gonna say this, after Microsoft acquired Activision,
I feel like their percentage of the gaming field has
definitely gone up. So without doubt, we should see more
studios trying nionize because otherwise they're gonna get an acts
to them. Because if you're not a billion dollar video
game like uh, Call of Duty, Uh, you know, the

(45:57):
big releases every single year DLC for I was gonna say,
fucking Ward of Warcraft. That's not even really that big anymore.
I mean it still is, but you know, I.

Speaker 1 (46:07):
Mean it's it's still the big I think it's still
the biggest MMO in the world. I think still has
the most subscribers. It makes, you know, millions of dollars,
hundreds of millions of dollars a year. It's stilly.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
Yeah, But if you're not a Call of Duty or
a I'm just using this as an example, GTA or
shit like that. Then Xbox Game Studio, especially after acquiring
all this shit, is gonna just close you down because
you're not you don't put out the same amount of
gold that they really need because I think it was
like five million dollars for the Activision plan they owned Bethesda,

(46:45):
so they need to make that money back and Microsoft
is only like a less than ten percent profit margin,
so it's not making its money back for Microsoft to
actually be like, Yo, you got all these game studios,
Phil Spencer, do what you want because Phil Spencer. They're
also raising the price of game Pass. I'm not sure

(47:07):
if you wanted to talk about that, but the ultimate
is going up to like twenty dollars. The standard tier
is fifteen or staying at the same price, but two
dollars Race of twelve, and then they're adding a new
tier that gets you day one access to games when
they release. So they did this because they're adding Call
of Duty six, Black Op six on game Pass day one.

(47:29):
But if you don't have that specific tier, then you
can't get it. But I will say, as a PC
player like myself, they're not raising the price. So if
you do have game Pass and you have a computer,
keep that shit on.

Speaker 1 (47:40):
Do that?

Speaker 2 (47:41):
Do that right there?

Speaker 1 (47:43):
Yeah, I will say this Detesta isn't the first one
to get, you know, the upgrading to join the CWA.
So in January of last year, three hundred quality assurance
workers at Cenemax Studios. So these are the people that

(48:07):
I believe you.

Speaker 2 (48:08):
Say through the game, get rid of the bugs, things like.

Speaker 1 (48:10):
That, specifically at Zeno when they say Zenamax Studios. I
think they're most are the people that work on elder
scrolls online into the QA for them, I.

Speaker 2 (48:19):
Think they're also a part of and then they might
QA for machine games too, got it?

Speaker 1 (48:26):
And they and they at the time formed the largest
union in the industry with three hundred members. But the
q QA workers at Activision also unionized with six hundred workers.

Speaker 2 (48:43):
So I definitely good. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (48:46):
So I think I think now that Bobby Ottuck is
not in charge of Activision Blizzard anymore.

Speaker 2 (48:52):
You know, though we got paid that fucking pig some.

Speaker 1 (48:55):
Some somebody, somebody. I'm not going to quali violence, I
think ultimately, I think now that he's gone and the
taxes that he used are gone, and a lot of
the fucking shitty managers are gone too. I think there
is now going to be a change in like like now.

(49:17):
I think I wouldn't be surprised with so much going
on like under the former, like the new Microsoft stuff,
and all the unionization going on, especially in the wake
of the absolutely vicious fucking February in March we had
where just the entire games industry got gutted by like
eighteen percent in terms of workers getting the boot. I

(49:38):
think that companies not being able to fire I think
that I think that's kind of the big thing about
these unions not firing developed people working developing games on
a win. I think forcing companies to keep the people
that built these games that made them money on and

(49:58):
will and I think it'll lead to a much healthier
I think it will lead to a much healthier industry.
I think it'll lead to us getting better games because
you're not gonna have people constantly filtering out of the
industry because they're like, fuck it, I just want to
stable ajeck you're gonna get I think you.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
Also want to see a Red Fog release because Arcades
Studios really didn't want to release a game like that.

Speaker 1 (50:23):
They didn't want to make a game like that. They
made they made fucking dishonored and ship like, that's not men.

Speaker 2 (50:30):
And they continued push from studios to create more games
as service even though they're like single player developers and
ship like that. That was a push from.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Zenomax originally, and and Red Fall was already in the
pipeline when most almost done. When when Microsoft got to it,
Microsoft just said, yeah, just fucking put it out as this.
We don't give a ship And they're like, but it's
not done, like we don't care to put Out on
game Pass and follow us followed. Seventy six was actually
a part of that was a part of that push

(51:01):
from Cenemaxis leadership to do online service games. Now, don't
get me wrong, Fallout seventy six is now a much
better game if it was it. It's it, but it's
an arcadie mmo like you know, experience still that you
still got quests and dialogue, trees and NPCs and stuff. Now,
it's perfectly fine. It's an enjoyable game. It's no, it's
no fucking Fallout for by comparison, but you know it's fine.

Speaker 2 (51:23):
It just you know it.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
Whether or not it needed to exist in the first place,
I don't think it did. I think honestly, having having
you know, Befessta Texas just for funzies and make a
you know, appellation based Fallout game that's just smaller in scale,
I think that would have been that would have still Gangbusters.

Speaker 2 (51:48):
I think that would have the main uh main story
fucking fallout right after the show, they would have been
sold gang Busters.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
Well, that wasn't gonna happen, Like the Quality Show had
been in works for years. There was no there's no
way we're gonna know about it. But to be that's credit,
they did hack out some new create free Creation Club
content and made Creation Club content in follow for free
in the aftermath of that, sort of just to throw
people a bone. Yeah, but yeah, it's a whole fucking thing.

(52:20):
Moving on, Yeah, we love that. We love unionization among
the game industry because God knows, they fucking need it.
God knows, Mike, let's let's get developers broadly in fintech,
you know, unionized next, because I wouldn't have lost my
job with a twenty four hour notice if that didn't happen.
M Moving on, Mortal Kombat onslaught shutting down barely a

(52:40):
year after release.

Speaker 2 (52:43):
Good I got all the Mortal Kombat one rewards I
needed from the game. I will say, I don't know.
I don't know what the fuck is going on with
Mortal Kombat lately though, because Mortal Kombat one does fucking
saw dick. It sucks dick, And it's just because they
don't have enough offline single player modes. That's literally it. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (53:08):
Yeah, you feel like Mortal Kombat is kind of a
shell of itself.

Speaker 2 (53:15):
Yes, because it's amazing to me that they really thought, Hey,
what does everybody want in their new fighting game? Oh?
I got it? A board game like adventure where every
node you walk across is a single fight. You don't
get any character intros. You know the thing that you

(53:36):
get using the character over and over and over again,
and you get to see it and it's super customizable.
And also, oh you know what will take away? Will
take away the ability to customize different parts of your gear,
so you could have one thing along with another thing. No, no, no,
no no, we're gonna mold it all down and claim
that every character only gets one set of gear from

(53:59):
here on. You want to know how you get more,
you gotta go play that game board mode. Oh and
you want to know the best part about the game
board mode. There's no map whatsoever. Good luck. I fucking
hate Mortal Kombat one. It's so trash and I'm just
upset with it because Mortal Kombat eleven, the last game
in the fucking series they spent like four years making.

(54:20):
Mortal Kombat one has so many more features compared to
Mortal Kombat one, and it's insane. It's legitimately insane. A game,
a fighting game, especially if it's based on playing with
somebody else in the same room, should not be some
bullshit like that. You can't even look at the rewards

(54:44):
that you're gonna get for characters until you get and
it's like, come on. At least with Mortal Kombat eleven,
I got to chose the tower based on what year
and rewards I wanted to get. Now I can't get shit.
I gotta go through the whole entire fight hopefully I
make it. Because the other thing about this is the
modifiers make shit so bullshit, and the only way you

(55:05):
can actually level up your characters playing online, which is
I would rather stick my dick in a pencil sharpener
than play Mortal Kombat one online. It's insane. At least
with Mortal Kombat eleven. I recognize, Hey, I'm trash. I
can accept this Mortal Kombat one. They changed up with
the cameo features, and then even if you're one hit

(55:26):
away from killing your opponent, you will get brought back
so fucking quickly. It's insane. The comebacks in that game
aren't insane. Uh yeah, I'm just not a fan, and
I'm not necessarily even talking about game mechanics. Game mechanics
themselves pretty good, pretty okay.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
It's like it's it's hard, it's you can fuck up,
like fighting game mechanics, but like those are usually the
first things that they make tight in a fighting game,
usually because if the fighting game of cancer, shit doesn't
matter what else you do with the rest of it.

Speaker 2 (55:54):
You know what, Mortal Kombat Want has giving me the
vibe of what Dark Tide when it released, And it's
almost a year after release, and I'm like, can you
add something to this fucking game?

Speaker 1 (56:05):
Wish you and I should do a streamer we revisit
Dark Tide on PC.

Speaker 2 (56:09):
I've been getting back into it a little bit. I
really wish they would get rid of the fucking RNG though.
That is the one biggest criticism I have about that game,
and fuck if it's insane to get actually good gear.

Speaker 1 (56:23):
Yeah, uh, we've only got about four minutes to the hour.
I talked about it at length, but I want to
know if you've heard about.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
It, Microsoft outage or whatever it was, the.

Speaker 1 (56:36):
Crowd the crowd specifically, and and do you know what
like how it happened.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
Not how it happened, but I know that everything is
based off of it.

Speaker 1 (56:45):
Let me explain it from the developer's point of view.

Speaker 2 (56:48):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
Somebody that CrowdStrike a team the crowd. The team of
CrowdStrike committed one of the Cardinals sins. They deployed to
production on a Friday. Bad juju? What Brancid vibes?

Speaker 2 (57:10):
What does that mean for the non developer heads.

Speaker 1 (57:13):
So, what it means is that they pushed an update
to CrowdStrike soft security software, which is on tens of
millions and not hundreds of millions of PCs all across
the world and everything from airlines to government healthcare, to
government offices to private office like everything like like it is.

Speaker 2 (57:36):
Yeah, no, the planes, they have house services.

Speaker 1 (57:40):
They pushed an update out before everybody went home for
the weekend.

Speaker 2 (57:49):
They said, y'all got it.

Speaker 1 (57:51):
You never pushed the production on a Friday because you
might need somebody to come, you might need the team
to troubleshoot ship. You do, you pushed production at latest
on a Thursday.

Speaker 2 (58:09):
I think the funniest aspect of this story. I'm just
saying this because this is what I remember saying. It
was a tweet, and I think it was either Delta
or American or one of them. They weren't grounded because
they run their service off of Windows three of.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
A Commodore sixty four.

Speaker 2 (58:27):
Literally, I don't well, I don't know if it was Delta,
but yeah.

Speaker 1 (58:34):
It was one of them, but ultimately I think it
was Southwest. But but yeah, right, But ultimately the biggest
thing about it, and here's the insidiousness of this, they
bricked all of those computers mhm, like probably like at

(58:56):
least one hundred million piece like PCs or more hundred
CI millions even And it was a type of brick
where like you boot up and immediately crash. You don't
get to connect to the internet and catch it up
and can't get the update, none of that. So what
you have to do is you have to boot it
in safe boot mode and nobody except the IT professionals,

(59:19):
so they were having a terrible weekend and they you
boot it up and you uh with like a thumb
driver or a disc. You updated the drivers like whatever,
you update it, man, you wally, and so then you

(59:42):
restarted in a reboot. And what the problem was is
that there was a lot of cases where they would
fix it, it would reboot and then it would download
the bad update again and then immediately crash. So this
so so just to make it simple, Friday the twenty

(01:00:05):
sixth July twenty twenty four was the day every IT
support person went, this was our nine to eleven like,
and I'm so if you went to know the funniest
thing and this is the thing we can end on.
I did five separate applications, five to CrowdStrike to be

(01:00:34):
a developer of CrowdStrike a month ago. And man, what
I tell you, I had two thoughts. So I'm glad
they didn't pick me. And I'm like, you know what,
bet y'all wish you picks me so you'd have the help.

Speaker 2 (01:00:53):
I need a job.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Here that.

Speaker 2 (01:00:58):
But yeah, man, that's crazy. I can't believe. It was
literally just an update.

Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
It was an update in in it it uh, And
you must be wondering, as so why house CrowdStrike like
all of these on like things like this, like like
will crowd strike updates Windows? Doubly so for corporate things
and stuff like that to keep things safe, like updates
older versions of Windows keeps it going blah blah blah
blah blah. And you know, corporate entities love working with

(01:01:30):
other corporate NTAs. That's why they picked Microsoft over like
that shit. So I think that you know, who knows.
I think ultimately I might be able to get a
job at IT support, Like I'm gonna start looking for
IT support jobs. I might be able to get a
leg in.

Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
There's just saying with a mass amounts of what's it
go on what they're looking for? Definitely Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
But on that note, I do now have a pre
reported outro that tells me all of the things that
we're gonna tell Brian's socials real quick and say our goodbyes.
But thank you everybody for listening to the rundown. This
is the twentieth episode. Somehow we made it here and

(01:02:16):
I'm happy we did. If you can follow Brian ad
no not to Brian on YouTube. No dot to underscore
Brian on Instagram and go give him follows and all that.
I will and thank you all for watching. We'll see
you next time.

Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
Appreciate job.

Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
Hey, thanks for watching. If you want to, you want
to talk to me outside of this video, outside of
live streams, or just be a pun join the community
and be a part of it, you can do so
at himedia dot, gg slash, Discord discord links there. We'd
love to have you. And given the financial situation of
the economy right now, I know this is the tall ass,
but if you have the scratch to spare's consider donating

(01:02:59):
and becoming a support at himedia Dot's launch ten. All
of our perks are service through our discord channel, including
early access videos, exclusive videos, and born. Your generosity is
a blessing of dollar amount of food. Thank you so
very much for watching. I appreciate you and half a

(01:03:19):
great day.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
When When

Speaker 1 (01:03:40):
When
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.