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June 16, 2024 66 mins

In this captivating episode of Fringe Beyond Limits, hosts Frank, Bree, and Lynette dive into the enigmatic phenomenon of time slips. The trio discusses the possibility of experiencing sudden and unexplained shifts in time, exploring famous cases like the man from Torrid and the mysterious events at Versailles. They also delve into various scientific and supernatural theories that attempt to explain these fleeting glimpses into different eras.

Join the conversation as they debate whether time slips are real or mere delusions, and ponder the implications of such occurrences on our understanding of time and reality. Could these temporal tangles be evidence of parallel universes, wormholes, or simply glitches in our brain's perception of time? Tune in to find out!

Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, this episode is sure to leave you questioning the fabric of time itself. Don't miss out on the fun and thought-provoking discussion!

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Music.

(00:38):
Hello, and welcome back to another episode of Fringe Beyond Limits.
Now that was sexy. It was great. It was amazing.
So, thank you for coming back to another episode. Bree, Lynette,
how have you guys been? Been great.

(01:00):
It's been a good few days. You know, got to be out in the sun. It was good.
Yeah. Did some gardening. It was good. How about you? What'd you been up to?
I've done absolutely nothing.
Yeah, the sun is great. I think we need more sun and more sunshine and just more outside.

(01:26):
Have you had any cicadas? No, I haven't. Have you, Bree? I have not.
I don't either, but my aunt sent me a photo of cicadas and her house is covered
in them. She's out in Lombard.
So they're coming. They're here.
I hate the cicada thing. Really? Yeah. Or is it all the hype around it? No, it's so annoying.

(01:49):
I'm 100% sure my two dogs are just going to go ape shit every single time I open the goddamn door.
And Rizal's just going to try to eat them. I was just going to say,
will they eat them? Yeah, probably. Then you don't have to feed them dinner.
Protein. Yeah. I'm pretty sure there's nutrients that they're missing if they
just eat cicadas. I don't know. Cicadas eat everything else.

(02:11):
Do they? I don't know. I don't know. What does their diet consist of?
I see everybody in my neighborhood with those tree covering things all over the place.
So I guess they'll get fiber from the tree.
I don't know, but my mom's neighbor actually bought like a mesh muzzle for her dog or their
dog just because it's not for biting or walking it's

(02:32):
just to keep them from eating crap so really to
keep them from eating the cicadas right that's weird huh are
you guys going to eat cicadas nope i don't eat meat with feet do they really
have feet though is that considered meat it's meat enough it has feet i don't
know if that's considered meat i remember i'm not sure I'm sure it was the last

(02:54):
time or the last two times, because I'm old.
People were, like, grilling them. Yeah. And baking, like, dipping them in chocolate. Yeah.
People who eat bugs creep me out. Like, would you eat those Mexican candies
with, like, the spiders and the beetles and stuff in it? You know.

(03:15):
You can get edible crickets online. Crickets, yeah. You can get crickets,
like, on the side of the street and, like, you would buy from a hot dog stand.
There's a lot of countries that, like, that's, like, a delicacy.
Like, you know, there's, like, all those street vendors that are cooking up
whatever and they have beetles and.
Mealworms. Oh, yeah, yeah. I can't do that. No.

(03:35):
That reminds me of maggots, and I puke if I ever. They also bite.
Mealworms bite? Yeah. Really? I used to have a pet hedgehog,
and we would feed him mealworms, but I was not afraid of them.
I didn't know that they bit.
Yeah, I used to work at a pet store, and we would always tell people,
make sure you squeeze off the head or something, because you don't want them

(03:56):
accidentally lizard-eat-it-whole-eating-through-the-stomach if it's still alive.
Sick. Yeah. That's a thing. Yeah. So you had a hedgehog that you fed mealworms to?
They love mealworms, yeah. So how many mealworms do you think it would take to overcome a hedgehog?
Well, a hedgehog's the size of a grapefruit. I would say like a gallon. Yeah, probably.

(04:20):
Okay, well, how many are in a gallon? I have no clue. You think I count?
I mean, they're about, what, an inch long?
We're not talking about me, right? I mean, but that's enough,
right, guys? Like an inch?
Like, that's enough? Right? For a good laugh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
Okay. That's probably why I'm a pretty good comedian, I guess.
Well, okay. So here's a, here's a question then. How many first graders do you

(04:45):
think you guys can take on in a fight before they overcome you? Yeah.
How big are these first graders? I don't know, kids, these are huge.
They're average size first graders. There's no average size. Yes, there is.
No, there's not. Yes, there is. No. Yes. No.
I mean, one is exhausting, so. Well, what I'm saying is, you're in a ring, right?

(05:06):
And every minute, one first grader comes running into the ring.
So like the Royal Rumble?
Yes. Royal Rumble. Wumble. I did it. I don't think you did it yet.
That was a tongue twister for me. That is hard.
Royal Wumble. Guys, English is my second language. I have struggles with my

(05:29):
R sounds. You have struggles with your native language?
Yes. No R sounds. English is hard. I actually have speech for it.
Yeah. My wife, your sister, is a speech therapist. And it looks like you should
book some more appointments. No.
No, you don't want to? Or no, you don't need them? No. Which one?
Because I have proof. I will go to the tape.

(05:50):
No. Okay. I guess all she knows is no.
How many first graders for you? You know, I would say I could probably take on like three.
Wow, I thought you were going to say many more. No, I could probably take on,
I would say, like in that capacity, right? I'm in the ring.

(06:10):
So one swing would knock out a first grader, right? It's Frank. I mean.
Listen, this is not something I've practiced or I've done. I'm just saying that
one swing could probably take out a first grader.
So it all goes to how many swings do I have in me before I have to start kicking?

(06:33):
And then how many combined kicking and swinging do I have in me before I tire out and collapse?
I would probably say a hundred. Yeah.
You have weird thoughts, my friend. Yeah, I would say like 25 of each limb. I got 25 good swings.
25 of each limb. Yeah.

(06:55):
That's like, if you do that, that math, right?
So it's L to the 25th power, right?
No. What are you talking about? I don't know. I'm just trying to figure out
an equation that would show my work.

(07:16):
Again? Yeah. What are you talking about?
My mathematical equation for how many first graders. It would be first equals L to the 25th power.
Where L is represented by one. We're not a math podcast, so. We're not?
No. No, what do we talk about, guys? Shit.

(07:37):
Okay, well, to a lot of people, math is shit. it so
if it's no no okay all right so anyway what are we talking about tonight guys
we got some time slips that's awesome before that though i do have an article
boom boom boom so do you guys know,

(08:01):
the article that i've chosen for tonight nope i have no idea it's from tmz oh
so it's a good one And let me read you the title.
So it says, Stormy Daniels' Trump's Ghost Shaming Her Ex-Spooky Partner Vouches For Her.

(08:24):
What do you guys think this article is about?
Say that title again.
Stormy Daniels' Trump's Ghost Shaming Her Ex-Spooky Partner Vouches For Her.
The ghost is a bully? All right. So you guys are stupid. Let me jump into this.

(08:45):
All right. Stormy Daniels is getting trashed by Donald Trump's attorneys for
claiming under oath she sees dead people.
But a veteran ghost hunter says they're barking up the wrong haunted tree because
he's seen her skills firsthand. Oh, boy. Oh.
I think a lot of people have seen her skills at least secondhand.

(09:08):
I mean, I don't know, would video be secondhand or first-hand knowledge?
Secondhand? Yeah. Okay.
Here's the deal. One of the porn star's side hustles is as a paranormal investigator,
which came up in court last week as Team Trump tried to use it to mock her and
discredit her testimony.
Now, I kind of take a little offense here.

(09:32):
Just because you're a paranormal investigator doesn't discredit you in any way.
Right. Or call it woo-woo. Yes.
When it's, okay, that's just, you know, that's just silly.
So I'll continue. David Childers has been in the paranormal field for nearly
30 years and had a much different take as he watched the trial play out because

(09:53):
he's gone ghost hunting with Stormy on her show Spooky Babes.
And he tells TMZ. That's the name of her show. That's the name.
I've never heard of it. I need to go watch it.
And she's the real deal, he says.
Childers swears to Zuul Z-U-U-L Isn't that the guy from Ghostbusters?

(10:16):
I don't know Alright Childers swears
to Zuul He's observed Stormy Daniels on several occasions Know scarily specific
details About dead people in spooky places With no prior information And for
him That's documented proof of her abilities And so So there's in this article,

(10:36):
there is a courtroom drawing of Stormy and it just, it's so bad.
I don't know who did that, but it's horrible.
Anyway, Childers says spirits flock to Stormy because she is a hundred percent good person.
But interestingly, he adds, they can't have her back.
As TMZ previously reported, Stormy wore a bulletproof vest while testifying

(11:01):
in the Trump case due to safety concerns. What?
Dude, this is so crazy.
I mean, so I have filed zero of this court case.
Yeah, me neither. Because I just don't give two shits. Yeah.
But you're wearing a bullet. I mean, that's just for show, right?
It is, yeah. She's just trying to make a point or. Right, right.

(11:25):
People talking about her or something. Right. And I'm sorry.
Listen, there's a lot of phenomenal people out in the world.
No one is 100% good person. You know, I think his, this guy,
I think he just wants to fuck her.
I think that's all it is. So we know what some of you are thinking.

(11:45):
And Childers says ghosts simply can't protect the living despite the Hollywood
heroics of folks like Patrick Swayze.
As for ghost hunting being used to discredit her on the stand,
Childers called it sad but not surprising.
Although he thinks it's terribly unfair. affair he recalls the
same thing happened to him while going through a divorce and

(12:07):
it ain't cool to have ghost skills used against
you whether people believe it or not children's
contents paranormal investigators are a science that deserves
more respect from the living especially from team trump regarding
stormy daniels so well i
agree with the last statement yeah i i do too but i
mean i just think he wants to bang her i mean

(12:30):
you know i mean how old is she i don't
i have no idea but you know she is an attractive woman what is thinking her
40s no i think older i think
she's closer to 60 oh it says she's 45 she's really yeah okay i'm looking at
a current picture of her there is no fucking way she looks the same age as me
she looks i mean you're saying she looks older she looks young well yeah she's

(12:56):
lived a rough life been ridden hard.
Oh god that's amazing you know things that i think and other people say at the same time i find,
so heartwarming it's because you're psychic you planted that thought in my brain
you know what that sort of stuff doesn't cross my brain i'm gonna tell you something

(13:18):
if i had that kind of ability that's not the kind of stuff i'd be planting in
people's brains yeah you might get bored of that skill after a while and you
just have to put weird thoughts in people's heads Maybe, maybe, but...
That would be a cool superpower. That would be.
I think I might want to add that to my superpower wish list.
Okay. Yeah. All right, well, we'll talk to Dr.
Xavier, Dr. X, right? From X-Men?

(13:41):
Okay, so I'm the only nerd here. All right, I'm getting a weird look.
So anyway, what do you guys think of that, of Stormy Daniels being a ghost hunter?
I mean, good for her, doing something like that, that she is inspired by.
So I'm not sure if everyone's seen, but on our Facebook page,
I did post that picture of her being a ghost hunter and with the caption I had

(14:05):
that we need to get her on the show.
So what do you guys think is the likelihood of us getting Stormy Daniels on
our little paranormal podcast? 20% chance.
Wow, that's high. I know. I don't know.
First number that came up to my head. Because if that's the case,
I'm going to start right now trying to get her.
I mean, you never know, No, but that's the first number that came to my head,

(14:26):
though. All right. Would you guys want to have her on?
I am open to have anybody on.
What would be the first thing you would ask her? Has she ever gotten naked for
a ghost before? That's actually not a bad question.
Lynette? I'm blanking. You're staring into my soul and creeping me out.

(14:49):
I'm trying to think. Is that a way of you saying that my eyes are just as sexy as my voice? Yes. Wow.
I'm going to have to. See, he doesn't know how to take a compliment. It's weird.
I'm going to have to timestamp that. And I think that's the first time you've
ever complimented me. Do you think she knows Jenny? Real quick.

(15:09):
Jenny is number one on my celebrity list. Oh, well, then she can't be on the
show. No, she definitely will be on the show.
I will sit here. That might be the most quietest I'll ever be on the show.
I'd be just in shock. Fangirling? Oh, yeah.
100%. What if she knows Dave and she can get Dave on the show? Who? Dave?
You're Dave. You're Dave. Oh, Dave Matthews? Yeah. Oh. Dave?

(15:36):
Maybe Dave's been on The Masked Singer. Mr. Dave Matthews, I just want to say
how much my wife and I love your music.
And it's one of the reasons why we got married. and I would love to hold you
for a good while. With Jenny there. Oh, God.
I'm going to have to step out of the room for a moment. Okay.

(15:57):
Anyway, yeah, so it'd be awesome if we can get Stormy Daniels on our little podcast.
Would you want to do the hurry here with us in my house?
Or would it just be more of a call-in show? If I'd be a call-in,
yeah. Yeah, all right. I'm trying.
All right, so anyway, that's our article for today. So let's jump right into time slips.

(16:22):
So tell me ladies what what do you think a time slip is like well what what
would you define that as while you're checking the time you slip and fall that's
the worst dad joke i've heard,
it has nothing to do what we're talking about.

(16:44):
Honestly i didn't know what a time slip was until i read into it for this podcast
so So that's why I made that joke.
Really? You didn't know what a time slip was at all? I never really thought
about it. I never really heard a term until now.
I'm just surprised. That's all. I'm not making fun of you. That's the first. Okay.

(17:05):
Ms. Lynette, I know you and I have talked about time slips before.
It's definitely something I want to experience.
But my understanding is it happens potentially at random where someone is doing
whatever mundane life activity and somehow automagically finds them somewhere

(17:28):
in the same environment, but in a,
as it sounds, time in the future or in the past and things don't look the way they are.
And then just as fast as it happens, they're back to where they started. Yeah.
So, yeah. Why do you want to experience one? It looks fun. Does it? Yeah.

(17:49):
Okay. I would love to be, I don't know, I find myself walking my dog around
the block or going for a drive and I was like, man, I really wish I could be
in this place where there is nobody.
Like before people settled in this area and started building houses and roads
and stuff like that. I just want to see what this planet, where I live,

(18:11):
looked like before people were here.
It sounds cool. No, it doesn't. Why? It's terrifying. Why? Because what if you run out of gas?
Yeah, well. Yeah. How do you get back?
What if I don't want to come back? You'd be answering a lot of prayers.
How do we know that doesn't happen to people who just vanish?

(18:32):
People who go missing. What if they ran out of gas on the other side of the time slip?
Listen, I know that this is why we're talking about this, but I don't understand
why someone would want to do that, though.
I find it exciting. I would love to come back and report my experience.
Yeah. If I come back. Yeah, right. That's the whole thing. That's a big fucking F. Yeah, well.

(18:57):
I would poop myself.
Oh, yeah. What if they don't have a change of pants for you? Well, yeah.
Then you know then i i'll guarantee people will stay away from me so what are
you afraid of happening everything you're not as scared i'm feared i'm scared
so i don't want to go somewhere where nobody knows my name.

(19:25):
Just make sure you're at the cheers bar i
mean i
don't know i think that's pretty terrifying just walking down
the street and all of a sudden being in a different time you
know i mean like i'm sure it's jarring but
i mean pretty cool listen okay if

(19:48):
i'm walking down the street and all of a sudden i'm catapulted back
to biblical times i'm i'm gonna
be number one put to death for being like a witch right okay well guess what
i'm not experiencing that time anymore well what if you just came back just
as quick i mean you don't know but like what like right before they lit the uh higher yeah yeah,

(20:12):
then they'll be like whoa he really was a witch and you'll prove them right
and then history would It would have been rewritten all about you.
So everyone would know your name. Once there's a guy named Frank.
All right. So number one, as amazing as that time would be, but no,
I don't think that sounds like a good time for me.
Do you think you can choose? Do you think there's any control over it?

(20:34):
Like your own mental time machine?
Right. Do I want, I don't know, if you're actually limited or bound to the place
where you physically are when it happens and you're only in that spot,
but just a different time?
Or could time slip, all of a sudden you're walking down the street and you end
up in another country or something like that?

(20:56):
Yeah, I don't know. That's a great question. I would tend to say that traveling
through time isn't the same as traveling through space.
So I would guess that if you do fall into a time slip, you would be in that
same space, just in a different time.
I see where you're going with that. Yeah. Yeah. But maybe, I mean,
maybe time and space are more interlocked than we think.

(21:20):
And maybe traveling through, or you could look at it this way,
maybe traveling through time.
You're also traveling through space, so you would end up in a different point of the planet.
You know, just depending on... That would be wild. Yeah, I mean,
just depending where the planet's rotation and axis and whatever.
I'm not a scientist, I don't know.

(21:44):
You know, but I mean, yeah, you could end up in a different part of the world.
Then how would you get back? Right.
I mean, there's no planes. If I'm going back, you go back 100 years,
there's no fucking planes.
Hmm. Well. You know, I mean. Do you think Amelia Earhart was a time slip?
No, I think she ran out of gas and crashed.

(22:05):
Well, that's a very unromantic story. It is a very un, but I'm,
you know, there's certain things where I just, you know, it just is what it is.
There is no. Well, what about that pilot? Wasn't he flying through the Bermuda
Triangle area in, maybe that's more time travel. I don't know if it's time travel or time slip.
It's very confusing for me. Do you know what I'm talking about?

(22:27):
There was a guy who was flying, I think, from Cuba to Florida or something like
that, and he made it there in a quarter of the time. Yeah, in like three minutes. Yeah.
So would you call that a time slip? Is that a portal? Is that time travel?
I don't... It could be all of the above. I mean, time slips...
It's whatever you make it. It's not whatever you make it. I just wanted to say

(22:48):
something. Okay, well, say something smart.
Gee, I sound rude. Duh.
But no, I mean, time slips and time travel, they can all be interlocked.
I mean, if you think about it, a time slip could be just a,
That's the word I'm looking for. Like a compression or expansion of time? Yeah.

(23:11):
It could be a time hiccup.
A time fart. Time burp. Time burp. Okay.
It's a flatulence of time. I think you're just coining new phrases on this show
right and left. Listen, I'm going to trademark them all. We had butt diamonds
last time. Yeah, we got butt diamond.
We got flatulence of time.
It's a lot of butt stuff going on. Lots of butt stuff.

(23:35):
And surprisingly, I am not a fan of butt stuff, as people may think.
I am not. What people might think.
The ones of our listeners. Everybody, the shirt that says, I like butt stuff
that you wear all the time. Yeah, yeah.
The ones of our listeners, all ones of them, think this.
And I blame both of you for that.

(23:57):
So how many ones of listeners do we have? Everyone sound off real quick.
But you know there's there's a lot of stories of like of like uh,
of like deja vu right what if like deja vu was just like a brief flash of a

(24:19):
time slip like what if all that is is just like a memory of us having a time slip that was so,
so small that we didn't really think about until we experienced it again.
Bree, you can say something now.
I can't think of anything right now. All right, just sit there and try to look
pretty. I will. All right, thanks. No, I... Oh, sorry, I didn't mean to kick you, Bree.

(24:42):
No, I think deja vu... I think the whole concept of time in general gets confusing
for me because I'm wondering if it is different words trying to express the same thing.
Deja vu being one of them because I've been there.
How did I see this? where did I see this?
But you don't, you only have like a flash. So maybe that, that,

(25:05):
maybe that's exactly what a time slip is. It happens that fast.
It's just a flash in time, like a flash in a pan. It's just a moment.
That's interesting. I mean, yeah.
So what do you think causes time slips?
It could be if, if we're thinking from a dimensional perspective,
it could could be a convergence of dimensions in proximity with each other.

(25:31):
So if everything's running in parallel, what if time sped up or slowed down
in one area where these dimensions converge, allowing you to slip into the other one and or come back?
Does that make sense? Yeah, it makes sense. I don't know. What do you think?
I'm not thinking of anything, honestly, no. Yeah, you know, I think we've mentioned it before.

(25:57):
The most current running theory is that all time that's ever happened is happening,
will happen, is going on at the same time.
So if we kind of look at it as though slices and just maybe it's just when those two different times,
sliced pieces of time kind of overlap, you know, they're touching.

(26:21):
So you kind of experience one over the other in that brief moment.
And then as they break apart or move away from each other, I mean,
kind of like what you're saying, speeding up and slowing down.
I kind of look at it as though...
Like a wave right like a wave i
don't and water so like when waves converge you know
and you create one big rogue wave and that

(26:44):
decimates ships i was actually before
you even started talking about ocean and water or whatever
i had images of water in my head too so i think you
are planting seeds in my brain just just saying
like i was picturing like raindrops or something raindrops could join
together and they pick up more as
they're you know running down your window or something them so yeah i'm

(27:06):
going to keep planning stuff in your head just whatever i do plant just
take action on those which is i appreciate it he does that
by when he stares at your soul that's that's what's actually what's happening
he's planning stuff in your head creep you know get out of my brain so all right
so this is going to take us somewhere different so i i do believe that the eyes
are the windows to the soul and i do know that some people when they stare at

(27:30):
you you're you're like, holy shit.
They're like looking through me into the back of my brain. Is that the way you
guys feel when I stare at you?
Yeah. Really? Because I've never gotten that before.
No one's ever mentioned that before and that just popped in my head because
Lynette's mentioned it twice now. Because I put that thought in your head.
There's times when people stare and I'm like, okay, but there's sometimes when like,

(27:53):
You witness it. Like when you start staring at me, I start getting nervous and
I'm like, stop staring at me. Do you like that? You're doing it right now. I don't like it.
It freaks me out. I'm going to have to put a two-way mirror here so you can't
see it. Pretty much. Yeah. It's like some people do the same thing he's doing,
but I don't get the same intense.
And it's like, I mean, some people, it's the same way. And just like,

(28:13):
I get so nervous and freak out. Freaking lasers.
Yeah. See, I've never, I mean,
at least people, maybe they feel more comfortable when I do
do it i don't know but like no one's ever said that so now i'm
just curious if i have that effect and if so i just
want to stare more intently into people's eyes now and just get maybe he's now
that's just getting creepy maybe he's a secret man in black and he's wiping

(28:36):
your thoughts and that's why you try to talk and he just wipes your brain i
should have wiped anyway Anyway, skid mark, Frank.
SMF. SMF, baby. So, all right.
So there is a couple stories that we did pull for this time slip.

(29:02):
So the first one is a pretty well-known one. I mentioned it to both of you and
you guys never heard of it. So I kind of want to lead with that real quick.
So it's July 1954, a hot day. A man arrives.
Tokyo airport in Japan. He's of Caucasian appearance and conventional looking,
but the officials are suspicious on checking his passport.

(29:25):
They see that he hails from a country called Torrid.
The passport looked genuine, except for the fact that there is no such country
as Torrid, well, at least in our dimension.
The man is interrogated and asked to point out where his country supposedly exists on the map.
He immediately points his finger towards the the Principality of Andorra,

(29:48):
but becomes angry and confused.
He's never heard of Andorra and can't understand why his homeland of Tori isn't there.
According to him, it should have existed for more than a thousand years.
Customs officials found him in possession of money from several different European currencies.
His passport had been stamped by many airports around the globe,

(30:09):
including previous visits to Tokyo.
Baffled, they took him to a local hotel and placed him in a room with two guards
outside until they could get to the bottom of the mystery.
The company he claimed to work for had no knowledge of him, although he had
copious amounts of documentation to prove his point.
The hotel he claimed to have had a reservation for had never heard of him either.

(30:31):
The company officials in Tokyo he was there to do business with,
yep, you guessed it, they just shook their
heads no later when the hotel room he was
held in was opened the man had disappeared the
police established that he could not have escaped out the window the room was
several floors up and there was no balcony balcony and he was never seen again

(30:53):
so you guys that's your first time hearing that story and supposedly this happened
i think is either the The 50s or the 60s. So it's not like it's something new.
It's a story, right? This is 1954. Okay, yeah. So, I mean, it's 70 years old. Yeah.
So, you know, there wasn't too much...

(31:16):
Bullshit going on back then you know especially with stuff like this like you know i mean sci-fi.
Stories were i think were just getting popular at that time so you
know i don't think this was something
that was just made up for fun what do you guys uh what are
your guys thoughts on that story well i think this one's interesting because
most of the stories i've heard are someone leaving

(31:38):
and coming back where this one is someone came and
went right so that's that
in and of itself unique yeah yeah and it's
it's a very pretty a well covered story
i've never heard it yeah that's cool
yeah it's really cool i just the only
thing that makes me think that this is potentially fake is that there's no name

(32:04):
you know so they would that's that's interesting yeah yeah because Because I
would think that if the officials,
the airport officials, would have taken this person into custody and put him
up in a hotel with guards.
They would have photocopied his ID and all of that. Right, exactly.

(32:24):
Exactly. You know, there would
have been additional documentation showing that this, you know, Bobby,
you know, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby Cletus Boucher is from Torrid.
And, you know, and there'd be a whole report filled out and there's nothing.

(32:46):
Yeah. You know, and I get it. This is way before computer age, right? Right.
Or maybe government's just keeping it under wraps and squashing it.
Maybe they know about this.
That could be too. You don't know. I mean, is it possible? Yeah.
You know, based on our show, anything is possible. Right.
But again, if this entire story with all these details came out,

(33:10):
I would have assumed something else physical would have leaked out as well.
Okay, why are you laughing? I'm just laughing because you said physically leak out.
Am I sitting in a puddle? I don't understand. I need sleep.

(33:30):
No, therapy, lots of therapy. Okay. That's the only thing that I have against this story.
It's weird because there's some stories that are so wild that have an overabundance of details.
Tells them like oh well that's just too much detail you know i mean
like we're never happy just like a picture of a ufo why
are they always fuzzy and then you get a really good clear

(33:53):
one oh that's just wait that's that that's just photoshopped that's
too clear like we're never happy with any evidence right but
there's just so much lacking like i want i
would love to see you know a copy of the report
that was written up the person's first name you know
i don't even even give me a last name that's fine you know but
a first name what was it you know was it

(34:14):
maybe it was andora you know maybe if it had a
first and a last name is that enough proof for you no i would i wouldn't want
to i'd want a body i physically want this person in front of me telling me he's
from toward what if he was hey if you're from toward please send us an email
frank at friend rangebeyondlimits.com.

(34:36):
Thank you. Sorry, go ahead. I don't even remember.
So that's a fun story.
So I was also kind of looking, and there's some theories about time slips as well.
So there's a quantum mechanics theory that proposes that time slips could be
evidence of parallel universes or alternate dimensions intersecting with our

(35:00):
own, which is what we kind of said in our own crude way.
Neurological abnormalities speculate that time
slips may be caused by temporary glitches or malfunctions in
the in the brain particularly within the areas that process time perception
which would also kind of make sense since it's it's a whole experience and you

(35:20):
know if it's a hallucination or a dream like daydreaming kind of thing our brain
can't decipher between reality
and dreams, which is why our dreams are so real.
And, you know, so, I mean, that is also kind of interesting that it may just
be a neurological imbalance in that moment because of all the different chemical
reactions that go on in our brain.

(35:42):
If one little thing is off because of, you know, maybe we bumped our head or
we just ate too much seaweed that day, you know, listen, you're the vegetarian.
Don't look at me. Seaweed's good for you. Yeah, I know. And guess Guess what
else is good for me? Meat. Cows.
So if...

(36:04):
Moving on. No pun intended there.
So would you call it a time slip?
For those days that drag on like time doesn't
seem to move or those days that fly by yeah because
that is that a personal perception of time or is it

(36:25):
collective you know i i think it it can
be both and just because i agree
i think when a day drags on like at work specifically
right or a time or time flies
by like and you're just hanging out with your friends at a bar or whatever you know
i drink so that's where i usually hang out just black out
on time yes yeah so like we'll

(36:46):
take the example of that work like it's funny i'll
go up to like a couple of co-workers like oh today's such a
long fucking day and they're like it is isn't it yeah you know so i mean i i
think it's it's it's both i think it's a both it can be collective and it can
be individual and you just have to like ask people if they're experiencing the

(37:08):
same thing as you because Because there are times where I'm like, holy shit,
today is flowing by. And someone's like, no, it hasn't. It's dragged.
You know what I mean? So there's been examples of both. So it just depends, I guess.
I guess it just depends where our individual minds are in that day.
Sometimes we're synced up and it looks fast or slow.

(37:30):
And if we're on different wavelengths that day, then it is an individual perception.
And then there's also psychological factors. Those factors suggest that time
slips might be a result of intense psychological experiences leading to altered
states of consciousness,
which is kind of similar to the one before that, the neurological abnormalities,

(37:50):
just in a different way, I think.
So do you think, and I know you have other stories here too,
but do you think that time slips,
at least based on some of the examples that I've heard, everyone's going about
their day, but one person slips through? Like, why do you think that is?

(38:13):
Hmm. Did they walk through something?
Are they on a different wavelength that they were able to do that?
That like yeah possibly i
mean you have people walking down the street and then does anybody
notice that so-and-so disappeared like weird right it is weird do they disappear

(38:33):
i mean no i i wonder if it just if everyone has that pause of time but so if so what if everyone um.
Crosses that time slip over with you
and it's only the handful of people that say something that really
that these stories come from so like for

(38:54):
example like take a square block right and for whatever reason they have a square
block travels into a time slip so everyone that was there experiences the same
thing but only a handful really realize that that's happening And maybe we're
just so caught up in our own lives, you know? Yeah.
Maybe it is a select few. I mean, I find it weird that every night I go to sleep.

(39:19):
I voluntarily do this, right?
I close my eyes and say, you know what? I'll be safe for the next set hours.
And I'm just going to close my eyes and shut my body down, which is weird in itself.
When you phrase it like that, yeah. Right. So I think it's weird that I go to
sleep every night and I wake up the same person.

(39:41):
I always wonder that too. You know, so I always wonder that what if our consciousness
just every time we go to sleep just hops around.
But when we wake up, whatever body we're in, we only know that.
Like you assume all of those memories. Right. All those memories.
And you only know of those memories. Right.

(40:03):
So I may have been, you know, somebody else yesterday, but since I jump into
this body, all I have is the memory of this life, this person's life.
That's wild. Like when you sit and try and wrap your brain around that.
Oh, it's crazy. It's crazy.
I mean, like, who knows? Sounds fun though.

(40:24):
Yeah. You, you would say that. I can't wait for you to go fall into a time slip
and never come back. Cause this is just.
You'll miss me. well this this
body will i mean my body yeah but the
the next soul hopper will be like so do
you think we go through like you said so if it's take your analogy of that square

(40:51):
block okay right or you know even just you as a person as an individual do you think that.
We're always hopping, always going through slips.
And let's just say you have your road facing forward. Right.
And we perceive that we're moving forward in a linear fashion.

(41:12):
But what if you're moving more horizontally or diagonally the whole time?
You see where I'm going with that? Yeah, I do.
So this is the way that I see it. I understand your point. And I don't think
that would be the case because I think there'd be more stories of these time slips than there are.
So i'll use your analogy of driving down
the road straight road and instead of

(41:35):
driving on a slight you know three degree
angle right is that is that what essentially okay instead of that i would see
as every once in a while you come to a roundabout so you want to continue going
straight but you got to do the little round i hate fucking around about they're
putting them in i'll say right Right, left around here.

(41:55):
Everywhere. They used to never be here in the last five years.
It's like, there's- Wouldn't it be cool in European?
Listen, just come to a fucking stop, wait for the other guy,
and then just go. I mean, how hard is this? But no, we have to sit there and
judge. Is that guy going to go straight? I don't know.
And then you got the people in front of you that don't know how to use a fucking
roundabout. And then it causes traffic that is supposed to help relieve traffic.
It doesn't help relieve traffic.
No, what it's going to do is it's going to make me want to start shooting people.

(42:18):
I don't think you can say that. Allegedly.
With a water pistol. as long as you just say allegedly you're fine so so you're
traveling down and you just you come to this little roundabout that would be
like your little time slip veered out of that lane right,
i don't know i mean yeah no that's a good analogy yeah i don't know that's when

(42:40):
when you were giving yours that's that's what popped into my head so yeah but
yeah so i would love to find like the science behind it.
You know, I would like to find something to measure it.
But I'm too dumb, you know?
So. Let's take up some courses in, you know, just the light reading of quantum mechanics.

(43:04):
Yeah. No, right. I can't even.
A little pamphlet. I don't think I can spell half the word quantum.
You know, to me it sounds like kumquat. Kumquat. Not even close.
No, not even close. All right.
All right. So here's another quantum mechanics theory is that time is a series
of probabilities and not a constant progression. Kind of like what we talked about.

(43:27):
Another theory is wormholes, tunnels, and space time that could allow for time travel.
And then another theory is parallel universes, multiple realities exist simultaneously,
allowing for crossover experiences.
So these are, you know, possible explanation to these time slips,
which, you know, so I have a theory on wormholes and death.

(43:48):
So, you know how like, not everyone, but the vast majority of near-death experiences,
they always have that white light in the tunnel.
I think that tunnel is a wormhole that takes our consciousness to our home base, lack of a better word.
People can call it heaven. We'll just call it home base because we're children.

(44:12):
So, yeah, I do think that, you know, that's one of the things that happens to
us when we pass. It's like we go through there.
I totally thought you were going to say the other theory.
Which one? That the light at the end of the tunnel is just the opening of another vagina.
Of another vagina. So, you know what's amazing is that that would mean that

(44:35):
all life is is just a series of vaginal openings you're coming through.
There's your time slip this is
an image i can't get out my head now i mean yeah i know you're welcome so.

(44:58):
This may be our last episode yeah it might be you gotta live life like it's your last episode,
that's our t-shirt i like that's our t-shirt write that down okay all right that's awesome.
So so there are some like aftermath effects
of having these time slips most common

(45:20):
one is disorientation occasionally you have altered perceptions of
time and then rarely physical evidence from the past do you think that's possible
like if i go through a time slip can i bring something physical back with me
i wouldn't think so no why not because Because my belief or my thought on that is that artifact,

(45:43):
that item, only exists in that dimension, that vibration.
And bringing it across to another one, it doesn't exist.
Assuming it's something that doesn't already exist in the existing universe that you're in.
So some widget, some animal that doesn't exist in this reality,
it wouldn't survive if you brought it over from another one.

(46:04):
So are you saying that the movie Back to the Future 2 couldn't have happened
because Biff couldn't have brought the Sports Almanac back in time to his younger self?
Hmm. Well, the Sports Almanac existed, but not the year print version, right?
No, it didn't exist. It wasn't even a printed document in those days? Right.

(46:30):
Well then, yeah. The whole movie's a lie. Right. And then also,
with that, once he brings it back, it splits time into a new timeline.
So do you think that's possible? Could we travel back in time and create new timelines?
And if so, how would we get back to our original timeline? Or would we even want to?

(46:51):
I think we're always creating new timelines.
And where I'm going with that is, okay you have a decision to make between a
or b you make a but you've given thought and energy towards option b that option
b goes off and creates its own reality and moves forward,
so it's a series of making a and b choices so let's see you way out.

(47:16):
You're gonna have to be much funnier at least i got someone to laugh yeah yeah
corny joke yeah i I know. Yeah, that doesn't mean anything.
I'm a sucker for corny jokes. I'm pretty sure I can look at Lynette right now
and just say fart noises.
Oh, no, she didn't laugh to that. But God forbid, you know, see you in a while.
That makes you laugh. It does.

(47:39):
God. All right.
You guys make me happy I have a penis. Do you?
I mean, it's size-wise, it may not.
In this reality in this yeah the size
of it may not warrant itself
to be called a penis it'd probably be called

(48:00):
a wee wee okay yeah so like
different different words you know would tell you like the different sizes i
would have so like for mine i wouldn't even call mine it would be just a wee
wee a wee wee yeah the next one up would be wiener okay you know then penis then dick,

(48:22):
and then I think if you have like, if you're well-endowed, it'd just be a cock.
You know what I mean? So.
Bree's laughing, not because of the words I'm saying, but we had a conversation.
And I think Lynette and I, I think I've had this conversation with you as well
as to what do you think it sounds like when people who don't swear talk dirty to each other?

(48:43):
You know? So like, it would be like, I'm going to give you my wee-wee later.
That's why he's so laughing.
I just think of that Orbit commercial. You lint licker.
You lint licking you're going to get a
wienering of a lifetime tonight you know like

(49:07):
like you don't even like like pull hair you kind
of just put your hand on the back of her head you just
grab it you're just like oh feel this
wiener you know oh my goodness i know it's so aggressive
but it's not it's so
weird anyway that's a great conversation so here's

(49:30):
a little q a that i kind of pulled up as well as what
is a time slip time slip is a phenomenon where a
person experiences a temporary displacement in time often feeling
as though they had moved to a different era of time period or
time period so i think we kind of touched that right let's see so what are the
common experiences associated with time slips people may report seeing historical

(49:52):
figures or events encountering buildings surroundings that appear to be from
a different time period or feeling as though they have temporarily stepped into the past or future.
So let me ask you guys this. I'm going to start with Brie because she's been the most quiet so far.
If you had a time slip, would you want to go into the past or into the future?

(50:13):
I would like to probably go in the future.
Okay. Because I'm just, I'm one of those curious people People like to know
what happens, not how it happened.
Okay. So what do you think happens in the future?
Like, give me a top five list of life-changing things that will happen 200 years from now.

(50:36):
Like, what five things would be extremely different?
Well, one, the obvious, like how technology tends to change every year.
Be more specific, please. I don't know how to be more specific on that,
just technology in general.
The way we use computers, cars, stuff like that, everything technology-related.

(50:57):
Okay, so will cars be self-driving? I would assume so. I mean,
we already have a self-driving car in a way.
Right. But it will be more advanced.
Will computers be integrated within our bodies?
I would say I would have to do with like kind of connecting with the mind in

(51:19):
some way like they're all able to do that so like instead of you having like
to type something or whatever it's like you just think of it and it goes straight
onto the computer okay what else,
it. I can't think of anything else. I just think it'd be interesting to see
in the future how everything has changed.
Right, and I'm just trying to get you to use your imagination to give me a little

(51:42):
insight what you think. Imagination?
Like the big imagination you use with Brian?
Key word there is big.
Let's see what else. Oh, I don't know.
What would it look like
for people going to work like what

(52:05):
would work be would we have the same kind of jobs as we do now i feel like that
part probably won't change as much no no i think it'll be more ways of being
able to do your job from anywhere rather than it's the people People that have
to go in the office all the time.
There's going to be ways of like, for example, people that are at the front desk or something.

(52:29):
Instead of them, they can actually be at home and it's like a hologram of them
at the front desk greeting people.
Instead of... What would entertainment be like? Like what movies would have evolved to what?
I think they'd be like 3D holograms instead of being on flat screens.
Screens would would a movie

(52:50):
also have the ability of putting you
into it so you can kind of uh oh smell
a vision you can actually smell things forever they
should have that yeah 200 years they better
like if like let's say they're just something going
on you can smell it and like if there's like a like a
explosion you can feel the air and feel the

(53:11):
heat and smell the smoke coming
me from i mean i think how good advertising would be yeah you
could smell my ass every time i fart i would never
watch anything that has to do with farting so unfortunately or i'll just bring
nose plugs so i don't have to smell that part or the shell movie so do you think
after going to the future would and you saw something would you try and change

(53:36):
something in the present,
to either stop or start something?
If I saw something, I'd probably go back to the present and just kind of do
more research and see how it's even possible at the present day and time.
I don't know if there's anything I would try to change because I'm one of those
paranoid people that if you try to change something I think that it's...

(54:00):
It's different than going back and changing the past to change the present.
I see something original, I kind of don't want to change it even though I may not like it,
it's like that's how it's supposed to be in my head but even though I know it's
possible you can change things but I'm always like oh that's how I was taught
or that's how I was shown and I'm like I don't want to touch it yeah that's fair.
What about you would you go forward or

(54:22):
back i am fascinated i love
history i'm fascinated with the past and i
think that history is
written by the victors so i would love to go and
experience firsthand events from our
past the first so if i had like a time
machine i would i would go back

(54:44):
to like jesus times like i would really want to
see is he real you know
i mean because i mean there really isn't any outside the bible which
i don't use as too much
of a historical guideline or historical
book there's not there's there's
little to none historical evidence of jesus

(55:06):
but i also get that because if he
was supposedly just this one normal person to
everyone else in the the world there would be really no reason to
be right for normal
people normal scholars to write about them so
i i get that i get i get the pros and cons to that but i
would i would really like to go back there to see that i would love to go see

(55:29):
what it was like during the i'm trying to blame the templar knights the crusades
yep i would love i would love to go back and see a dinosaur Heck yeah.
You know, again, in the safety of a little like space that I know I won't get
crucified along with Jesus.

(55:50):
I don't want to be Barabbas hanging next to him. I don't want to be eaten by a T-Rex.
I would have to have my own safe space.
And I'm totally not. So you need a time slip safety bubble. Bubble, yes, yes.
Yeah, so that's, yeah, I would like that. What about you, Longat?
I would like to go back as well. Well, I think I mentioned earlier,

(56:11):
I just want to see what places look like without people.
Yeah, I guess we did cover this. I don't like people. No, you don't.
Which is, I wonder why you're doing this with us now. Yeah, it'd be interesting
to go back with dinosaurs. That's true.
So, all right. So, another question
here is, are time slips considered scientifically proven phenomenon?

(56:33):
Time slips are not scientifically proven and are often considered to be more
of a subjective experience or hallucination than a real phenomenon.
I mean, that makes sense. I can't say, you know, yay or nay on that.
I think we touched on the scientific process that they always want that smoking
gun for it to be repeatable and doable and under controlled situations, which I understand why.

(56:56):
I'm not going to say that that's wrong.
It's just so hard, you know, because, I mean, you go back 100 years and the
atom was the smallest thing we had until we had the technology to cut that open
and all this shit just came out. I mean.
I'm sure it's going to go smaller still.
Right. I mean, well, for me. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Lucky for you,

(57:20):
they'll have more things to measure. I know.
Smaller and smaller things. Yeah. Like right now, I'm up to the size of length, 10 atoms.
10 atoms. Wow. Yeah. So, you know, ladies don't all come running at once.
They aren't. They're running away. And that's A-T-O-M, not A-D-A-M.

(57:41):
Yeah, A-T-O-M. Yeah. No. I don't know any atoms.
Can time slips be explained by paranormal or supernatural theories?
While some people may attribute time slips to paranormal or supernatural causes,
there's no conclusive evidence to support these theories. You know,
going to say that because there's never going to be enough proof there's not right right

(58:02):
you know i mean if there's not enough proof for any one
paranormal or supernatural theory you know then
of course so i'm surprised that they didn't lump that into that where are some
famous well-documented cases of time slips we went over the man from torrid
and there's there's a couple more it was so hard trying to find them because

(58:23):
they're behind so many paywalls yeah which drove me crazy
researching this. And it's like, I just want the story.
Like you don't own the story, you know, unless it was made up,
which is very possible. Yeah.
And then are there any ways to intentionally induce a time slip experience?
There are no proven methods for intentionally inducing a time slip.

(58:44):
Pretty sure hallucinogenics.
But if you do enough mushrooms, you will think that you are time itself. Yeah.
So. Time's got a sound and a smell. Yeah. And I don't, I've never done hallucinogenics,
but I am willing to watch other people do it.
Glorify a babysitter. Yeah. You're hired. Am I? Yeah. I never thought I'd be good at babysitting.

(59:10):
So there is one last story here that I do want to just go over.
So in 1901, two English women, Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jordan,
took a vacation to France.
While they were there they visited the palace of
versailles and while they were
at versailles they visited what's known as petite trianon a little chateau on

(59:34):
the palace grounds that louis the 16th gave to marie antoinette as a private
space for her to hang out and do whatever it is that a teenage queen did when
she was relaxing back then what do you think she would do back then guys,
Probably read poetry and sonnets. That's very French of you. Mm-hmm.
Brie, what do you think a teenage queen would do back in the day when she had

(59:59):
this chateau all to herself?
Run around naked. Probably. French or frisky. French or frisky? Frisky frinters.
Frisky frinters? French earth.
I was going to say that she played with the Ouija board. I don't know why.

(01:00:20):
Maybe she called a seer in. See her what? A seer. Never heard of her.
Carry on. Okay. I thought you liked corny jokes.
Jeez. But while they were there, they claimed they saw some odd occurrences.
They said they spotted people wearing anachronistic clothing.
Almost sounds like you said Abercrombie. heard mysterious voices and saw buildings

(01:00:44):
and other structures that were no longer present and indeed hadn't existed since the late 1700s.
Finally, they said they caught sight of Marie Antoinette drawing in a sketchbook.
They claimed to have fallen into a time slip and been briefly transported back
more than 100 years before being jolted back to the present by a tour guide.

(01:01:04):
What do you think that kind of felt like? Like you see Marie Antoinette sketching,
then all of a sudden you know Pepe Le Pew your tour guide from France is snapping
you back and you think they were just having like a,
mutual vision like or do you think they kind of time slept and saw this good question.

(01:01:29):
Probably mutual maybe okay I don't know okay well your question kind of makes
me wonder when you We go on paranormal things and you pick up on a sense of
what life used to be like in this building.
Is that maybe something that they experienced?

(01:01:51):
Is some of our paranormal stuff maybe more time slipped than we think? Maybe.
I've been in some old houses. You're like, I can totally vision this family
having Christmas here. Or this is how they would decorate and the table would be here.
And then maybe that crosses over into the Claire's. But, you know,
like clairvoyance, clairsentience. I mean, it's possible.

(01:02:14):
But, yeah, it just made me wonder if. Yeah. Is our consciousness just kind of
seeing into the past, right?
Is it seeing through the different slices of time into that specific point?
Right. And I think the difference would be as if Marie Antoinette looked up and saw them.
That would be interesting. Right? Right. And then you would tell her,
don't make the brioche comment and you're going to lose your head.

(01:02:36):
Run away. Yeah. Stop being a greedy bee. Yeah. Yeah.
Would you really want her not to make the brioche comment? I mean. I kind of like it.
Brioche is delicious. I know. It's so good. It's so good.
So did they really travel back in time? Probably not.

(01:02:57):
Various explanations include everything from a fois adieu, basically a joint
delusion, to a simple misinterpretation of what they actually saw.
But for what it's worth, in 1911, roughly 10 years after what they said they
had experienced occurred, the two women published a book about the whole thing
under the names Elizabeth Morrison, and Frances Lamont, simply called An Adventure.

(01:03:20):
These days it is available as The Ghost of Trianon. Check it out.
I will. I like all things Marie Antoinette. Do you really? I do.
I've never heard you once say anything about Marie Antoinette.
You've got to keep some of your nerd stuff under your hat.
No, because I'm an idiot. So you should feel more than comfortable expressing

(01:03:41):
and divulging any of that information. I don't want to put listeners asleep
about French Revolution history.
Freaky French. Freaky French. Freaky French.
So, all right, well, if any of you out there have had any time slips,
please, we'd love to know about them.
Send us an email at frank at fringebeyondlimits.com or Brianna or Lynette,

(01:04:06):
also at fringebeyondlimits.com.
Any last takes on this, guys? Bri, what do you think? Like time slips, real, fake, delusions?
I kind of want to go in the delusion category with this. Mm-hmm.
So it's hard to have proof that it's real, and it's hard to have proof that it's fake.

(01:04:27):
Like it's one of those, I don't know, but it could just be something in your
head that it's like a delusion. Okay.
Okay. Why not? I am so hopeful that they're real, and I can't wait to experience
one and come back and tell you about it.
I think that they. So it could be delusional for you, if that makes you happy.
Yeah, I can't wait for Lynette to have her delusional experience and never come back.

(01:04:52):
Hey, whatever. I'll go eat brioche with.
Marie. Marie. Yeah. Marie and Tinnit. All right. So social guys,
what are our socials? You guys remember?
No. No one remembers? Oh, all right. Okay. So we're on Facebook.
I was going to say we're on Instagram. We're on Instagram.
YouTube coming soon. We have a website We have a website FringeBeyondLimits.com

(01:05:16):
You can see a picture of us And our phenomenal bios So yeah,
you guys enjoy Thank you again for listening My name is Frank My name is Brie
And this is Lynette And we are Fringe Beyond Limits.

(01:05:37):
Music.
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