Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season forty nine, episode
two of Daily Sight Guys, Tuesday, September eighteen, two thousand eighteen.
My name's Jack O'Brien. A K. It's the eye of O'Brien.
It's the Daily Site Guys rising up to drop the
prescious of our hot takes and the second rate podcast
(00:23):
stocks Miles Gray in the night and he's watching us
all with the Jack O'Brian all right. That is courtesy
if Hannas sole Soltis. Yeah, and I'm thrilled to be
joined as just by my co host, Mr Miles Miles
(00:44):
at the time of Zite Guys. And I never felt
this gray before. I don't know if I did that again,
but that is really from Chapman Rice A. K. Gottis,
and I just had to do it again. It's worth Yeah,
it's just it's just worth doing. It's just worth doing.
And that might be the time but either way, Hello, welcome, Hello,
Hey Miles, Jack, good to see you, Good to see
(01:05):
you well, uh in our third seat. We are thrilled
to have the stand up grade, you know from drunk
history and crashing. He is Mr Wayge Betterman, Thank you,
thank you, Hey, thanks for being here. We had too
many credits we could list for you. Yeah, let's just
go throw them all every Now we don't have. My
question for you is uh Survivor? Is I the Tiger?
(01:27):
But I don't know if I know who's saying I'm here.
I don't either. I just know that Jennifer warre it's
from Dirty Dancing. Yeah, well obviously, but I mean, is
it Jennifer Warren something like yes, no, Jennifer Warrens and
Bill Medley Warrens, Yeah, that's what it is. Okay, what
happened to Bill Medley? I don't know. Sounds like a name,
(01:49):
that's weird. That's why at first I was like, maybe
I should feel bad for not knowing who did it.
But then when I read those names, I'm like, those
don't remember. Okay, it was closed. That's closed. But Survivor
for sure. Everyone likes that, right the great? Yeah, alright,
we're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment, Wayne, But first we're gonna tell our
listeners what we are about to talk about. We're gonna
talk about the fight of the Century that happened over
(02:10):
the weekend between Tom Arnold and Mark Burnett. It was
that the canelo. There's also that We're gonna talk about
how senators from both sides are reacting to all the
Kavanaugh breaking news. We're going to talk about Trump's feelings
(02:30):
towards women just in general. We're gonna talk about Sean
Penn's feelings towards the Me Too movement, a gentleman named
Randy Cretico, who you may not know but you should.
And finally, we're going to talk about the four distinct
personality types. Miles. I've been waiting a long time for this.
Myers Briggs is just complete garbage and has been replaced
(02:55):
by an actual scientific study of personality types. And we're
also going to talk about Mark Wahlberg. But first Wayne,
we like to ask our guest, what is something from
your search history that's revealing about who you are as
a human being? Just we're gonna reveal, yes, well, we'll
just be judging you. Well, um, it's the difference between
(03:16):
the word aesthetic and aesthetic with the a just looked
it up today, okay, because I was writing an article
and someone corrected my aesthetic with an aesthetic and I
was like, m hmmm, so what is yes? Well, aesthetic is,
you know, the general idea behind something, the general the
(03:39):
way it's and aesthetic is the exact same thing, except
that's the way they say it in Britain. Yeah, it
was ridiculous. For a second, I was like, do I
not know that? So I thought I didn't because it
was correct because somebody sent this artic and they was like,
I think you mean aesthetic. I was like, oh wow,
(03:59):
and I being corrected. I love learning things. Yeah, I
always spell it a I think I do too. It's
but in America we spell it and with just the
eaton you also spelled color with the you I do
and favorite with you. I'm a bit of an anglophile
as well. Okay, yeah, I mean I have ventulations on
the wedding, Thank you so much. I have a bit
(04:19):
of rubbish in the boot of my car I have
to get later. It's in a state car. What is
something you think is overrated? Wayne? Okay, this is gonna
turn off most year less. All right, Okay, this is
gonna be hit the controversial theme music. Okay, that's not here.
We go the movie Shawshank Redemption. Wow, that's over rated.
(04:45):
Now tell me how did you arrive at this because
I saw the movie, because because I had to sit
through it, and then there was a whole wave of
people loving it to the point where and I going,
I am dB, and they have that own rating service.
Usually if it's not number one, it's usually the Godfather.
They go back and forth. Yes, I didn't know Rushank
(05:07):
is now regarded. Yeah, and in the world of im dB,
as does that mean like the search heat around it
or they have a ranking. It's crowdsourced by American, So
I am going against America and so sometimes that is
an okay thing to do, right, Well, in this case,
I'm sure I'm going to get some heat on. But
(05:28):
that's that's my feeling. I felt like it was not
a great movie. I didn't think it was. Again, I
know people obviously adore it. But prison movie where there's
an evil warden, I've never seen anything like it. Can
you believe it? I can't believe it? Well with my
idea of prison, Yeah, it's really breaking some boundaries here, Okay.
(05:50):
I was a fan of the strong female characters in
the You mean on the poster on the wall? Yeah? Um,
what is something you think is underrated? The median Paul F. Tompkins.
Yeah you think you're no, I feel like that guy.
I don't know why he's not a famous comedian all
(06:11):
I mean, like a comedian. If you like comedy, you
know Paul of Tompkins, But he's not a household right exactly.
I just think he's off the chart, brilliant. One of
my favorite is perform. Yeah, you would you say he's underrated?
I would underknown. I guess, like I feel like it's
hard some way, even like when you talk about Shawshank,
(06:32):
Like part of me where I agree with you the
overratedness is how much they fucking play that movie all
the time, And I'm like, what the fun is going
on here? But it's rated, it's it's rated, it's held
up in high regard. But yeah, with Paul of Tompkins,
he's like one of those people where I feel like, obviously,
if you know comedy, you like comedy, do you know
who p F T is? But like I feel like
he deserves to be in that next wave or that
(06:55):
next circle of spirit influence the exactly. Yeah, credible. He's
constantly on podcasts and is just I think he's on
every podcast except his batting average is so high, so
it's anyway. So that's and I love hearing him improvide,
like his his improv skillers. Just I just creep up
(07:16):
when he's Yeah, he's amazing. We all agree with you,
all right, everybody makes for great to the comedy bubble.
One of my favorite sort of underrated podcasts every year
is when Paul Tompkins and Scott Ackerman do the countdown
of the top comedy bang Bang moments of the year.
(07:37):
And it's great, just like the in studio moments when
they're just talking about the year and like not really
talking about anything or are the greatest, and it's just
Paul Off Tompkins being Paul Off Tompkins. Some people going
Paul for Tompkins. You're saying that that's how it's pronounced. Yeah,
like William Macy, same thing. I thought it was Tomkins,
(08:03):
paula Paul Tomkins. When we do have him on, that's
how we will pronounce it. And the whole time waiting
for him to be like, is this a joke? Uh?
And finally, Wayne, what is a myth? What's something people
think it's true? Here's a myth that fast food will
(08:26):
kill you? Alright, and let me tell you my canary
in the coal mine? Is that the correct metaphor? Probably
it's a gentleman by the name of He's one of
the richest guys in the world. He has a I
don't know, whine blanket on his name. I want to
say Buffett, Warren Buffett McDonald's huh said every day said
(08:49):
every day? Everything there. If there's anyone who has an
incentive to be healthy, right, yeah, and stay around. Yeah,
it's Warren Buffett. Mr good. Yeah. Yeah. I drove by
his house when I was in Omaha. How don't look
it's very normal humble. Yeah. I mean it's a it's
a big house or whatever, but not like where you're like,
oh my goodness, this estate colacial manner. He has like
(09:12):
neighbors Oh yeah, yeah, I mean not like I drove
my friend who was like, you want to see Warren
Buffetts house and we went and I was like, cool,
do you think you could drive by Gates house or no?
I mean Mark Zuckerberg specifically, but all the houses are
around it is because somebody was thinking about building something
(09:33):
that would have been able to see into a part
of his house, and so he was like, nah, it's
like a common practice for the wealthy. It's called the
buffer zone. Just buying does not yef zone. Wait, what's
his seeing McDonald's every morning, every morning at breakfast? I
think the McMuffin. He's just like he values these certain things.
(09:53):
That's kind of what he's great at. His finding value.
Like it's basically by like doing a lot of math
and eating every newspaper. But he That's what I'm saying.
But if you talk to people, people like I would
never eat that poison, I'm like, well, he's doing he's
doing fine. And yeah, Coca Cola is like one of
his big picks that he invested in way back and
(10:15):
makes tons of money on it. And he drinks five
of those a day. Yeah, Coca cola with and he
brings a little bottle about this. Yeah, I'm a big fan.
Brings a little bottle of cherry cherry syrup around with
him and like pours it just like burns up fashioned
yeaow Yeah, I mean that's good news for Donald Trump.
I guess who also loves right by cherry syrup, I
(10:37):
mean whiskey. All right, we know you guys got Actually
it's scissor. Alright, guys, there's a lot going on right now,
and we have to get into the news. Not since
Axel Rose attacked Tommy Hill. Figure have I been this
uninvested but morbidly curious about a fistfight Axel Rose fot
(10:57):
Tommy at a club like in The Only two Thousand's.
For some reason, it was like when you hadn't heard
of Actel Rosen a long time and then somebody showed
a picture of him and he had corn rows, Like
oh wow. Anyways, Tom Arnold got into a fight with
reality Mathen Magnate Mark Burnett, who is the producer of
(11:19):
The Apprentice, Keep Going and uh what else Shark Tank Survivor.
He also produced that show a couple of years back
where the Antichrist was played by an Obama look alike
and everyone was like, huh interesting, interesting, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well they ran into each other at a like an
(11:40):
Emmy fundraiser party. Uh, And you know, Tom Arnold has
a show on Viceland where he's trying to get the
tapes basically where suddenly we're gonna be surprised if we
hear Trump talking like a racist or behaving like a
racist or general miscreant. But it's always good to have
their physical receipts, so anyone who wants to deny can
look at in the eye. But yeah, apparent only they
(12:00):
saw each other. They got to tussling. I guess literally
he was tweeting stuff about like yeah, his torn pink
shirts and like missing gold chain whatever. He's like, I'm
going to go to the police that l ap D
said we have no incident on file or he is
clearly not filed a report with us. But the other
interesting things that Tom Arnold's like, yeah, Kevin Bacon was
(12:21):
a witness. It has like it almost it's a parody
of itself. But the whole thing is kind of getting weird.
I get Tom Arnold has a show going on, but
it's just kind of funny to me. And also now
he's like retweeting so many things about how Mark Burnett
is actually connected to Putin and things like that, and
he was before right, that's been a theory they were, well, yeah,
he was apparently in talks with first making a show
(12:44):
about some kind of like space program, like having to
do with the Russian astronauts, and then he had another
some kind yeah whatever space guys, and then he want
to do another show that was like humanizing like these
like really wild government leaders like Fidel Castro and Putin
was what person he wanted to show and was saying, like,
(13:06):
I just want to show that emphasized, you know, it's
devoid of armies and politics. Rather it would focus on
quote the humans, the nature, the animals of the nation.
So I mean that would have been pretty cool to
see a humanizing show about Putin, but you know, weird.
I really wish I could see how this boiled over
(13:26):
was just him being like in his face with probably
getting in his face the camera being like the tapes out.
I assume his show is based on Burnett releasing these tapes,
like what else the whole point? Yeah, is there going
to be an editor that he's trying to I don't know.
It wasn't Tom Arnold on Celebrity Apprentice he was, And
(13:46):
that's what he's basing it on, that his experience were
hearing Trump and he knows the recorded and Mark Burnett,
I mean, he's, you know, a Trump fan. So he's
refusing to release the Putin thing. You how are you
joined that conclusion. Well, he's adamant about not releasing those tapes,
and I feel like, clearly they have some kind of
relationship where it worked closely on The Apprentice, I mean,
(14:09):
Mark Burnette was already huge in reality, but I mean
the really yeah, Survivor. I feel like Survivor was the one, right, Yeah,
it was the one that everyone was going and that
was known for basically the photography where the sky would
move really fast those times. Yeah, okay, I remember that,
and people became more and more emaciated and tan over time.
It was always fun to like, look at what they
look like at the beginning of the show and then
(14:30):
by the end they're just like super sunburned and like
rail thin. Yeah, but there's a midpoint where they look great,
and that's that's where they the Survivors servation sweet spot. Yeah,
that Survivor glow up. No word on who won this
fight or I mean, honestly, they both lose getting a
triple G. Yeah and triple and triple G. Huh didn't
(14:54):
I did not watch. I was at a soccer game
and I just heard people getting like some people screaming,
not a match, soccer match. You know you're right now,
you're right going on the first time americanized the stuff
for people because I say football or whatever. And then
he actually has a thick British act that I have
to hide, just hiding it, trying to sound more American
because I like, they call it the pitch, right, yeah,
(15:15):
the pitch. Yeah, there's no field. No, it's the pitch. Okay,
So I'm sorry, I'm a go ahead. No, no, no,
And it was I mean, I just saw what the
actual announcement was, but I could there were people like
watching in the stands, like people were doing the funny
thing of like friends were watching on pay per view
and then they were just face timing the screen for them,
so they were at the game like watching it. No
way to get around that right now, there's no absolutely
(15:37):
no way. Pay per view was yeah, they don't know
what you know, how you're using your private stream of communication.
But I saw people do it on Facebook. Yeah, those
ones tend to get taken down because it's more public
versus like just my phone to your phone. No one's
there to really monitor to peer peer to peer. Yes,
yeh um. Do you think that a tape coming out
(16:00):
of Trump saying the N word and saying awful things
on the side of the apprentice would change anything? I mean,
I'd like to think that we're in a world where
people are reasonable enough to then do something. But there
have been so many incidences where any in any other politician,
they would hold their feet to the fire. But I
(16:21):
think it would have to be so bad that the
GOP finally finds their spine and they're like, Okay, we
can't just embrace this uranium rod and just die from
exposure to it. He's radioactive. But I don't think it's
going to change anything. Just the same way, I don't
think that if the p tape was real and came out,
I don't think people would care about that either. Yeah,
what would that be? It would be him watching people
(16:41):
pee on a bed? Yeah, who knows that. I feel
like that aesthetically would be just like, aesthetically would just
be uninteresting, Whereas if you had a tape of him,
because everybody who's heard him speak on the side of
the Apprentice are like, holy shit, this guy is just
like a monster, Like he's just constantly saying like the
(17:02):
most objectionable things just conversationally. I feel like in the
context of him just you know, unleashing this stream of horrifying,
you know, words, like, it's not just going to be
a tape of him saying the word out of context. No,
you're gonna get a little yeah, you're gonna get a
whole thing of him just sounding like a really bad person.
(17:24):
I'm with Tom Arnold. I'm team Arnold on this one.
I want to I mean, anything up Mark Burnett. And
also I'm getting that tame assault. Yeah yeah, team assault. Yeah. Yes.
Did you hear about the peanut that was going through
the park? Was that one was assaulted? So there was
and there's no way to get that back, right, I
(17:44):
can't be edited out. I will be dragged on the
internet for that. But I think on one level, though,
if the tape does come out, it's harder for people
to deny his racism. So there's that. But you know,
this guy is on tape saying stuff that he grabs
women by the pussy and that didn't do anything, and
he's been credibly accused of all kinds of things, and
(18:08):
yet the people who are supposed to check his power.
Here's the crazy thing is, I don't know if you
guys are old enough to remember this, but there was
a presidential candidate named Howard Dean. He was the of
was Vermont. It was Vermont, yes, okay, and he literally
was leading and then like, yeah, I just screamed and
(18:32):
the mike, you know, they caught the room mike, I
mean the actual the mike as opposed to the room mike,
and it sounded crazy and that was the end of
his and everyone was like, dude, get this guy the
funk out of here. Yah. Yah. I remember because it
(18:53):
was right around the time I had there was like
the second election I was able to vote, and so
it was like pretty checked in and yeah, and I
remember being like that was funny, Like he sounded literally
somebody did women comment that he did that he took
a huge ding fit, right. Somebody did a recounting of
the sort of Dean roar heard around the world and
(19:17):
interview people who were in the room who like didn't
hear him that sound at all. It was just like
he like basically made a sound that wouldn't have sounded
loud in person, but he like made it real close
to the mic, and so it just sounded really crazy.
And it was also like the crowd was really loud,
but you couldn't hear the crowd, I mean, because he
(19:38):
started getting into that wrestler, like it was a little
bit more than like and we're gonna go to Michigan,
and like, you know, he was definitely like I love it, feeling,
the feeling, the crowd's energy, and that's but that's where
we are. Quickly we shifted where that used to be.
(19:59):
I move on or like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, and
you're like, well, that could be fake or I don't know,
it's locker room talk. This guy just went and we're like, no, no,
we're unstable, sir. I do wonder if because the response
to the pussy grabbing tape was such that it was like,
(20:21):
oh wow, I guess a lot of people talk like
that still because people are like, oh, that's locker room talk,
and people are just like, yeah, okay, good with that.
But I don't think a lot of people use the
N word casually like that seems like more of a
you're definitely not going to be able to spin. That
means you're in the locker room of like the KKK,
(20:41):
go on, Tom Arnold, let's do it. Let's find that tape.
All right, we're gonna take a quick break. We'll be
right back, and we're back. And the Brett Kavanaugh vote
(21:01):
confirmation got got a little more. It was smooth sailing
just a few days ago. Uh so over the weekend, Well,
I guess multiple weeks ago. I guess I was. Back
in July, Senator Feinstein got an anonymous letter from somebody
who recounted being sexually assaulted by Brett Kavanaugh in high school.
(21:22):
And then that person finally came forward and said who
she was. We're going to see this gonna she's gonna test. Yeah,
she's going to her nails. Christine Blaze Ford? Is that Blaze? Yeah?
I think yeah, forgive us. Is it's going to be
high political drama? Yes? Right, I mean literally, this nominee
(21:47):
is in the balance. It is now. The only disqualifier
could be if she seems credible enough. Right, and she
took an FB a light detector test, which we know
light detector tests are can be a little bit If
you say we would you mean that? Huh? When you
said we know, just in general that the idea of
I think I think some people do. All right, you said, Okay,
(22:09):
do you do you feel that polygraph tests don't Yeah, Okay,
I don't like yeah, yeah, no you're not. I'm not
speaking for you, but I think it's people have publicly
disputed a lie detector tests. Not to say that it's
that that means that she's lying, but she's clearly here
to show that she's being as honest as possible. She
has nothing to gain from this. She's clearly this is
(22:30):
only going to be something that is going to be
traumatic for her because as you've seen, like people already
doxing her, uh and trying to tear her down. I
think that there's been some senators have said, well, why
did it take so long? Which is the most the
dumbest fucking way to question somebody who's coming out with
this kind of thing. But yeah, now it's gotten to
the point where people like Lindsey Graham or Jeff Flake,
(22:51):
they're starting to be like, well, we this person, we
should probably hear from this person at this point, how
do you not want to hear from this? I mean,
up until this point, I thought they were gonna Jerry yeah,
because Chuck Grassley seemed in no way interested. There was
that weird letter that came out from sixty five women
that had gone to high school with but when they
dug deeper, they weren't all from the same high school.
So it was just like he went to all boys
(23:13):
high school. Right, So just people so that a lot
of guys have transitioned since then that these were people
they paid for them, very very good endorsing that. And
now it's to the point where, yeah, there are many
calls from you know, just a couple of GOP senators,
but most of the day, I mean, somebody had not
I'm not talking about senators. But there's gotta be some
(23:35):
kid who remembers that party or right there that long
ago I met six years ago, it was right thirty
six years ago. But I mean, it is clearly a
traumatic event in her past that she has, you know,
that her life has had to be oriented or and
(23:55):
you know, it's a like in the way that all
traumas sort of change age how we live our lives.
And like that's the question I have, is she goes up,
she says, this is something that happened to me. I've
been dealing with it for decades. I was in therapy
when I first talked about it, like to my husband,
uh six years ago and specifically called him out. And
(24:16):
then he's going to come out and say, uh, no,
that didn't happen. But like my drunken recollection of it
is better than her like actual recollection of it, and well,
at first he said this absolutely false, and then he's like,
but then I then the person came forward, which seems
to me that he does remember this person in some manner.
(24:37):
He said. So. His latest quote, though, is I'm willing
to talk to the Senate Judiciary Committee in any way
the committee deems appropriate to refute this false allegation from
thirty six years ago and defend my integrity, which I
think is interesting that he chose to throw in the
from thirty six years ago, just because it seems like
that is going to be one of the tax they
(25:00):
take is to say, well, why now, why are you
doing this now? Why? I know, Yeah, I think a
lot of people, at least from the White House, would
rather not have her testify in front of the Senate
Judiciary Committee because they're like, optically, there are people are
going to be sympathetic, you know shit, but like, don't
this person And Kelley and Conway surprisingly was like, I
think the woman should be heard, which I don't can't
(25:21):
imagine any other avenue. Yeah, but I've seen the Republicans
have been so brazen through this process those at the
time that I wouldn't have been surprised if Chuck Grassley,
considering that there were so many documents that they chose
to suppress, then be like, no, no, no, it's been
too late. They should have brought it up sooner. It
doesn't matter what this person went through. And this even
though theres a lifetime appointment for someone who's trying to
(25:41):
who could possibly shift the legal landscape of this country,
let's just get it done. Yeah, they're being quiet now
because they're waiting to see if they can get away
with just pushing it through. And yeah they could. No
one could outright right now just say no to I
mean Chuck Grassley kind of did say, well, this is
really late in the game, but well, you know, I
think it's something that definitely has to be heard. And
(26:03):
it's a you know, people were showing like just sort
of when you look at what the majority looks like
for the Senate Judiciary community, it's all men. There's not
even a woman on there, and of course their sentiments
are gonna like they're focused on getting for the for
the majority on the for the Republicans. Okay, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah. Um, so he was meeting at the White
House earlier today. We're sweating some Monday, but meeting. Yeah,
(26:29):
it's interesting because there's no good it has nothing to
do with what he's He's going to deny it, right,
it's all about it's a third thing. Yeah, that's that's yeah,
that's why it sucks so hard for her. This is like,
I mean, to have to relive your trauma on the
most national stage. Like Anita Hill was like turned into
(26:50):
like a punchline slash. You know, she's like a household
name because she had a similar situation and this is
like a private trauma that this person had has chosen to,
you know, come forward with, and not really even chosen
because she wanted to remain anonymous. But then she started
like as she was leaving class, a BuzzFeed reporter approached her,
(27:13):
and you know it was just it seemed like only
a matter of time before her name came out so unmasked. Yeah. Yeah.
And then there was the the other man that she
implicated in her allegation was like there was a classmate
who like that conservative figure. Yeah right, and well he's
already like they were going through just his sort of
(27:35):
general stance on things, and he's tried to discredit past
people who have accused men of sexual assault. So he's
kind of firmly rooted in like the well they don't
know blah blah blah. And he has like a book
that's like called like Wasted, like Tales of a Gen
X Drunk or something like that, where there's like a pseudonym,
like there's a guy called bart he's openly like a
recovered alcoholic or a recovering alcoholic who was like, yeah,
(27:57):
during my high school years, like I was constantly blacked out,
you know. But yeah, he has these stories of a
guy whose name is what, bart o'cavana. There's a mention
of bart o'cavanaugh there in this book. Uh it says,
Shag scored a hit then handed me the glass I drank.
If you were standing anywhere, you're a quarters game, you
could get picked even if you don't want to play
(28:19):
or weren't paying attention. So how do you like prep
Mary asked, it's cool. Do you know bart O'cavanah, Yeah,
he's around here somewhere. I heard he puked in someone's
car the other night. Yeah, he passed out on his
way back from a party. So I mean, I don't
know what that means. But I think I don't know
if if Brett Kavanaugh can say, oh, I don't know anything.
I've never done anything like that. I've never done anything illegal.
(28:41):
I think is one of the things. Or I think
Judge the friend who turned up the music, Yeah, Aaron,
I think it's Mark. Sorry, is Aaron Judge the baseball player? Yes?
Like yeah, so Mark Judge was saying something about like
I didn't know him to engage in these sorts of
(29:03):
illegal behaviors. But at that time, like in the high
school yearbook, Kevinaugh was voted treasurer of the Keg City
Club or I don't know, this is what his yearbook said.
So maybe this was just like a funny like an
inside joke, but treasure of the Keg City Club Kegs
(29:23):
or bust like something to do with Beach Week committee,
which beach Week is just where all these prep school
like privileged kids go to uh the beach from the
DC area and just get wasted for a week. Uh.
And also like something with the police in Rehobeth, which
is where the beach Week happens. So you know, I
(29:45):
mean whatever, I just think at the very least the
Republicans have to allow this person to be heard and properly,
just at some level, have this process have some kind
of shred of respectability to it, because the steamrolling thing
we saw it was like all this other stuff had
to get unearthed. Corey Booker was like threatening to release
(30:07):
documents that were classified. I'll get to my sart. You
don't say that, you just have Are you wearing a shirt? Uh? Yeah?
And I just think, you know, at this point, it's
I mean, not nice, but you it's good to see
that there are some people on the right that are
(30:28):
showing some shred of decency to be like not just
do the thing that I thought they were going to do,
which would be like ignore it. But you know, I'm
sure if the White House, if they were going to
play it the way they wanted to, they would probably
just try and obscure this move on or what they'll
do is just try and smear her, uh, which is
usually move on from me to move on from me
to and you know, Kelly and Conway, I think you
(30:49):
were just referring to was she's the hero, She's like
the voice of the rest case, which is crazy. But
she was saying like, don't attack her, don't don't insult her.
Let's let her anyone, you know. Yeah, And I mean
even Trump seems to be somewhat reasonable on this because
he said, and I'm sure somebody had to sit him
(31:11):
down and you know, direct him with shiny objects and treats. Uh,
you know that this was what he had to say.
But he basically said that, you know, if it needs
to be delayed, it needs to be delayed. Uh. So
he's acknowledging it's a serious thing. And actually it looks
like they are now saying that they will both testify
(31:34):
on Monday, so a week from yesterday. So yeah, it
will officially be delayed. Um. So that's good at least
that they're not trying to just like Jim Well, I mean,
they couldn't. Like we were saying, it's literally the least
you can do when something like this comes up, especially
when you know with Al Franken, they're very quick to
just believe the accusers and move forward with it. At
(31:56):
the very least, they need to extend that same sort
of practice to this process. Something that just on this
week's As a Reclient podcast that he had the philosopher
Martha Nusbauman, and she was talking about the politics around
anger and also the politics around discussed, and she kind
of crystallized this thing for me, the degree to which
(32:19):
Trump is sort of waging a civil rights battle against women,
just using sort of the tools of the zeitgeist like
ideas and just the way like the language he uses.
Um so Nusbaum was talking about, uh, just sort of
discussed as an emotion in the context of how people
use it as like around political fear. And she pointed
(32:43):
out that there's like a long history using disgust to
subjugate people. It's easy to forget that they're like visceral
aspects of racism from before and during the Civil rights
movement in America, with white people thinking people of color
were like less clean and this is why they made
them eat and drink in different physical locations and use
different bathrooms. Like that wasn't just a way to make
(33:06):
their lives less convenient, Um they were, you know, the
idea of sharing a bathroom was like gross to them out.
And then more recently America has seen this with like
gay rights. Like I remember in their early two thousand's
Dave Chappelle joke that was just he was like, gay
sex is gross to me. I don't have anything against
(33:28):
it's just gross. And everyone laughed and it's just like yeah, yeah,
And then you know, in other countries, India's cast system,
they have a whole cast that is the untouchables, and
they're deemed untouchable because they're viewed as like dirty and unsanitary.
And she pointed out anyways that Trump uses language and
(33:49):
just sort of his whole attitude towards women. He refers
to them like women who are unattractive as disgusting and
like focuses on there like bleeding both with regards to
their menstro cycle and with Megan Kelly or Mika Bridgynski's
recovery from surgery is like she was leaking blood out
of our faith. And like all sorts of Hillary Clinton,
(34:10):
like the fact that she took a bathroom break during
the debates was like made a big deal of, and
like any illnesses or like frailty, like he made a
big deal of. And it's just like using these visceral
ideas and emotions to I don't know, other women and
in a way that seems kind of retrograde and like shockingly,
(34:31):
like I guess listened to this podcast, Yeah yeah, and
did it resonated you. Yeah, yeah, totally. I mean I
wonder if I don't know if he's sophisticated enough to
know that and you use his rhetoric to do that
more than he's a germophobe and doesn't respect women, and
so that's how he's going to talk about that's the effect,
you know what I mean? I could see how also
(34:52):
knowing like his like germophobia, how he would think someone
going to the bathroom is just like so grea. He
he seems like someone was like, oh my god, the
person right, they're gonna get hear me, like all over
them or something. I don't know, like that, he's just
a ye, he's got a lot of interesting tactics that
he doesn't even know what he's doing, and they're working.
(35:14):
Do you think they're working? I mean, I think with
his base, I think for sure, because a lot of
these people, there is a lot of overlap in the
way they will even then refer to these people or
the reasons that they used to describit them more like
with the independence and stuff. Oh no, I don't think so.
I mean, I think I think clearly now at this
point his rhetoric has split people into the people who
(35:34):
will just believe anything, and the people who are repulsed
have probably at this point been The day after the
Access Hollywood tap came out, there was a group, like
The New Yorker profiled this town in Colorado where this
huge like women for Trump movement sprung up, and it
actually started the day after the Access Hollywood tape because
(35:55):
they were like, you know, they didn't want to be
told by the media how right they should feel about
women's roles and like whether that was okay or like
have their own morality police. So I think things are
turning into a way that it's more clearly defined, like
women against this kind of thinking. But he's clearly tapped
(36:16):
into something. And it just seems like the record number
of women candidates in the two thousand eighteen mid terms,
the Women's March, the Me Too movement, and then now
with the Kavanaugh thing, it just seems like we're really
polarizing around this way Trump views women versus like the
way women would prefer to be viewed. Wayne, do you
(36:39):
think that it's that his rhetoric is bringing in more
independence because you seem a little skeptical. I am a
little skeptical. I'm not sure. I mean I looked, you know,
I just saw a thing where he was like gaining
with Hispanic voters and he's gaining with the African American voters.
And I'm like, I'm not just because I live in
like anti Trump land, like that's where I live. So
I'm always like, all right, let me just try to
(37:02):
look outside that a little bit. And you know, I'm
not in any way like super political, you know, but
I was just like, I look at his you know,
he's still in the forties, you know, for the most part.
So I'm just shocked. Again Howard Dean, like, you know,
it's like so I'm like, I'm just not quite so sure.
And he's also like, those people that are against abortion
(37:24):
are solid, you know, they're they're locks there. They're one
issue for and there's a lot of people who were
four you know, choice and they're locked in or right.
So what I'm talking about is those people in the
middle that are just like, oh, this is the way
my you know, yeah, I think those people are probably
gonna be brought in with other issues that aren't so tied.
Like I think Medicare has been the biggest thing that
(37:44):
other people have kind of come around to and he
beat Hillary Clinton, you know what I mean, and all
of this, there's nothing new that's really come out other
than since then. And I everyone I know thought it
was just like horrible, there's no puzzle. I think that
was because conventional thing thinking around how these elections would work,
We're like, oh, this guy is way too many negatives
against him that will probably affect the elector. And then
(38:05):
you realize that his sort of pseudo populism thing he
was doing again, all these things this lady is talking about.
I don't know if that necessarily again will translate. Yeah,
I don't know. I don't know. I think it's yeah,
it's uh nuts bum And I think she it was
just a useful way of understanding the dynamic that of
(38:30):
like how his language works. And also I think his
daughter is very popular. Yeah, I really think she is
a I think she's a big part of his success,
to say the truth. Yeah, well that's why I think
they're trying to deploy her in as many districts for
the mid terms too, Yeah, because they know with him
he's kind of a third rail, but they can win
certain races. Other times he can go and people are
(38:51):
going to turn out, but also getting her into the
suburbs is sort of the I think something that I've
read too that she's more effective in the suburbs with
more educated people. That's what I'm saying. So I just
don't think it's again I don't know what we're talking
politics with me, but that's just my feeling, just kind
of looking at it as the overall like maybe, I mean,
he could beat Hillary Clinton. That's a pretty big, yeah
(39:14):
machine that he was able to beat. So yeah, I think, yeah,
we'll see these midterms will be very indicative of what
the temperature isn't based on everything we're seeing just with enthusiasm,
Like even without taking the results into it, there's more
enthusiasm on the left than there is on the road question.
And so but that's yeah, yeah, And I think that's
the problem is a lot of people stayed home in
the presidential election too, because they there was this thinking
(39:36):
that like, well, like you thought too, this guy's not
an Indian chance that yeah, there are a lot of
people who thought it was just a foregone conclusion and
that clearly who weren't paying attention to five thirty eight.
But I think I do think that you guys are
deep dive. I don't know it's gonna be this a
little bit. Yeah, well, we'd like to know. Got to
take the temperature. But A right, I guess. I do
(39:56):
think that his relationship with his daughter, if anything, is
an indictment of his overall like inability to you women
as any like full human being, because he yes, that
like just weird, always talking about how hot she is
and how like attractive she is, always talking about it.
He says it enough that I don't think, I know
(40:18):
it's weird. Give you that'll give you that it's weird.
It's weird. But I do think she is a no,
she's the I feel like the one deflector shield a
little bit, right, yeah, yeah, but not to some people.
I think most people can kind of see through it
because as a mother, they look at half the policies
and they're like, what, how could you look at this,
(40:38):
like the family separation thing. It took her so long
to come out and say anything against it that they're
just sort of like, well, you do what is the
most advantageous for the administration rather than whatever her values are.
But we'll see how it works. Deep. If you like
her so much, elect her to public office. Guys don't right, right,
all right, we're going to take an their quick break
(41:00):
and we'll be right back. And we're back. And on Friday,
gentleman named Randy Cretico with dog in toe the Washington
Post specified testified about his relationship with Roger Stone before
(41:25):
grand jury. This guy is very interesting. He's a comedian.
He's also an associate of Roger Stone, also an associate
of Julian Assange. Just this very weird mixture of like
he's also a radio host, so he's sort of this
mixture of political activist, commentator to Facebook friend of mine,
(41:45):
Facebook friend Wayne's most importantly, I didn't want to leave
that to last. Uh what some of the details of Well,
first of all, for people don't know, like what they
are interested in is they see him as possibly being
the connective tissue which beween wiki leaks and Roger Stone,
right yeah, And then he was in there denying that, right, right,
(42:07):
he won't say, oh wait, what happened? So he came
out and like the press started asking him. So he
comes out out of the testimony, testifying in front of Muller,
and the press asked how much of the questioning dealt
with Assange, and he answered very little and was about
to elaborate, and then his lawyer just said don't and
(42:28):
that was so that was the end of that. Right.
Just what one detail that I love so much about
he and roger Stone's relationship. So one of the messages
they have on file is roger Stone sending him a
TI the way Rogerstown, very down to earth, very normal
guy with the Nixon back tattoo. He texted Randy Credico,
(42:53):
I am so ready, let's get it on, prepared to
die Coxsucker. Now, the circumstances of of that text are amazing,
because Credico says it was when he found out that
he was going to testifying, you know, testifying front of
the grand jury. Uh. And roger Stone's version was that
(43:13):
he had just learned that Credico had cancer and was
depressed about it, and he was telling him to get
ready to die cocksucker, because that's just how he like
treats his friends. The field reason is roger Stone here
is that Credico has something that contradicts everything that roger
Stone has been saying publicly. He gets a text, I'm
(43:34):
so ready, let's get it on, Prepared to die to
cock sucker. What happened Roger? Oh, he said he had
terminal cancer. That's why that seems far fetched a little bit.
I don't know, but that could be Roger Stone's trademark humor.
That's so nihilistic and morbid. Uh. And Credico was like,
I don't have cancer. That's not true. None of this
(43:56):
is true. So your Facebook friends with Credico. Knowing him
since the eighties, he's a character. He before he was political,
he was just a comedian and very good impressionist, like
really good. Yeah, yeah, that's what I thought. I never
heard him do his bit, but I remember reading things
where he was warning the lawyers. He's like, hey, I
(44:16):
do voices, and I might do it during my testimony.
It's just my thing. And I was like, this is
gonna be amazing. Yeah, No, he's he was really, he
was really was on the A list. If I'm not
a saying that. I think he did the Tonight Show
in the eighties with Johnny Carts with the big guests
for the young comedians at that time, and but even
I think at that point he was starting to he
(44:37):
was going after Reagan and all of that, and yeah,
he's One of my favorite impressions his was he used
to do an incredible David Brenner. I don't know if
you know who that is. You don't know. I don't
think he's yes, yes, not in no relationship. So he
used to do that. He would do like you know,
Archie Bunker and Heed a bunker kind of thing. So
(44:58):
and then the next thing, you know, oh, he's like,
oh Wayne, I'm going to El Salvador or you know,
Nicaragua and right material for like the head of not
the conscience the other guy. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
what do you mean right material? Like do come to
help that guy politically? Ortega? I think that guy's name.
(45:21):
I think a guy's name is Daniel Ortega. Pretty I
know that's in my head. I'm not looking it up.
And so he went down there and would do rallies
for him and like help him with his campaign for dictators. Yeah. Yeah,
well he's he became very left. He's like a lefty
left left. And then uh, but he does some good
stuff like you know, like these draconian drug laws that
gets you know, people are you know, non violent drug
(45:45):
offenders and stuff like that. He's very he's very passionate.
He's very funny, and he's just a weird though. He's
just a weird he's a comedian. It's just the weirdest
political activist I've ever when you saw his name kind
of start bubbling up in the news, where you kind
of like, of course, yeah, it's literally every comedian just
knows him as Credico. No one calls him Randy, of
(46:06):
course Credico. Of course he's going to be the Mueller investigation,
right somehow, you know, the same guy he's trying to
get on evening at the improv is like it's insane.
It's insane that I know. Can you imagine he starts
doing like material about testifying the materials? But I will
say he is consistent. He's not one of those like
just if it's a Democrat or it doesn't matter to him.
(46:28):
He's like, you know, it seems like it seems like
he's very like Principal and what his beliefs. You know,
he had a drug problem himself, and it's Credo he's credical.
I just love that he testified from the grand jury
and had to bring a dog, right, Like he's like
classic credit, did you travel with a dog? A lot. No,
this is this is uh, this is a new thing.
(46:51):
I think. I know. I heard that he like rescued
that dog from Chili. Like he's just traveler, He's just
I don't know how he has a passport at this point.
But one of the articles I really admired that he's funny.
He's actually a funny actually has that obsessive compulsive disorders
(47:13):
is my take on. He's just like once he's fixated
on he can't let it right. Yeah, but I love
the guy. I love the guy. One of the sources
that we are using for research on Credico uses this
photograph that is just this like real buttoned up public
hearing and then a really like a screen accurate Greek
(47:34):
philosopher like just he's got this like long white beard.
He looks like Gandalf the White just with a with
a lantern walking through the thing. And it says Mr
Cretico addressed as the Greek philosopher diagenous cynic. He's the
one who founded cynic philosophy. So yeah, and layered. I
would say that the thing that seems to connect him
(47:55):
Stone and Julian Ossange's cynicism and in some kids is
very justified cynicism. Miles. Yes, a new study has found
four distinct personality types, and I'm fucking excited. Well, you know,
there's the Myers Briggs thing, and which are you're saying
it's bullshit? It's so it wasn't is it breaks? It's
(48:17):
Myers and it was. It's just there's been a lot
of like psychology and psychological literature around the fact that
there's no real scientific basis. It was more of a
business thing that they created around to be like, oh,
this is gonna But I remember even during Myers break,
there was another competing psychological think. I think this is
(48:40):
a never ending battle to try and put humanity into buckets,
and that's it. It's just we realized it becomes increasingly
harder to do. But what's funny is that this study
was actually conducted by a person who's a like avowed
Myers Briggs like cynically, he's a hater of it and realizes, like,
does that effect your opinion about what you're gonna hear
about this? Well, I guess the one of the reasons
(49:01):
that sort of makes this different is that he this
person isn't claiming that everyone falls into one of these
four types, like the Myers Briggs like you're one of
these sixteen things. It's more the idea that people cluster
into these four areas, and it's like he doesn't want
people to think that that's what they're saying. It's just
that you're finding people begin to concentrate around. It's distributed
(49:22):
because it more of lumps in the batter too, has
an analogy to look at it, like, it's not they're
not separate. Do you think it's interesting that they're both
that it's like four and sixteen, like it's four times.
Oh yeah interesting, Yeah, the way I think about it, Yeah,
you're a big math guy then huh yeah you see
the matrixology. Just what does it all means? But yeah,
(49:51):
the other thing that makes me less suspicious of this
is less suspicious, less suspicious, or the thing that makes
me less suspicious of this other than that. His main
problem with Myers Briggs is that it's not scientific and
he's using actual like data on this data that he
stole from like not stole, but like got from Facebook
survey questions, has just been published, has just been peer reviewed.
(50:15):
Is this any of that stuff or is this just
a guy with an article. It's a new paper in
Nature Human Behavior, so it's like it's it's rigorous, it's
a revocable study, So yeah, this isn't. This isn't just
so guys. And the other thing I want to say
is that the personality types are pretty boring. Like if
they're not, they're not. Number one is average. Wait what
(50:43):
is that average? These people score high and neuroticism and
extra version, but score low and openness in terms of
like being open to different points of view. I guess
it is the most typical category, with women being more
likely than men to fit into it to be average. Yes,
it sounds like a trump thing you would say about
a woman reserved. This type of person is stable emotionally
(51:05):
without being especially open or neurotic. They tend to score
lower on extra version, but tend to be somewhat agreeable
and conscientious. Wait are you saying someone reserved is not extroverted?
That's crazy? Reviewed Wow, this is insane. Models insane by
stating the obvious. It's also weird because there is It's
(51:27):
like a this is a good one. This is a
bad one because role models is one and it's these
people score high in every trade except neuroticism, and the
likelihood that someone fits into this category increases dramatically as
they age, which I also like that it makes room
for people changing, where you know, there's not this like
fatalistic you are this person and that's just how you're
(51:50):
going to go through life. It's like no, you can
adapt and mellow out and learn things. Then it says,
these are the people who are dependable and open to
new ideas, are good people to have in charge of things.
Women are more likely than men to be role models.
Uh so as well as yes, role models and average
I think is what we've learnt. So men are more
(52:11):
likely to be reserved and the fourth type self centered.
These people spread very high and extra to look at
me when you say that, very unfair I just met you,
but yes that did kind a little close to the moment.
But score low and openness, agreeableness and conscientious. Uh Most
teenage boys would fall into this category, which I also
(52:34):
like that that like, yeah, we're acknowledging that, you know,
we all sleckt as teenage boys. Four year old man,
we're talking about you, Mr Kapit. The number of people
who fall into this category decreases dramatically with age decreases decreases,
which I think, yeah, more become a little when suddenly
(52:57):
you like you get a hip replacement. Yeah, realize. Yeah,
maybe I'm not right exactly. Maybe I will hold the
handrail when I go down the stairs. But lumps in
the batter is also a good character. Its batter is terrible.
It's metaphor because it's so like nebulous. Even then, it's
just like it's lumps in the battery. You know, I'm
not saying you're one of these It seems like the
(53:19):
batter is the biggest part of that. Yeah, but there's
just lumps. I think that's why they're saying it's harder
to do what like the Myers Briggs is just saying
you fit in one of these things. And they're just
saying these are four basic things that people are usually
near or around. But basically everyone's just floating in this
batter soup in a way. Yes, I mean the way
(53:40):
they put it is they say, just to think of
how people tend to concentrate in cities in the United States.
So if you divide the country into four regions and
then look at how population density is distributed, you'll likely
find the highest concentration of people living are in dense cities,
and they're saying they're describing, quote, what we're describing is
the likelihood of being at certain parts of that distribution.
We're not saying that everyone is in one of the
(54:02):
four categories, just as a model of how human behavior
tends to like look over in big groups. I think
lumps in the batter is it seems accurate. It's not
like claiming okay, and then you're in this bucket or
this bucket. Is there somebody you might be in between?
Maybe yeah, you might just be batter, you know, I
(54:24):
staying corrected. I thought it was a horrible metaphor, and
now you're coming around, coming around. But I think there's
a fifth So there is a fifth personality type. It's
actually a speck, but it has a lot of gravitational pull.
It is Mark Wahlberg. So we have learned over the weekend,
Mark Wahlberg has shared his daily routine with the world,
(54:46):
and it is fucking what is going on with him?
At two thirty am, praise he wakes up at doesn't
say what time he goes to sleep. It does not
already I'm yep, praise At five for a half hour
half Yeah, it's intense. Then do you know what kind
(55:08):
of religion he is? Christian? Very very Christian? What is
he Catholic? Bro? Like, what do you Catholic? What do
you Catholic? Bro? Have you heard? Have you heard of
this guy at the Pope? Have you heard of this bro?
That is one of the strangest facts that I think
we will look back on in history as like he
introduced the Pope when the Pope visited America for the
first time. Mark Wahlberg is who introduced him to America. Well,
(55:31):
he is known for those underwear ads, both of them,
those guys. Yeah, and at three Calvin, yes, Calvin, We're
not forget which one the Pope lust And what did
pant effects? That was pretty good? Uh? At three fifteen
(55:52):
am he has his first meal. This guy eats constantly,
but it's all like incredible hell food that like like
not warm, buffet style and breakfast. I started out with
steel oats, peanut butter, blueberries, and eggs for breakfast. Then
I have a protein shake, performance inspired nutrition vanilla latte shake.
(56:16):
It's like an an acronym, but it doesn't like he
writes it like an acronym with in all caps, but
it doesn't. Then three turkey burgers, five pieces of sweet
potatoes for breakfast, but then he like works out for
four hours from five then five thirty post workout meal,
(56:42):
this guy like how afraid of death is he? That
he's like I have to get up at two thirty
and just experience as much of the day as possible,
because in those videos he does think he's multiples of kids,
and that that was something that I was noticing, Like,
I will sometimes get up super early because is my
kids get up super early and I want to get
shipped done before they wake up. But like there's no
(57:04):
mention of like and then I have to like take
the kids to school or anything. It's just like I
get up at two thirty because you know hear of me. Yeah, yeah,
like huge meals. Yeah, he eats more whole foods before
he wakes up than I eat in like an entire week.
I know, you guys are mocking him. I'm admiring him.
Keep going. Well, it's I can only mock because it's
(57:27):
so mind blowing to me that someone has there, Like
let me set my oh, what time you're waking up
to two thirty am, and you're like what to do?
What you work on the Today Show? Yeah? Yeah, like
morning radio exactly. Those are people who wake up. And
then he has family time at eleven and five thirty,
picks up the kids at three. Oh he does pick
up the miss that yeah, and then you also miss that.
After his workouts, he has a cryotherapy session where he
(57:50):
chosen up room that's a hundred fifty below zero. So wait,
oh that's weird to you. I don't know, I guess
I just like when you have those kinds of resources
where like, yeah, I can wake up, I can eat
like he has like this like trainer with him is
like a doctor with him, like all day. Then he
does his cryotherapy. Doesn't He also have like a burger
business Wall Burgers. Yeah, there's a reason three Turkey burgers
(58:12):
are in there. I'm sure right, I got three turkey walls. Yeah.
There's video of him like explaining like his workout routine
with the doctor behind him, and the doctors like treating
his body like it's a horse's body, like my freak study,
my experiment. So weird. Somehow convinced him to wake up
(58:33):
at two thirty every day. Yeah, he had to convince
the equinox to open extra early for him. Four I
am club bro. Yeah. Now he's got his own up
yeah when he's on the road. But it looked like
his own home gym was like some like it. Yeah,
I mean look, how cold was the room? Hundred fifty
degrees below zero? Yeah? How does that work? You need
(58:56):
like an entire city blocks worth of electricity just to
like keep the room doing right. Yeah. I don't know. Yeah,
I'm not sure. I don't know someone who does raising
the Earth's temperature heavily. Yeah, exactly, Like that's the threshold.
We're gonna look back and we're like, how came all
that irreversible climate change happened? Oh? This fucking ass when
name Mark Mark Wahlberg, I keep a room at a
hundred fifty degrees below zero? He had his own mountaintop
(59:18):
removal coal mining operations. Who's the Anthony Robbins here with
the Tony Robbins. Yeah, but he has in his house
like this. I can't even describe. It's like a man
hole goes straight down and it's freezing water that he
just dips in and then comes back out like yeah,
(59:39):
that's like it's like no it's it's no, it's it's
it's water, it's under it and then comes back out.
But I can't believe it's a hundred fifty degrees below zero.
Well that's when you have that Wallberg money. You know,
you're not doing ice baths like some common professional athletes. Yeah,
you're treating your body like a piece of meat that
(01:00:01):
is being like prepared by one of those chefs that
uses like scientists like I think it would burn. Well,
he told Ellen it it helps remove inflammation and can
improve sleep. Yeah, of course, of course. Again bro, Yeah, Wayne,
it's been so fun having you man, Thank you, thank you.
Where can people find you? Follow you? Well, I'll tell
(01:00:22):
you I'm on something on Twitter, so yeah, I right
there too sometimes um at Fetterman. Okay, wow, you got
in early early adapters. By the way they jumped, I
think they came online in two thousand six. Yeah, so
I think it was two thousand and eight, so a
couple of years in. Still it wasn't a problem. And
(01:00:44):
then you know, I have the Wayne Federman dot com
and my website and also have a new podcast that
I'm doing. It. It's just we talked about the daily
news with a couple of guys, just a new idea
history of stand up, right, yes, history stand up. You
were teaching a class on that, right, believe it or not. Yes,
(01:01:05):
the new thing in my life at USC where they
have you know, the Trojan is their mascot. Yes, O. J.
Simpson alumni. Yeah, and so many others. But yeah, it's
just if you're into the history of stand up, we
go from Vaudeville right up to we call Netflix is
like we feel the big like the new right, what's
(01:01:28):
happening right now, right right right? If you want any
talk about premium blend, does that make it in there? Yeah?
I did it. Yeah, yeah, Mitch Hedberg and I were
on the same episode. You know that guy, I've heard
of him, Well, I don't know, you don't know David Brenner.
I don't know. Definitely, Wait, who is David Brenner? Anyway,
(01:01:48):
it was he literally kind of the the first full
on observational comedian signed pre signed yea yeah, yeah, so
a lot of like one of his jokes would be
like this sign that says, uh, only seeing eye dogs allowed,
Like who is that signed for? Right? That would be
a Brenner right right, right. It's like Yeah, there's like
(01:02:09):
they've just cut down their customer based very small. But
who would even Yeah, yeah, yeah you were blind. You
can't see that this guy. How do I not know
David Brenner? Uh? Miles, Yeah, where can people find on
Twitter and Instagram? At miles of Gray You've been enjoying.
There are a couple of things I just around the
like Brett Kavanaugh thing. It's it's amazing. I remember during
(01:02:31):
his confirmation, Camala Harris asked, very specifically, did you have
any kind of interaction with someone from this law firm,
Mark Haswitz Law Firm about them? My impression camera, Well,
if you could tell me the person, maybe that would
answer yes exactly. Do you have a person of mine
I can't recall, you know, And she's like, I have
an email, but I can't say because this is classified anyway.
(01:02:54):
So Whitney coming said pretty amazing that Brett Kavanaugh can't
can remember names of sixty five women he knew in
high school you five years ago, but not whether or
not he had a conversation about Robert Muller in the
past year. Uh, and then another one from Ian mil Heiser.
So to summarize it, confessed serial sexual predator nominated a
man who is credibly accused of attempted to rape to
be the key vote to strip women of reproductive freedom. Yeah,
(01:03:14):
let's just hope that this woman has her day to
testify in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee and we
can bring some respect to this process because it was
looking like a runaway train. But we don't know. Still,
things could change, alright, some tweets I've been enjoying. I
will leave now. Cryptic Callie tweeted to the tune of
Destiny's Child, say my name, spell my name, spell my name.
(01:03:36):
It's right there in the email. It's not a hidden
detailed The spelling doesn't change. And that goes out to
my wife, who's for some reason everybody thinks her name
is spelled without an H, and they will constantly email
her at her first name in the email address and
spell it without that. That's like when people spell my
handle right to tweet at me and then misspell either
(01:03:58):
my first last name like opening all right uh and
then from Bob volf Off tweeted, I believe in disconnecting
and relaxing after work, so I only do three things
once I'm home after a long day at the office
one thinking great detail about every mistake I've ever made,
to look inward and cataloged all my weaknesses like a
maniac and three chill uh. And you can follow us
(01:04:21):
at Daily's Eye Guist on Twitter, where at d Daily's
I Guist on an instagramway of Facebook campage, and a
website Daily si guys dot com where posting our episodes
then our foot or link off to the information that
we talked about in today's episode, as well as the song.
You can also find that information in the information about
the episode on whatever you're listening to this on Miles,
(01:04:42):
what song are we writing? We played some Dirty Art
Club last week and I just want to play another
song off one of their his album, Basement Seance, that
I really called Queen Persephone. So this is Queen per
Septony by Dirty Art Club. All right, we're gonna write
out on that. We will be back tomorrow because it
is a daily podcast. We'll talk to you that first.
(01:05:05):
I just dabbled with it, you know, like everybody else
in Hollywood. What is real in the spinning universe and
realities through the brutal microscope, I've expanded consciousness. H m hm.
(01:05:31):
Terror thousand telescope references, Providence extra sid thousand things signed
my head, signed myself. H. I love it all I
(01:06:09):
know iv befall. That's a cove and all I know
ivy fall. My baby is a love and she fall.
(01:06:57):
I know ivy em all. There live a W. I
know I belying my oar I m B S m
(01:08:30):
W