Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
What's going on? Guys, your boy h Q four twenty here?
What came y'all back? Another episode Beyond the Cube. I'm
on a special night Wednesday. I can't say the eve
of fourth of July yet, because we're not on the eve.
We're on the eve eve. We're on the dual eve
(00:31):
of the fourth of July.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Aren't we supposed to like a terrorist attack on July fourth?
Isn't this some bullshit going around about that?
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Is that what's actually supposed to happen?
Speaker 3 (00:42):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
There's something going on. There's always something going on. I'm
tired of something going on. The news is making me exhausted.
I don't even want to watch it anymore. I don't
want to know anything. Stick my head in the hole.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Uh, cour Corey, Corey, it's just verbial. Hold this proverbial right, proverbial. Okay,
you see, you got you got to you got to
put that out there for the audience. He's Corey. We
don't want we don't want down or.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
Corey, I got some hair iss giving. I don't like
that outside. Look at that ship. Fucking god damn it.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Maybe maybe you need to maybe you need to get
some jail hair jail. That's what we need to work on.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Do you do?
Speaker 1 (01:24):
You do? You do?
Speaker 2 (01:25):
You do?
Speaker 1 (01:25):
The hair jail?
Speaker 2 (01:26):
I got paste, correct, j'all makes it too wet and
sticky looking. I use paste. It's more natural looking, but
I haven't used in the past.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
Yeah, old on, what do y'all know what he's talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Bro? You take Elmer's glue and you rub it in
your hair. I learned that from watching hood videos. Man,
What the fuck?
Speaker 1 (01:47):
What hood you talk about? You said hood vdas the
hood of what? Yeah? Yo, do y'all hear what Corey
is saying. He said he gets paid for his hair.
We need to get you hold on a second, we
need we need to get Corey on some proper stuff.
All right, that's what we need to do. Let's see, Uh,
(02:12):
let's see best hair jail for me?
Speaker 2 (02:14):
And why jail? Why jail. It's fifty different things that'll
make your hair sticks jail man, You ain't got no hair.
I'm taken advice from a guy with no hair.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Mean, I know I know about hair. At one point
in time. You know what I'm saying that It might
have been many many years ago. The mythical meat had
along lush as long I.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Gotta see it. You with hair, You got one, you
got you gotta have a picture, okay for Sunday. You
need to bust out a picture of you with hair.
That's what I want to see.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Well think that, you know what, There's only there's only one.
There's only one picture of me in my true form?
What was I I believe I was eighteen when I
took the picture, and I was at Hearty's and we
got off work and I was getting my hair done
(03:08):
the next day. And I sat there after work and
I undid my undid my braids, and so I had
my fray all out like that. That's that's really the
only picture.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Man.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
I surprisingly didn't take any pictures like at all, like period.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
I was fortunate that my dad kept a lot of stuff.
My dad took a lot of pictures of me growing up,
so I have actually have a couple out photo albums
of me from my childhood. And then when my parents died,
I got their computer which had like ten thousand fucking
pictures on it that I should probably go through and
sort one day. But I had this one picture that
(03:52):
I think I mentioned this on Day zero recently, But
we got a family photo taken. In hindsight, I'm like,
what the fuck, that's so not us. So we were
not the family photo type of family. And we had
a family photo taken, like my dad's wearing a nice
shirt and everyone's the four of us are the gatherery
and my sister and I was wearing a Jane's Addiction
(04:12):
T shirt and I had half my head shaved and
the other half was like a foot long, like hanging
over in front like that. It was like the stereotypical
picture you'd see in a comedy comedy film of a
family with the punk rocker kid and the family photo.
I mean it was it was too much. And my
sister doesn't know where it's at. She can't find it,
so it might be lost to history. I hope not.
(04:33):
But it's amazing because like I'm getting to my I'm
like fifty years old now close, and now I'm starting
to want a lot of those things that I took
for granted growing up, you know.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
And stupid Okay, so you're starting to, Yeah, Like my
dad had a stupid painting on the wall that was
terrible of like a fucking boat in a in like
a lake, and it was like very like, you know,
classical painting.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
It was terrible, But now I kind of want that picture,
you know what I mean. It's weird. I just want it.
And like there was all kinds of stuff that my
dad had and my sister, thank god she's in possession
of and it's it's in storage and whatnot. But you know, sentimentally,
it's starting to kick in in my coming up on
my fifties, which is weird because life I'm not a
sentimental guy. I'm usually I'm not. I try not to be,
(05:25):
because life.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Can be painted that when it's kicking. Okay, yeah, you.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
Gotta t years ago. I got another ten years to go,
and you're gonna be wishing you had that picture of
you with the fucking afro up on your wall.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
He thinks it.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
Yeah, my god, so keep it so fin, so keep
it in good shape. Okay for me?
Speaker 1 (05:49):
I oh my goodness, is this right? This can't be right? Okay?
I was, I was, I was a boat.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
I was a boy.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
December fourteenth, two thousand and six. It's not a good photo.
I have to have to put it on, uh, I
don't have to get on something else. I have it
up here on this screen hold on, I'll get it
up here in a second. But oh man, in two
thousand and six, it's crazy. Two thousand and six. I
mean it's like it wasn't even real. Did I go
(06:27):
through two thousand and six? You know, as you start
to get older, like you try to remember back to
what you were doing, and like it didn't even seem real.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
Yeah, at that time, I'll tell you what I was doing.
At that time, I had just got out of the
police Academy and was working at the police department for like,
I've only been there a couple of months after after
I got out of it. So you go to do
all this training. You gotta do field you feel training,
and you gotta do the academy and there's all kinds
of fucking training. But I was on the road, I
think by by that time. So yeah, that's.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Okay. So I took this picture. This is when they
had polaroids. You know what that is old school right there.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
That ain't real. That's me at Hardy's at screenshot.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Straight up. Yeah, Home of the pict Burgers. You know
what I'm saying. That's me and all my glory. But
back when I had a ton of hair, God, I
had a bunch of hair. So yeah, I get that
thing braided, and uh what I would do? I put
it in box braids and it would lay down past
my shoulders. It's wild, man, that's a wild time, due
(07:49):
mainly because I don't remember it. Uh, that's that's the
wildest time about it. Like I like hardys. I got
a couple of distinct memories and that neither one are
that great. So I've got that right there just because
I've got a photograph. But some of the other memories
are are aren't fun.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
I worked a lot of faster too. I worked at
McDonald's and Taco Bell my first two jobs.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
No, well, my main thing is because man, I hit
on by a dog at work.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Yeah, and he worked there.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Yeah. I was like, hold on a second. I ain't
gay though, Like and you know I ain't. Ain't one
of these ones that can be converted neither. You know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
So I got a story for you. This is a
wild story. I'll tell you. When I was how old
was I? This was like ninety ninety eight, I must
have been like twenty one, twenty two something like that.
I got a job. I was into the whole rave
techno thing, and I got a job working for a
record distributor and we were it was like it had
become like one of the bigger vinyl record techno distributors
(09:09):
in the country at the time. So to work there
you were like you were like in this little inner
circle of people who are fully connected to what was
going on in that industry. So it was amazing. I
was probably there about six months. I drove fifty miles
each way. But I met a guy there in Houston,
and he was really cool. He wasn't my boss, but
he was the guy who was kind of like my
(09:29):
We were paired up as a team in sales and
he was I was working with him and he was
all kinds of gay, but he was very professional, like
you couldn't and you really couldn't tell if you if
you couldn't tell, you know. So after working with him
for a while, he's like, hey, man, I'm doing this
record promotion tour. We got these new single came out
from the producer of Backstreet Boys and it was some
(09:51):
girl group that never went anywhere, but he had a
bunch of records and he's like, I got booked to
do a couple of weekends in a row going to
these clubs to give out these records you want to go?
And I'm like, yeah, that sounds like a great time.
And I'm thinking, we're gonna go do this like rave
techno thing. And we're driving and we're like halfway to Tallahassee,
Florida from like Tampa area, and he's like, hey, you
(10:13):
know we're going to gay bars.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
Right, And I'm like, no, I don't.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
I'm like, no, I don't. I didn't know that. He's
like yeah, he's like all these bars were going to
their gay clubs. He's like, you're cool with that, right,
And I'm like, well, we're halfway there, motherfucker. You know
what am I supposed to do? So I ended up
going three different weekends in a row to Tallahassee, Orlando,
and Miami with this guy to promote this fucking record.
(10:41):
And I had to go to three gay clubs three
weeks in a row. And here's the funny thing. Here's
a funny thing. I'll tell you the exact pattern that
happens every time the gay dude will hit on you
and then Houston goes, no, he's straight, and then you're
the butt of straight jokes for the rest of the night.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Well that's supposed to me.
Speaker 2 (11:03):
Yeah yeah, yeah, like the token straight guy and you know,
just little, you know, faggy comments like that. That was
what it was. But overall it was an interesting experience
doing record promotion. So I got a lot out of it,
but it was it was a learning experience, to say
the least.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
He said, yeah, but you said, man, you got me
at the gay bar. Man, how do you get here?
I remember years ago? Okay, But my friend and a
couple of the people they are and their girlfriends, they
had a couple of people in their circle that you know,
swung the other direction and they were like, yeah, man,
we're going to this bar. And I was like okay.
(11:44):
And they said the name of the bar. I can't
remember of it. And I was like, hey, I don't
sund ain't no bar. And they were like, it's a
gay bar. I'm like, man, I ain't going to gay bar. No,
I'm you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
There's a lot of girls, a lot of girls go
to gay bars like that in there.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
I don't give a ship. I don't want my name. Look, man,
he and this ain't this ain't no no slap on the.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
Straight guy to go into the gay bar and pick
up the straight checks because you're the only straight guy
in the place.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
No, I don't want my name associated with it. Okay,
I don't want that thing out in the ether. That's
your boy x Q out here frequent in the gay bar. Okay.
Well because yeah, because yeah, because I don't want nobody
to question could come into question anything with sexuality. Because
(12:40):
you know, there's a lot of there's a lot of
times where they say that the black men be in
the closet, you know what I'm saying, enter in the closet. Yeah, yeah,
Well I don't was Diddy in the closet? It was
just a cook.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
Well he fucked dudes, isn't he?
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Did he?
Speaker 2 (12:58):
I'm pretty sure.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Did he get a man booty? I don't. I don't
know if he got man booty or not, or did
he watch somebody else get some man booty?
Speaker 2 (13:07):
I I don't know. These are things are outside my purview.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
Yeah, but you see, I don't I don't want I
don't want my name. It's like, yeah, man, yeah, I see,
I see you have a gay bar. A few times
it's like, na, bo, don't even be putting that out
there because folks be thinking that that there's some potential
for me, and like, oh yeah, I noticed you sitting
here talking about you like women. But we seen where
you were at past few weekends. Oh no, being a
(13:32):
single dute too. You see the other folks, they going
with their girlfriends. You know what I'm saying. It's so
I'm here with my girlfriend and they happen to have
a gay friend. Well like Q, who you here with?
I'm here with them? Where your girl at? You got
no girl? You're here to pick somebody up? You see
(13:52):
what I'm saying. I don't want my name to get
surrounded with that, then to get out there and then
tarnish my legacy. Okay, what very little bit I have left? Okay, Hey,
I don't Hey, I don't want my legacy to be
tarnished in that way. Like I said, no hate to
the folk who wanted to get down like that, but
(14:14):
I just can't. I just can't be associated with it. Okay,
out there out there in the ether, put my name
out there like that. You know what I'm saying. Somebody
been une caught, win caught word and look and as
somebody who has been hit on by an actual gay dude,
and like how very uncomfortable that was at that moment,
Like I just really don't want to be put in
(14:36):
the situation. He's really uncomfortable, like I was. I was like, dude, like,
m you shouldn't have said that ship to me, saying
you should you should have you should have held onto
that man man told about taking my butt hole for Jenny.
I was like, do what, Uh, no, dog, you know
(15:00):
what I'm saying. I mean, I don't know what you
thought this was, but it ain't that what you know
what I'm saying, it ain't that. So I mean, we
just gotta be careful, all right, That's all I know,
because you know, a rumor was spread and then all
(15:20):
of a sudden it become the truth. You know, then
everybody around yeah you know, yeah he gay man, So
he be trying to you be trying to get with
some chick. I heard you were gay? No, dog gay?
Come on now, I'm gonna show you. You know what
I'm saying. And then what they always say, I'll show you,
you know, the whole while. You know, they'd be doing
(15:41):
some stuff on the back end. It'd be like the
uh about the episode on special U S FORU, especially
with the JUNI iced Tea confronted the black guy, he said,
ain't gay, man, I have relationships with women and sex
with Menisty said, it makes you gay. Though. It's like,
(16:07):
come on, man, it's like.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
I can't show that show is still on fucking television.
It's like thirty five years.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
It's crazy. It's got to be that in the Simpsons.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
I mean, they get promoted out of that unit in
thirty five years. That's wild.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Now that I just got promoted up. Oh really, he
just pays. He just pays for will Man, the amount
of trauma you would have on your backside after thirty
five years, I mean, damn. I mean you have seen
all type of clabboring, you know what I'm saying. Folks
getting getting ravished and just.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
As a just as a road coop. See what happens
is when you get a call, they don't be sending
no detectives out, like I don't know what. Maybe in
New York are the bigger cities they might, but like
you're lucky if the detective sees that case for like
a week, unless someone dies, unless someone gets murdered like
I've been because they said, a street cops. So I've
been out there. I've worked a couple dozen what they
(17:09):
call sexual batteries. Technically rate it's not a thing, it's
a sexual battery. And so I've had to be there
and taken the statements and like talk to these people,
and yeah, it's fucking hearing some of these stories is
from these people. What happened to them is it's pretty rough.
(17:29):
You gotta have a you know, I have a thick shell.
I had a thick shell back then. But you gotta
have a real fucking thick shell to deal with that
shit every day.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Yeah, there's no doubt about it. I mean, there's you've
got multiple occupations where you know, you get harassed quite
a bit, okay, And it's hugely anything anything that's public facing,
anything where you have to have multiple interactions with different
(18:02):
people throughout the day in quote unquote stressful situations yours.
As a police officer, you're rarely meeting somebody in a
non stressful situation, you know what I'm saying. I mean,
like the likelihood of you, like being in the vicinity
in a non stressful situation unless you're just doing happened
to be doing a patrol or I don't know if
(18:25):
you ever did any like if they had like a
like a baseball game or something, you would block the
roads and kind of do stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
Oh yeah, track, We worked all kinds of events. I
worked the president. The President came to town twice. We
had to block off a road for like seven miles.
They had like three agencies come out to do it.
It was ridiculous. And then it was Obama and then
he had it and I did Bush? And did I
do Bush? No, it was Obama, not Bush. But he
just shot in like boom, like super fast. They go
(18:55):
like one hundred miles an hour down the street and
they run all the lights and stuff like. It ain't
like a leisurely strolled right, and they got to block
off all the rows. I definitely I did that.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
That would probably be that would probably be more of
your non stressful situations because you're just there.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
Well, here's the deal. After you've been on a road
a while, even situations that are considered high stress become routine,
you know what I mean, They really become routine. So
it's not like I've been on I can't tell you
how many you know, man with a gun call. Right,
(19:34):
most of them turn out to be nothing, but the
preparation is the same every time, and it is a
high stress situation. You're at an elevated state of awareness,
but that state becomes the state you're in all the time.
And that's the biggest problem with police in general, and
what causes all the problems we see with police in
(19:56):
general is that when cops go to work in the
day or whatever the fuck, they basically, because of the
nature of the job, enter into this state of hypervigilance. Right, Like,
if you get into a fight with somebody on the street,
you're going to get into that elevated sense of hypervigilance
and that's going to take you. Study show it can
(20:19):
take like twelve to eighteen hours for your body to
recuperate and go back to normal from the time you
have an incident like that. All the stress hormones and
everything that goes on in your body takes that long
for you to reset from it. And even if you
just had one single incident on the street. Cops go
to work and they enter into that state throughout the
duration of their shift, and then they get off and
(20:42):
they go home and they go back to work before
their body has a chance to recuperate from being in
that state of hypervigilance for that long, right, So you
have a long term, extended physiological problem caused by excessive
dopamine and all kinds of other things that are brought
about by being in this state. But then when you
(21:06):
come out of this state, this hyper vigilant state, you
literally crash. Like I would get off of work and
I wouldn't want to do a fucking thing. And it's funny,
because I had this one chair. I would always fall
into my chair and watch TV. And then I read
a book called Emotional Survival for Law Enforcement that talked
all about this stuff, and it even talked about the
(21:27):
magic chair. Every CoP's got a magic chair. And I
read this book and I fucking realized. I felt like
this guy had been spying on my fucking life. Like
all the pitfalls of the emotional and physiological problems that
you get when you're when you are a cop, I
had every single one of them in an extreme version
of them. And that was when I knew I was
(21:48):
done pretty much, because you're I was a and on
top of that, my girlfriend was a fucking alcoholic, right,
And so that was and she destroyed my career. That
combined with my attitude, kind of made everything crumble. But
when you go into work every day and you enter
that state of hypervigilance and you have that feeling of
(22:09):
like on edge all the time, it's no different than
being addicted to crystal meth. You go up and then
you crash, and your body physically crashes. It is no different.
It might be a little more intense on drugs, right,
but like, it's no different because the doperamine reactions and
the endorphins and all that stuff, they burn your body
(22:31):
out quickly. You know, you meet a cop that's been
off for more than five years, maybe seven years, coming
at least definitely over ten years, and they are either
like burn the fuck out or they just don't care anymore.
And that's what leads to all these shootings because they're
in this hypervigilant state and it just fried them, you know.
(22:55):
And then, yes, it's wild. I should one day write
a book, but about the stuff. I really just don't
care enough about it.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
Okay, Yeah, so you talked about how it's routine. But
unless you're somebody who is in trouble with the police
all the time, most of the time when people are
talking to the police, they're usually in some type of
high stress situation.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
You are correct dealing. Just my presence there increased stress.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
Yeah, you're sought out. So it's just like me. So
I work at the car dealership in service. People saw
seek me during high stress situations. Car is broke down.
I need to go somewhere immediately. What do you mean
that you can't get this done immediately. It's just one
(23:46):
hundred percent of the time. I need it. I need
it now. Why is it not instantaneous? I don't understand.
What do you mean you're busy? I don't get it.
I get that I didn't have any where park. I
get that there was nowhere in the parking lot to park.
I had to park all the way in the back
of the fence where I'm not supposed to park. But
(24:07):
I don't get why you can't get to my car today.
Like it's the disconnect, Like you see all the people.
It's like when somebody walks in the restaurant and they
see all these people wait and they walk up, they'd
be like, how long is the wait? They'd be like,
it'll be an hour hour and you ain't see all
(24:30):
these niggas waiting. I mean, I mean, are you okay
when you walk through the door and you've seen every
seat taken, You looked over at the bar, all the
barstools were taken, and then you've seen not only people
sitting inside, but people waiting outside. Did they not give
you an indication that you're gonna have to wait a whit?
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Like?
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Folks still are taking aback, even in places that are popular.
One of my favorite places go and eat eat breakfast.
I get it to go now.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
But Yodas.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
When you roll up the Yodas on a Saturday and
your ass did not get there at six fifteen to
wait for them to open the door at seven, you're
gonna be waiting an hour. And so they still don't
get it.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
So that they got like hot waitresses there at Yodas.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
I would say that that they were.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
They were on their head.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
They see it between the four point five.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
To seven range to be expected.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
There was there was. They've had a couple there before
that were that were eight. They're not there anymore, but
they've had a couple that were eight, but usually four
point five. I mean it looks like you know, a
good old she had about three four kids. You know
(26:00):
what I'm saying, cookie and meal not really say nothing. Yeah,
wash your draws type girl. I mean what its like.
You know what I'm saying. It's just like just like
running the meal. Wish that's what you should be going
for anyway, Okay, running the meal, running, running the meal
to get you where you need to be. All right, man,
(26:23):
you can live a real happy life, you know what
I'm saying. With some running the meal. I know. I
know us as men, we've got this thought in our head,
you know what I'm saying, of what we believe we
should have and women do as well, but most of
us should just be with average people because we are average.
(26:44):
I'm just talking about as far as looks average and
average and you should be okay, and most chicks there
are average right there? Run average. I said, you look
at you like if you look like two or three
times like, Yeah, you know what I'm saying. I mean,
it's just one of those. Uh. Maybe it's years ago.
(27:08):
I was sitting there at the at the gym, was
sitting upstairs the ship running the running that they got
a upstairs part where you can run. You can do
a mile upstairs sitting there looking at us like, man,
it ain't no way went by second. The second time
I was like well, and then the third time I
(27:28):
was like, yeah, you know what I'm saying. I mean
it just it just grow on you. You know what
I'm saying. And that's what can happen. All right. He
showed the chicks to grow on you. Now they all
have that they're in there. They got their dresses. Uh,
they got their little hat, put the hair in the bun.
(27:49):
But they all wear like nikes and new balances.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
I think that is. I wonder if they get out
of there and they put on there like there are
daisy dukes and go do their thing. No.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Uh, I've seen the Mountain public because sometimes they sometimes
they venture to uh part of the woods, see, because
I would are about twenty five minutes.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Away up in your part of the woods. There ain't
much of a big Amish Mennonite community. I grew up
on the outskirts of a very big Mennonite community, which
are like Amish light and they live amongst us and
they use electricity and stuff. But they still like literally
they still have like you see them with the carts
and stuff from horses and whatnot on streets. It's really
(28:31):
weird passion for them.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Yeah, I passed by their small village. They've got a
village of like little tiny houses. It's like forty or
fifty of them, Like I passed by, Like I passed
by it every every time I go out there because
the way I go now, I happen to just cut back.
I let that there. The first time I seen, I
was like, that's what girl friend, I said, what's that?
(28:56):
She's like, Oh, that's where the the menna nits, the
one who was working run others that there's some ship
straight out the village. You know what I'm saying, The Shamalan.
That's what it looked like. That's what I thought when
I seen it. I said, it's m night, Shamalan man.
I was just looking for the fence in the trees.
Speaker 2 (29:18):
Like up in the you know the big Amors populations
or I guess they're up in Pennsylvania and uh they
they live in huge communities and they don't have like
electricity and none of that stuff.
Speaker 1 (29:33):
You see. I ain't trying to get deep like that,
like start talking about how how.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
The fuck you get that person's a Christian? But then
you get Joel Olsteins a Christian? How are they both
the same Christian? Well? Is he not?
Speaker 1 (29:47):
Who Joe Olstein?
Speaker 2 (29:50):
Oh, well, he's a Jew, but he's a Christian on
the front.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
Okay, he was a bad he's.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
He's a g How do your maga Christians justify being,
you know, using electricity when the Amish are like, Nope,
I'm not.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Sure, but I don't know. He's a g first.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Oh he's a Jew. I'm pretty sure is Joe Jew?
I swear to God. It's like they live. I swear to.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
God, said said held On, Hold on what we get
into it? I think he's a g first, so we
might want to.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
Joe goes back to roots with trip to Israel. No,
I can't find it. Maybe it's propaganda, but I like it.
I like that because this is propaganda.
Speaker 1 (30:44):
You say, you like you live propaganda.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
Yeah, Now here's the thing. Propaganda is an absolutely necessary
part of a society. It's it's it's what generates the
narrative of the world, in the country and the community.
You have to have a narrative, and narratives are not organic.
They have to be propagated. So it's like a school
spirit kind of it's like a school spirit kind of thing,
(31:06):
you know what I mean. But propaganda can get out
of control. At the same time, you got to have
that kind of thing. Yeah, you understand the concept of
school spirit and yeah rah rah and all that stuff. Like,
it's a good thing. It's cohesion and you need That's
why we have sports teams and ships, so communities can
kind of come together and have this social cohesion. You
need to have overarching narratives in a society, and those
(31:29):
overarching narratives are injected via propaganda, right, So propaganda doesn't
have to be false. Propaganda can be true, you know,
propaganda can be true.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
So it would be like every day when you went
to school when you played your leadies instead of playing right.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
Yeah, that is in doctrination one oh one. But I
don't necessarily have a objection to it because one thing
I've realized over in my old age is that society
needs a rigid structure. You can have all the freedom,
monetary freedom, actual freedom to do whatever you want, but
(32:12):
that freedom has to reside within a very rigid cultural framework,
otherwise you end up with San Francisco. I'm not even
playing like and this is this is where I hate
this because always the conversation goes back to fucking Hitler, right,
because he was like the picture perfect guy of who instill,
(32:34):
who enforced a rigid structural, a cultural structure, you know
what I mean. That's really what he did. And it
might have been it might have been a little too rigid,
but nonetheless you have to have a rigid cultural framework
for a society to operate. Right.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
Why looking like fan and Portland, right.
Speaker 2 (32:55):
Like, why do we take Saturday and Sunday off? It's
fucking pretty arbitrary, you know, but we do it. We
stick to it because it gives us a framework right
which to live. Otherwise we'd be like, oh my god,
what is happening on this fucking rocking space?
Speaker 3 (33:07):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (33:07):
You know what I mean. We have to have self
imposed prisons to a degree.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
Otherwise you know what you'd be doing. You'd be telling
the field every day shit, you know what I'm saying,
except Sunday. And he might have to do it Sunday
too if you ain't have enough food. That's one of
the arguments that it burns my ass every time I
hear it. They like, but you know our ancestors, dang,
(33:31):
they work half the time we work. I'm like, what
are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (33:35):
Man ate bears.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
I'm like, dude, they would walk outside and get bit
by a tick and be dead in two days. You
know what I'm saying, Man, you don't understand the troubles
that they had to go through. But they actually had
to grow. They feed, and I'm talking about they won't
going up to the damn the Loew's and get bags
(34:00):
and see they're just putting it out. You know what
I'm saying. They were having to go get their oxen
and get a plow and go out there and do
some hard work from the morning to night. When it
got dark, that's when they came back.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
The whole purpose of your life was working to make
your food so you could continue to live, so you
could continue to work so you can continue to make.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
It to continue to Fuck.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
That was it. That was it, and that's all people
did was working. Fuck. That's why they had.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
To see it. They won't nothing else to do. That's
why I want That's why I said that, And people
got the mentality now that there's so much more to life.
I'm like, no, they just put all this entertainment out here,
so you think there is, but there's the more man.
(34:51):
You work to contribute to society, and then eventually you die.
You might get some pussy in the meantime. You know
what I'm saying. That's like, and it's okay. You can
derive some type of meaning within that, and you can
be laying on your deathbedd and be like, you know what,
(35:12):
I think I did pretty good, And that's all I'm
looking when it's whenever it's dwindling down, maybe it'll be
instant for me. Maybe I'll have a slow, agonizing death.
We don't know. But once it starts dwindling down, I
can look back and he said, you know what I did?
(35:32):
All right? And then that's it. You know what I'm saying.
We move on to whatever's next. You know what I'm saying,
whether it's our seventy two virgins or whatever else we're
gonna do.
Speaker 2 (35:42):
You see, I have it. This is my problem, This
is the fundamental problem of my fucking life. Is that
I understand what we just talked about perfectly, that's it,
but I can't convince myself of it to practice that.
(36:02):
To me, life is this never ending fucking stare away,
and I keep thinking, there's like an end to something,
But there just doesn't seem to be. No matter what
I do or how much work I put in or
how much I accomplish, I never seem to get to
this place I think is on the top of the stairs,
you know what I mean. And it sucks. It fucking
sucks because I can recognize it as I'm doing it.
(36:25):
But I still feel like there's so much more and
there really I don't. There isn't There isn't much.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
So you can never so you can never say that
I made it. Yes, so you never feel like you say, hey, man,
I made.
Speaker 2 (36:40):
Regardless of that thing, I've already accomplished with more than
most people ever will, just just by putting out a
book and just by doing the things I did in
my previous lives. But it's just like it's it's not enough.
I don't know what and I don't know if it's
a money thing. I don't know what it is. I
don't no idea what it is. It just I just
can't shut it off.
Speaker 1 (36:57):
And I wish I could, you know, And I you know,
I've thought about the the money thing, and it's like, okay, huh,
say I hit fifty million more? I can't sit it
out for me personally, Yeah, be really shit that I
(37:17):
would buy. I mean I probably get a townhouse and
that'd be it.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
Yeah, you know, I mean I could probably live the
ball or lifestyle in my mind that I want to live.
I could probably realistically, when I think about it, I
can probably do it on like a one hundred grand a year,
you know what I mean. It's like, right, I'm not
even more fucking people with like money money like dream
I could have a ball. I'm just I'm a bachelor.
I could have a swinging, fucking one man apartment and
(37:44):
a brand new car and fucking going out doing shit
every night on like one hundred grand a year.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
Man, you'd be like, shit, I made it, you know
what I'm saying. At that point, you'd be like, man,
I feel good about it. Like when I've had people
come in working, they sitting there and they tell about stuff.
I was like, yeah, you know, if I left tomorrow,
I'm good. It's like, what do you mean? It's like,
but I I ain't got nothing else. It was like ship,
Like I literally felt like I did it all. I
(38:13):
don't have anything else that I'm looking at because I
mean about about the only thing left is alrighty, that's
about the only thing for me.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
When you're there, when you're at the sorrow stage, you
have to bypass that and go to the coc and
hookers phase. Then you'll okay, that will take your mind off.
Speaker 1 (38:31):
It, Okay, okay, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Technically it's like if you're in that state of mind,
like uh huh, Like if I was gonna kill myself,
why not just rob banks or fucking go bang hookers
or you know, if you're going to end it, right,
why not fucking do all the crazy ship There's no Yeah,
it wouldn't matter if you have nothing to lose if
you're at that point, so you might as well.
Speaker 1 (38:55):
Okay, man said, I just said I'm looking to die anyway,
Someone do coca hook that fine, said, Hey, look, but
I'm gonna tell you right now. Sometimes life has a
evil way of keeping you around during those times. You'd
be like, Man, at any point in time, I should
be able to leave here. There you live for the
(39:16):
next day and sixty years you lived to be one
hundred something, you'd be like a piece of shit. You
know what I'm saying. Life would keep you around for that.
I don't know we are me, and so we do
tend to die early, way earlier than women. And as
there's a bunch of women in there late eighties and nineties,
(39:40):
how many men do you hear in their late eighties
and nineties.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
I'd say like seventies is when most of them go,
you know, late seventies.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
So yeah, dude, I've had people that I've worked with
right here recently, when I started working at the place
of work at fifteen years ago. These dudes in there fifties,
all of them dead, all of them. Hey, we just
had a former manager at the place I work at,
(40:11):
former service manager, and then he went to the sheriff's
apartment and that's when my buddy took over, and then
I came in with him. But he died forty seven
years old. Dead, boom gone heart attack. Crazy Like the
(40:33):
amount of people I know that they ain't even got
what I technically would think would be old old yet
it should be seventies.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
So I worry about my heart for sure. There's no
record of any heart anything in my family, and I
got let me see one. Both of my grand grandmothers
lived into their nineties, and both my grandparents lived to
their late seventies. My grandfather lived in the late seventies.
But I do worry about my heart because of what
happened during COVID. And people don't really grasp what happened
(41:06):
during COVID still, even the conspiracy fucks talking about it
don't grasp what really happened. But I had a fucking
heart condition for nine months that went away. Give me
a fucking break. I don't understand what the fuck that
was about. But I had I had end stage heart
failure symptoms for nine months and then all of a sudden,
I was back to normal. Since then, I had an
(41:28):
EKG or where they put the little things on your
chest and they measure, and they said my heart was fine.
They said the rhythm looked fine. They said when they
have scarring in the heart, they can tell in the
pattern of how it does the thing. And they said
that my heart looked fine. So I don't know if
I had like some fucking myocarditis or I don't know
what the fuck was going on, But that makes me
worry about did that cause some kind of Is that
(41:51):
a time bomb? You know what I mean? Is COVID
cast some shit that could happen? You know? Ten years later,
Like that makes me fucking nervous because they fucked us
all with COVID. They really did, and most people think
it's not real or didn't exist. Bullshit. In the very beginning,
in the early stages, it was a real bio weapon
that burned itself out within a matter of months. And
then they did at swap. Then they did a swaparoo
(42:12):
with the flu. They they did the fucking Indiana Jones
with the idol and the bag of dirt, and and
and that's a.
Speaker 1 (42:24):
Good good that's a good analysis I need.
Speaker 2 (42:27):
I got my COVID notes. I just found my COVID
notes that I put together a couple hundred pages that
I did in like March and April and May and
June and July, the whole first fucking series of months
that it was going on, and tracked all those fucking
numbers and the deaths in the beginning. I'm gonna say
we're the real original deaths that probably happened between October
(42:49):
and February. I think a lot of those numbers were
not even looked, not considered or to look at in
any way, shape or form or at time. They were
lumped in with flu numbers. But by March of twenty twenty,
when you look at the number of COVID deaths that
(43:11):
were coming in and you because allegedly there were no
COVID deaths. But once you get into like April of
twenty twenty, even though COVID only been around for like
two weeks, the death numbers were all of a sudden
that like nine thousand and change, right, right. But they
they started out on day one in March, you know,
they started This is where they fucked up. They started
faking the numbers in March, and I think they they
(43:35):
made them x SOO big, exponentially so quickly when it
was impossible to grow that rapidly because they had deaths
that they were accounting for before, right. And so when
I look at the numbers, I kind of came to
the conclusion that somewhere just under ten thousand people had
died between late October and like March ish, right, and
(43:55):
I attribute all those deaths one hundred percent to like
the real COVID bio weapon. There was a guy I
can't remember his fucking name. I should go back and
look for it. In mid twenty twenty, this comedian went
on Joe Rogan he was a black guy. I think
his first name was Michael. I don't remember his last name.
He talked about his COVID experience and his was earlier
(44:15):
than that. His was like in early twenty twenty, and
he said, and there's everything he described had nothing to
do with the fucking flu. Like he said, if he
could have pulled the plug at some time, he probably
would have, it was that bad. And yeah, that's exactly
little bits of like circumstantial evidence, like his statements, Like
I kind of put together and I realized that, holy shit,
(44:36):
people were getting fucked and wrecked all the way up
to March. And when they announced it was when it
was on its way out, you know, because I caught
whatever I caught in mid March, and it fucked me
up until about September. And I didn't have a cold
or a flu. I never had chest pain, but I
had crazy fucking symptoms that you only get when you
have heart failure. And so, like I explained my symptoms
(44:58):
to a doctor friend of mine who lives Sweden, and
he's like, yeah, I don't understand what you're telling me,
because like your symptoms don't make any sense that these
things for someone like your age, because what happened was
I had these like I had COVID toes, and then
I had rashes on my feet which were blood vessels
bursting because they had no oxygen, right, and then I
lost all the hair below my fucking knees, and so
(45:19):
that tells me my entire circulatory system was inflamed. But
I didn't have any heart pain, so I don't know
what the fuck that was about. But yeah, that freaked
me the fuck out. That freaked me the fuck out
big time, and I think I think we're gonna start
seeing some effects from that. It's been five years almost,
you know, almost since the vaccine at least, so who knows.
Maybe the vaccine was meant to cover some of the
(45:39):
early deaths. Who the fuck knows. I don't think anybody
has a full grass. We might know who did it,
how it was made, all that stuff, because they put
out papers over the years, but the real backstory, like,
I don't think anybody really totally you know, there was
a first time people sat together in a room and
thought of this, you know, and I don't think anyone's
gotten close to that.
Speaker 1 (45:59):
Oh yeah, yeah, that's true. And we did have that
one doctor in New York. I remember when he put
his video out. He's like, man, this is something's all
because this just got something to do with like your
heart and Bud's that's what we're seeing. But they're putting
people on ventilators just like what they ain't got nothing
(46:22):
to do with what we got. What we got, Yeah,
and that was early on. That was like early April
in New York.
Speaker 2 (46:29):
So the crazy thing else though most people didn't make
this connection. But when you go back and you for
some reason, they didn't start tracking flu deaths like in
a data in a specific database until twenty ten, which
is crazy to me. Oh yeah, Starting in twenty ten,
there were five thousand deaths from the flu. That number
(46:50):
grew every fucking year from twenty ten to where in
twenty eighteen the number was like sixty five thousand or
something like that. And so if that number was with
the projection held true, that means by twenty twenty, you're
probably looking at upwards of one hundred thousand flu deaths, right,
(47:10):
But they fucked with the flu numbers like they literally change.
I have to go back and check the reference in
my notes on this one, but they.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
Changed algorithm, they made an algorithm, and they did it
whenever we had the h win in one. That's when
Obama introduced the algorithm of how they calculate flu daves.
Speaker 2 (47:30):
Part of how, the part of how when COVID went
down had something to do with masking the true number
of flu deaths, because if everyone in the country knew
that flu deaths were growing exponentially every fucking year, like
legitimate flu deaths, which is weird to me, then I
think there'd be like a fucking freak out. And so
(47:51):
part of this had to do with hiding the number
of flu deaths. And I think they hid the number
of flu deaths amongst the COVID fake deaths because like remember,
if you got hit by a car, you got killed
with COVID, right, so you know, right, Yeah, Like nobody's
gonna jail yet. I'm really disappointed, Like these people are
traders to the world. I mean, these people they can't
(48:12):
covered in honey and then dipped in like fucking fire
ants before being drawn and quartered and then set on
fire and then have your ashes like fucking dumped into
a volcano.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
Yeah, they ain't even gonna be able to see Daddy,
jail man. They're gonna they're gonna have to let They're
gonna have to be like, man, it's time has been served.
You've seen it and dropped everything, is it? Like? Oh yeah,
he prostitution somewhat. I mean like racketeering gone, sex traffing gone,
because they ain't say nothing bout no six trafficking. It's
(48:44):
just folks having nasty sex. Never see it. It's like, well,
I guess technically you took a prostitute out of where
they were at and moving across state line, so I
think that's kind of a crime maybe, but you didn't
(49:04):
traffic him because it wasn't by fource.
Speaker 2 (49:07):
So like so OD was like, shit, if I get
a hooker and I get Uber to deliver her to me,
did I just fucking commit the crime of transporting a
hooker for prostitutions? Is that actually a crime?
Speaker 1 (49:21):
You might.
Speaker 2 (49:25):
Pay for a.
Speaker 1 (49:28):
You got to let them pay for their own Uber, Okay,
come up their own accord, all right? And if I
happened and when they came in, I happened to leave
a stack of cash on the dresser and that they
stole from.
Speaker 2 (49:43):
Me, and I just chose not to report it because
you know.
Speaker 1 (49:48):
Look at the kindness of my heart. Hey, we got
the perfect cover story, Diddy, all of a sudden goodness, Man,
I could have been a lawyer. Come on, not kidding.
I ain't want to be in that moff worker. See
all the paperwork they'd be doing. I'm like, oh no,
I know they glad AI is on the way, even
though it's gonna.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
They're lawyers getting this barred for using AI and the
ship's making up cases out of this ship's wild.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
Oh boy, you know this a oh man, that's what
we need to have AI versus AI. You have your
AI lawyer against somebody else's AI lawyer. You know what
I'm saying, Because you can build agents within like the
chat GVT and stuff like that, tell it how grace
if it wants to be and all that. So yeah, yeah,
that's what that's what we need to have. Next lawyers.
Speaker 2 (50:39):
Any writers, have we have any? Have we got any
fake writers out there who put out some AI written
books that we don't know about yet.
Speaker 1 (50:46):
I don't know about that, but I do know that
we've had those AI rap rappers robot rappers. But they
had to they had to had to take the one
down because he kept saying Nick and it's like, I guess,
I guess they feel like AI is white.
Speaker 3 (51:06):
And so.
Speaker 2 (51:09):
So I'm still trying to get my audio book up
on Amazon. I got a bunch of technical problems. It's different,
they need different killer bites per second, and it's gotta
be a like very structure different. But one thing I
caught when I was trying to upload was that it
said they do not accept and will ban your account
if you upload an AI audio book. Shit has to
(51:30):
be person read. That I thought was pretty because they
know they open up the floodgates. I mean, oh, I
promise you. Amazon has their fucking tech built in and
they scan your ship and they can tell if it's AI.
They can tell if it's AI instantly, and they'll ban it.
Speaker 1 (51:51):
So well, dang, I mean, they just everybody told me
how great AI is and how great it's gonna make
your life, and then now I can't use it. I'm
trying to make I'm trying to make my life great again.
Speaker 2 (52:03):
Here's a deal, this is AI. The analogy I'll make us.
Imagine they promised us like a Lamborghini, right, and we
can envision a Lamborghini, and we're all expecting a Lamborghini,
but they delivered Fred Flintstone's car instead. Right, that's what
we got. We expect this fucking beast of a fucking
(52:25):
thing that can do everything, and it's still it is.
So it's it's like I feel like it's like you
put a retarded kid to work and he's getting shit
wrong and then you beat him for it. It's like
it's the most fucked up thing in the world. It's
technology that should not be out to the public in
the form that it's in because obviously everyone tried to
get the first move or advantage. Everyone failed. I mean
(52:48):
Apple had to have their shit taken off of their
iPhones until they fixed it because they got like threatened
to be sued by like Scotland because it was making
up fake stories in Scotland or something like that. Like
it was fucking heave. It is total. It's bullshit. Now,
can I have good uses? I just saw a fucking
video on how they used to do train inspections manually.
(53:11):
People would go in and like look and make sure
the shit's all connected and the joints are connected and
everything's working. And that's how you would do a train inspection.
It would take like four to six hours. Now a
train can be laser scan from all angles as it
goes through. This thing goes into some software that's some
Microsoft AI processes, and it can detect every problem on
(53:33):
the fucking thing in real time as it moves through
the sensors. Hm hm okay, that's crazy. That is an
amazing use of AI. Me asking AI to recommend a
fish album is not a good use of AI.
Speaker 1 (53:52):
He said, me asking AI to create me a girlfriend.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
It's a.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
Which this would be a lot of folks doing it. Tea,
create me a girlfriend, because you know we did read the.
Speaker 2 (54:04):
Day you can have an AI girlfriend. Okay, It's bad
enough when you fucking are hanging out with a chick
who was like you're not on the same level and
you're trying to talk to her and she's like, you're
just not there, like because you know that there's nobody home,
like AI would be even worse because there's really nobody home.
(54:30):
You're literally talking to a brick wall.
Speaker 1 (54:33):
You see, you said, I got an old dodo.
Speaker 2 (54:35):
Her a girlfriend?
Speaker 1 (54:36):
What's it? But I mean, but did she look good?
It's like she did look at she makes a meme
mac and cheese, Right, that was the one that cheese.
Speaker 2 (54:51):
My girlfriend, Amy, my alcoholic girlfriend who wrecked my life.
She the one thing about her she could cook like
she was amazing in the kitchen. That was the best.
That was the best. Yeah, every woman needs a car.
Speaker 1 (55:04):
Look, there's one thing that I can say for myself
is that I'm lucky to end up where I was
at where I'm at right now, because like I'm I'm
actually like unbearable, and I'm unbearable not how you would
think I'm unbearable because I don't want to do shit.
(55:28):
I'm not interested in trying a whole bunch of shit,
and I don't give a shit. And so that's what
makes it something that's extremely difficult because I don't take
I don't take crazy leaps because I don't see it
as a necessity. So and you know, a lot of times,
(55:50):
you know, people feel like the relationship needs that high
intensity in some type of way, whether it's trying new
foods or trying to and I'm just like, I just
don't care, Like I can do the same stuff all
the time, be happy, which is what I actually do.
(56:13):
Like I'm like right on schedule with every single thing
that I do. And so for somebody that would for
the majority of people like, oh, yeah, you know you
be I said, you wouldn't be able to deal with me.
It's like, oh, you know, narcissis this I said, no,
I just don't do shit, so you wouldn't be able
to do like you would be like this guy just
(56:34):
does the same thing all the time, where it's the
same four pair of pants, where it's the same four shirts,
eats the same meal all the time, goes to the
gym at the same time five days a week. It's
just like it's been like, hold on a second, man, like, like,
I can't I can't take this structre It's too structured.
(56:57):
It's too structured for people. So, man, are the difference
is between that. That's what makes it so difficult to
to actually find somebody. People don't understand how hard it
is to actually get in a relationship that can make
it past a few months. I'm talking about past a
(57:17):
few months.
Speaker 2 (57:19):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (57:21):
The difficulty like it's exponential for here's a here's here's
a few reasons why you both have to be in
the same mental space at that point in time. All
it takes is one little thing that can hit that
could be a hiccup. So let's say you meet somebody
that you feels incredible. They just took a job in California.
(57:46):
They're gonna be gone in two in two weeks, but
y'all hit it off. But you can't leave. You got
a job in California. Now they're gone, give me somebody else.
And they hit it all perfectly. They're like, yeay, man, I
really want to have kids, you like, I don't want
(58:07):
to have new kids. Boom done cook. Just like that.
It's instantaneous, Like to be able to find somebody who
who you're able to actually stay with for an extending
amount of time is actually almost impossible, improbable.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
So I don't know what happened. I don't know if
it was COVID. I don't know what the deal is.
I don't know if COVID was a blessing in the skies.
Who knows. But there are more and more reports now
coming out about vaccine shedding on people who got the
vacs like five years ago one time. This kind of
(58:50):
freaks me out. This eliminated like half the dating population,
if not more.
Speaker 1 (58:54):
Right there, So right there, you go, right out the gate.
Speaker 2 (58:57):
Right out the gate. Yeah, it's weird because up until COVID,
and I don't know if it's a me problem. I
don't think it's a me problem other than I put
in about this much fucking effort into meeting somebody. Zero.
But I'm forty nine years old and see COVID hit.
I was like forty four or something like that, never
(59:20):
been married, dated my whole life for the most part,
not you know, a couple of serious girlfriends, but mostly
but I never had a real issue all of a
sudden post COVID. It's like dating is a stopped meeting.
People just stopped. I don't know what the fun tale is. Yeah,
it's a societal thing. It it seems to be a
societal thing because it ain't just me.
Speaker 1 (59:41):
Yay, It's a complete shutdown date the date market is
a complete and total shutdown because the way we interact
with each other is weirder than they ever Okay, the
way any and this is people who are right next door.
We only interact with each other VR devices, and most
(01:00:02):
of the time a lot of people are not even
interacting with people within their area anymore. You know, you
would be localized for the most part. And I tell
people there's a time and a place for approaching. Okay,
(01:00:24):
and you've heard this about old men are not approaching,
you know, cold approach, things of that nature. And so
we've got this thing in our mind. It's like, oh,
you know, I need to approach. We know. Here's what
the deal is. It's not so much about the approaching aspect.
It's about being in a situation where both parties do
(01:00:44):
not feel the pressure of a date. And where is
a place where most people don't feel the pressure of
a date act It's at work. And that's why you
have a whole lot of work romances for the simple
fact is that you're able to get to know somebody
just act like yourself, has no pressure of anything happening afterwards,
(01:01:09):
which can which can lead to a natural attraction as
opposed to, oh I'm taking this girl on this date.
Ship man, I managine something need to happen because I
might spend one hundred dollars, you know what I'm saying.
You know what I'm saying. I'm not I might spending
skin so so so now you're nervous just going up
(01:01:31):
like I was sitting there, and it's like if you
see a girl that you like, you know, just walk
up to her. I'm like, there's nothing more awkward than that.
That's the dumbest thing to do. Actually, you just walk
around to see some chick. You're just gonna walk up
to her and say what, oh, hey, how you doing,
I'm such and such, and then just look there with
your well, you know, I really like your shoes and
(01:01:52):
I thought your necklace was pretty, and yeah, I'm trying
to fuck I mean, you know what I'm saying. It's like,
you know what I'm saying. It's like there's nothing there.
But if you go to a whole bunch of conferences,
work conferences, maybe you've seen somebody two or three times,
maybe y'all sitting there talking about business, and all of
a sudden you start talking about something random. Then just
(01:02:13):
the attraction bills from there. There's no pressure, nobody spending
any money. I didn't ask you to go do anything
with me. We just happened to be here. It happened
to be a work event. So like all my success
has happened from work. Now, it hadn't been from people
at work, but it's come from meeting people through work
(01:02:36):
because I'm just interacting with them with no pressure of
I'm not asking them on a date or nothing. It's
just they come in multiple times interact with me, and
the attraction is built that way. So people got it
in their minds wrong that people were just people just
walk around just walking up to people, cold approaching. I'm like,
nobody was ever doing that. You were in a particular
(01:02:58):
type of social circle to where there wouldn't a whole
lot of pressure and natural attraction was made, which is
why it's sometimes it's easier to uh to date, like
in high school. You know people dated. A whole bunch
of people dated in high school. Well, you just in
that social circle, and so you're able to build the
attraction that way. I want nobody going on their dates
(01:03:18):
or nothing supposed to be boyfriend and girlfriend. Ain't nobody
went on the first date high school. You ain't got
no money, broke as fuck, especially back in the day.
You're talking about nineties, eighties, nineties, you know what I'm saying.
So that's the whole premise behind that. And so with
(01:03:39):
our social circles, we stopped meeting so much in person,
and so now when people are in person, you're kind
of awkward. Like people are really awkward in person now,
like They almost like they don't even know how to
how to really handle it anymore. And that came with
the wave of a lot of remote work, you know,
(01:04:01):
because I mean a bunch of people wouldn't re make
whereas before, you know you being in office, Maybe y'all
will go out and have some lunch, you know what
I'm saying, A whole bunch of you will go out
and have lunch. Shit, maybe after work y'all blow off
some steam. Folks go somewhere, have some drink. Yeah, But
that all went away for what two years? It was
(01:04:24):
two years that folks lost. You talking about twenty twenty
twenty twenty one. A fortune of twenty twenty two. People
didn't really let go of a rope till about halfway
through twenty twenty two.
Speaker 2 (01:04:39):
Some people still hold that fucking rope bro I went
out the other I live in Fort Collins, and Fort
Collins is like La without the trash, right. It's that
they're justice liberal here. Although I'll tell you this much.
They they didn't do Pride month here. They said they
did on their website, but like they didn't do a
(01:05:01):
thing nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
I ain't seen no dicks this month or last month.
I ain't seen no dicks. So own eggs usually have
some type of pride, So I didn't see none folks
let it go this year.
Speaker 2 (01:05:14):
Yeah, but this place here, I has a little bit challenge.
I've seen people with masks when I go out here.
Still people they didn't.
Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Get the best. It's it's it's almost it's almost dwindled
out in my area. That's just a feud. It's just
a they holding on the hope. You know what I'm saying,
that last string of hope. I'm like dog, it's time
to let it go, you know what I'm saying. And
then what you come through and have an intervention together.
Speaker 2 (01:05:42):
Know it's crazy. You know how the mind has a
way of blocking certain memories so to protect itself. And tonight,
like I have a real hard time remembering a lot
of the COVID era inconveniences, Like my mind like has
minimalized them and them in the little box somewhere because
(01:06:03):
it was a major inconvenience for what like two and
a half years.
Speaker 1 (01:06:06):
And yeah, and uh.
Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
I can only think of a couple incidents in my
mind of wearing the mask, but I know I wore
it every time we went anywhere right, So my mind
has done a good job of blocking a lot of
those memories for some reason.
Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Well, here's what's key for me. I mean, of course
I worked through the whole thing. I was Essential Mask. Yeah, yep,
car dealership. Yeah, folks still had to drive. So if
your car breaks down.
Speaker 2 (01:06:38):
The idea that they told people that some people were
essential and some people were not, this is some straight
out of Kafka kind of ship.
Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
And they and they and they won't line about it neither. Okay,
they needed They were like, no, you did Pine at Essential.
I mean you were at the closed door. They're like no,
but I mean you can take your ass to the half,
you know. It's like, I mean, the didn't need some funk.
They look. Some folks took it to heart and they
put themselves out of business when they shouldn't have. Because
(01:07:06):
I was like, depending on where you at, man, And
we're seeing this now. When the cops were coming around
and shutting folks down all that, I mean, all those
folks got sued. They had to pay that money back
and all that because it was illegal as fuck. Okay,
I mean, damn, it was illegal. It's like, dude, I mean,
(01:07:27):
the one thing I remember was that that dude's name
bar It's up there. It's like, yeah, man, they out
here shitting on folks constitutional rights. Somebody should do something
about that. Nigga, that's you? Like you the guy? I'm like,
man that show that show gig Oh that's me. Oh damn,
(01:07:51):
I spoke too soon to then then. Yeah, So, like,
what was it that the one GM that got shut
down multiple time in New Jersey? I think I think
they want they won all this shit. Yeah oh yeah,
I got paid back and all that. All those nurses
they got fired and stuff, they got back pay. You're
talking about military people, man, just take them to the ringers, man,
(01:08:14):
take them to the cleaners. I don't see why not.
See here's the deal, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:08:17):
I don't understand how they thought they could get away
with something like this in the modern era. We live
in the digital age. I had one hundred percent completely
solved COVID by like July of twenty twenty. I could
have told you what lab it was made in, who
made it, everything by July of twenty twenty, And you're
gonna tell me the motherfuckers that the government couldn't figure
it out. Fuck right off.
Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
Cooy cooy. It couldn't quite it couldn't quite get the
head around it, you know, I'm saying, could get quite
get a hold on it fast. She was doing the
best he could, Barks. Barks was doing the best she could.
Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
Okay, I wanted to fucking if anyone someone needed to
go to the rape pens. It was fucking birks.
Speaker 1 (01:09:05):
We're doing a bit they could. So yeah, man, we talked.
But that era that two years transformed America or transformed
the world forever because it pretty much made almost everything unaffordable,
was what it did, like exponentially unaffordable for most of
(01:09:29):
what you want to do, because you're talking about like
rents and stuff like that. I mean, folks talk about
buying a house. You're like, man, I could buy a house,
but damn man, my rent four hundred dollars, which y'all
talking about, Well, I want to buy a house, you
know what I'm saying to mean my rent five hundred dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
Man, that's not something I want to talk about real quick,
because I'm in a state of confusion right now. Because
stock markets all time high, Bitcoin's pretty close to all
time high. People will tell you that things are about
to explode, and if they cut interest rates, the market's
going to explode, and everything's going to be hunky dory.
(01:10:09):
I'm hearing all this stuff like crazy, and at the
same time, I'm looking at the fucking housing market, which
is the leading indicator of the economy in the country,
and all indicators are that we're in a situation with
the housing market that is far worse than we were
in two thousand and eight. So I don't know what
(01:10:32):
to believe. Because if the housing market crashes, the economy crashes,
Bitcoin's going to crash, everything's going to crash. If the
housing market has a bottom out like in like two
thousand and eight. This housing crash has been in people
have seen it coming for years because of the amount
of money that was fluxed into the system during COVID
(01:10:54):
and the remote work and the anticipation for the need
for this housing and it's just not needed. Markets across
the country have more housing on fucking record for sale
than ever before. Places like La Vegas, Florida. The housing
markets are flooded. These people will never be able to
sell these houses. This is going to lead to financial ruin.
(01:11:15):
So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:11:15):
How to have them at the laws.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Right, and that means the banks take a loss, and
that affects the banks, and that affects banks stocks, and
that affects the market. Everything is a is a gear
and a big machine. So I don't know how to
fucking make jive these two things. That everything's great and
that the fucking markets are going to explode with cuts
and interest rates and everything's gonna be awesome, and yet
the housing market is teetering on the biggest collapse of
(01:11:39):
all time. I don't know what the fuck to think
of this. I don't know how weird. It seems very
fucking weird. All I can think of is that there
might be some kind of quantitative easing kind of thing.
If they cut rates and there's more money in the economy,
it'll slow the hasten of the fucking collapse. But still,
you can't have more houses than people wanting to fucking
buy houses and expect everyone everything's gonna work out, right.
Speaker 1 (01:12:03):
Yeah, Cause you got to think when when they cut
interest rates, you want to talk about the amount of
homes that are going to go in the market if
they cut if they cut it back to four percent,
because there's people in their houses right now that absolutely
hate it. But they bought it because it was two
percent interest. They're like, damn, we need to buy a house.
We need to buy a house. Yeah, I'll buy that
(01:12:24):
when I pay seventy thousand dollars over over asking price too.
And then they get in there and they're like, oh shit,
the foundations rotten and damn the back deck can fall in.
Oh man, I need a new ac unit.
Speaker 4 (01:12:38):
Like folks were buying stuff sight unseen. They weren't even
looking at it, didn't step foot in it, paying fifty thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Dollars over sticker price. Yeah, that's how fucking retarded we are. Mh.
The government don't have to do much. All they got
to do is hit a button and watch the ant scurry.
They hit one button, they said, look at him, look
at the Dummies's good. You see. What they don't understand
is that your wages don't go up. I can make
(01:13:13):
mine go up into perpetuity because first of all, I
get the inside of trade. Second of all, when we
feel like we just give ourselves a raise, you see
what I'm saying. I mean, it's just like they hit
one button and folks lost their damn mind. And folks thought,
oh man, I got something so great. I said, what
(01:13:33):
you don't understand that you have done is that you
have landlocked yourself. And so if you had any hopes
of moving up in any type of financial way, usually
moving up financially requires a movement for most people. Let's
say you in a smaller city, you got sixty seventy
(01:13:55):
thousand dollars job. Boom, Okay, I got me a house here. Okay,
all good. Oh. Two years later, oh, I got offered
a job in this city over here for one hundred
and twenty Well, shit, what I'm gonna do with this house?
Oh damn? If I sell this house, then the next
house I buy is gonna be a sending seven percent interest?
(01:14:15):
And how much you say the house was twelve hundred
square foot for four hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Damn,
I'm in the two thousand square foot now, So I
got the downsize in paper on money. So now you're landlocked. Yeah,
I said, both they got you by the nuts. Man. Like,
when I was sitting there telling folks, I said, Folks
(01:14:35):
was like, oh man, this is great. I said, man,
calm down, everybody needs to calm down. I said, they're
doing this, They're prop up the economy to make it
seems like it's doing okay when it should have just crashed.
Should just let the crash happen, right, But we just
pump money out there and made it look all great.
And then now, folks, I don't understand why stuff's so high.
(01:14:56):
I was like, it's like you said, Corey, it's like
people deleted twenty twenty, twenty twenty one and half of
twenty twenty two out of their minds. It's like it
didn't happen. Folks have no idea how we got here.
Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
Yeah. I knew this whole thing was rigged when in
the midst of COVID they had that fucking boat that
got stuck in the Panama Canal. Oh yeah, the split thing,
And I heard that shit. I'm like, bullshit, bullshit, bullshit.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
You see they did happened to get stuck.
Speaker 2 (01:15:36):
That's the benefit of living in the digital age, man,
I have to say, really, it's the benefit of living
in the digital ages. We can debunc shit in real time.
Their fucking level of lies have to be so complicated
and planned in advance, and if you're planning it in advance,
that far you leave a trail, you know what I mean.
It's fucking wild.
Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Yeah, yeah, you know it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:15:57):
Because right now I'm actually back on the stint. I'm
back to writing my book again. I've been knocking out
like ten or twelve pages in the past day or two,
and so I'm realizing that John Armstrong is like the
major researcher who I'm pulling from for this book, and
he did his work in the nineties and he had
to like take a picture that he a physical picture
(01:16:18):
that he got from somebody, mailed the picture to somebody
else to look at, and then they had to mail
the picture back to him to verify, you know, if
it's the information that the person remembers. Right, that process
takes what like two weeks. I can do that now
in like a minute. I can message a person, send
(01:16:38):
him a picture, have him look at it, and tell
me within a minute what I'm at with your question
I want to know? Right, So, just being in the
digital age has fucking taken so much time out of
the equation it's crazy, really, And applying that to the government,
they can't hide shit anymore because when they hide things,
that leaves voids and those voids are easily you can
tell the something missing, you know, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Yeah, yeah, you can look right at it. Just like
when they told me in January of twenty twenty that
be scared because folks was getting was coughing and sneeze
and I'm like, do what a fever? I'm like, okay,
it seems like running the meal stuff to me. I
(01:17:23):
was like, why is this on the news? I said,
this seemed done. It's during my basketball season. Says it
seems done. Then some of my players start dropping out.
I said, what the hell wrong with y'all? I never
really got anything. Then all of a sudden we finished
the season and one week later shut down. I'm like,
two weeks the slowest spreading. That's the weirdest time in
(01:17:46):
my life. Look if I felt like twenty eight days later,
except I didn't wake up with my dick hanging out,
you know what I'm saying, Like like all home dude
did in the damn hospital. I don't know if they
explained that shit and some lords I'm where, but I'm
trying to figure out how on twenty eight days later,
how all these folks got eight and my man was
(01:18:07):
just laying right there in the hospital. Ain't nobody eat him.
That's what I'm trying to figure out.
Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
Because it ain't no movie if he don't wake up there. See,
my dad taught me when I was really young. The
have certain questions. You're not supposed to ask about movies.
Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Oh man, So uh so July fourth coming up? All right,
Independence Day? Except for the Negro community. All right, we
already had our Independence Day allegedly June tenth. Okay, we're
not supposedly. If you're black, you're not supposed to celebrate
July fourth.
Speaker 2 (01:18:40):
So that's not when I'm honest, I guy, this is
stupidest holiday because it ain't when the slaves got released.
It was when the dumb motherfucker's down in wherever two
years later, finally got word that they got released. So what,
you're celebrating a broken fucking system of mail delivery. That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
What that that's what. That's what we've been told in
the past few years that black July fourth is not
for black folks, for white people only. It may be
in dangered service. You see different races.
Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
Now, this is a problem. You either embrace America you don't.
If you embrace the culture, you don't. It ain't about
racist about culture. If everybody just looking adhere to the
same culture, right, and we didn't have things like sexy
red polluting us getting paid by the c i A.
You know, if everyone stuck to listen into the fucking
to real music. You know what I mean? If everyone
acted like I acted and did like I did, everything
(01:19:38):
would be perfect.
Speaker 1 (01:19:40):
You mean, we got Glote really, she just won her
a Gospel music awards. Glow Local Queen.
Speaker 2 (01:19:47):
Had a song called Moose Knuckle Queen won an award.
Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Oh no, no, no. Her her gospel song was rain
on Me. But you know she was in on her song?
Was it t?
Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
And he has secondary implications.
Speaker 1 (01:20:04):
Kirk Franklin was in to day she got Kirk Franklin
being a Yeah. I was like, Kirk, you you know,
you know gloyalis turned up with her niggas and bitches, right,
but that's that's her song.
Speaker 2 (01:20:20):
Yeah. But he's a Christian guy and they take in
your you're what is this saying? Your beggars and you're
unwanted and you're fucking junkies and whatever the fuck?
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Man? I mean, I get Christian.
Speaker 2 (01:20:33):
Preachers can Christian preachers can get a good piece of
ass by playing that fucking role. They a lot of women.
I promise you that, in the name of the Lord,
it is a good gig. I should have gotten in
on the Christian gig when I was like a fucking teenager.
Speaker 1 (01:20:49):
I should have got it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:50):
I'd have a mansion and like a harem all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:20:57):
It's a whole bud. He say, hey, man, this is
the the it said, we want you to be pastoring
the church. Just like, oh man, what kind of house
does this come with? Do I get a couple of
side bitches? Pastor you can't say side bitches? Okay, I'm sorry,
women of God on the side. You know what I'm saying.
(01:21:19):
You got me, get me, get a couple of days. No,
but I mean glorially she won. You know, she want
gospel music song of the year. I was like, whoo,
ain't nobody else make no gospel music. It's kind of
like when Beyonce One Country out of the Year.
Speaker 2 (01:21:39):
I said, See, when I think of gospel, I think
I like fifty black chicks in the fucking church with
the robes and they're all clapping the hands. Yeah that's gospel.
Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Yeah, that's the gospel music, but not
not the not what Gloriala had. I listened to the
song because I had to make sure. I had to
make sure she didn't say nick in the middle of
the song. You know what I'm saying, just just somewhere randomly.
I was like, no, she she she hailed it back.
(01:22:08):
But bo I'm gonna tell you right now. But she
she had to tone herself down, you know what I'm saying,
compared to what she'd be doing. But uh, but Corey
July for what you going to fish? Ain't you? Ain't
you got cash?
Speaker 2 (01:22:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:22:23):
July four for Extrafaganza.
Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
It'll be good. They're doing three nights, but I'm only
going one night out of all three. So it's not
the most convenient show in the world. They're playing in Boulder,
and fucking Boulder is not a town that is meant
to handle fifty thousand fucking people coming into it at
the same time. It is just not designed that way
(01:22:46):
at all. The parking is spread out over like seven
different parking lots. It's gonna be a fucking shit show
to get in and get out of. I'm not looking
forward to it at all. And so tomorrow night I'm
going to my friend's house. Are going to watch the
Fish Show on TV her place, and then then I'll go.
Then I'll go on fourth of July because they'll do
(01:23:07):
something special on the fourth. They'll have like fireworks, so
they'll do some fucking songs they haven't done in twenty years.
They'll do something special which will be cool. And then, uh,
then they're playing Saturday. But I really want to get
down to Pueblo because they're doing that Pueblo meet up
for Slow Newsday guys. Third Eye, Third Eye. Yeah, and
I still have a ride. All I got my motorcycle
and I don't have a way to get down there,
(01:23:28):
so I'm kind of like stuck.
Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
Yeah, that happens from time to time. Yeah, July fourth,
Burgers and dogs, right, Hamburger's hot dogs. Yeah, getting the
grill out.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
Mh.
Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
You know what I'm saying. What it's just usual, just
July fourth, Hamburger hot dog. She's not anything else on
July fourth. As far as food was, of course, you
got your chili.
Speaker 2 (01:23:52):
You saw you know.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
Your stuff that I don't eat, but uh, you know
other people eat it. I only know what's what's your
uh what would be your go to dessert on July
four would just be ice cream, go to dessert.
Speaker 2 (01:24:09):
I couldn't even pies apple pie, American apple pie.
Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
Apple pie, that would be go to dessert. Guys, leave
that in the conversation go to dessert on July fourth.
Nobody really talks about the dessert. I know, I don't
even remember this. A couple of years ago, Biden put
up there that you know, this July fourth was gonna be,
you know, cheaper than it was before. And he had
up there, you know how much a pound a hamburger
(01:24:35):
was and stuff. But I didn't see anything about no dessert.
Dessert forgotten on July fourth, and it shouldn't be. It
should have its place on this gracious day. I would
be off work, my god, and I need it because
they have kicked my ass this week. Well but there
(01:24:58):
right now, Bore, they have been kne d. Boy, they've
been in me, you know what I'm saying. And this
ain't I in. This is just a letter in capitalized.
They've been up in me. So so that's not that
about it. So we hope everybody has a great fourth.
All right, Corey, We've got Superman coming out next week
(01:25:20):
of the DC.
Speaker 2 (01:25:20):
You see it, the more I'm interested in it.
Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
It seems like it's gonna have a lot in.
Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
It, like a lot, and it doesn't look like it
takes itself too seriously. It's got the super Dog in it.
I mean, it's like it's got some things. It's got
some quirky things in it that tell me that it's
not taking itself too seriously, and that is essential.
Speaker 1 (01:25:39):
We see a green lantern. We see a green lantern
in there.
Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
Yeah, it should be.
Speaker 1 (01:25:43):
We see some other people I don't really know about
that seemed to be villain us in nature of course.
We got a Lex Luthor. He's gonna be in it.
He's got to be the nemesis oh of Superman.
Speaker 2 (01:25:57):
And uh I see And then what trailer do you
think I'm excited about now that I just came out
in the past couple of days running man, you got it?
Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
Man boy, I hit it. I was like, hold on,
hold on what came out of past co days?
Speaker 2 (01:26:20):
You know, it's kind of funny because it's like a
year ago. I was thinking to myself, man'd be great
if they remade that, And then they remade it. I
think I might be God. I think about things and
then they happen.
Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
It said. The more I think about it, the more
I believe that I may just be here. You know,
I've put myself in these in this you know, body
of clay to feel what it would feel like to
be amongst the pens, to get that feeling. So yeah, guys,
(01:26:54):
hope you'll have a good jove for We'll catch y'all
on Sunday for day zero of course. And oh if
if y'all haven't been watching the UFC and a guy
named Eliot Tapoor, just go back and just just look
at his fights, because this dude is he's collecting skulls
(01:27:17):
right now, Like he's like Infendity Stone type ship right now.
But what the folks he's putting down and like he's
he's flatlined, like he sucked all up.
Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
Like bad quick and quick too.
Speaker 1 (01:27:34):
Yeah, And so I don't know. We got a few
people who watch us during our UFC live streams that
we have on Wheezy's channel. Uh. But if you are
a fight fan and you don't know who Eliot to
poor he is, he don't He don't get a whole
lot of press as far as because he doesn't have
a very outgoing personality. But I would I'd highly suggest
(01:27:57):
if you got like ESPN Plus or something, just go
watch some of his old fights on demand. All of
his old fights should be on demand. And do you
talk about somebody who's got a trajectory to become, you know,
one of the goats of m m Ah to even
potentially passes past. Who's that Kabib's legacy, because you know
(01:28:22):
Islam's moved up. Islam's moved up. Kabib is a badass,
he was, but man, he won't wrecking skulls like this.
He will wrestling folks, But I mean Ili is wrecking skulls.
I mean he's hurting folks. So it's a little bit different.
(01:28:44):
So I don't know if they're gonna end up having
that super fight in the future between Islam and Ilia,
because you know, Islam vacated the bell and moved up
to one seventy. Islam Markatscheff, so he's gonna be competing
right now in one seventy for the Forceivable Future. So
I don't know if that's gonna set up a super fight.
A lot of times when they do these super fights,
(01:29:05):
they do them like three years too late, Like when
both of them are long in the teeth, you know.
It's like they're all the super fight. I'm like, maybe
we wanted to see this five years ago, you know
what I'm saying. I want to see it now. Both
these like after they go on the losing streaks and
shit like that, it's like, what was it the last
Like Chuck Ladale versus Teeterward ties eight, you know, when
(01:29:27):
they're both fifty years old, It's like, but don't neither
one of these teachers need to be fighting anymore? So,
but that's the way it is. But uh, we appreciate
everybody for being out with us tonight. We'll catch on
the next Beyond the queue boys Q four twenty Powerful
and Corey Hughes make sure you makes you supporting with
all his work, Bloody, here's you dot Substack, Corey Hughes
dot Org Warner from History JFK book. He's working on
(01:29:50):
an Oswald book. Y'all know what the deal is. We'll
catch you on the next one. He's out