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July 25, 2025 • 93 mins
Beyond the Cube: Legends Left Us This Week.

In this engaging conversation, the hosts explore a variety of themes including the implications of wireless technology, the dynamics of attraction in relationships, and the influence of social media on personal connections. They discuss the importance of low-pressure situations in dating, the role of therapy in mental health, and the complexities of political representation. The conversation is filled with cultural commentary and insights into the challenges faced in modern relationships, ultimately leading to a deeper understanding of societal expectations and personal choices. In this engaging conversation, the hosts explore a variety of topics ranging from DIY home repairs and fitness journeys to the importance of staying active as one ages. They share personal anecdotes about their gym experiences, discuss the impact of diet on health, and reflect on nostalgic pop culture moments, including childhood cartoons and wrestling legends. The discussion also touches on the legacy of rock icon Ozzy Osbourne and the evolution of wrestling as an art form, highlighting the significance of maintaining physical health and mental well-being throughout life.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
What's going on, guys? You boys four twenty here, welkom
y'all back another episode on the Cube. Of course, we've
got the powerful one with us. Corey Hughes Man's got
a rather spiffy letting up under armored shirt.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
On the day that's laundry day.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
I mean spiffy.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
I mean he uh huh the spider behind me? Real quick?
Is it?

Speaker 1 (00:35):
I mean, is it a deadly spider? Is it?

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Just like they're all deadly? I don't care what they say.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
That all of the Hey, look, there'd be some uh
some insect activists out there and be like, hey, that's
the one that's keeping the flies out of your house.
You don't eat much that spider right there. It's keeping
the flies out and uh some other type of insects
from evading your house. And Corey's already already left the screen.

(01:12):
I mean, this is what we got going down, guys.
You know what I'm saying. Man over here, if you're
watching this live, man is spiffying up his room because
he just splattered spider guts all over his walk. It's
is cory that that picture's crookeet, But it's okay, damn

(01:34):
it It's okay that your pictures crooked. You see, this
is already off the rails, right out the gate, guys, wireless.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
But I fucking hate getting my wires caught in my
goddamn chair fucking wheels every fucking day, every fucking day.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Okay, God, well damn it. They got some things that
you can use to tie the wires up.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Time back, thousand wires at my fucking feet here. I
swear to god, it's a veil of fucking wires. And
wireless is dog shit. It just is. You gotta charge
the ship every day.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Fuck you, well, Corey, wireless is the future.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
I don't want to hear.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
The future is now.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Microwaving our brains is what it's doing.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Is that what it's doing?

Speaker 2 (02:23):
Yes, you're getting You don't even know.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
It is even proving I do have bluetooth headholes. It
may in fact to be microwaving my brain, which is okay,
all right, right now, It still seems to be functioning properly.
It may be enhancing our brains. Do you ever think

(02:46):
about that?

Speaker 2 (02:47):
No?

Speaker 1 (02:49):
Okay, so what's the potential to day?

Speaker 2 (02:52):
I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I was asking what the potential was.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Zero?

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Oh my god, you see you see what it is?
It proven that, uh that bluetooth microwaves your brain. Let's
see those Bluetooth microwave your brain. I mean, somebody's had
to ask Google before. Let's see what Google about to
say on this AI. Hey, no, using bluetooth devices like headphones,

(03:26):
it's not microwave your brain, that's what they say. Okay,
since bluetooth devices are designed to operate within safety limits
for our RF exposure set by regulatory agencies like the FCC. FCC,
I thought they were the ones that keep you from
cussing and showing TDS on the.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
On the Federal Communications Commission.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Okay, they got to do with the bluetooth too.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Sounds like the Ministry of censorship if you ask me, well.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
They're just trying. They're just trying to make sure that
you know, no shenanny is get out there.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
You know what I'm saying, Well, every one's causing the shenanigans.
Here's the thing. You can't trust regulatory nothing. I don't
trust him anymore. Like I'm not an anarchist, but I
don't trust any of that ship no more. Because people,
whatever system you put in place can be bought. Our
intelligence agencies have mastered compromising in these systems.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
So yep, the FCC is just trying to make sure
that little kids don't see a titty on on PBS.
That's what they try to do, Corey. They're trying to
say the little kids from a titty. Now some gate shiit.
As Obama said right here recently in the podcasts he
did with his wife, he said, man, pure, young boy,

(04:47):
you need another man in your life, paill a gate man,
that's what you need. I'm like what he said that
on the podcast?

Speaker 2 (04:58):
He u uh, he's a construct. They made him up
in a laboratory in the back alley somewhere.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
The man straight up said young boys need a gay
man in their life. So they get that perspective. If
I'm like.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
No, how about no, I'm like, I don't.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
I don't know where that came from.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
Young boys need a stripper as a babysitter.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
Shot so much do they babysit on the weekends when
they ain't working.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
They should. There should be as website where you can
hire a stripper babysitter, but strip setter some there we
go strip stters dot com.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
That man, yescept The problem is is that for spabysitting
the kids and be just scrowing me and trying to buy.
It's like with the kids at it's like there ain't
no kids on the night. It's a oh man, I
ain't selling them pussy. Oh. I thought that's what this was.

(06:10):
That's my bad. I thought I was getting some on
the cheap. You know what I'm saying, your babysit for
the night, you know, five hours, a hundred bucks. It's like,
whow I'm getting this. I'm gonna get this thing on
the cheap. Son. I could already see some dudes now
you know what I'm saying. That would uh, that would
eliminate the poser hose real quick, that would eliminate them.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Yeah, the poser hose. Yeah yeah, you need to trademark that, Bro.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
I do I do? I need to. I need to
make a I need to make a whole long, hold
long spiel on it, and just I need to make
sure I boost it. I'll pay for this when I
make sure on every platform.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
Bro, you got to start one of those niche x
fucking accounts you know? Have you you ever? There's a
whole bunch of them. I like to follow. Delusional takes.
You ever followed delusional takes.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
I don't think I've seen here before.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
It's just it's just some stupid like people saying dumb shit.
It's awesome, right, you could do that. You could do
the same thing.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Okay, okay, delusional takes.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
But with these checks with chicks, Hey.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
Look, every single day that I did, I get on
the the internet TikTok or whatever, and there's some chick
up there that starts talking about something. I'm like, man,
like this chick right here. Recently she got up there
and she was like, Yeah, my husband's a great guy,

(07:44):
great father. The marriage about to be our ten year anniversary,
and ever since we've been together, I've been I've been
missing something in this relationship. I thought about getting a
divorce earlier this year, and I told him about it.
I was like, hold on the second, it have been
with this nigga for ten years and you ain't never
like him. I'm saying, that's what you just told me.

(08:08):
She said, I love him, And what I'm hearing is
that I love the fact that this dude probably makes
quite a bit of money, He's able to take care
of me, and I ain't really got to do shit.
That's what I really heard. But here's what the deal is.
She said, I always felt like something was missing and
to talking about therapy and you know, counseling and going

(08:33):
and reading a love language book, The Love Languages, Corey.
You know whatever the fuck that's supposed to mean. You
know what I'm saying. That's the new shit. I've been
asking what's your love language? I'm like, what? But she
said something was missing? I said, I know what's missing
this nigga. He don't really turn you on, and he

(08:55):
ain't put you through that mattress. That's what you trying
to tell me. You know what I'm saying. He ain't
brought you back there and showed you his bonka. What
I'm saying, I don't know if you know about the
bonka the bleach.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
Here's the thing. I don't know if this existed in
the cave man days because you needed each other for survival.
But since that's not the case anymore, it seems as
though the relative life span of most relationships is three
to five years, and beyond that everyone's miserably complacent. That's

(09:34):
what it comes down to. You got kids, you stick around.
If you don't, you move on. That seems to be
the general pattern of how things go.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
And for the majority of people, because I don't believe
that when they say go out there and say, oh
you know you sattled, you settled, I think somebody's seen
a good opportunity as far as lifestyle opportunity, but they
were never actually really attracted. Because attraction is not just something.

(10:09):
It's almost the damn only thing. Okay, because if that,
if that, if she didn't have that, I need to
get my draws off right now for this dude type
of attraction. I'm not interested. It's straight up yeah, you
know what I'm saying. I mean it needs to be
that you know that that raw instinctual ship like she

(10:35):
just remains in heat type shit. If it ain't like that, bo,
you need to move on. Okay, now, I know what
folks says. I think she's hot though, Yeah, but you're
gonna find somebody who might be no more on the midside.
But she ain't gonna wake up one day and she
doesn't post it on the internet how she was gonna
leave your ass but decided not to. And I know

(10:57):
you ain't gonna do nothing because you punk bitch. You see,
the woman don't respect you and as a man, you
need that respect. Okay, that's what you need. I don't
know if you're worried about love, but the respect, I know.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
Like, so we should go back to being able to
hit him and stuff.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
This is a lady.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Everything's coming full circle. That's next, crabby.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
Look, that's the whole premise. But people keep trying to
skip this step, which is the attraction step, and you
can't skip it, bud, And look, sometimes sometimes you hit
a home run. Sometimes some cheek is extremely hot. It's
actually just like got a burning desire for you, you know.

(11:52):
And sometimes it's the girl that maybe it's me, but
I mean she's got poot tane. So it's all good,
you know what I'm saying. I mean we you know,
we're here to get right. As a man, we could
be attracted to a lot of stuff, you know what
I'm saying, Or.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
It can be very situational.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Our physiological makeup is like like we see a vast
amount of things attractive. So I remember when I was
at the gym one day and in the back they
were having dance drives. It's like for a dance team
or whatever, and there was probably a hundred girls back
there all right. Now, I look back there at the

(12:28):
hundred girls, and I thought to myself, I see, you
know what, I look at all hundred girls, and all
hundred of them, I'm like, yeah, yeah, even the ones
that were like you know what I'm saying, we on
the fence. It's like, yes, I was like, out of
those hundred girls, one might say that I could come

(12:50):
get a little bit up one, right.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
And that's where you get them guys who just are
like they just throw it on the table every time
they go out and it's just a numbers.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Game, you know. Yeah, I don't like the numbers game.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
That's hard. You get a lot of rejection in that sucks.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Here's the thing, okay, and but cold approach is stupid.
All right. I'm just letting folks know this right now.
You just going up out there and just randomly just
trying to run up and talk to some chick. It's
too much, man.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
Well, like I don't know, like no.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
No, no, no no no no no no no no no
no no no no no.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
You're seeing people don't go to the bottles. They do, Okay,
what are you talking?

Speaker 1 (13:35):
They do? I'm not I'm not I'm not saying that
they don't. I'm saying that that's not your most effective method. Okay,
so you want to work off your warm leads and
your heart refers, Okay, that's what you want to work
off of. Now, where are you more likely to uh
garner this type of attention? Usually in your In your case,

(13:58):
it doesn't really work for you because you work at
the house. But you're going to be in social situations
where it's friends amongst friends.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
Virtually percent of the time behindsightly yeah, and if not
off the internet, then it's through a friend in real
life somewhere.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Yeah, uh and work Okay, Now it could be somebody
at work, or it could be where you go and
travel to conventions and stuff and you kind of start
befriending people. Now, the reason that this is the best
way to actually meet somebody and potentially have some type
of long lasting relationship is because it puts you in

(14:34):
low pressure situations, all right, which is what's key. And
that's how that's how, that's how the attraction is naturally
built without anybody feeling like somebody's owed something at the
end of the night. So when you when you go
up some chicken, you get the numbers. It's like, Okay,
I want to take you to dinner. There's pressure within
that dinner. I ain't really talk to her that much.

(14:55):
I'm taking her out to dinner. I'm about to spend
one hundred bucks because you know, I don't know if
this chick wants to liquor drink three lequor drinks? Is
you want to take something home to her kids that
she had kids? Can I get it to go back?
You know what I'm saying. So for you know what,
you just spent two hundred dollars. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
You see that pressure. You see that video with that
woman ordered sixteen to go males for her kids.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Yeah, yeah, that's what I'm saying. So you've got all
this pressure tied up into a situation of taking somebody
out on the date that you don't really know, as
opposed to when you're at work, when you're a social
situation for friends, where you meet people multiple times at
any type of your gym classes like yoga, pilates, run

(15:37):
clubs where you just go and you just you just
hanging out talking, You just talking. I ain't ain't I
ain't getting no digits. I'm just sitting here and we done.
We've seen each other three or four times, and then
that is how you end up getting the drawers without
actually have to take them on the date. That is

(16:00):
it to a tea. All the chi the chicks that
I've been successful with have been directly through work. Nobody
I've worked with, but people, but women who have came
in and have talked to me multiple times, just hung
out and just you know, because I'll talk to customers
or whatever. You know, they'll come to my office and
we'll just shoot the ship and the attraction's built that way.

(16:23):
They had to take nobody on a date. What I
need to day, I need a date. If I go
out there and I just meet somebody in the wild,
I just try to run up to them and get
a number, and they're gonna be looking for a date.
But if they seen me for the past year, we've
just been talking and they've kind of built a desire

(16:43):
for me throughout that time, then you know, you be
You're able, You're able to uh to work that situation
to your advantage. There's no day required. Everybody's comfortable. I'm
comfortable right out the gate. So that's the premise there.
So That's why you see so many workplace relationships, right

(17:07):
because it's a low pressure situation. You're able to see
who they are, Like, they're able to be funny. They'll
say random stuff. You know what I'm saying. It's not uptight.
It's just like you know, you go up and saying, oh, hey,
how you doing man, We're doing good. Oh man, I
seen you working out. They you look really nice to that,
you see it Just it's like it's like tints. You
know what I'm saying. It's like tints. It's like this

(17:28):
dude's trying to come up and ask me some pussy.
You know what it's like. I mean, I know why
you're walking up to me. You coming up to me
and asking me for a pussy, as opposed to you
just say work. Hey, I'm just at work chilling. You
know what I'm saying. Oh yeah, we can talk about
random stuff all of a sudden. But there it is.
That's how this works. Low pressure situations garner the best results.

(17:51):
So you just walking out there trying to cold approach
a bunch of chicks, but it's gonna hurt your confidence,
all right, she gonna betting you're gonna be getting turned down,
and especially if they in a group. If they in
a group, a group of chicks will mess you up
all right because they be caught blocking. I'm trying to

(18:11):
tell you, man. So when you at the bar and
it's a whole group of chicks, man, you need to
you need to try to get the one separated. But
the problem is is that when the other girls say
it and they kind of kind of feel what's coming,
what's coming down the pipeline, some of them come in
and mess. She gave up that mess you game right

(18:32):
on up. You'll be like, man, I was working this programs,
huh oh, well we need to go you know why,
because they ain't getting struck that night. They're like, oh no,
oh no girl, I think you're gonna come through here.
You're gonna get some data. Said that I'm gonna leave
here with no d They said that ship ain't happening.

(18:53):
We're gonna shut this ship down to night, right steady.
That's actually happened couple times. But it's okay, you know
what I'm saying. Yeah, that's all good. That ever happened
to you before she got blocked that you can think
of right off the side of the head.

Speaker 3 (19:11):
No, no, no, no, really, yeah, that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
I just don't remember, man, like I don't remember twenty
to twenty five thirty ish.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
Oh yeah, I forgot about that drugs a cory. I mean,
ain't we got that thing that can go back and
like looking to your memories and Ship.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
I don't want it, like.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
To repress memories. Bring for got hypnotists and they got hypnotists.
They can go back and all sing you remember Ship?

Speaker 2 (19:47):
I think that's bullshit. And I don't think I can
be hypnotized.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Yeah, but you can, day, I don't know. I don't
think so, ye know. Why why don't you think you
can be hypnotized?

Speaker 2 (19:59):
It's like because certain people are susceptible to being tricked.
And that's it. And I'm not.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
Corey Novice trying to trick you. That's so different, I
don't think.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
I think ultimately it's the same thing. It's ultimately the
same ship.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
You just you just described a scam.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
They get you to get your mind into a certain
like Okay, So the reason that people are susceptible to
that is because they don't have a layer of their
consciousness that goes yo, dummy, this is what's happening, idiot, right,
and that's just not there. I have that layer, Okay,
I got that layer, and I know because I've been

(20:52):
fucked up on some drugs, fucked up on some ship,
thought I was goddamn dying, and that fucking layer kept
me alive. Okay. And so most people, well I don't
know if they have that. And so yeah, I think
that's a very important thing to have. And I think
if you don't have it, you can get hypnotized, because
you're kind of dumb.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
Man said, if you could be hypnotized, then I can.
So I can take all the money from your four
one K and you'll send it to me, he said,
I can figure it out today.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
I guess people who try to conversation, Like, every once
in a while, you catch somebody who's trying to do
some weird conversation manipulation thing, right and get you to
say something or do something or push you into a
corner or like a you know, like a like a
bad debate tactic, and it's like, don't fall for that ship, right,
don't you can't let other people. There's always a paranoid

(21:46):
side of my mind that doesn't allow every time something's
going on. It's like it's something going on here, you
know what I mean? So I think this, uh is
that it's a level of trust thing. Also I believe Okay, okay,
you can talk on my ship. So no no uh uh?

Speaker 1 (22:04):
So man, what hold on? What? We got a professional hypnotist.
We're about we're about to get We're about to get
Corey hypnotized. This is a professional hypnotists. We're gonna see
if we can't see one tea. Uh. And this is
supposed to be therapeutic too, Corey. In nature, it's supposed

(22:28):
to be therapeutic to be able to, you know, confront
uh past things in your life that you may have suppressed.
And then what they say in therapy, do you want
to confront your demons?

Speaker 2 (22:44):
The reason the mind suppressed this ship is because it
knows that mind can't handle it. So it's suppressed ship.
It can't handle so good, let it do it all
at once?

Speaker 1 (22:58):
Said this is So that's the deal. But dang, were
you gonna put them out of business?

Speaker 3 (23:05):
Man?

Speaker 1 (23:06):
They got the business model trying to So, so what
do you think? What do you think about therapy?

Speaker 2 (23:12):
I think it works for some people. I think it
works for some people. I went to therapy when I
was a cop for like, I don't know, probably six months,
like once a week, and I became the therapist Like this,
I mean, it was really not an overly fruitful experience.
And you end up talking to somebody who like just

(23:35):
doesn't have a fucking clue where you're coming from, you know,
and like you're asked the standardized questions, right, and it
was just, uh, yeah, it was it was a waste
of time. Okay, Well, like I said, all you really

(23:57):
need is somebody to talk to and then your penis
when you're when they're done, Like that's all it is.
You need to You need a girl to try on
her shoulder and then fuck you when when when it's over,
and that's it. That's that's all you need. Like I said,
it all comes back to those things. You need a
hug and someone to blow you, and your psychological problems
will mostly go away.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
For the most part. You'll be okay. You may still
be broken okay before you wake up, but you at
least feel better that at that moment. But you know what,
life ain't that bad. Ain't the damn I was gonna say.
I was Sunna say the couple's therapy thing. I ain't
gonna lie when I when I hear it's like, oh yeah,
you know, we've been going to a marriage counseling, couple's therapy.

(24:38):
I'm like, but the thing is over. You know what
I'm saying, Like it's over, Like it's there's a thing.
Here's the thing, man, Like, okay, okay, let me know.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
In hindsight, In hindsight, you can always tell what the
real story is. And then over time, if you have
good pattern recognition, you can kind of pick out what
the problem is and when the problem was. And ultimately
what it comes down to is there's when things go south.

(25:15):
There's always one moment that it becomes reality. Like he'll
do something, say something, you know, whatever, whatever the whatever
it is, but all of a sudden, it's like a
switch that just goes off. It's like like with my
girlfriend Amy, who I was with for fucking years, who
was an alcoholic who destroyed my fucking career, in my

(25:36):
life and everything. We had only been together like four
or five months, and I came home from work one
day and I could tell she was fucking drunk. I said,
you've been drinking and if she just said, yeah, I've
been drinking, everything would have been cool. But what did
she say, No, I haven't been drinking. Talking to a

(25:56):
fucking a DUI expert, an expert at fucking alcohol intoxication, right,
and she's telling me no, I didn't drink. At that moment,
it was over. Yeah, but it takes fucking like years
for it to become reality, you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Oh, okay, okay, see what I'm saying that that's pretty
much the time.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
It was always and then I can think of anythink
of other relationships. I remember I used to go out
to this girl, Jamie, and we were sitting one time
at this restaurant with one of her friends. And then
I'll never forget it. It's like, all of a sudden
it was over for no. I was just like no.
I was like, no, I'm not into you no more.
It just ended like this. It was ultimately behavioral on

(26:38):
her part.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
You know, But okay, okay, ultimately.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
But like I'll never it's like a switch just goes
off one day, You're like, oh, that's this is done.
You know. I think that's always it is. But I
think people like to tell themselves otherwise and people drag
shit out, but I think there's always a moment where
you're like, you know, like how many times did it
take your girl coming home late? Are you catching her
in a lie or anything? Before you realize it's just starting,

(27:06):
you know what I mean? Like one I used to
put up a chill growing up, I'd put up a
ship not no more.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Or less likely to leave because as a dude, you
understand it. I mean, you don't know when the next
one is coming.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
Around, right right, right, I get that next.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
Next piece might be three four year down a row, right,
that's what you got in your head, right, you know
what I'm saying. So that's why it makes it difficult
for guys. So guys will put up with a lot
of shit, Okay, a whole lot of do you know
what I'm saying that straight up put up we getting none,

(27:46):
not getting any just because there's a higher potential chance
that they get from from the one they're not getting
any from trying to go out in the while to
recreate this thing. So I mean that's the premise there.
And then of course, you know, if you have kids,
you got the thread of losing access to them, potential
child support payments if you make quite a bit of money,

(28:10):
potentially losing your home because you know the mamines a house.
Kids need somewhere to stay. So, I mean, there's a lot,
there's a lot of ramifications out here on that side
of the spectrum. But the minute, the minute I start
hearing about couples therapy, I'm like, m y'all just need
to start, you know, getting your ship split up. You

(28:34):
know what I'm saying. I mean, let's go ahead. Let's
go ahead and start figuring out how we're gonna split
this shit up. All right, it's the couples therapy. It
sounds like it sounds like you three, I don't know
what you're gonna get from that. Some people said that
is held.

Speaker 2 (28:48):
It sounds like, okay, you know, a couple of therapy
sounds like to me. It sounds like to me, when
fucking Ukraine and Russia have a ceasefire, which is really
just a fall in the timing that they need to
rearm themselves, that's a couple of thing.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
Yeah, feel like.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
A little stall until they can figure out an eative strategy.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Yeah, I guess I guess that would be the whole
premise there that I think about it. That would be
the old premise. But it's like, oh, well, you know,
and for me, I think that would that would begin.
I don't know how you feel about this, but I
don't know if my chick got up there on the
internet and I told everybody that, yeah, she was about

(29:35):
to divorce me. But I'm a great guy. But something's missing,
and it's been missing the whole time.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
I mean, her bitch got home.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Yeah, I mean, but you just told and like this
video has been viewed by like five million people. I mean,
folks gonna see you walking down the street and know
who you are.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
You might want to consider suing her for something.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
I'm like, you got I fell out of favor that much.
I'm that far out of favor. You can't you. I
can't even save face. You can't even leave me respectfully. Damn.
You got to tell everybody. It's like the the one

(30:23):
chick who was talking about and it always prefaces with
I do love him. He's a great dad. He always
shows up, he cooks dinner, he changes diapers, he does.
But I'm like, but he can't drill you. That's what
the deal is. Do can't fuck man.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
I'm telling you women are superficial. The fastest way to
their heart drilling. I'm telling you, bro, a chick might
not be that into you, but you bring it home
and she'll be into you really a whole time. All
of a sudden, you barely want to go home with
me last night. Now you're all about it was your deal.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
It's because you tow it. Dam if you go. If
you go in there and you do a phenomenal job
right out the gate, it's hard to get him out
of there. And if you're all right there, you like,
if you're all right there, you and you killed it.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
It could be like a fucking in jail half the time,
fucking burglar, fucking six baby mama, and they'll they'll make
excuses for you. It's wild. I've seen it. It's fucking crazy.
He's no good, he said, yeah, but he can.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
Fuck You've got a golden dick. That's what they're trying
to tell you. So every time I hear that one
chick was talking about the mental laid, it's a mental aid.
I'm like, I've got four kids, and you know, when
I'm up in the morning and we're getting ready to

(32:00):
go to school, I don't want to have to figure
out if Johnny's favorite water bottle is in the cabinet
orfice in the dishwasher. I'm like, dude, what is that?
That's why you bout left him because of a water bottle.

(32:21):
You have to give me something better now, all right.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
It's like the toilet paper was put on the wrong way. Yeah,
I mean, it's just like when you're fighting over the
toilet paper or the water bottle. There's deep dishes here. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
She was like, you know, there was there was one
morning that that he had to get up super early. Now,
this dude was alignment, so he like he he could
be on call at anytime. You know, if some ship
goes awry and there's a storm and a whole bunch
of damn power lines are dawn and they calling you
up though it'd be the damn three o'clock in the morning.

(33:00):
You know what I'm saying, Hey, man, uh, you need
to get your ass out here. So he jumped up
and he forgot to take the trash out, And she said,
when I woke up and I seen the trash were
still in there, I just felt so I felt like
I was unseen and unheard. I was like some trash

(33:21):
a trash bag. That's what's gonna take this out. Like
It's like if you sat down and you listen to
what you actually said, okay, unbiased, just be like, all right,
I'm just gonna sit here and I'm gonna look at
it as if I'm some other person. I'd be like,

(33:43):
does that not sound dumb? I left him because of
a trash bag. I left him because he did wash
the dishes. He put him in a dishwasher, but he
didn't take him out of the dishwasher and put him
back in the cabinet. So it throw it through my
whole day off. Ain't we reaching a little bit? I mean,
I mean, what do you think are we reaching? I mean,

(34:06):
it seems like we're reaching.

Speaker 2 (34:08):
How much of this is a product of social media
and keeping up with the Joneses.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
That's true too, And sometimes I want to tell people
this shit. They'll be like, Oh, I'm so stressed, I
need more help in this. I said, No, what you
needed to do was not have so many kids. What
you needed to do was not get that extra dog
in the house. What you needed to do was not
take that hire a job because you just can't handle it.

(34:40):
That's just it. Whyon't you just just cut the bullshit.
You won't meant to handle four kids, a husband, two dogs,
trying to run a business. You can't handle it. You
don't have the mental capacity to do it. I wish
somebody just be honest with me. It's just like you know,

(35:01):
folks always making all this. I just really need some help.
It's just so much. I said that you could have
scaled back instead of haveing four kids. You probably have
had tea and it been okay, But you kept sucking.
You know what I'm saying. You can't. I mean you
you had a dog, then you ain't got another dog. Okay,
now I got two dogs, all right. I was always

(35:25):
struggling with one dog and one dog.

Speaker 2 (35:27):
You gotta have two. You gotta have two dogs.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
Is that that's.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
A real thing. They're called pack animals, you know, because
there's more than one.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
Gotta have a pack. So so if the cats are
the only ones that you can't singular because they would
give you a ship no way.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
You know something. We have one cat, and I think
he's always are somewhere. He spends a lot of time
with me. But if we had another cat, maybe he wouldn't.
Maybe he spends more time with the other cat.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
You go not to do little hey man, you think
if we got another cat, you might spend less time
with me. I just want to know, say, because I
don't want to make a mistake and gettingno the cat
and you're going and I feel.

Speaker 2 (36:19):
Like I gets so jealous. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
Was that right?

Speaker 2 (36:23):
Oh god? It's drama when the cat comes around? Does drama?
Trust me?

Speaker 1 (36:28):
An's it's straight drama. It's straight drama. Chrme will switch
it up a little bit. There's some people out saying
out there saying that Obama going to jail treason.

Speaker 4 (36:43):
Now.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
I think he had trees in his statements with the
gay man in your young boy's life. But they talking
about a little collusion in the twenty sixteen election. What
do you think about that?

Speaker 2 (36:55):
I think that's somewhere in the neighborhood of I don't know,
one hundred thousand as government employees should probably be hanged
as traders, send a clear message, you don't fuck around
with America. The constitutions very clear are what we do
to traders?

Speaker 1 (37:16):
Yeah, it is pretty clear. It's pretty clear.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
People don't realize this. Like, here's the thing everyone hates
the state. I hate the state, right, Everyone hates the
fucking state, state meaning the federal establishment. Right. But we
need the goddamn state. We just don't like the state
we have. That's the problem. You need the state because
if we didn't have the state, guess who's going to

(37:42):
come and invade. The Russians could just come and invade, right,
if there's no state, you gotta have the fucking state.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
Oh yeah, somebody's coming, Yeah, they're coming.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Right, You got to you gotta have. And along with that,
you got to have the propaganda to keep it together,
because propaganda kind of works like glue to some degree,
and so it sucks. But the chain of events that
you need to have to have a state at all
leads to corruption. No matter how you look at it.

(38:07):
You can either have this fake veneer of democracy, which
we don't have. I don't feel represented. Do you feel represented?
I think in a court of law.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
Some days I feel a touch of representation maybe or
from somebody, somebody locally.

Speaker 2 (38:25):
I think it's like, is there a difference between feeling
represented or just happening to agree with a politician? Is
there is there a difference?

Speaker 1 (38:34):
Uh hmm. That's a good point. Is a good point.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
Semantics on my part.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
Well, you got a good point here, because okay, so
I believe it. Okay, so I believe for I believe
for ninety nine percent of people, agreeing with somebody makes
them feel represented.

Speaker 2 (38:58):
Okay, there you go, excellent statement. I would say that
in a court of law you could pretty much demonstrate
that Citizens United remove power from the individual and thus
representation because corporations not gon dump billions of dollars into
a campaign, didn't come out of get like a billion
dollars in like two days.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Oh yeah, but she ranked it up quick.

Speaker 2 (39:20):
Right, right, So that was all made possible by Citizens United,
and so Citizens United you could argue ended our ability
to be represented. Okay, then you get into definitions of
corporations and people and all that's bullshit again, right, So.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
Okay, because okay, So because of the funding aspect of it,
it's almost impossible to represent the people who don't have
any money.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Right And if you here is another thing. Is it representation?
If a fucking multi billion dollar pack has influenced and
you just happen to agree with them, is that representation? No,
it's definitely not. I would say it's the most certainly
not I would say.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
It's not, but but people feel like it.

Speaker 2 (40:13):
Is right correct, and then it could be used as
their argument in support of it that oh, will we
represent these people? No, you don't. They just happen to
agree with you. And so I think there is a
difference there, and so right, yeah, I think in a
court of law you could argue because for me, it's
all about taxation, like, go fuck yourself, I'm not paying
eat a dick, Like, what are you gonna do? I

(40:34):
got no money to pay you with. I don't even known.

Speaker 1 (40:36):
Anything, okay, and so and so that's and so that's
the premise of what we got tax taxation with that representation.
So as long as you agree with what that person
agrees with, you're fine with the taxation because they are
representing you own own issues and y'all agree on this issue.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Well, no, I'm not fine with the taxation at all.
Like I said, no, no, no.

Speaker 1 (40:58):
No about every day people to my everyday people.

Speaker 2 (41:02):
Yeah, every day people.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
Yet that's that's the logic, that's the logic of what we.

Speaker 2 (41:05):
Got correct, correct, Like, that's why I think that if
Trump like does what he says and gets rid of taxes,
for people under one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. That
is great. It's also an admission that we no longer
have representation.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
Mmm okay, okay.

Speaker 2 (41:26):
It's almost a little back ended payoff.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
Hmmm. So okay, so would you.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
So?

Speaker 1 (41:36):
I guess at that point in time they could be
overtly corrupt as opposed to covert.

Speaker 4 (41:43):
No.

Speaker 2 (41:43):
I think they always have to maintain images. That's why
they still lie to us. Right, Epstein committed suicide? Right?
They they happy, They still feel that they have to
lie to us and the ability it all costs.

Speaker 1 (42:01):
He hung himself with a damn string of napkins. It
was what he had those. Uh it was at the bounty,
the quicker picker uppers. And there's one he had, the
quicker picker uppers. Man, damn fun trying to figure out

(42:22):
how this happened. So where do you get all these
damn paper tails?

Speaker 2 (42:26):
Kill myself with quicker I think I would like soak
them in water and then like shove them down my
mouth like waterboard. You have to the self waterboard with
paper towels.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
Yeah, yeah, hey, look here's what's key.

Speaker 2 (42:43):
All right.

Speaker 1 (42:44):
They said that the footage goes out at that point
in time every night, man, I think he said something
like that.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
Okay, So every single damn person who works in the
chain of command up to a through administration who knows
about that and is willing to sign off on that
for however long that's been the situation, all of them
should be terminated because that means every goddamn person in

(43:15):
that jail would then ultimately eventually come to know they
can go and shift somebody at eleven fifty seven and
twenty seven seconds because the camera does its minute fucking thing.
It is the most disgusting security violation I can ever imagine,
So for anybody to have signed off on it, they
should be instantly terminated.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
Yeah. Well, okay, you got a good point, Corey, and
Tucker says that my man used to Shanwylla. Well, Tucker,
we appreciate you being with us. Hilarious.

Speaker 2 (43:51):
That guy like fucking got arrested because he like beat
up a hook or something.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
Yeah, that's where we don't have representation. We don't have
fuckers trying to sell the shit no more. Bro.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
That motherfucker invented the slap chop and now you can
get that generic in like every grocery store for like
ten bucks.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
That's what I'm saying. But we used to have him,
and we had the other guy who died, Bill Mays. Yeah,
there we go trying to say you some shit. Yeah,
we need those guys. That's the representation we meet that.

Speaker 2 (44:24):
Ship, dude. Those guys made their products look like a
million fucking dollars. Like you know who else. The guy
who does the fucking he's got the boat with the
screen door in the bottom and he sprays it with
his ship and then takes it.

Speaker 1 (44:37):
That's terrible. The flakes, the flakes.

Speaker 2 (44:42):
It doesn't work. Whatever I've tried using it, it doesn't
work like it says it works.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Hey, I sprayed it in a corner of the crib
I got here. I had something that uh uh, the
spray the spray stuff you.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
May have to spray like half a can on some ship.
But we tried it on something and it didn't fucking work.

Speaker 4 (44:59):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
We tried hanging some ship on the walls with it,
and it fucking just ship just would just fall right off.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
Well, I was just covering up a hole where ants
were coming in, and it worked. Sprayed the ship out
of it. I sprayed the ship out of it. We
only got me a little can of it, I said, Bob,
I'm getting right today. Saw. I know my man said
this works. I mean, my man cut a hole in
the bottom of his boat and then put a screen
door up there and and sprayed it down. Shit looked

(45:29):
good to me. I mean, it didn't show you all
the work off camera that they did to make that
like that. But I mean it's okay. You know what
I'm saying. That's what we're missing. I think that's the
representation we missing. Niggas on TV trying to say ship
people don't even in.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
Man, the Internet killed commercials.

Speaker 1 (45:52):
Yeah, and do you still have you still have some
of them, like uh, you know when the TV station
goes to sleep and they have the the infomercials like
it three four or five six. I think by seven
they're off. But I think that one of the big
ones is like a car shield up there. Iced he

(46:13):
was talking about car shield the other day, which is
extended warranty for your car.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
Oh yeah, He's like, yeah, it's not a trunk monkey.

Speaker 1 (46:28):
It's not at all like the truck monkey. Cory.

Speaker 2 (46:31):
You remember trunk Monkey.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
Yeah, I remember truck monkey. Jump out of there and
who your ass. I don't think folk understand. Look, but
don't fuck with a monkey. Okay, some hand to hand combat.
These ninjas a nimble, all right, and they're gonna scare
the ship out of you. Okay, that's the first one.

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Your dick and rip it right off.

Speaker 1 (46:59):
I mean, a little bastard. I still remember, Kylie. This
is back during the back in like twenty twenty or
I seen when the monkey came up straight grabbed the baby,
start dragging it down there drawn the street, I said,
And my man was up there recording. I said, nobody
can't get no help around here, as baby just can't.

(47:22):
I mean, monkey came up, just grabbed the baby right out,
the right out the damn the strollers just start dragging
it down the street, I said. Damn parents just sitting
there looking because the monkeys are sacred or some ship
said town where all the monkeys are running around. I'm like, man,
y'all crazy grocers in the back.

Speaker 2 (47:42):
I want one of them monkeys like from Indiana Jones
who wears the clothes and the little hat, and then
he can go and get me ship out the fridge
and stuff.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
Oh okay, okay, monkey, go get me a pepsy. You
drink pepsy, you drink pepsi?

Speaker 2 (48:03):
Do I drink pepsi? M h, I'll drink pepsi?

Speaker 1 (48:06):
Sure, Okay, Okay, I mean I said, I just wanted
to make sure because you know, sometimes people are like, So.

Speaker 2 (48:14):
If I had to take a pepsi there there, cherry
pepsi is better than the regular pepsi because the regular
pepsi is just coke, but a little sweeter and a
little less fizz, and so overall, cherry coke is the
way to go if I had my choice.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
You know what I've been disappointed in, now that you
said that, I've been I've been thoroughly disappointed. And the
fountain drinks.

Speaker 2 (48:40):
Like like, yeah, I know what you mean.

Speaker 1 (48:42):
Yeah yeah, like from any any of your any of
your fast food restaurant places, like the fountain drinks have
gotten bad. And you know they swish to those machines
where you've got various things you can pick from, right,
but they don't have that pop and like you don't
have that right, I know that carbonation here.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
Right, right? So I think the a once upon a
time in fast foodland, Taco Bell and KFC and a
whole bunch of other places. We're all, you know, independently
owned restaurants, and then they all got bought up by
Pepsi because Pepsi couldn't get their fucking drink into restaurants,

(49:23):
so they had to buy a bunch of big fast
food chains purely to get their pepsi product into the stores.
And they did that wild huh.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
It is pretty crazy. Oh, KFC. I went to KFC
the other day. KFC has got the worst soft drinks
you can get, and their tea shit tea straight up.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
Yeah, because then that's Taco Bell, and we have a
Taco Bell off the road here and they're fucking there.
It's pepsi, and it's always a little on the a
little little syrapy, a little less therapy than it should be.

Speaker 1 (50:05):
Okay, yours is a little less therapy. But the CAMC
I went to. My God, but dude, it's like I
just stuck sugar and sugar and some water and just
started drinking it down. I'm like, damn, man, I said,
I ain't getting no carbonation some in the mixtures off.
So when I went the other day, I got a

(50:27):
Pepsi zero and the Pepsi zero was actually sustainable. I
was like hot damn.

Speaker 2 (50:33):
Okay, so another one of this topic. We're gonna transition
to something else because I know you, my friend, and
you go to the gym. Mm hm, tell me about
your gym, So tell.

Speaker 1 (50:50):
Me about my gym. Okay, Uh, let's see. My gym
is at a university. The university did I graduated from
East Carolina University, and so I have access to three
different gyms. Actually, no, it was actually a photography That's

(51:15):
what my home was. But the gym I go to
so it's got a big weightlifting area down at the bottom.
It's got four basketball courts. It's got a top level
that has treadmills bikes. Uh. It also has a top

(51:38):
track that you can run on. Uh. It's got two No,
it's got four studios. No, actually it's got six studs
because it's transferred. It's got six studios. It's got a
cycling studio.

Speaker 3 (51:56):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
It's got a area for m M A where you
can box and stuff like that. Oh. No, it's pretty.
This has got a lot. It's got a lot.

Speaker 2 (52:06):
So I have just wrapped up a whole bunch of
things that have been consuming my mental energy, and now
I have a major. I have a big void that
I need to fill, and it's time I need to
go back to the gym. I haven't been in a
gym in probably ten years.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Yeah, it's gonna hurt.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
I'm not worried about that. So here's so I've done
this a couple of times, Like I know how my
body works, and so the first time I really got
serious about going to a gym was like early early
two thousands, maybe two thousand and one, and I literally
spent one year in a gym and it completely transformed everything.
And then I didn't go back for a couple of years.

(52:53):
And then I did the same thing, but I went
for like six months and again I got myself into
shape like pretty quick. So I'm trying to do that again.
I know myself. I am going to maintain it forever.
Or if I can find a mental schedule that allows
me to do it and not kill myself or be
overwhelmed by and incorporate it into other things, I might
do it longer. But I just want to get in

(53:14):
there for like six months and get myself back in
shape and then I cannot worry about it for another
couple of years. That's the intent.

Speaker 1 (53:20):
That's ninja. Well, you see, it's it's like it's like
if I don't go, then something feels all. So I
go Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
So I find that things have momentum and behaviors. You know,
your diet, everything has a kind of momentum to it.
And so I found that after I kind of go
to gym for a while and get in somewhat shape,
it would be a while before because obviously you have
to change your diet. When you do that, you have

(53:53):
to eat a little better. You want to eat a
little better, and after a while your new diet kind
of becomes the status quo. Right. But I find that
the echo of the gym lasts for a long time,
and like the previous times that I've done has gone
to the gym kind of got myself in the shape
it was years before I kind of like fell completely

(54:14):
off the wagon, you know what I mean, and was
eating shit and all that stuff again. So if I
just get in there, you get myself going. I feel
much better about things. I don't even care about losing
weight or any of that stuff. I'm at two hundred pounds.
That satisfying with me.

Speaker 1 (54:28):
So okay, yeah, but I got a I got an
old video was it with this show time on it?
You can tell like your your weight loss difference from
that point in time.

Speaker 2 (54:40):
Well, it's weird because I ain't done nothing different except
I was probably before I came back to Colorado, think Psycheah,
because I'm up at like fifty five hundred foot elevation
here in Fort Collins. So everybody who moves here and
lives in and lives at this elevation, you lose weight
right away because it's less said. You're not up here,

(55:00):
they say, I think the concept doesn't really make sense.
It doesn't make sense to me. The ground is right there,
you know, the ground's right there.

Speaker 1 (55:10):
Yeah, you got man. Yeah, I don't understand it.

Speaker 2 (55:13):
I think it's stupid, it's retarded. But that's what they say.
But I've moved to Colorado like three different times, like
moved there and moved away and moved back, and every
time I fucking get here, I just fucking lose the
weight like that. It just falls off. When I got here,
I was like two thirty five ish to forty on
a bad day, and like without even doing shit. I

(55:35):
ain't been in a gym at all. I'm down to
a two hundred standard. Hell, at one point I was
down to like one ninety.

Speaker 1 (55:43):
Hum.

Speaker 2 (55:44):
But then again, I don't eat much anymore. I don't
eat till really afternoon. I'll have a couple of coffee
in the morning, and I don't really eat until one
two o'clock.

Speaker 1 (55:51):
So you do you do? You do a ton of fast?

Speaker 2 (55:54):
Yeah, but it's not like I intentionally am doing it
too fast. I just do it because it is only
mis cloric. It's pretty low. I probably don't consume two
thousand calories a day, you know. Okay, the worst to
get to drink like like I can't. I gotta stop
drinking shit with sugar in it. Like that's all I
was doing. If I could just purely eliminate sugary drinks.
And I don't even drink a lot, but I have juice,

(56:15):
I have coffee with a whole bunch of sugar in it.
You know, just everything's got motherfucking sugar in it.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
So if I sugar drinks, yeah, I mean, people keep
telling me that I only live once, and I'm like, damn, man,
So you mean I got to I got to only
live once? And then I got to I got to
deny myself the whole time I live. I'm like, man,
this sounds like oh shit to me.

Speaker 2 (56:38):
Well, here's the deal. I'm about to be fifty and
I don't want to be one of those eighty I
see dudes outside trying to walk around with canes and shit,
all hunched over. I ain't gonna be that guy. I'm sorry,
I can't.

Speaker 1 (56:48):
You know a lot of times those people are like
that because they stopped moving, they stopped doing stuff. Let
me tell you something right now, the quick the quickest
way to go into ground is to is to retire
and stop doing shit, because when your ass go sits down,
your body's like good, I've been waiting for you to
give up for a while. I'm giving up too, you

(57:10):
know what I'm saying. That's what the body does. Man.
I've seen folks both they go and retire and they
go sit at the house for about a year and
a year and a half they did. He said, well
what happened?

Speaker 5 (57:19):
Man?

Speaker 1 (57:20):
He was good, said, think had been sitting at the house.

Speaker 2 (57:22):
That's funny. All these I knew, all these cops who
were like trying to get to their pension and stuff
put in twenty five thirty years. The average life span
of cops when they retire is five years. Mm hm, say, motherfucker,
you're thinking something else.

Speaker 1 (57:38):
Dude, you got you got to continue to do something.
There was a guy that that was at the gym.
I think he was I think when I talked to
him he was eighty. But every day he was up there,
he was sitting. Now, he won't running, he won't running fast,
but he would get his run on up there. He
can still move and that's just because he kept moving.

(57:59):
I was like, but at any time you stop moving, man,
that's it. But that thing can start, anything can start
taking other way, especially as you get older. You know,
you're young, you like, and you stop moving for six months,
eight months, you can get kind of back into it
pretty quickly. I mean, you start getting sixty seventy year old,
you stop moving, and that ship.

Speaker 2 (58:20):
Some of them old people. You look at their arms
and you can just see how the muscle atropeed and
it's just like bone and van and it's like, oh god.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
Yep, yep, maintaining scale to a muscle.

Speaker 2 (58:30):
You know.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
But somebody who was talking about that.

Speaker 2 (58:32):
I look at people like fucking Schwarzenegger. Though, Man, he
was the biggest guy in the world, and that guy
is like, he ain't looking that good these days.

Speaker 1 (58:40):
Uh, well that's okay. So when we talk about minus the.

Speaker 2 (58:47):
Steroids, steroids, there you go. Never mind, that explains everything.

Speaker 1 (58:51):
But yeah, minus the about more more of an ailed
natural ail. But the reason that people get older and
they can't move as much as because they haven't they
haven't put an emphasis on any type of weight training
to maintain skeletal muscle, and muscle is what actually helps
you move. There's a woman who got bud. She she

(59:16):
she travels the country and she just talks about this
about you know, the more skeletal muscle that you can keep,
the better you uh, the better your results are later
in life. So a lot of people fall and stuff
because they don't have any muscle, you know what I'm saying,
just the simplest of things. They're like loves back. You
don't have any muscle mass, So you got to try

(59:38):
to maintain that as much as possible, especially as you
get older. But here's the issue there. It if you
didn't create any habits when you were younger, man, I
just hang it up, you know what I'm saying. Because
I know some folks are like, oh, anybody can do
it and lie to me another day. All right, there's

(01:00:00):
a select there's a few outliers who were able to
figure it out later on, but most people, if they
ain't doing it early, they fucked. Like I'm just letting
you know that right now, because they don't have the
mentality to do it, and they just say they ain't
got the damn wherewithal to be like, I'm gonna go
through this pain even though I may not quote unquote
enjoy it, but it's gonna be for overall gain as

(01:00:23):
far as my mobility and how good my life is
gonna be as I age. So I mean, it's all good,
you know what I'm saying. I don't hate on the
people who don't want to fuck with it. It's just
that the results you get is results you get. Don't
cry about it. Just live with it, you know what
I'm saying. It's like, man, I mean I heard and

(01:00:45):
I can't move and all this. I was like, well,
you know, somebody told you she probably should be doing something.
Maybe you should go for a walk, maybe should try
to do a push up or two or something like that.
You were like I need to do that shit. So
you know, it's all good. This is what you got,
this is what you wanted. I'm an advocate for what
people want, and sometimes when you get what you want,

(01:01:07):
you just you don't feel so good about it once
it's there, but you're not willing to do anything to
change it. So it just is what it is, so good.

Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
So so what supplements are you taking?

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
Supplements am I taking and all that shit? I'm not
taking anything right now. I am cycled off currently.

Speaker 2 (01:01:30):
Mm hmmm. Would you say that's effective?

Speaker 4 (01:01:35):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Creatine helps your muscles retain water more, so that is
good for that. And they actually have said that it's
actually good for brain function.

Speaker 2 (01:01:53):
Creatin is really OK.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
Yeah, yeah, there's been some studies where they said it's
good for brain function. I think you're your body naturally
creates some of it, uh if I'm correct. But once
I because it's it's my off season, because it was
back because it's basketball season. Basketball seasons came to an end,
but the kids don't get back in schools for another

(01:02:18):
three weeks two three, three weeks, so I'll still be
doing my basketball training until they get back in school
and then I'll go back into my weightlifting mode because
when they get back in school during the week, it's
it's too many, too many people on the court trying
to run and I'm old, I ain't trying to be
there till ten o'clock at night, and so I'll just
run basketball on the weekends, but I'll weightlift throughout the week,

(01:02:43):
and then that's when I'll get back on my UH
on the pre workout, which is pretty much about the
only thing I take pre workout, and then I'll get
back five five milligrams of preateam that day. So that's
how it is. But I just say that's it. But
nothing crazy as far as supplement stuff goes, because I'm

(01:03:05):
not actually trying to get that big. And I used
to be way stronger when I was younger, but I
was like, man, I'm getting old, and anytime I tried
to go in there and I could lift the stuff,
but I started straining shit. And then other people who
used to go with me they got married and had kids.
I'm like, I I'm not going in there to impress anybody.

Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
I'm cool with just using the machines.

Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
Yeah, but I used to be let's see when my
rep what I could do for reps. Was that two
forty fives on each side and a twenty five on
each side. So it's ninety one fifty is that right? No,
that's ninety ninety ninety one eight fifty two thirty bar

(01:03:54):
two seventy five? Who think bar is forty five? So
I used to be able to rep two seventy five
eight reps three cents. You want to know that one
that was twenty twelve. That was a long time ago.
You spill do that. But that's when me and me
and one of my friends. He God, but we were

(01:04:15):
going in there, but we were throwing weight son, real weight.
But I got older and I was like, you know
that shit's rough on you. It gets rough on your
joints and shit like that. If you keep trying to
throw up that heavy weight, you don't once you get
where you want to be, maintaining it pretty much ain't shit.
You know what I'm saying. You just need to go
in there. If you went in there once a week

(01:04:37):
and just did a full body, that will maintain it
once you gets once you get where you want to be,
because you all you're doing is just stimulating the muscle
so you don't lose it. That's it. So that's what
I tell for people like, oh you plateau bust through it.
It's just like, I mean, it sounds great, but you
ain't bodybuilding nikka, Like you ain't doing this for a job,
Like get where you want to be, get your physique

(01:04:58):
where you want to be. Understand what you're do it
can be to maintain that physique. And I'm talking about
like my die, my died. It ain't great. Better be
eating French toasts and French rice and hamburger and shit.
But I eat the same shit on the same days
all the time. Now, that would get monotonies to peak.

(01:05:19):
But I don't care about monotony because I want consistency.
That's all I care about. The only time where things
get get thrown off the kulture is when I go
on vacation. And that's because I get to eat a
big breakfast every morning, which is my favorite thing about vacation.
Folks is like, oh, I mean you go to vacation.
You know, you go to a park and ride a ride.
I could give a damn about a ride.

Speaker 2 (01:05:39):
Can I say something, bro, Well, you know they got
they got breakfast where you are every day?

Speaker 1 (01:05:45):
Motherfucker. I can't I go to work Monday through Friday.
I ain't got time to fuck with that ship. And
plus want to eat a big breakfast. I want to
come back and sit down, strench acting. You know what
I'm saying. That's the whole premise. It's I say, I
hate a bree urpose. I'm like, oh yeah, I get
to lay back. That's what I mean, that's what That's

(01:06:06):
what I love to do. I ain't gonna lie to you.
That's my favorite part of it. The weekend Saturday, Oh yeah, Sunday. Yeah,
I like to get a big breakfast in and come
and just stretch out and lay down. I might take it.
I might take it now now, just U I was
only up for an hour. Now I go right back
to sleep. I feel good about it. You know what

(01:06:28):
I'm saying, Uh, Corey, I want to show you this,
and I want you I want your reaction. Okay, this
looks like it may be good. Okay, predator badly.

Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
That's the ugliest predator ever. He looks so stupid.

Speaker 1 (01:06:47):
Have you said come on now? I mean let's let's
let's let's go through it. Let's go through it.

Speaker 5 (01:07:13):
So this is your first hunt.

Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
And you've come to the most dangerous planet in the universe.

Speaker 6 (01:07:36):
H you're after a creature that can't be killed, the
definitive apex predators. I could help you.

Speaker 4 (01:08:01):
Well, good luck with your journey.

Speaker 5 (01:08:13):
You're you're not the predator, You're the prey.

Speaker 4 (01:08:44):
We might not be alone in this time.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
It was a lot better when Predator was like mysterious, Yeah, mysterious, mysterious.
Remember the first Predator. It was like you wouldn't know
it was there, and all of a sudden you'd see
like a little crinkle in the trees and then like

(01:09:14):
then you just kill you. It was badass.

Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
Yeah, well, this is the hard times that we're going
from the Yeah, we're going from the aspect and the
perspective strictly from the Predator. Okay, is it now?

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (01:09:33):
I guess you would say so. So it looks like
this Predator is gonna be the main focal post. Of course,
you've got the Android with it, which is uh that
so that does give you ties directly back uh to
the aliens as well, because it is a whaling core
uh android, hm, whaling u Tani I think that's the

(01:09:54):
name of it, whaling Utani android.

Speaker 2 (01:09:58):
So Okay, So here's my big question. Okay, this is
because to me, this is all like, well, this is
actually connected to Alien, not Predator. So in the very
very first Alien, when they go and they investigate that
ship and it's got all the eggs in the in
the pilot and all that stuff, where did that come from?

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
It came from somewhere.

Speaker 2 (01:10:27):
Now the Prometheus movies they don't. They don't answer that
question of where that ship came from? Did it?

Speaker 4 (01:10:32):
Not?

Speaker 1 (01:10:33):
Exactly?

Speaker 2 (01:10:34):
They should have because that's all I can really care about,
and I want to know the answer to that, not exactly,
because here's what I'm real big on, like logistics and
the thing with these Predator this movie, because all they're hunters, hunters, hunters, Well,
there obviously is a predator planet. They got to have
some kind of predator government. I just hunting all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:10:53):
That's how you get you. This is how you get
your that's how you get your stripes, That's how you
get your honor worry. It's through the hunt, know what
I'm saying. That's how they do it. So this particular
Predator is like, you know what, I want to go
get the baddest mofolk the one. They say, ain't no

(01:11:15):
no other predator been able to take out folk. Now
here's the problem is that predator don't speak no English
with this particular movie. It's bought me some subtitles because
of course that the androids gonna understand what the predators saying.

(01:11:37):
This be like pops and clicks and ship. But uh,
I was assuming the androids do much of the talking.

Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
So I found those pictures of that fucking of that
movie theater I went to. I want to show you
some of these pictures because these are this is like
the epitome of like where I live. This is the
fucking heart and spirit of where I live. Like when
you think of four Collins, think of the freaky ship
you're about to see.

Speaker 1 (01:12:03):
Okay, Okay, holy this is a movie theater.

Speaker 2 (01:12:10):
Yeah, it's a movie theater. Well it's a movie theater
and a concert venue and a whole bunch of stuff.
They have an outdoor section.

Speaker 1 (01:12:17):
Okay, so.

Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
That's what it looks like when nobody's there. They have
an outdoor screen. They play like next week, they got
like Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure playing, and they play
old movies and like this is like what four Collins
is everywhere, Like every fucking place you go. It's got
nick knacks and fucking little things, and it's all like
hippie stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
And so it was hippie town.

Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
It's hippie college town. But this is like really permeates
the entire front Range of Colorado, like all this kind
of like weird sculpture ship. Like this weird sculpture ship
is goddamn everywhere. It's all artsy and hippie stuff, you know.
But uh, yeah, they have they have a little store
in there. And this is the theater. The theater only

(01:13:00):
had like like maybe maybe thirty seats in it. It
was like super small.

Speaker 1 (01:13:07):
So okay, that's an intimate theater.

Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
And that place yeah, oh yeah. It had like three
recliner it had two rows of three recliners, and then
it had maybe eight rows of like maybe five or
six seats each tops. Yeah, maybe forty fifty tops total
and the very very small, and yeah, it was really cool.
They have a fucking membership for twenty four bucks a month.
You can go to unlimited movies.

Speaker 1 (01:13:32):
That's a should not buy it.

Speaker 5 (01:13:35):
That.

Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
Yeah, it gets you into I think all their events.
If they have a concert, you get into it. Like
whatever they're doing there, you can get in for the
whole month.

Speaker 1 (01:13:44):
She Yeah, that's actually a great deal.

Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
Is that where you used to go watching movies?

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
No, that was the first time I ever went there,
because I've driven past it for like two fucking years,
and like, I mean, I should go there someday. So
I finally went, and yeah, it's cool. And they do
like they do kids cartoons on Saturday mornings. You can
bring your kids in and watch like the old Saturday cartoons. Yeah,
it's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Oh, they he used to be the best thing wake
up Saturday mornings, man, on many Saturday morning cartoons. You
know what I'm saying? Oh you give you give for me?

Speaker 3 (01:14:16):
Yoh?

Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
Man?

Speaker 2 (01:14:17):
What the fuck you? How old are you? Twelve? Man?
I'm talking Tom and Jerry. I'm talking to Jerry.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
I'm talking I watched that saying like I'm talking about
the Heart of the Cards.

Speaker 2 (01:14:30):
Man, I know nothing about that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:33):
Well, I'm talking about buh. I mean, you be like this,
you but he'd be in trouble. He'd be in deep trouble.
Look over there, set to Kaiba got out in the
Blue Eyes on from the Dragon. This nigga got one
Caribo on the field. You know what I'm saying. He
said heart of the Cards, but I mean he pull

(01:14:53):
that thing like that, and he busted your ass for
my first move, like to bust that hands. Oh man,
I thought it was some good sho. I actually got
a bunch of U give cards. Actually they used to
play it back in the day. But yeah, yeah, Brendad
the bad Lands. I don't know. Corey might be good.

(01:15:16):
It might shock you, might surprise you. Does at least
look like he's got.

Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Some potential maybe if they insteal it.

Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
But we wouldn't try such a thing. We pay for
everything that we get, ain't it right.

Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
Cord, That's correct, especially UFC.

Speaker 1 (01:15:38):
Damn especially going to make sure that people will pay up. Uh,
it's a couple of weeks, I think a couple of
weeks for the next for the next big one at least.

Speaker 2 (01:15:58):
Yeah, the next next week, I got next fight night.

Speaker 1 (01:16:00):
We got ready, Yes, August sixteenth is due places versus,
So that's the next.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
One that could be good. That should be good.

Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
Yeah, yeah, the next big one so oh, which they've
actually got some uh, they've got some Halasius names up there.
But Corey, this week we lost a lot of a
lot of legends, a lot of agents. Just was that
the day or yes, the Hulk Hogan today, I think, yeah,
hulk Mania.

Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Oh my god. So this is a totally unrelated story,
but you know, so how the meme coin ship works,
like whenever something fun, something will happen, something big will happen.
Someone will come up with a coin with it and
everybody puts the money in it, and it lasts a
couple of weeks and then it dies. I watched the
biggest rug pull I've ever seen today. So this coin
launched and in like seven minutes. It was a Hulk Hogan,

(01:16:54):
Hulk Hogan rest in Peace coin, and it launched and
within like the first like seven minutes, it generated something
like three hundred and fifty thousand dollars in volume or
four hundred thousand dollars in volume, and the LP had
like fucking couple hundred thousand dollars in the LP and

(01:17:16):
they pulled it. So in seven minutes, these guys made
a couple hundred thousand dollars, They put a token out,
they had everyone rush into it, and they fucking pulled
the liquidity poll in seven minutes. I watched the whole
thing live. It was crazy because I saw it just launch.
It launched like within a couple of seconds of when
I got to it, and I just wanted to see
what was gonna happen, because it's fascinating to watch mean

(01:17:38):
coin's launch like from the scratch, to see the kind
of activity you get. So I just thought I'd just
check it out, and holy fuck, it was going, going, going, going,
and then all of a sudden, boom, the liquidity went
to less than a dollar. I was like, holy shit,
it was crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Eddy is crazy scam scams, you know what I'm saying,
scam sintry, But I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
Well, that's the name of the game. Coins. The meme
coins are a game of getting in, making some money,
and then getting out before the scammer pulls the fucking
pulls the scam. You know. Yeah, it's about it half
of is it half a dozen different ways to scam
a crypto meme token, and so yeah, it's a dangerous game.

Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
Yeah. So but uh oh, Hulk Hogan died seventy one
Hall of Famer. What would you put him on the
rankings of professional raskers all time? See, he wasn't He's
got to be top ten, right, he's top teen, right.

Speaker 2 (01:18:41):
Yes, but not because of his wrestling ability. See, you're
there's two different there's really two different top tens you're
talking about. You're talking about top tens as far as
name popularity, you know how big they are. But then
you got a top ten of like guys who are
fucking great at actually wrestling. And I'm not talking like

(01:19:03):
Olympic wrestling. I'm talking ww E style wrestling because I
don't care what people think. It is a fucking art.
And half the guys who were in wrestling today they
can't do it. They just go in there and they
fake fine, real old school fucking wrestling like you go
back and watch like the Masters, like Terry Funk, any
of those old school guys from the seventies and eighties

(01:19:25):
when it was a fucking it was a totally different game.
And so that I could put together a list of
top ten who are the best fucking wrestlers, you know,
but in like for skill, you know, like Brian Danielson
would be like at the top of the list. You know,
Bobby Backland was fucking amazing. I'm talking guys. It's so

(01:19:46):
crazy because you got some guys today who are great
technical wrestlers but didn't get the peak of fame like
the Rock or some of those guys, you know what
I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
So okay, so what would what would you be? What
would be your You're a top teen, you got to
have a top teen.

Speaker 2 (01:20:08):
If I had to put together a top ten, it
would be a lot of it. From the Early Night
or early two thousands WWE, right, Hardy Boys, the Dudley
Boys for sure, Rock Stone Cold of course, Undertaker. I
was never much of a Cane fan, but he was
always good for his stick, you know. Then you got

(01:20:31):
the ae W guys now ew, the e c W guys,
Tommy Dreamer, amazing, Rob Van Dam Sabo who just died recently.
I mean, those were some of the those guys are
the legends for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
So okay, Chris over here says Angel does.

Speaker 2 (01:20:53):
Oh Angel, Yeah, that's a Dustin rule chatted dreams. Dustin
Rose is still around at the ae W. He's like
fucking sixty or something like that. But he was, Yeah,
he's kind of he kind of got overlooked a lot,
I think because he was in the from that Dusty
Rhodes family, right, and so he was always had Dusty

(01:21:15):
Rose overshadowed him, you know. So, yeah, the.

Speaker 1 (01:21:21):
The number, the number one's got to be Rick Flair.

Speaker 2 (01:21:24):
Well, Rick Flair. The great thing about Rick Flair was
he was not only did he put on a good show,
but he was a great technical wrestler. It was really good.

Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
Yeah, that's that's got to be because that you're Rick Flair,
You're your Brent Hart, Sean Michaels.

Speaker 2 (01:21:44):
Hogan's They wouldn't put him in that list though, because
he's not a good He sucked at wrestling. He was
not a good wrestler.

Speaker 1 (01:21:50):
Wrestler like everybody, I mean, I mean, you know what
I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:21:59):
Big like fucking Undertaker told a great story about Hulk
Hogan on the Joe Rogan podcast where he was like
he knew that he knew Hogan was a little bitch,
and so he made sure extra sure not to hurt
him when he did his thing right, and afterwards Hogan
was like, oh man, you fucking dropped me on my

(01:22:20):
fucking neck. He's like, motherfucker making ass bitch.

Speaker 1 (01:22:27):
Now look now some some of my favorite God it
has to be okay, oh Mankind, Oh God, Mick Foley.

Speaker 2 (01:22:38):
Best of all, Oh top three. He's a top three
for no other reason that hell in the cell.

Speaker 1 (01:22:44):
Yeah he would. He would intentionally hurt himself. He would
intentionally hurt him Sale or ask people to hurt him.
That's how crazy he was, dude, he was clinically insane.

Speaker 2 (01:22:55):
That motherfucker did shit in Japan that people just shouldn't
be allowed to do, like flaming thumbtack, barbed wire fucking matches,
like with a baseball bat with nails in it, like
fuck you.

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Yeah, Like like when he lit the Undertaker, I think
it was in his documentary, he was like, yeah, throw
me off the hill, and the Sale he's like, what
thrown me off? Throw you off? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
See here's the fucking here's a fun reason by that match.
He got thrown off the top of that in a
relatively quick manner. The match had only been on for
a couple of minutes. Like what if he got fucked
up and couldn't continue, that was it. That's the whole
match in like five or six minutes or whatever. It
was not even that, it was like three and a
half minutes or something ridiculous, Like they are lucky that

(01:23:45):
he could even get up again. And then he gets oh.

Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
Man insanity, insanity. Now for me, my favorite when I
like Hulk Hogan the bass is when he went to
the nw A. That's when I liked him. That, Oh
Hollywood hold Holk him with a with Kevin Nash and
Scott Hall who used to be raised ramon the wolf Pack.

(01:24:12):
I mean that that was my favorite ineration of Hogan.
Ain't gonna lie to see which he started that in
w c W they went under and then and then
he went to a w w E. But that's when
he That's when he went on his villain journey at
the end of w c W, and then they transferred
all that talent over to which was still w w
F at the moment when they transferred it. But you know,

(01:24:34):
you got your guys, what is it? The Hunter Hurst, Hamsley,
h triple h.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
In hindsight, he turned out he was good and he
did a lot of stuff, but he never really ever
got the the praise of a Rock or any of
the big you know, he was the top guy.

Speaker 1 (01:24:55):
Had the ship talking. He didn't have the ship talking
down like the Rock and Stone call bo they they
had the ship talking down. I mean, you know what
I'm saying, Like like the memorable phrases and all that stuff.
But they nobody has has Nobody before them beat them,

(01:25:15):
Nobody after them has beat them. It's not close. Two
best ship talkers they ever do it ever? You know
what I'm saying Now, I did, I did uh get
a little bit of a hoop whenever I heard watching
me going to this the cream of the crop, this
nigga God damn little uh little creamers on them. I

(01:25:38):
was like, where do you find all these creamers?

Speaker 3 (01:25:39):
Are?

Speaker 4 (01:25:40):
Like?

Speaker 1 (01:25:40):
He was like a magician. He throw it away and
it's the cream of rock. I was like, where'd you
get that from? Man? I was just washing your hands,
you know what I'm saying, Oh, my jo Man, he
was on drugs all the time. There's no doubt in
my mind about it. He was on drugs the entire time, allegedly.

(01:26:00):
Uh So we had that, we had him pass and
then Ossie passed. This week Ozzie got ethanized.

Speaker 2 (01:26:08):
I don't think I euthanized. So it was so funny
because my cousin is about uh she is about five
years older than me, and I remember growing up she
was listening to like Ozzie and fucking bon Jovi and
like in the late late eighties, you know. And so
she texted me the other day she goes, Ozzie died

(01:26:28):
and I wasn't thinking about I wasn't making the connection
at the time, and I thought she was talking about
like her cat or something. So I'm like, oh, I'm
so sorry. She goes Ozzie Osbourne. I goes, oh, I
thought you were talking about your fucking cat. She was
talking about Oh God, yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
Like before, which is kind of crazy. Yeah, he was
a he was a couple of weeks pasty show. I
think that's what it says. Uh, Now, he had Parkinson disease,
but I mean he did a farewell show, so I mean,
obviously obviously there was something going on there. But yeah,

(01:27:13):
Chris says that he heard something about euthanasia as well,
so he I mean, he may have had him pull
the plug on him, you know what I'm saying. He's like, man,
I'm tired. You know, I'm tired of biting off the
heads of chicken deep off the head of a chicken ahead.

Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
I think it's myth.

Speaker 1 (01:27:32):
Okay, yeah, mats are nasty too, so like you do that,
you definitely got some type of disease afterwards. You know
what I'm saying. That's how the convey got around.

Speaker 3 (01:27:41):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:27:44):
Some bat landing on a landing on a dog out
there in the wet markets, nibbled on it. Sorry, this
is the this is the damn.

Speaker 3 (01:27:55):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:27:56):
This is the official story. Thundred miles away flew to
the wet market in Wuhan, landed on a damn a
cooked dog, nibbled on a little bit ship on it,
and somebody picked it up and ate it and it
turned into convy and it sprayed.

Speaker 2 (01:28:16):
Bullshit.

Speaker 1 (01:28:19):
But didn't that sound good? Dude?

Speaker 2 (01:28:21):
It sounded like the biggest It sounded like Lee Harvey
Oswald got the President from the book depository, is what.

Speaker 1 (01:28:25):
It sounded like. That's what it sounds like. So okay,
so Ozzie of course story career had oz via would
you would you wait? Uh? Ozzy high own Uh. As
far as rock goes, like technically rock, the.

Speaker 2 (01:28:43):
Reason that he's so hailed is because they were the
first or one of the first, in that metal period. Really,
you know, you have Zeppelin, but really before Zeppelin, you
have a couple of bands that are on nobody really
knows about that were kind of heavier but they all
led to the Black Sabbath, and they're kind of held
as like the first big international metal stars, and that's

(01:29:03):
why they're that's why everyone loves them because they were groundbreakers.
But in I grew up in listening to metal, starting
in like eighty eight, eighty nine, ninety and then my
first band I listened to was Metallica, and Metallica I
thought was significantly heavier than all that other shit man,
because I remember trying to catch some good metal on

(01:29:24):
fucking like, what was that MTV show? Not Friday Night Videos?
It was Bangers Bangers Ball. Oh my god, I remember
watching head Bangers Ball and I'd have to sit through
like fucking Rat and Cinderella and like all the and
Ozzie right. So to me, Ozzie was always lumped in
with these fucking hard rock bands that were never really metal,

(01:29:45):
and so Metallica was like the entry level metal for me.
And if it was, it wasn't as heavy as Metallica,
it wasn't metal to me.

Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
So okay, okay, okay. So so he gets hailed in
high Steam more because he was kind of a pioneer.
The only song that I really know from Ozzy is
Crazy Train, right, Like I know Crazy Train.

Speaker 2 (01:30:09):
I know all of his big radio songs because like
I was forced to fucking endure them on head Banger's
Ball for years growing up.

Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
Okay, okay, he said I was fourthd is it? This
was by for I remember watching I did not want this.

Speaker 2 (01:30:23):
I remember watching head Banger's Ball for like be on
for like three hours, and they'd maybe play like one
Death Angel video and I'd be like, Okay, sucked, It's terrible.

Speaker 1 (01:30:36):
Yeah, So so he's gone, uh pieer, Now he did
his How long did oz Fitz go on when he
start that?

Speaker 2 (01:30:45):
I don't know?

Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
And did oz Fist start? And and okay, so it
went from nineteen ninety six and it ended in twenty eighteen.
Oh wow, I didn't I didn't realize it in twenty eighteen.

Speaker 2 (01:31:04):
Oh so surprisingly the lineup for oz Fest ninety six
Ozzy Osbourne and Slayer Danzig, Biohazard, Sepultura, Fear Factory, Neurosis,
Narcotic Gypsy and on the second stage Earth Crisis. Holy shit,
that's crazy. They're really good. Power Man five thousand and

(01:31:24):
Cold Chamber, Cellophane and King Norris Dude to have Slayer
Danzig Biohazard and Sepultura on the same stage.

Speaker 1 (01:31:32):
That's sick and this one they were freish. This one
they were fresh, all fresh.

Speaker 2 (01:31:41):
Ye I saw in ninety two, I went and saw Sepultura,
Sacred Reich, Napalm, Death and Sick of it All at
one show. That was the most crazy thing I ever ever.
You know, the crazy show I ever saw was Fear
in like ninety ninety one or ninety two. Fear was
the craziest show I've ever been to ever. People's take

(01:32:02):
it out and ambulances and ship I never seen a
circle pit so big it was. It was brutal.

Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
People were getting ambulance just swinging. Hey look, there's one thing,
you know, and I don't know if this is the
case anymore, but when you were out there and they
say starting a circle, pee it, you don't want to
be in the circle peede.

Speaker 2 (01:32:26):
So I was at the edge of the circle pit
at fucking I just went and saw Flesh Got Apocalypse. Dude,
you should check them out. Flesh Got Apocalypse are fucking like.
They're from like Italy and they they're their chicks singer
sings opera. It's like one of those they sing opera
and they got the synth in the background and the

(01:32:47):
piano and the fucking Okay, dude, it's so technical, dudes,
like you know, like the Ngway mountains all over the
Oh yeah, or dude, it was like it was like
a performance. You felt like you were in like a
Gothic cathedral. Oh we can't have to wrap up my
dogs about to go take a ship.

Speaker 1 (01:33:03):
Oh yeah, guys, we uh we appreciate. Somebody said Corey's
audio much lower. Excuse hey, look no, because Corey is
usually louder than me. So I don't know about the
fucking Mike shit because it's crazy as hell. Here's what
I do know. Okay, I'm gonna put this on audio
all right, and on audio Riverside does his thing. It

(01:33:28):
makes everything hunky dory. That's what I do now. So
we appreciate everybody being with us tonight. Corey's gonna roll out.
We'll catch yall next week, gonna be on the queue, goodbyes.
Book Appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (01:33:38):
Zill
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