Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
What's going on? Guys? Your boy is Q four twenty here.
We're back at it beyond the Cube once again from
a little bit of hiatus, two week hiatus, but we're
back with y'all. I've got the powerful one with me,
of course, as always Corey, He's Tory Corey. The past
(00:23):
couple of weeks, have have they been? Have they been
nice to you? Is? Is that all we got? Just?
Okay on?
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Yeah, ain't much. I guess me excited, especially the last
couple of weeks.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Said nothing makes me rise to attention. Uh tell the
viewers that viewers out there, you got anything? Uh? You
got anything uh uh new that happened to you over
the past few weeks, be a famous podcast you've been
on or anything like that. Famous people. You know, you're
(00:59):
into the famous people. Nail Corey.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
I can't say. I can't. I can't. I'm not. I
cannot say.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Oh, okay, okay, okay. So we gotta h this is
something that's uh under wraps. Let's just say currently until
it's released.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Let's just say I've had some blue balls for about
a month and a half, waiting on a yes that
I haven't had has not come yet, But it's it's
it should be coming soon.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
Okay, Okay. Blue balls always like new statement because uh
it directly refers only to white people's balls. I mean,
I mean, you know what I'm saying. I was like,
I was like, I don't I don't know about all that,
you know, the these quote unquote blue balls that that
(01:44):
y'all be having.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
So I'm hoping he had come very soon. And then
once I get it, I still can't tell y'all about
it for like another six months.
Speaker 1 (01:52):
So oh oh oh, So it's so it's deep like that. Yeah,
we almost got like a like as close to like
a like a brand deal.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
I'm not brand worthy, let me tell you that much.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Well, I mean somebody's brand brand is Yes, he's not brandworthy.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
The first is a brand up to themselves. Let me
put it that way.
Speaker 1 (02:20):
Okay, Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Okay, that's what I'm saying.
You know, the the really to really get involved in
these brands, you have to do something pretty generic, Uh
I say, like was it reviewing food? We were reviewing products?
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Yeah, clothes, any type of product you can, and as
long as you don't have anything controversial, brand deals can
usually come your way.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
But beyond that, well yeah, yeah, they don't exist. Yeah
unless unless you know, over the past few years, if
you were a trance or gay or buy whatever, then uh,
there's plenty of brands want you to get up there
and tell everybody how you like licking poo nanny and
(03:11):
you were female, or you like taking dick and the
ass and your male that that was that was totally fine, okay.
Or I believe I'm a woman now even though I'm
actually a man. I never got rid of my penis.
But this is a this is a female penis. This
isn't you know, a normal male penis. This is different
(03:33):
that they could get brand deals, you know. Uh. And
to be honest, that's how you just say, shaw, you
make a ton of money. Well know, princeker said, Uh,
Prince Skier said, you know, maybe you can be like me.
(03:55):
My mother introduced me to the gayage, end the early
and maybe if you introduce your kid to the agenda
and they'll become governor. One day, I was like.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Well he's Jewish, it's like normal for them.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
Yeah, but I'm like, what's that guy? Would you become
a governor?
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Because Zionist the cultists in case you didn't know. So
the Prince spent millions upon millions of dollars to get
these ancient texts translated, called the Zohar. It is of
ancient Jewish ritual ship. These people are sickos at the
highest level.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
Okay, okay, of the highest order. Huh okay.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Prinsker's translation of the Zohar, it'll blow your mind.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
Yeah, but can we can we say that they're bad
because they're they're the good billionaires. You know, there are
a bunch of communists what they're what they're the good guys.
They that's what That's what they're telling us. They're seeing
the Prinskers, you know, because when they started. I know
you've seen the the tour we got going on, is it?
Are we campaigning right now? I've seen AOC, AOC and
(05:12):
Bernie Sanders are on the right.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
Dan stupid.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
What they got they got fight, fight oligarchy.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
They got talking about the right stare at oligarchy.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
AOC is up there and what they call her her
mom jeans. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
I want to know how fuck she makes one hundred
and seventy five grand a year. But she's a multimillionaire.
Is Doge's going to get to the bottom of that?
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Well, she said that we need to stop inside of trade.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
I was like, how did Jasmine Crockett make nine million
in her first eighteen months as a congressman.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
That's a great question.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Are you allowed to take money people and put it
in your pocket?
Speaker 1 (05:53):
I mean maybe maybe it's those the nonprofits. You know,
everybody loves him, a good non profit that they somehow
profit off of it. Let tell you, oh, yeah, this
is nonprofit. Yeah, but except by unprofited. It's like, hold
(06:16):
on a second, I thought you said it was nonprofit,
so like this should be for the better men of
like humanity, right when in the in at the the
the idea, that is the idea, but that never really happens.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Are non profits not taxed either?
Speaker 1 (06:37):
No, they're not taxed.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
Are the people who work for him tax Yeah? I'm
assuming so. Well, you heard what Princeville did right in
one of Princeville's mansions, he had all the bathrooms removed
so it was deemed uninhabitable. So he got a three
hundred thousand dollars off his tax.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Hey, I mean that's currently saying that's a smooth operator.
Are you gonna shop a smooth operator? Well, yeah, I
mean you said we're going to old school. We're going
back to our roots. You know, that's what you're going
back to. Ridiculous When folks are like, man that things
are things are, that's the worst has ever been. I'm like, oh, Bud,
(07:20):
you used to have to wake up and you know,
in the middle of the night and walk outside to
go piss or ship. You know what I'm saying. It's
something that might have a snake in it. Damn outhouse,
I mean what I'm saying. So come on, now, you
got running water and shit, so I don't know if
it's I am I gonna sit here and tell you that.
(07:42):
You know, some folks ain't struggling now, I'm not gonna
say that, but the worst is ever been. I'm like,
I don't know, man, if I stick you back into
sixteen hundreds, you might want to y'all think you might
come back. That's the epitome of, you know, pulling yourself
up by your bootstraps pillars though right, yes, uh, pretty
(08:02):
pretty openly. But here's the issue, Like you'd have to
travel to do that more than likely, and h the
likelihood of you making it wherever you you you're you
know wherever you're gonna go and do this next raping
and quote unquote billaging uh the will not to make it.
You know you played the game The Oregon Trail, right,
(08:23):
it's one of the most famous games on the on
the original Apple computer. Famous game, infamous game. You know
what they what they say, you get typhus. I mean,
I mean, you out for two days and got typhus.
But you know what happens when you get typhus. I
don't even know what it is, but you die. Okay,
that's what happens. I mean to care you what's typhus?
(08:47):
Let's see what we got here? Okay? Yeah, bacterial infection
spread by life.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
Yeah, the number one killer in all of World War Two.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. That's the stuff.
You begin and you get that typist bow. I mean,
that's it. You know stick a for can you you
go out there, get you get you get bit by
a snake and you're on the Oregon Trail. That's it.
I'm not sure how. I'm not sure how we got
(09:17):
to the point that we got to right now, with
everybody you know, being able to survive. It's I mean,
it's amazing. You got to talk about folks just getting
you know, starting out in the USA, you're just traversing
landed really only the natives have been around, and you
don't know what the fuck you're about to run into.
(09:38):
So the fact that we got to the point where
we're at now is actually pretty amazing. I know, Folks
that hit me with the stolen land and all that,
I'm like, all land is stolen, Okay, I mean you're conquered.
You move on, conquered, move on. I mean that's I
think that's the history of the world.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
It Yeah, well, well that's only supposed to be the
case up until ninety forty five. Obviously, people lie because
there's still colonialism going on.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
Oh okay, okay, colonialism.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
You see, that was the whole thing. After World War Two.
We were supposed to have to fix the borders and
no one was supposed to be able to, you know,
just conquer anymore.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Okay, So so we were out of the conquering business, right.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
So, but the Israelis and the Americans didn't get the message.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
No, no, they're helping, they're not conquering. You see, you
got to you got to discern the difference. Corey. You
see you're out here. It's too too it's too black
and white for you. This is gray here. We're helping now.
When we help, sometimes we kill about you know, a million,
two million, eight coner. But I mean it's okay. We'll
(10:48):
be there to rebuild. We don't just bomb and then
just leave you high and dry. We'll be there to rebuild.
That's one thing you gotta appreciate.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
We'd never rebuilt anything what they say they had. They
hadn't bettleship rapp in Iraq. I've gotten to stand they
ain't build nothing. In fact, I'm pretty sure there's some
shack in the middle of nowhere getting them a couple
of million dollars for transgender surgeries in both.
Speaker 4 (11:16):
What for?
Speaker 1 (11:16):
I mean this, but they they got up there and
they said that they helped rebuild. I mean it helped.
Did they help rebuild Japan?
Speaker 2 (11:26):
I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
Okay, okay, what folks out here like, oh man, our
allies out there, I said, men, you know all the
folks that you say are allies, like they fucked them
up back in the day. And it won't that long.
Aday yeah, very true. It's like it's like it's like
Man Britton is one of our allies. It's like, you
(11:49):
know that we seceeded from them, right, like we taught
them to get away from them. I'm just making sure
a Germany, Germany's an ally. I said, fault them in
World War two. Japan here it's called we dropped two
nukes on them, and they was like, oh shit, they're serious.
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
It's like Russia is our enemy now, but they were
our friend in World War Two.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
That's what I'm saying. I'm just like, y'all, do realize
that there's there's there's no there's no friends, there's no
quote unquote enemies. Is just are you able to help
me at this point in time? And if not, kick rocks.
That's pretty much it. Okay, we're more of an acquaintances.
(12:33):
Let's just say that worldwide acquaintances. I wouldn't say anybody's
quote unquote friends right per.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
Se, Right totally, It depends on each situation. Doesn't seem
to be her friend right now with all these tariffs
and ship.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Well, they said they're coming to the table, said they're
coming to the table. The chick from Italy said, I mean,
she said, I love it.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
You know what.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
That man? It sounds good to me. And I mean,
folks all are man, they all up in arms. I'm
just like, I don't understand what people want. Okay, So
so here here's the rhetoric that I hear. I hear
that there's no manufacturing will come back to the US.
Who wants to do those jobs? It's stupid. And then
(13:24):
I also hear from folks, well everybody needs a living
wage and shit's too high. And I'm like, okay, And
then you know what I don't hear from people is
how the fuck you gonna change it? I mean, I hear,
I hear people doing a lot of complaining, but I don't.
I mean, I don't see anybody got a solution. So
(13:45):
what's the solution?
Speaker 2 (13:48):
Well, I do like Trump's bringing a manufacturing back to America.
He has secured five trillion in domestic investment from various companies,
which is pretty fucking amazing. If all these companies follow
through and actually do what they say they're gonna do,
it would be a good thing for America. Now, a
T shirt might be thirty bucks standard, you know, a
(14:08):
Han's white tidy, whitey, but like, I don't know, we'll see.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Well, here's here's the deal. Okay. Uh, let's say that
some shit did go down and we happen to have
another quote unquote war. Well, I mean, depending on who
you have in it with. Let's say let's say that
you have it with China, which we were starting to
redabbling early into the stuff. But it's all good as
(14:37):
far as the endgame. But uh, if you get everything
from China and they just said, man, I ain't gonna
sing any more shit and the I mean, how we
gonna ramp things.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
Up all of a sudden, that's a good question.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
So, I mean, it's just like, but folks are like,
all mean your iPhone to be thirty five? Say you
ain't got to buy iPhone? But something talks about like
you don't have to buy.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
So I my phone? Where the fuck is it?
Speaker 4 (15:10):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (15:11):
I ain't even sitting here. I buy specifically Chinese phones.
Chinese phones are far superior to fucking everything we get
here in America. The I bought a red me Note
thirteen or whatever the newest version is. It's retails for
four hundred. I got it brand new for two hundred.
(15:35):
It's got dual SIM plus E SIM, so you can
run three different phone numbers into it. It's got two
home screens, right, so it's got one home screen where
I can put in my code and go to my
normal phone. But if like a cop wanted to look
at my phone, I can type in another code and
it'll go to a completely different home screen with different
(15:57):
text messages, different everything. It's yeah, got you a spy phone,
mane the standard on every Chinese phone.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Uh spy phone?
Speaker 2 (16:07):
Mine says Yaomi is a Yaomi red note thirteen I
think is what it is.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
Y'all heard that, Danielle, I mean, Corey damn infiltrator.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
But let me put it this way. I trust the
Chinese with my information before I trust the American government
with my information because the Chinese can't do shit with it.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
They really can't. And look some of the info that
they said they were stealing, like, oh man, it's still
in an info off TikTok. I was like, what girl's
been over with their booty out? I mean, is that
come on, mate, girl's going to be and saying how
I don't know if you've seen this most recent clip,
but the same boy. The chick got up there and
(16:48):
I guess it was a Christian podcast, and she was
talking to the gentleman about how she was cheating on
her husband for three years with his best friend and
then her husband found out and they've been going to
church this whole time. And he was like, you know,
he felt all the emotions at that point in time
(17:09):
of anger, hate, disappointment, didn't know what, you know, disoriented,
and I thought he was gonna do like every other
man did in my life. Leave. I'm like, well, yeah,
he should have, he said, yeah, but at that point
in time, he said, I don't have to. I don't
know how to do anything else but love you. And
(17:29):
that's when Jesus really came into my life. I said,
hold on a second, man, So you mean to tell
me it took you taking dick for three years and
then you getting caught for you to finally find Jesus.
I'm like, I the best friend of that. And let
me tell you right now, the best friend was getting
when he was getting the good stuff, Okay, he was
(17:53):
stretching it out, it was quick, quick, five minutes of passion,
you know, in a bathroom somewhere, you know where it's
just rate, just straight pawn town. I mean he was
getting he was getting all the good stuff. And what
was the husband of the house probably get. He probably
getting old lame l like she look at it, but
just be like, I'm done, but not Jesus found me.
(18:17):
Then Jesus be fighting everybody after they get caught. After that,
after that, it took all the dick then sold all
the drugs. General butt naked out there in Africa, done,
killed all the folks. Then they find them. I'm like,
how y'all be fine? Could you not just could you
(18:38):
not be a piece of ship? And it, I mean,
disregard Jesus. Could you just not be a piece of ship?
Didn't it be? Okay? I guess that's not an option
there we have to have with everybody has to have
their journey.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Well I guess.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Hey, look, well I'm not gonna I'm not gonna deny
your redemption, okay, but your redemption ain't kind of shit
to do with what we got going on right now. Okay,
your redemption is supposed to be in the afterlife. What
I know right now is that you were just banging
my best friend for three years. He was coming over
here and shaking my hand. Now she went through it.
She's like, yeah, we went through some tough times, had
(19:19):
to had to switch towns and all kinds of stuff.
I see, Yeah, because folks was like, man, what kind
of bullshit is this? Switch churches? You had to get
out of there, you had to leave dodgs, damn Witness
Protection program at the back. Oh, but hey, you know,
that's the way it is, you know, and it's unfortunate.
(19:41):
But uh, I mean that's that's the type of rhetoric
and stuff that that's the type of dad that China
has been stealing. So I'm just like, I mean, what
we actually talking about though? You know, girls putting on
makeup every once in a while's supposed to go up
there talk about some real ship. But it ain't like
(20:02):
they're giving away any secrets up there, you know.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
And every single company we've ever had our ship stored
in has been hacked at some point. All of our
ship is out there, right, that's true.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
One percent of it. Percent of your ship's out there? Well, hell,
what was the what was the latest one that got
I think it was Facebook because that they send everybody
ah the email saying yeah, you know they gave away
your ship when they weren't supposed to. I'm still looking
at my three dollars, you know what I'm saying. I
(20:38):
filled out the form. They said, Man, y'all want to
get money back. I said, let me feel this form. Now.
I know it's gonna be like three dollars or something.
I want you to put that in my account. Okay,
I want my three dollars. I'm trying to buy the dip.
You know what I'm saying. Oh, trying to buy the
dip out here, Corey. And it's a big dip. Matter
(21:00):
of fact, I ain't looked at it. I ain't. I
ain't even looked at crypto in a long time. Is
it still is it still crashed out?
Speaker 2 (21:07):
Yeah, I ain't doing nothing. It's gonna be hovering for
quite a while.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
I don't think it's gonna be stagnant right, more than likely.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Yes. And when things are stagnant, they go down. It's
just a facult life. Like I said, I'm still anticipating
bitcoin to go back to the sixties or high fifties.
So okay, which means everything something, which means everything else
is gonna come down with it.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
I know bitcoins a seventy something, but it looks like
it's back up to eighty four, close to eighty five. Uh.
I know one one crypto that took a damn took
a hillacious here.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
It was.
Speaker 1 (21:45):
What was it, chain link?
Speaker 2 (21:47):
Chain link, Yeah, chain linking.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
I mean it took it took a damn it took
a right hand cross, but straight on the chin.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
Well, chain link is one of them things that like
never should have got See here's the thing with when
you look back at crypto prices, they all they all
got over inflated. And so when I look at things
like Ripple right now, XRP like at two dollars, that's
fucking ridiculous. It's ridiculous. It doesn't do anything right. XRP
doesn't do shit. It doesn't. It's it's no different than
(22:16):
any of these other motherfuckers. If you want to transfer value,
you can do it with one of ten million coins,
you know what I mean. So just talk about something
going on with the treasury and XRP and stuff. But
like from a technological standpoint, it's not worth the money.
It's that people are put into it. I mean I
owned Ripple when it was worth point zero zero six,
like when it launched at zero zero six, I had
(22:38):
a lot of them. I probably would have been rich
if I just held on to them. But people who
were serious about crypto never put their money into XRP.
The only people who put money in XRP are people
who are Johnny Kumalai's because XRP genuinely doesn't do shit.
But it's been hovering in this top ten position for
like almost a decade, so people just assume, right, I
(23:00):
keep missing the dip on Solana. I need to pick
up a bunch of Solana for this token launch that
we're gonna do. It dropped down to one hundred, it
dropped down to one hundred and seven. It's back up
at one hundred and thirty four, so that's pretty good
next time. Solana is very resilient because there's a lot
of people who like the platform, and so it always
bounces back. I got to remember that next time it.
(23:20):
If it gets down below one hundred and twenty again,
I'm gonna buy. I got a couple thousands in.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
At the chain where everybody makes their main coins.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
Yeah, and so here's the problem with crypto and Solana
proved this Ethereum started it see Ethereum is a platform
where you can make your coin on top of it.
Right bitcoin technically there are you can do that on
Bitcoin technically, but it's a different, totally different system. But
Ethereum came out so you could make your own coin
on top of it, so you didn't have to build
(23:52):
a whole network, right, which is a good idea, but
it opened the door to all these fucking scams. But
Ethereum is a shitty system, and so launch a coin
on Ethereum will still cost you, like I think, like
two grand. Well the price is down now, it might
be less than that now, it might be like down
to like a thousand, or even like eight hundred. But
no joke on Slana, their system is so good and
so efficient you can launch a coin for like one
(24:14):
hundred bucks. So's that's why everyone went to Slana for
the mean coins. So what does that tell you? The better,
the more efficient the platform, the more shit coins you're
gonna get dumped on top of it, you know what
I mean. And so that's the problem with Salana. It's
probably the best blockchain out there technologically speaking, and so
(24:35):
because it can multi it can process multiple blocks at
a time, which is fucking crazy. So but yeah, most
of these coins don't do anything. Well, way down, dude, Yeah,
way down?
Speaker 1 (24:50):
It was it four thousand dollars, wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
It way back in its peak? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (24:56):
But I thought I thought that wasn't that long ago? Man,
This said fifteen eighty.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
I guess, I guess December. Yeah, I can't believe it
was a high in December, but that was when the
big pump happened with bitcoin. Ethereum's down, A is the
THEORYM going to pick back up? Well, here's the thing.
If I'm going to make a coin, why would I
do it on Ethereum? Why should I should do it
on Solana? Solana has caught up and in the last
couple of years, and it's cheaper, and it's easier maintenance,
(25:20):
and uh, it's got a lot of flexibility. So there's
no point to ethereum anymore.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
Really.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
But then again, you have B and B and you
have like Tron, and you have a bunch of these
coins where you can build a coin on top of it.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
So ap wild man, So because I guess you can
steak if you like to. But the ap wise terrible
point zero nine percent.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
So ethereum went from a proof of work. This is
another reason ethereum sucks. Ethereum went from proof of work
to proof of steak, meaning it went from a legitimate See,
the only real innovation in crypto is the proof of
work algorithm. That's it. It's not the blockchain. The blockchain
is and is a necessary evil. Okay, it is not
(26:06):
the big innovation everyone thinks it is. The real innovation
is the proof of work algorithm, which is basically like
a guessing game. You got all these different computers trying
to guess a number, right, it's called a nonce, and
so the computer that's able to guess the number first
gets the block reward. Right. It keeps the it keeps
the miners honest, and it's not a rich get richer system.
(26:30):
Anybody can participate. Right When you have a proof of
steak system, you have to own a lot of the coins,
which makes it a rich get richer system right off
the bat. You know what I mean to steak ethereum.
I think you need like thirty nine or forty coins,
So that's like what e seventy's say, seventy eighty thousand
dollars something like that to set up a node and so,
(26:52):
and then when you look at how much you actually
earn from running a fucking node, it's peanuts. It's literally peanuts.
It's like, I don't even know four percent five percent
per year for running a fucking node, a master node.
It's unbelievable. The whole system of Ethereum is junk, and
I think people are realizing it. Plus Ethereum was rolled back, right,
(27:14):
people don't understand this. This is the most important fucking
thing in crypto's history ever that shows that pulls the
mask off because you have the Ethereum Foundation, you have
all these guys who made Ethereum metallic. It was just
one of them. He was the face of the of
the token though. So they come out and then the
DOW comes out, which is a digital autonomous organization. It's
the first one that you're supposed to be able to
(27:36):
basically run a system fully autonomously. Right, Well, they launched
it in a smart contract. The smart contract was written shitty,
and so it got hacked and sixty million dollars worth
of Ethereum that was in the fucking fund for the
DOO got stolen. So who number one? It showed Ethereum
sucked it showed that the TAO and smart contracts at
(27:59):
the time sucked, and so they were faced with the
decision do we just let it roll and we take
our lumps? And that's how it goes. Because this is
in immutable blockchain, right, Immutable means you can't ever change it.
So what did they do. They made the decision to mute,
to make mutable the immutable blockchain, and they rolled back
(28:20):
the chain to before when the hack happened, okay, and
then they forked the chain a hard fork, so everyone
had to update their software and then that's Ethereum now.
And in the forking process, they created a second coin,
Ethereum Classic. Ethereum Classic is still around. It is the
original Ethereum, well with new you know, there've been some
(28:45):
advances on it, but it's basically the original Ethereum proof
of work that's still out there. And so that's why
you can't ever fork bitcoin ever. You can't hard fork
bitcoin ever. You hard fork bitcoin and you're fundamentally copying
the chain and creating a whole new second set of
coins based on the original transaction history. And that's what
(29:09):
Ethereum did, and they did it because of the decision
of a couple people. It had nothing to do with
what the users wanted, It had nothing to do with democracy.
It proved that it was not an immutable blockchain, you know,
and so that's why that was. Ethereum has been totally
compromised since literally its first year. But people, it just
shows that people want to make money. People are desperate
(29:31):
to make money, and so that's why people put money
into these shit coins, because they think their shit coin
is going to be the one, right, and the whole
entire landscape has changed. Once upon a time, when you
put out a token, you created your own blockchain, even
if you just forked it off a Bitcoin, creating your own,
you know, project off of the Bitcoin Foundation, which a
lot of the coins did, most of them. Anyway, they
(29:56):
all had to have their own infrastructure and their own
people running nodes and all that stuff. Right. That's why
there was such a big shift to working with Ethereum
and now Solana, because then you didn't have to build
your own infrastructure out right. But in the beginning, that's
all there was was people building their own blockchains, and
they all failed. I mean, I had a ton of
vert coin at one point, Monaro's got its own blockchain,
(30:19):
but it's a totally different system than bitcoin. It runs
on privacy features, so bitcoin doesn't have yet. And so
but right now the whole crypto space is in like
this identity crisis mode, and the meme coin craze proves
to me without question that it's sheer desperation and Las Vegas.
(30:40):
That's it. That's all this is going on because people
want to make money and shit coins don't. They're all
the same, All the mean coins are the same. They
don't do anything different, you know what I mean. So
whether you buy fucking joshmo coin number one or Joe
shmo coin number twenty two, it doesn't matter. It's the
exact same thing. There's no technological difference. There's not going
to be any difference in adoption. No one's going to
use the shit. They end up being all pump and
(31:02):
dump schemes. And that was made possible because the technology
got so good that it was cheap. So we can
see how having a cheap barrier to entry is not
necessarily a good thing for the for the space as
a whole. Right, But this is people are gonna get
tired of this mean coin shit, and it's going to
change very soon.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Now when you say it's going to change or you're
talking about regulations, no, I'm.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Thinking people are going to realize that mean coins are
just flashing the pan. You know, it's a slot machine,
and they're going to look for things more stable, that
have a real team, that have faces on there, they're
not anonymous. You know, people are going to look for
I think people are going to start to revert back
to like some of the traditional investment strategies, you know,
trusting the team, seeing a good roadmap, like what does
(31:50):
this thing actually do that's different from everybody else? Like
if people are going to revert back to these factors,
and you might see some new coins pop up that
do something different that people will brace.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
Okay, okay, just my speculations.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
That I've been around the space for a long time.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
The current current CHRISTE landscape, well, a lot of people
were saying that the twenty twenty five was going to
be the bull year. That's what a lot of people
were saying, because I guess they were going off the
four year cycles quote unquote.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
Yeah, but that's not really necessarily true. The bull run
usually happens after the having, which it did this time.
So we had the having in May last year, and
we had bitcoin go to like one hundred thousand in December.
So you have the having and then it's a couple
months later you have the big run. So twenty twenty
(32:45):
five I don't see that happening. I see twenty twenty
five as being more of a bearish nothing really happening.
Whenever you look at the big spikes in bitcoin, it's
always followed by a big down period because people get
all this hype and this enthusiasm and then it goes nowhere,
and so then people start to become disheartened and then
(33:05):
they start to sell. And that's when you saw the
fall from one hundred and something down to seventy something.
And now it's bounced back up to like eighty, but
it's already in a downward trend. I could already see it.
We look at past patterns, it's following the same past patterns.
So in my opinion, I think we're going to have
twenty twenty five, We're going to continue to drop down,
and maybe towards the beginning of twenty twenty six we'll
(33:28):
see another pickup. But I'm not anticipating any big runs
in bitcoin and the all coin market is going to
continue to fluctuate as people figure out that they don't
know what the fuck the time it is, and therefore
it's going to continue to go up and down.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
Right. Well, I think one of the things that people
didn't take into account was when it was the twenty
twenty one bull run. You got to think about what
spot we're in. It was the disease that should not
be named and the massive dumping of trellions of dollars
(34:00):
that was printed, uh, you know into the atmosphere. Folks
got to remember that that is why it pumped one
hundred percent. I's see it.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
Yeah, my glasses on. What does this thing say?
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Here? This says.
Speaker 2 (34:20):
Going back one year, we were at sixty three thousand
dollars bitcoin. The big pump started for well, I would
go let me go back before that.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Christmas.
Speaker 2 (34:31):
The big pump really started in September November. Well, the
big pump really started September twenty twenty three, and then
it pumped all the way till March of twenty twenty four,
fell back down till August, and then it shot back
up again in December. That's it. Oh, that's the bull run. Okay,
(34:51):
that's the bull run right there. I'm telling you right now,
the bull run is over.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
Just looking at this fucking chart. Let me screenshare just
so you can see what I'm s seeing.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
Yeah, because I don't think it it hadn't touched near
the has that that it was beforehand. So there it is.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
Yeah, So look at this. I mean, the bull run
for way back in the day started. It was less
than three months. Bitcoin went from you know, let's say
two thousand to twenty thousand between June and December.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
And then here twenty seventeen and eighteen right.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
Correct, Correct, that's when I got That's when I made
a whole shitload of money. And then you have March.
Basically have the end of March twenty twenty and you
have a bull run up until April twenty twenty one,
so that lasted almost a year. Right. Then you have
this bull and you have this bull run started December
(35:50):
twenty twenty two, basically lasted all the way to December
twenty twenty four, so you have a two year bull run. Right.
That's basically how that went. The duration of the bear
market got cut in half. Though. Look at this. You
went from you went from like January twenty eighteen all
(36:10):
the way to like middle of twenty twenty with pretty
much nothing. Can this can all be considered bear because
it didn't do shit, and really September September, you have
a five or six month pump here. This was confusing
this double top here, because bitcoin doesn't usually double top.
Double tops are always bad. When you see a double
(36:32):
top like that. See, some people would interpret that as
like a cup and handle. Right, you see this little
bump here. If this bump was higher up here, that
would be a cup and handle pattern, right, But it's not.
It dropped and then it bumped again. That's just a
dead cat bounce. So yes, based on this, maybe we'll
see a shortened bear run less than a year. Maybe
(36:54):
we'll see less than a year.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
But you're thinking definitely, definitely beyer for the ricit each year.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Probably, yes, exactly what I'm thinking. Yeah, but look at
these patterns. Look how far bitcoin drops every time. It
went from fucking twenty thousand all the way down to
this is where I sold my last bit, my last
whole bitcoin. I sold right at this thirty five hundred
dollars price because I was broke. I was living in Vegas.
I had no money and I had one bitcoin left,
and I'm like, fuck, man, what do I do? And
(37:18):
the week after I sold it, it was like double
in price, right, So I fucked myself as hard as
you can when I sold right there. But looking at this,
looking at these patterns, this bull run lasted fucking forever, okay,
And it doesn't go on forever. It has to come
to an end, and we're going to see a pattern
just like this, a big dip like that. And so
a big dip like that will put us right down
back at fifty, maybe even lower than fifty before it
(37:39):
comes back up sometime. It might last all year looking
at this, looking at these patterns. So yeah, that's my
that's my take on it.
Speaker 1 (37:52):
Yeah. So I mean that's our current a crypto analysis
for the people who are in that space and investing
in that. And uh, you know what Corey says, You know,
Bitcoin is king and everything else is trash. Well, I
(38:14):
guess some of the things can be used, but for
the most part, that's that's his that's your philosophy, right Corey.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
Yeah, like these other tokens just don't do anything. And
whenever you hear about Finn send and they're building new
technologies that all these technologies are just interoperability, the ability
to swap one coin for another. There's no real end
purpose for most of them. There's something right there. Maybe
there's something right now called fark coin that's worth about
fifty eight million dollars.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
Sark coin, Like, who's gonna buy that? Here's the question though, Like, Okay,
so when new mean coin comes out and there's there's
only the same pretty much subsection of people that are
putting money into it, Like, I don't think I don't
(39:03):
think there's a ton of like quote unquote new money
just pouring into these mean coins.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
Start coin has a seventy seven hundred and eighty million
dollar market cap. Sorry about that, Oh.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
Damn, Okay, I don't think there's like this new subsection
of people that's like, oh man, I heard about mean
coins and I'm ready to go gamble, you know what
I'm saying. I think I kind of feel like it's
the same people, you know, rolling the dice.
Speaker 2 (39:28):
I mean, what do you think, Well, the amount of
crypto holders out there is very small, really compared fraction
of a fraction of a percent.
Speaker 1 (39:41):
Yeah, so it's like, you know, the people who when
these mean coins come out, you gotta you gotta think
that it's more likely kind of the same people who are,
you know, running the odds and taking the chances. That's
what I would think right off, fans to see if
they can and see if they can hit big. Now,
(40:01):
the only issue with hitting big is that you don't
know if you're like you'd be able to pull the
money out the liquidity passed big, yeah, and how much
would they let you pull out?
Speaker 3 (40:12):
Right?
Speaker 2 (40:12):
So, back in the day when bitconnect was big, I
got in with bitconnect and I knew all the top
guys in the bitconnect space was his name, Craig and
tray Vaugh, James and all them guys. But I knew
the guy who was above them, Glenn, who nobody else knew.
And Glenn had made Glenn was the big dog and
(40:32):
bitconnected in North America. He stayed out of trouble for
some reason. I don't know how, but he stayed out
of trouble when the SEC came knocking at everyone's door.
But Glenn had made hundreds of millions of dollars off
bitconnect through referrals, and one time he told me that
he got up to use the bathroom, came back and
made four grand in the time that he got to
use the bathroom because every single person in bitconnect was
(40:55):
under him in the pyramid structure, so he got piece
of everything. And he told me the most he could
ever cash out was about fifty grand a day in
big Connect tokens because it was wasn't any it was
no liquidity, and he had millions of dollars worth of
tokens that he couldn't end up doing anything with. So
liquidity is a big issue for sure.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
All right, Well, that that's got to be. It's got
to be the number one issue because I mean, technically
you're just a you're just a paper millionaire. But if
you're not able to pull anything, I mean, and the
ship goes back down, then I mean, that's just it
for you. I think that's what people were running into
(41:38):
issues with, like what was it like paype pepe and
things like that, but it had his big jump Yep,
it's like, all damn, man, I got I got five
million dollars. Not really, not really they they five million
the pool.
Speaker 2 (41:56):
Person exactly exactly.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
So that's that's the issue. Now. The difference with UH
with of course Bitcoin, it's been around so long that
the liquidity's there. Yes, so any of the coins has
been around for a long amount of time, the likelihood
of you being able to pull profits is extremely high,
(42:21):
just because you know money's gonna actually be there right
as opposed to these new mean coins and stuff that launch.
And we've seen that right right here recently with the
hawk Tua where it jumped with like five hundred million
dollars market cap and in like in an hour zero
(42:43):
and she disappeared off the face of the planet. I
don know she's bitting on dicks or not, you know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
But uh, she was investigated and they didn't press charges
on her, So I don't know what's up with that.
Speaker 1 (42:53):
I don't know. But she hold on, let me see,
let me see if she's if she's made another episode.
She almost seemed like a plant. You think she was
a plant.
Speaker 2 (43:04):
I don't think so. I think everyone thinks everyone's a plant.
Life is just weird like that.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Sometimes, Oh was it? I mean it's her life is okay?
It said life is weird. I mean I get that,
but I mean, let's see here. Oh uh oh, oh,
(43:29):
she's recording again. Oh really, she's done too. She's done
two episodes, so she had she went four months without
doing an episode, and looks like over the past ten
days she's done two episodes. She's done one with ks
I and I don't know who this other cheek is
(43:50):
Chanell West Coast, Goest Country, but she's done a couple. Okay,
So she so she's she's back, she's back. She's back.
The Hawk to her to talk to it, Haley, Well,
so I guess, uh, I guess the heat died down
enough to where she can she can jump back out there.
(44:11):
And uh, I mean I suggested just to go ahead
and make another coin. You're a dumb ass if you
if you bought a coin, but a lot of I mean,
that's just all there is to it. Look, some of
these other things has been around a while, and you
speak of it and you feel good about it, you know,
even if they may not do nothing. If you can
talk about XRP. Stell or you know, Chainley whatever, you
(44:33):
know what I'm saying. At least they've been around a while.
But damn, I mean the hawk to I mean, that's
I can't. I can't. I can't mortgage the farm for
hawk tour. I really can't. Uh So, yeah, be careful
out there in those spaces, uh, with your with your
(44:56):
your crypto, and expect probably a bear more ark for
a while, especially with the uncertainty with these tears and stuff.
I think is it's actually pumped gold a lot. I
think gold. I think gold pumped a thousand dollars went
from like twenty five hundred to thirty five hundred nams.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
So people are getting all excited about gold. I don't understand.
Gold is shiny rocks. They're from the Stone Age and
he has no intend intrinsic value at all. The industrial
uses for gold came one hundred years, you know, in
the last hundred years. So bitcoin has gone up one
(45:38):
hundred times when gold has gone up and will continue
to go up. So I don't know what the fuck
people a getting excited about gold for.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Cory. Folks like shiny stuff. Haven't you seen that from
when Speed? When Speed went to China, folks was like,
look how shiny it he is? You know what I'm saying.
They seen flashing lights and shit was shining, like, oh man,
it's great. I'm just like, damn y'all. It's like it's
like we never stopped being kids. You know what I'm saying.
(46:07):
When you're two years old and something rattles and pops
and makes and lights up, you're like, wow, we.
Speaker 2 (46:13):
Like, Bitcoin has destroyed all arguments for gold because big
because gold itself. You can't use it as a currency,
you can't go use it as a store. It's hard
to transport, it's confiscable. Someone can break in your house
and steal it. But everything about it, it just got it.
Dog shit.
Speaker 1 (46:34):
They just made the anti bitcoin maybe yeah, oh really
but yeah G twenty I watched it last Sunday. It's
a starring a Biola Davis.
Speaker 2 (46:47):
Oh and it said it was all used for illegal
ship right, is that what they said?
Speaker 1 (46:52):
Oh yeah, some some terrorist mercenary was trying to devalue
all the world's current act. She said bitcoin will go up.
Speaker 2 (47:03):
So here's the deal, and I've said this a million times.
Bitcoin is very simple. It is censorship resistant money. I
can transact with anyone in the world who has a
Bitcoin wallet, and I don't need any anybody's permission, and
the network will never say no. That's why bitcoin exists.
That's the whole reason it exists to let people who
(47:25):
do not want to have the government over their shoulder
and every transaction fucking not be there.
Speaker 3 (47:29):
Right.
Speaker 2 (47:30):
So that's the whole purpose of bitcoin, and it does
exactly what it's supposed to do. So all of the
fucking talk about bitcoin being some custodial asset and all
this bullshit, it's it doesn't matter because the fundamentals have
never changed. To motherfuckers in Nigeria who don't have access
to money can transact bitcoin on a cell phone because
everyone's got a cell phone, even in Nigeria. Right, So
(47:52):
that's the whole that's the whole point. Nothing else.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
I see.
Speaker 2 (47:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
But the but the G movie though, I mean it's
like this is this is this is what they'll use.
Be afraid, be very afraid of the krypto. I mean,
that's that's pretty much the basis of the movie. It's
like some dude stole the chicks bitcoin wallet and then
(48:20):
he proceeded to busting to the G twenty party with
like twenty world leaders and hold him hostage, make an
AI video of them saying that oh, yeah, we're gonna really,
we're gonna really fuck our people and take over the world. Yeah,
we're gonna We're gonna make it where they don't have anything,
and so for some reason, everybody just dumped their money
right in the bitcoin. I'm like, hold on a second, now,
(48:42):
I mean, we got folks that they can't even can't
even read, man, I think they made a crypto wallet
and bought big coin. I was like, let's we need
a little more serious than that. But it's the basis
of the movie that and we had had a female
(49:03):
black president that was trying to solve world hunger.
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Yeah, world hunger. Nobody gets a fuck about world hunger.
Speaker 1 (49:13):
They do not. They do not some of these topics.
When you start talking to people about it, man, they
just get they get a tangle, and it's you know,
it's something that they want they don't want to mention.
But here the reality is is that nobody cares about
anybody that they don't know what can't see and you
(49:35):
don't need to all right, Well, sometimes you see it's
too much. Yeah, it's too overwhelming.
Speaker 2 (49:43):
Like I'll never forget that it was an old, like
thirty year old fucking Saturday Night Live skit and that
guy comes on in the suit and it's got all
the skinny kids in Ethiopia and He's like, aren't you
tired of seeing these starving children in Africa? We'll sign
my petition to get these off of the airwaves so
we don't have to look at them anymore. And that
(50:04):
was that was the skit, and it was so fucking
funny because it was so true.
Speaker 1 (50:10):
Let's see it. Hey, you know what's bad is that
when I look up there and I see that they're
giving me the same commercial that they ran back in
nineteen ninety six, Like I remember the commercial. Come like,
hold on a second. These these negroes are either did
or they're thirty five by now. Okay, I mean we
need to we need to show them as adults. You've
(50:32):
seen that the same kids.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
You've seen the new one with the starving Jews feeding
the starving juice jeeves. Oh my god, let me see
if like a finance commercial.
Speaker 1 (50:41):
Man, say it ain't say cord starving.
Speaker 2 (50:46):
Jeeves, starving Jews. Yeah, what if I guess this thing.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
If you see with the starving kids?
Speaker 2 (51:01):
Man, I mean, I gotta find this fucking ad because
this thing is so fucking hilarious. It's got like this.
It looks like a bunch of peasants in a village
and like burned out motherfucking Ukraine and like your twenty
one dollars a month can help feed a hungry jew.
I'm like, here, you fucking kidding, motherfucker. You have all
the money and give them something.
Speaker 1 (51:22):
Hey, hey, don't don't you want to help a hungry gee? Corey?
Speaker 2 (51:26):
No, I don't actually ever.
Speaker 1 (51:30):
You see you see that ain't right? How are you
gonna be able to get into the pearly gates without
want that for some mourning money over before hungry g come?
Oh man, Corey had to get with the program. I remember,
Oh man, that's so terrible. Oh oh uh, Corey, did
you see the.
Speaker 4 (51:52):
What was it?
Speaker 1 (51:52):
The Blue Origin?
Speaker 4 (51:54):
Is that?
Speaker 1 (51:54):
Is that what they want to be? Yeah? Yeah, the
girl bosses.
Speaker 2 (51:58):
Yeah, with the door opening that bullshit? Where's all the
where's the re entry? Burns on the capsule?
Speaker 1 (52:07):
Look that don't happen, all right? Burn and rome re entry?
What do you think this is?
Speaker 3 (52:15):
Then?
Speaker 1 (52:15):
It made it? This is the Blue Origin? Okay, I
think your damn moright.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
You think he must have come out talking about it.
Speaker 1 (52:26):
Here right now?
Speaker 2 (52:27):
Ship looks like a dick, it does.
Speaker 1 (52:33):
It's phallic in nature, A big deal. That's a bad right.
Speaker 2 (52:42):
There, Harry Field Perry's feeling. Katie Perry's feelings were hurt
after the fast food giant Wendy's tweeted can we send
her back? In response to news that the Fireworks singer
I believe is pretty funny with their twitter.
Speaker 1 (52:59):
When yeah, yeah, but I mean we see this was
this Jeff Bezos's wife Sanchez, did she go we got
Katie part? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (53:08):
Said I thought it was eleven How is that tactical?
Speaker 1 (53:14):
I don't know, man, they look like it looks like
it was supposed to be a movie. That's what it
looks like.
Speaker 2 (53:20):
You know, what's the name of the article? What's the
title of the article? That man shows the world is
fed up with entitled celebs who think they are iteration.
Speaker 1 (53:32):
That's hilarious, Yeah, pretty much. Uh yeah, but eleven minutes,
I mean went right up and came right back down.
Speaker 2 (53:43):
But they didn't go out. Here's the thing, they didn't
leave the atmosphere because can you bring up can you
bring up the video or pictures of the damn ship
when it came back?
Speaker 1 (53:52):
Oh yeah, yeah, I got a let me see miss
start that. I think I've actually got a.
Speaker 2 (53:58):
Video someone else commented on the video landing. Well, I'll
say after we watch it.
Speaker 1 (54:06):
Well, I know what you're gonna say, but.
Speaker 4 (54:10):
What was it?
Speaker 1 (54:10):
We got some community and hopes on that mm hmm community.
Let's see, let's pull this up. Here we go and
you will see a puff of smoke when it touches down,
A puff of dust.
Speaker 4 (54:24):
I should be asking more, a puff of dust last
milliseconds air air cushion that you kick at the dust.
Speaker 2 (54:31):
It's a very soft, soft landing despite the forty uh.
Speaker 1 (54:35):
Self for there it is man, folks right there cheer
in the morn too. What's like a cardash congratulations and
welcome back to Earth.
Speaker 2 (54:51):
Yeah, shouldn't they all been fucked up from that landing
and there's like no ambulances out there to help them
or nothing.
Speaker 1 (54:58):
Cool.
Speaker 2 (54:59):
We're it's the ambulance.
Speaker 4 (55:02):
For it.
Speaker 1 (55:02):
They don't need an ambulance. Look, the community says that
the big impact is actually nitrogen gas cloud it gets
it gets it speiled to solve. Now, now, the impact
did not look solved. Okay, I know they said did
it solve in the impact, but I mean, damn, that
did not look solved at all.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
I mean period, I didn't about it, but the re entry,
the whole thing should be scarred with re entry burns
if it went to space beyond the atmosphere. Even the
fake astronauts who got stuck up in space for ten years,
they came back and their ship was all scarred up.
It was all burnt up. This one not so much said.
Speaker 1 (55:44):
At least they got it right here you go right,
this is damn right here, Bud Perry. Perry promised before
the flight. They before the flight would be putting the
ass and astronaut. Wow, but that's terrible. But look at
this is then flating, well maybe fluting. They're taking selfies.
(56:06):
They went up into space and take selfies. It it's
like the ultimate like I got more money than you.
I mean, like, here goes Bezos right here. I ain't
got the video, but they showed Bezos. They and busting
his ass trying to go up there and unlock the door,
which they.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
Open the door people put in there inside. How that work?
Speaker 1 (56:32):
It's like it's like the door is not supposed to
be able to open from the inside. That's the whole premise,
Amy Schumer, I didn't this, Oh here goes, here goes
when center back boy, there goes wading. But I'll tell
(56:53):
you what. Hey look man, but that hey, that's one
one small step for something. There's a couple of small steps, man,
they took two or three. So the older I, yeah,
I got this pointless.
Speaker 2 (57:12):
The older I get. I look at like doing anything
that's like out of at a hand, like no fucking way,
Like I'd never go to space. I look at roller
coasters now and I'm like, fuck no, Like I don't
even want to do the log flu Like I don't
want to do any fucking thing at all that might
break my old decrepit body.
Speaker 1 (57:32):
Yeah, roller coasters don't do anything for me. Look me
being scared shitless is not exciting for me. All right
Now Folks are like, oh what I've been on roller coasters, okay,
And every single one of them I was on, I
was like, this is ass all right. I can go
sit by the pool and chill out. You know what
(57:53):
I'm saying. Look at some cheeks, chill and look at
some cheeks. You know what I'm saying. Get me, hey,
get you boy at a water park. I'll get one
of those. I'll get one of those. Was it one
of those slides that's like fully enclosed. The two ones
that's fully enclosed. Now, I messed around and did one
(58:14):
one time where you just get on the h the
actually just regular slide that's you know, and it's just
a single just you just lay down and you just
slide down it. And about a third of the way down,
I caught some air and I lifted up off of
the surface and I was like, okay, I'm not doing
this one again, you know. And my sister did the same.
(58:38):
I was like, She's like, yeah, it's scared of shit
out of me. I was like, yeah, Cuz, man, if
I don't lay back on that slide, that means I
get to drop right to the ground. And like, it's
not so much to being scared about the death, that
is just being scared about getting fucked up and having
to live with it.
Speaker 2 (58:54):
Well, you know, on that bay out slides, take it
all the way down and like that. I always think, like, man,
what if your leg like hits the side and gets
fucking shot back and you're fucking hip gets all dislocated
like a funk all that ship.
Speaker 1 (59:05):
Yeah, man, and you look you're gonna be You're gonna
be messed up forever. Okay, once you break stuff like that.
I mean, it may heal back, but there's there's no recovery.
All right, whatever you were doing before, just go ahead
and next that. Okay, So I'm with you on that, Corey. Look,
I don't even dangerous.
Speaker 2 (59:26):
Yeah, it's just going way up in the air funk
all that.
Speaker 1 (59:31):
But well, they're safer than cars.
Speaker 2 (59:34):
It's a yeah, but I but crazy, that's it's safer
than walking down the street. Statistically, like more people get
hit by cars walking down the street than die in
plane crashes.
Speaker 1 (59:44):
It's fucking weird, but I feel yeah, but I feel like, Okay,
So I think it's the I think it's the feeling
that or it's the thought that you don't have control
of what's actually happening. That's it. So you're a you're
at the mercy of m whoever. Yeah, that's pretty much it.
(01:00:08):
You just you're just at the mercy. So I think
I think that's the whole premise of it, which makes
it extremely scared. I ain't gonna lie to you.
Speaker 4 (01:00:17):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
And I don't like unprotected heights anyway, So that's like
one of my pet peeves, uh is unprotected heights. Whenever
I whenever I see people standing close to the edge
of something. I just like, I started getting nervous for him.
So I'm just like, hey, man, move move off that guardrail,
(01:00:41):
because I mean, see somebody topple over and then fall
and break something, not even die. I mean, just like
their shoulder goes right, you know, way back there, and
their legs be way back there behind their head. It's just.
Speaker 2 (01:00:56):
I've seen a girl have by a car once. It
was fucked up like that.
Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
Oh god, dude, this is a nasty sight. Oh you've
seen a few like that when.
Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
Yeah, so this was heartbreaking, man, because I was on midnight.
I worked midnights for like years, and like these two,
these two guys, this couple, this guy in his chick
probably early twenties. They was just crossing the road. But
it was a big road. It was like not a
not a highway, but it was you know, it led
to the highway overpass and h both of them ran
(01:01:26):
across the street and he made it and she didn't,
and she was fucked up. Man, Like, he saw the
whole thing happen. It was fucking nasty. He was wrecked.
And I seen another guy hit by a car break
his legs all broken. Out of his skin and stuff.
His bones all sticking out, and his face was like
his head was. He was face down on the concrete,
(01:01:47):
but half his face, his whole face was compressed into
about three inches, so the whole skull like he hit,
his face hit so hard it just crushed into his skull.
That was fucking wild. That's one of the worst things
I ever seen. The one thing that sticks with me
the most though.
Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
Man.
Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
I saw this old lady. She was like eighty something
years old. She fell in her backyard and broke her hip,
and she was there for like three days outside and
she had When we got there, her mouth was full
of dirt and that stuck with me forever. That was
she didn't die. She might have died later in the hospital,
I don't know, but she was fucked up in the
(01:02:24):
backyard for three days with dirt in her mouth. That
was that fucking fucked me up.
Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
That's crazy. That's do you see? That's the wild shit
right there? What they got that thenk they got? They
shoved tails from the er I watched. I was starting
to watch one episode and I was like, I can't
watch this is a dude had a straight up tree
branch stuck through his neck. I was coming out each side.
I was like, and he was looking around. I'm like, dude,
(01:02:52):
he got a whole branch stuck through your nick man,
how are you align? He's just like like he was
just in shock, and I was too, So I turned
the channel. I'm in shock with him. I'm changing this.
Oh goodness, when it's fake, it ain't that big a deal,
you know, like watching saw him like it didn't actually happen,
(01:03:15):
but that happened. So I'm like, I'm changing the channel. Okay,
I ain't fucking with that. Uh, Corey, let me show
you this. We got us a a brand new trailer
for what is being dubbed potentially a summer blockbuster hit.
Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Or you ain't talking Maybe you ain't talking about Silver Surfer?
Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
Are you the Savior of the mc alright, fantastic four
first Steps? We got us a fresh trailer, Corey. Let's
let's let's take a pick at it.
Speaker 5 (01:03:49):
Okay, Wow, folks, we all know the story. Four brave
astronauts head off into space and come back forever, changed
our city, our planet. O a debt to these intrepid souls.
(01:04:12):
We can never repay them. We can certainly celebrate.
Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
Fantastic fantastic four.
Speaker 5 (01:04:20):
Please welcome the fantastic four.
Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
Herbie, how's that sauce looking?
Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (01:04:34):
That is fantastic.
Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
You're late? What do you mean? What do you mean?
Speaker 4 (01:04:38):
What do I mean?
Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
You're late for dinner? Yes?
Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
We are, relie I just said that. Are you pregnant?
Speaker 4 (01:04:44):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
You're going to be the best mom in the world.
And you are going to be the best dad. Just kidding.
Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
You are out of your death.
Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
We are going to be the best uncles ever.
Speaker 1 (01:04:54):
We can do this. All things going to change. M
hm hm. Are you the protectors of this world? Yes?
We are. Your planet is now marked for dad. That's
(01:05:22):
my fault. I stretched the bounce of space and they hurt.
Always safe.
Speaker 2 (01:05:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
He's run enough.
Speaker 4 (01:05:41):
God, I'm not giving up. We will face this together.
We will fight it together.
Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
As a family has to be asked. We will protect you.
Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
I don't think ship of course there it is? Do
what fun? That's that? Looks that's terrible, but it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
Got golight is cory.
Speaker 2 (01:06:46):
I'll give an with.
Speaker 4 (01:06:49):
That.
Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
A woman's surface fuck off.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
Some time.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
Next thing, you know, they're going to make several snake
black Jesus.
Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
Well, I think they're actually making Harry Potter black in
the new series. I believe. I believe. I've seen Neurotics say.
Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
This, it's snape. They're making Snap black?
Speaker 1 (01:07:11):
Is it snake?
Speaker 2 (01:07:12):
I thought we were past all this d I guess
this is the leftover d I stuff from before Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Oh, well, what is it? Disney. Disney's not over it yet.
I know that Disney's definitely not over They're definitely still
fully involved. Where did I see it at? I thought
I've seen it from him. Maybe I've seen it from
(01:07:42):
somewhere else. Hold on to see here. You you might
be right. It might be snake. Uh, let's see. Yeah,
I think they were saying that snake. Yeah, yeah, Okay,
you're right. You're right. You're right that Snap was potentially
(01:08:03):
gonna be black. So yeah, I mean we're just switching
things up a little bit. I mean, they had Snow
white that was not white. H She's like Middle Eastern
and like not as good looking as Gelga Daou, even
though Gelgadau is at a more advanced age. My god, Disney,
(01:08:24):
if you if you're gonna make snow white, she needs
to be white and she needs to look good. You
know what I'm saying. She needs to look better than
than the damn evil Witch. I mean, that's that's that's
that's see it man, that you can do that and
it can be Okay, the movie can be bad, but
(01:08:44):
you still make a ton of money. Who look like
the Minecraft You know what I'm saying. I think the
Minecraft movie is pretty bad, but it's making a ton
of a ton of money right now. I don't understand
the The whole thing around Minecraft like is it's like
nothing to me.
Speaker 2 (01:09:05):
So I this is kind of funny that I'll say this,
but I kind of appreciate. I don't. I've never played Minecraft,
but I do. I have come to appreciate what it is.
I end up playing a lot of survival games lately.
That's all I've been playing. You got to build a
bunch of huts and shit. And so when you look
(01:09:26):
at Minecraft from the perspective of it was like the
first really big kind of survival ish building crafting kind
of game, it kind of earns a place in the history,
you know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
And so.
Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
They were really smart with Minecraft because they were able
to get the kids involved. Once you get kids involved,
that parent money just flows right in, you know. What
I mean, it's a wholesome thing. That's a an unwholesome world.
So I appreciate myft.
Speaker 1 (01:09:58):
They got to creep for me.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
Creeper, what do you mean?
Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
It's that green? It's like a green bush that chases
in each.
Speaker 2 (01:10:07):
So I got a game. I bought a game called
Vintage Story. That is it's it's a based off Minecraft.
When you look at it looks like Minecraft. It is
brutally fucking hard to where I can't even get past
like the first like twenty minutes. I played for twenty
minutes and I want to quit already.
Speaker 1 (01:10:29):
They said, is there an easy made on this thing?
Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
Ain't no easy mode. There ain't no easy mode. So
but I do like the building and chopping trees. And
the reason I like that stuff is because it takes
the pressure off of having to like get through a
game and beat a bunch of bosses, and you know,
it's just kind of like a time filler. It's like
the zen the sand, the zen stick sad thing that
the Japanese do, right, It's kind of like that. So yeah,
I appreciate Minecraft. The movie looked gay as fuck.
Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Hey, it's knocking it out in the theaters. Is it
really smoking dust? Yeah? Hold on maybe, uh box offic
let's here we go. Let's see Minecraft movie reaches five
hundred and fifty million at global box office. Yeah, so
(01:11:22):
two days ago.
Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
Because it's all kids, it's parents bringing the kids, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
Uh huh uh. And it's browsed with that with two
hundred and eighty one million of that being domestically. So
domestically is doing well.
Speaker 2 (01:11:35):
What it cost to make uh see.
Speaker 1 (01:11:44):
Uh cray, let's see Craft. Maybe budget one hundred and
fifty million, so they made it.
Speaker 2 (01:12:01):
It's crazy when one hundred and fifty million sounds cheap
for a movie these days.
Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, Well, I mean you got to
think some of that. What he got Jason Muway, you've
got Jack Black. I mean, they got some names in there,
they got they got they got some names to us.
We got u let's see. Oh the rest of these guys, well,
(01:12:28):
Jennifer Coolidge, Sebastian Hanson, Amma Myers, Daniel Brooks. So I
mean still one hundred and fifty. Men, you've already made
five seventy that's what this is saying, uh, five seventy
already and it's still in theaters. So yeah, yeah, but
(01:12:50):
I mean, that's that's the success. Usually they say take
your uh what they say the budget wasn't double it
for marketing and all that stuff. Said three hundred million,
so you made five seventies so far. So that's that's
a hit. That's a straight up hit. Only part this year,
(01:13:12):
to be honest. Which the Centers movie they're saying is excellent.
I'm going to go watch it. It has gotten I
think it's the only movie ever that's gotten a ninety
nine percent to know what made a Meter movie? What Centers?
The vampire movie?
Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
Oh, the one with the one that looked like it
was in the Old West or something.
Speaker 1 (01:13:34):
Yeah, it's in Uh, it's nineteen thirties in the South.
Speaker 2 (01:13:37):
It looked cool. Yeah, that looked really good. It looked good.
Before I could do it was a vampire movie. I
wanted to see a movie about some black people hiding
out playing the blues. I said, I thought it was
a great movie.
Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Yeah, to make a meter dude, that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
Nothing gets that, nothing does. So I mean, where the fuck.
Speaker 2 (01:13:55):
Can I Where the fuck can I watch the latest Venom?
Speaker 1 (01:14:00):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:14:03):
Is it on?
Speaker 1 (01:14:06):
Is it on Netflix or Prime Prime? What did I
watch your day I watched Craving the Hunter. That I
watched Craving the Hunter, Huh.
Speaker 2 (01:14:19):
Was that any goodding?
Speaker 1 (01:14:22):
It was a movie, I mean it was. I mean,
for what it was, it was him killing some folks.
And because because Sony don't know what he's doing with
the villains, like they try to make them anti heroes.
(01:14:42):
It's opposed to just like going all in on them
being you know, villains like you know, like the movie
The Penguin or the TV show The Penguin. So it's like, yeah,
I don't know, it's kind of weird, uh h, because
he's not a good guy, but technically he is a
(01:15:03):
good guy, say of Venom Last Dances own Netflix apparently
right now that's where I thought i'd seen it, So
that's showing it on that. So yeah, but this but
the Senters movie, I gotta go check it out. I
(01:15:25):
was like, I was like, man Tomato meter or ninety
nine percent. Everybody that I've seen talk about it, and
I've seen various people, like I've seen some people who
are kind of weird with their tastes, and I've seen
some people who I think they would be down their alley.
And everybody's got a pretty similar approach to the movie
(01:15:46):
that Miss fucking Badass. So I'm like, not only that
it's bad asses, but it's actually creating a world aspect
as well. I think they said there's two end credit
scenes on this field, so I'm gonna go check it out.
I'm definitely gonna go check that out before we get
(01:16:07):
out of here. We just got to which we touched
on it a little bit earlier. Uh, trade war endgame.
Who do you believe comes out on top or a
ka folds first, China or the USA.
Speaker 2 (01:16:33):
That's a good question. They to some degree have us
over a barrel, and I think we have them over
a different barrel, and so right, I think that's kind
of how it goes. They are very self sufficient as
a country. Their economy is pretty big. They have trade
with every other country. Can they afford to lose us.
(01:16:56):
Probably not. But at the same time, we can't afford
to lose them. We're so economically entrenched with China. The
idea of US having a trade war with them is
somewhat ridiculous. What Trump honestly is I think attempting to
do is to get all tariffs eliminated by everybody. I
think that's the whole point. Everybody who comes to him
and says we want a deal. It's no teriff for
(01:17:18):
no tariff, that in and of itself, in theory, theoretically
should bring down prices across the board if there were
no tariffs on anything. But we all know what corporations
do when they get a little bit of rope, they
hang you with it, right, And so if the tariffs
went away and corporations could sell things for cheaper, will
(01:17:41):
they Fuck no, they won't. The problem is we don't
really have a fair We don't have a free trade,
a free market. I mean, our free market is not
really that free. It's this price fixing across the board.
You're not allowed to get with your competitor and fixed prices,
but you can if you see your competitor at a
certain price, you can match it, right, and therefore you
(01:18:01):
don't need to conspire to price fix. So that's a problem. Ultimately,
I don't Here's what, Here's all I give a fuck
about in the world. I don't want to pay taxes ever,
so if they can make up the two point six
trillion through other means, please go right ahead. So Trump
keeps selling these gold cards I keep seeing how they
(01:18:23):
keeps selling the fucking five trillion dollars worth of gold
cards overnight, you know, like, what's up with the gold card?
I like the gold card. Keep selling the gold card.
Pay off our debt and fucking make it so I
don't have to pay taxes. Other than that, I don't care,
not that I pay taxes now, but I don't want
to go to jail for not paying taxes.
Speaker 1 (01:18:44):
It's get it's it's the premise is the premise. You know,
there's a there's a lot of people quarters out there saying,
uh what trying to just sell to somebody else. I
was like, don't you think they're already selling to other people?
I mean it's like, yeah, like people are acting like
they're not selling to other people in like the EU
and these other places, like oh man, thank god, now
(01:19:05):
we can finally get some of that China market. You
know what I'm saying. It's like now they've been selling
to them as well. Like so what they say, we
were like a fifth of their GDP or whatever was it,
over five hundred billion comes from consumers in the US.
(01:19:26):
So I mean, you start talking about taking a hit
on that, and I've heard some other interest in things
that people have talked about as far as with their
actual economy, because the reason they're so big on exporters
is because the people in their country don't really spend money,
you know, it's not really their thing. Also, they've got
(01:19:49):
like the ghost cities, they got a real estate crisis.
It's about to happen, and so losing the USA, you
can't just go and say, hey, austraight you y'all want
to buy five stuff? I mean, I mean if you
ain't gotten the money, I mean, I can't guy to shit. Yeah,
(01:20:13):
I mean, that's it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:14):
But the Chinese, I think, are very proud people. They're
very stubborn by our standards. And I don't think they'll
fold for any reason just because they don't have to.
Speaker 1 (01:20:27):
Okay, okay, So you think they'll continue into perpetuity even
if it destroys their people.
Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
Well, I don't think it'll destroy them, not like not
like we think it will. I think that. Well, here's
another thing to consider. He put the big tariffs on,
but then he exempted like micro chips and fucking electronics
or whatever the fuck else. He exempted the most important stuff,
the stuff that's in the computer is that everybody needs, right,
So the whole thing is just charades. You know, it's
all bullshit. We economically need each other. The idea that
(01:20:57):
this is going to persist for too long is kind
of ridiculous to me.
Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Mm hm oh no, Christ, Christ, you're not negative, uh,
Chris said, The problem is we don't have a free society.
You'll know, would be free from taxes. Unfortunately.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
Well, the thing is, there's a thing called jury nullification.
It's when they can't get a jury to convict you
because of circumstances, right information, that's out right. So Trump,
by telling us the government's been ripping us off our
entire lives, just nullified every fucking jury who would ever
(01:21:34):
convict you of any tax crime. How to fuck you
gonna expect me to pay taxes? When the president himself
just told me that the government's been ripping me off forever?
How the fuck are you gonna put how are you
gonna put me on trial for not paying my couple
grand a year in taxes? When the fucking president said,
we've been getting scammed by our own government, Give me
a fucking break. It's just nobody's going nobody's getting convicted.
(01:21:56):
Of any ir S shit period period. It's if they can't,
how the fuck are they gonna do that? I don't like.
I said, you know, all you gotta do is go
in there and if you get a liberal jury. Say
you think I'm gonna give money to Trump? Fuck no, Right,
if they're Trump people, Biden screwed us, I'm gonna give
him any money because Biden screwed us. Right, So you
can flick, you can pick whatever side you want.
Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
Oh, you can flick. There's in no way, hell I
get money to Trump. It's like, you know what, He's right,
I can see that going. It be perfect. That's a
perfect defeat. Oh man, that's great. Hey, look well that God.
I can't remember this guy's name, but they're saying that
(01:22:39):
he uh, he predicted the dot com bubble two thousand
and eight crisis, has some crisis, a whole bunch of shit,
And from what he says, he's like, within the next
twenty years, she had to be so cheap that it
(01:23:00):
won't matter, like you won't work because she had to
be so cheap, because robots would be doing everything.
Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
That's I don't agree with that.
Speaker 1 (01:23:07):
That's what that's what. That's the premise of what he see.
Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
So the one thing economically that I'm looking forward to
in the very near, very near future this year, starting
with COVID, when everyone was locked in and all the
remote work it's spurred and all the money they gave out,
it had developers building massive amounts of housing, massive amounts
of apartment complexes. And then what happened. The economy pulls back.
(01:23:37):
Everything gets too expensive, and now we're looking at a
fucking housing bubble that makes two thousand and eight look
like fucking nothing at all. Like two thousand and eight
is a bullip compared to what we're experiencing now. There
are some places where housing values are expected to fall
fifty percent, like Las Vegas is at the top of
(01:23:59):
the fucking list. I just saw a whole thing on this.
In Las Vegas. As of a couple weeks ago, there
were eleven new apartment complexes still being built that were
going to hit the market this year, eleven brand new
apartment complexes. The market in Vegas has already tanked. You
can go get an apartment in Vegas for like six
hundred bucks a month. I mean it's in the hood
(01:24:20):
and it's in the ghetto, but it's still you can
get an apartment for six hundred bucks. That was like,
that was like what it was when I first moved
there in twenty seventeen. By the time I left in
twenty twenty, the cheapest apartment I could find was like
eleven or twelve hundred. That is no longer the case
at all. Now I can go get an apartment there
for like under nine hundred bucks, a decent apartment for
about nine hundred bucks. And they have eleven apartment complexes
(01:24:41):
that are still going to be hitting the market this year.
This is a disaster. This is a fucking disaster. The
number of houses for sale in Vegas went from seventy
five and went from forty five hundred now it's at
seventy five hundred in a year. In one year, three
thousand houses came on the market. This is happening all
(01:25:02):
across the country. It's happening worse in Florida. It's this
is gonna this. Once that actually pops and the housing
starts to crash, that's gonna domino effect the whole economy.
Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
So right, I mean, that was the domino effect last time.
I mean that, I mean that was it to a teh.
So I mean, could you swoop in and get you, uh,
get you a decent property on a little bit cheaper scale.
There's potential we have to see. And then also depends
(01:25:37):
on where you're at for some of these markets, So
in whatever area you're at, it's this might not come
to fruition because of you know, the supply demand aspect,
depending on what's what's actually available. I know, I know here.
I think they're building and I'm not in a big,
(01:25:59):
big city, but it is a college town, so I
think I think normally there's like a one hundred I
think this says like one hundred and twenty thousand people
that live here, and then when students come in and
we get like to one sixty one seventy. But I
(01:26:20):
know they're building two new apartment complexes, and they're building
townhouses all over the place. There's a there's a place
that built. I think it's either forty or fifty new
townhouses across town. They can't sell them, like nobody's buying
like they they can't sell them. They've been on the
market for over a year. I might need to call
(01:26:43):
them up. It's like, hey man, look I give you,
I give you one fifty. They got them for like
one ninety six. Man, I give one fifty. Man, you
need to I know, you need to come off of it.
You've been hurt, so I mean, help me help you.
You know, you come with a low ball all it's
(01:27:03):
like I can't take that. It's okay, Well just sit
on for a while, you know what I'm saying. I'm
pretty sure somebody come around and want to jump on that. Uh,
but I mean that's how the stuff goze, and and
so I guess we'll see, we'll see depending on the area.
I don't know, are you seeing the same kind of
trendsient in the area that you're in? Really not?
Speaker 2 (01:27:26):
Really?
Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
Aren't you? Aren't you near at college?
Speaker 2 (01:27:29):
Yeah? Oh, this whole town is college town.
Speaker 1 (01:27:32):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:27:32):
I learned that being old doesn't benefit you being in
a college town. And honestly, all these college girls are
so med. It's fucking unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
MHM said the mid.
Speaker 2 (01:27:49):
Med would be on a good day. I'm telling you.
They're all like fives, which is the low end of
medt you in below?
Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
What five? Five's in below?
Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
Come on, man, they're all the same. There's they're like skinny,
but not shapely, skinny, and they got blue hair. There's
a lot of blue hair as motherfucker around here. I'm
not even joking.
Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Nose ring bull ringing, then you.
Speaker 2 (01:28:16):
Got, yep, some of those. Although I went to the
bank the other day and there was a very attractive
teller with a big, fat engagement ring on who had
a nose ring. But she was all sophisticated dress, suit
and everything, and then she had a nose ring and
it was weird.
Speaker 1 (01:28:30):
Mm hm hmmm. Yeah, I don't I don't get the
nose ring thing. It's weird to me. It's like like
your face was looking good and then you put that
nose ring in, and it's just something that's weird about it.
If you took that nose ring out, you know, you
look a whole lot better. Right, I'm just saying, I
(01:28:53):
know you're trying to have a statement piece. Everybody wants
their statement piece, But how about we skip this statement
peace and let's stick to something, you know, and we
and we can both put our arms around, you know,
saying caress and hold on to uh, but you know, uh,
let's see. Chris up here said, it kind of reminds
me of what transpired in Detroit and uh and other
cities alike. Look at how populationships has been manipulated. Conveying
(01:29:18):
his perfect example. Politicians intentionally went to atalitarian and people
fled to the Red States, which is right. A lot
of people were fleeing, fleeing to Florida, so that real
estate was on fire. But now that things have even
back out, now you've built too much because you thought
you were gonna continue, Uh that same trend of people
(01:29:39):
fleeing to your state. Uh so now you what they
called it over leveraged. Yeah, so now you're overleveraged. Sonaw,
you just got ship chilling, which usually in the case
uh you used to people are looking looking the crib
to stay in. So we'll see how the real estate
stuff goes. We see how this trade war goes. Uh.
(01:30:00):
I think we're currently still at the one hundred and
forty five percent tariffs. From what I understand, people are
saying that people were sending shipments back, cargo ships were
going back and all kinds of stuff. That's why, Yeah,
they were they're piling the stuff back up at China.
It's just sitting there chilling. So they need to get
rid of the shit and the folks out there are saying, oh,
(01:30:21):
they just sell to somebody else. It's like, but the hooday,
I mean they already buying. I mean you asking somebody
to buy more what money they ain't got, which is
gonna be difficult, you know what I'm saying. Now, I know,
and look, I don't know about everywhere else, but America
is the deck capital of the world. All right. We
(01:30:44):
love putting stuff on buy now, pay later. Okay. They
even had the movie at the Door Dash. That's how
much in love we are with it. You know what
I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
I thought, all the credit card you're making a whole
big deal about this buying now pay leadership. I'm like,
this is a credit card.
Speaker 1 (01:31:01):
Well now this is the four easy stuff. Yeah, but
I mean, damn man, I mean it's just like it's okay.
So for people who were scared of credit cards, but
then they see that it's almost like giving you a
backdoor way of overspending. Let's just say that, oh, well
that's okay, I just got four easy payments. Before you
(01:31:23):
know it, you've got you know, seventy things on four
easy payments, and you're like, oh shit, I ain't got
the money. To pay all this. That's what kind of
ends up happening. But I don't know how they're gonna
come and get the burger came back that you ate
a month ago. You know what I'm saying. I mean,
it's like, you know you didn't pay for that burger
king right, It's like I didn't ate it and ship
(01:31:44):
it out, dog. I mean, it's gone. So guys, we
appreciate y'all for being with us today on this episode
Beyond the Quee, Corey Hughes dot Org, Buddyhistory Dot Substack
the Best Story and on the Internet. Make sure you
subscribe to that. Get his book if you ain't got
(01:32:04):
it yet, Warner from History. Okay, and we'll see y'all
next week on Beyond the Cube, and make sure you're
checking out. Me and writer Lee are doing showtime with
the Cube. As far as the Last of Us, Corey
didn't like the Last of Us, so me and writer
he's not a fan, which is okay. So me and
(01:32:26):
writer have a recorded our first episode that will that's
also on podcast platforms as well. I know I sit
in that episode to you you got it out? Yeah okay, yeah, yeah, yeah,
So that'll be on podcast platforms as well if you
want to listen to it that way. So so yeah,
we appreciate everybody for being with us. From Boys Keep
for twenty Powerform, Corey he Cat y'all next week on
(01:32:46):
Beyond Cube peace Out