Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
In these bleak days, humanity is at a breaking point.
Economies are tanking, the woke mob is canceling everything, and
the little guy who's just trying to run a small
business is getting screwed from both ends. But not all
is lost. Amidst the chaos, two men offer up their
(00:26):
voices in the darkness, dropping two thousand pounds laser guided
truth bombs on today's lunacy, introducing the Sirens of Sanity
David Pridham and l Bradley Sheef.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
Hazy Shades of Winter the Great Bengals Band. Interesting story.
My youngest son obsessed for a period of time with
walk like an Egyptian, also sung by the Bengals, right, and.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
So he loved that.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
He'd get in the car and he would do the
thing where he was doing the you know the where
they're doing the pyramid dance like the that he would
do it sort of like straight away, it look kind
of like the dinosaur dance. But for a period of
time he loved that song. He wanted that song. And
he likes what I whistle at the point of whistling.
And so meanwhile number one son, Noah, he likes we
(01:31):
have a worship song that he likes when we pick
him up from school.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
He wants this.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
Song every day when he's picked up for school. He
wants this worship song to be played Chris Tomlin no
relation to Lily, And so we play that song. And
then Noah got with of the walk like an Egyptian song.
And now he too insists on the Bengals rather than
(01:57):
the worship song. But when I jump into try to whistle,
he doesn't want any part of it. He says, no sing,
He's just.
Speaker 4 (02:05):
There for the studio recording. He doesn't want, you know,
any any artificial input. He just wants the Bengals as
they put it on wax. That's what he's saying, don't
screw with it.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
Yeah. But the odd part is he sings.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
Oh he does, Okay, Well, I see that's you know,
that's questionable right there where you're saying you can't sing,
but I can sing now? Is that the seol man
joining the singing or is he just there for the dancing.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
Oh, he's just he's just there doing his thing. He's
just there doing his thing. He I don't even think
he likes the song anymore. He's moved out to Pokemon.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
The game or the song.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Yeah, I don't know if there's a difference. It all
kind of Listen, you'll know one day when you have.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
I didn't know there was a Pokemon song.
Speaker 3 (02:51):
It all just kind of lends together at some point,
some point.
Speaker 4 (02:53):
You know, I can't. You probably can't, to your credit,
and but Jared might be able to. I don't understand
how those games work.
Speaker 3 (03:04):
It's kind of like gambling for kids. And there's good nice,
that's great.
Speaker 4 (03:09):
There's a story in the background, and you have powers
and some powers to feat other powers, and then you
get beat up and your cards stolen. So it's like
it's like like rock paper scissors, but with cards. So
are you telling me? Yeah, with some rules that are
open to interpretation. All right, well there you go, buddy.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
But anyway, back to the Bengals.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
So, as you know, Brad, at one point in time,
I was approached by a much younger Susanna Hoffs for
a you know, a little tryst a alliance.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
Yeah. Well that doesn't surprise me, buddy, She's always had
a type.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
No, so you know the lot of the side eyes,
but the side eyes were facing my direction.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
So anyway, that's it.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
But it's suck.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Everything comes full circle. What's up is down, what's down
is up, everything is should be down and up. Remember
that al Gore.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Gore sad, But I mean it's just it's things like
that that do you realize that Al Gore was very
nearly the president of the United States. Al Gore, Joe
Biden has in fact been the President of the United States. Now,
we talk about this all the time, and I don't
want to go back into it, but of all, there
(04:24):
are just hundreds of millions of people in this country,
and Al Gore was almost the president, and Joe Biden
was the president. It's crazy.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
And Tim Waltz was almost the vice president, although I
guess not really given that the results. Can you imagine that, I.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
Mean, yeah, I stop and think about that for a minute.
Kamala Harris and Tim Waltz the one two punch leading America.
That was that was potentially a thing we honestly contemplated
that as a country. It's crazy.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
I mean, she's running around now, I mean I think
she's hit hitting the bottle just the way it looks,
you know, some of the things she's saying, and you know,
it's it's unfortunate, I guess, but you know, it is
what it is.
Speaker 3 (05:13):
They'll be gone.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
I mean, you know they're as of the well, they're
gone now, Brad, as of this recording, they're gone.
Speaker 4 (05:20):
We're hopefully never to be heard of or from again.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Yeah, except on the reletive relative you know, the book
tours and then it's a twenty eight campaign and they'll
probably compete against one another for the Democratic.
Speaker 4 (05:33):
Along with the guy who's single handedly responsible for the
conflagration of the state of California.
Speaker 3 (05:39):
And we have we have to get to all that
I have.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
I can't tell you the number of d ms I've
got in my d M box where people a direct message?
Speaker 3 (05:51):
Right?
Speaker 4 (05:52):
Direct message?
Speaker 3 (05:53):
Is that right, Jared direct message? Yeah? Direct message? Oh,
how about that?
Speaker 2 (05:59):
Anyway, I've got a bunch of them from people on
the podcast right. Oh, and uh, they're they're wondering what
they should do. They're in California and you know they're
get out. I can tell you that, get whatever you can.
And so in some cases is not much left. No,
I mean, the insurers are pulled out because the state
regulated them into the ground and insurance companies are vile anyway.
(06:20):
But the state regulated them to the ground. And then
you got this the mayor who was in Ghana. You see,
the mayor was in Ghana during this all she knew
the Santa Ana wins were kicking up, right, and she
still went to Ghana.
Speaker 4 (06:34):
Why. I mean, Gonna is lovely. I've been there. But
what was she doing there?
Speaker 3 (06:38):
She was there for the inauguration of the president I believe.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Of Ghana. The mayor of Los Angeles.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
It's important, Okay, it's an important.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
So she was there that the city was burning, and
they have all the I mean, it's it's just all
it is the and it's a terrible tragedy, right, it's
a terrible thing. Oh yeah, all these people who have
to live through this, this I mean, yeah, I can't
even imagine. But it's just this, this liberal bastion. Right,
You've got the mayor, I mean, she ran this is
(07:08):
This is a congress woman who is just if you
look up ack in the dictionary, you'll you'll find this
woman's picture.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
She's total, total hack. Never had a job, you know, again,
the typical of KEVINUSM.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Never had a job. And so she's there. The first
thing she does, they take over the fire department. They
institute this DEI thing where you know, they have the
fire chief who who are one of them? One of
one of the people in charge there that did some
video and was asked, well, how is a woman And
again nothing against woman, but how's a woman going to
(07:42):
carry some two hundred pound man out of a fire?
Speaker 3 (07:45):
And this woman literally said.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
This is a video on the L A f D website,
one of their websites.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
The woman literally said, well.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
You know, if I'm a twittord pound man, I probably
shouldn't be in a fire.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
To begin with. Literally said that, literally said that.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
And so you got all this d I stuff going on.
I mean, why you got this mayor and Ghana And
then you got the reservoirs with with with tens of
millions of gallons of capacity empty during the high wind season,
which is apparently the high fire the wildfire season empty.
And then they're not clearing the brush because they're trying
to save the the platypus or whatever. They're not they're
(08:21):
redirecting the water into the Pacific to save the smelt.
They're I mean, they're they're you know, PG and E's
out there whoever they're you know, they're they're bankrupt. But
whoever's out there running the power lines they're trying to
clear brush, they won't let them them.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
I mean, it's just the craziest thing.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
And this is what you got people with, these these
houses that they couldn't get insurance for because the insurance
companies left the area because they were regulated into the ground.
Now have you know five ten million dollar homes that
are reduced to a pile of rubble that are not
going to yield much in terms of an insurance claim,
And even if it did, you can't rebuild shit because
(08:56):
you're in California and to get permits to build something's
gonna take year.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Is yeah.
Speaker 4 (09:01):
Well, I mean listen, if you had a five to
ten million dollar home and you couldn't get it insured,
you know, odds are you're okay, right, Like it's a
tragedy to lose your home. There's no making light of that.
There's no real coming back from that, right, I mean,
even if you rebuild this structure, I mean, the you know,
(09:21):
all the personal belongings and stuff. So I'm not making
light of that. But those folks are not the folks
I feel worse for. I feel bad for those folks.
But I feel, you know, I'm just irate on behalf
of the average man in LA. Right, someone who has
just you know, just an average home with an average lifestyle,
(09:44):
who can't get insurance. Now their house is gone, they
don't have the resources to try and rebuild, and they're
looking to their leadership. And their leadership is this mayor,
this particular you know, fire chief, and this governor, all
of of whom are personally responsible for what happened. Right.
(10:05):
I mean, my fervent hope is at the courts. And again,
you know, I'm sure the courts in California won't do it,
but maybe the federal courts will do it, although most
of the federal judges in California are just as liberal
as the rest of the leadership there. But to be
able to go no, no, no, you can't hide behind
the position. I don't want to sue the office of
the mayor. I want to sue the person who is
(10:27):
the mayor, right, I want personal jurisdiction over this person.
They are personally responsible for advocating, abdicating their responsibilities and duties, right,
and my life is ruined because of their policies. Now,
the first thing I would ask, if I were a
(10:47):
judge in that case, is I would say, well, did
you vote for him? Now? Of course it's a stupid question.
You're never going to find out. And we do secret
ballots in this country, and you shouldn't ask people, you know,
to air themselves, not like that. But I will say,
have you voted for Gavin Newsome? If you're an LA
resident and you voted for the governorship to go to
(11:09):
Gavin Newsom, the mayorship to go to this gal. If
you voted for that, then you know what, this is
the direct result of decisions you made. If you didn't,
then I mean, I just I don't even I don't
have words to describe how just incredibly irate you must
be about the situation you're in. And the only advice
(11:31):
I can give is get out. I don't see any
sign that it's going to get better anytime soon now.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
And you know the issue is with some of those
people that had five and ten million dollar houses, they
there are some laws in California that limit the tax
on family residences in certain areas, right so they keep
the taxes low so they're not so burdensome of the
people have to sell when they inherit a house to
(12:00):
it's just greatly appreciated in value. So a lot of
those houses in the Palisades, I understand, are people who
are middle class people who have inherited houses from their
parents and they have just greatly appreciated in value. And
that's their asset, right, that's their their nest egg, that's
their retirement. And because of the insurance problems, you know,
(12:20):
I mean, you basically get a piece of land in
a high probability wildfire zone that you can try to
sell to developers and who knows what's going to happen
with speculators and stuff like that. I mean, that's another
whole issue, but it's but that's what's happening. You have
a lot of middle class people who just lost their
(12:41):
entire retirement nest egg because that's that's what they were
counting on.
Speaker 4 (12:45):
Yeah, I mean it's just and again, fire happens, right,
and so you know to just say, oh, well, you
know that's the risk you take when you buy a home.
Your house might burn to the ground. That's true, but
you know, if it's caused by lightning and there's nothing
you can do about it. You know, if you live
in a well managed area for fire soil. Like, for instance,
(13:07):
where I live, fire management is the thing, right. I mean,
you live in the mountains, you have some advantage. Your
house is never going to flood. We don't have hurricanes,
we don't have tornadoes, right, we don't have hail. I mean,
well wait, we have hail, but it's not like you
get in the Midwest.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
We don't.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
We don't have that stuff. But fire is everything, right,
I mean, if this house is going to be destroyed
by a natural event, it will almost certainly be fire.
And so people take it incredibly seriously. Each individual takes
it seriously, and the government takes it incredibly seriously. I mean,
clearing the underbrush, they do controlled burns all the time,
(13:48):
you know, forestry management. I mean all of that is
a big deal. And wildfires still occur, but you know
they're oftentimes managed before any property damage. And when property
is damaged, then you just kind of have to shrug
and say, well, man, I mean, you know, we did
everything we could. But if you're in that situation California,
and not only did they not do everything they could,
(14:08):
they didn't do anything that they could. In fact, they
specifically said no, we're going to ratchet up the fire
danger on behalf of Perry the Platypus and Sammy the Smell, Right.
I mean you you cannot justify that. You cannot justify it,
(14:29):
and I don't know what the right answer is. I mean,
even if you know I allude to before, you could
suit people. But at the end of the day, even
if you sued in one and maybe you got some money,
your house is still burned to the ground, right, I
mean you've still lost you know, your wedding album, You've
still lost your children's artworks. Yeah, yeah, I mean if
(14:49):
you lost all that stuff is and it's all because
of these lunatics, these idiots. And guess who didn't lose
their house. The governor of California, the mayor of Los Angeles,
the fire chief. Those people didn't lose their out. The
gal I saw a video, the gal who's responsible for
making sure there's water in the reservoirs. There's a video
of her, as I'm sure there are videos of nearly
(15:10):
every elected official in California of them saying, no, my
number one goal is is DEI not. My number one
goal is the is the best management of the water
system or the reservoir system or ensuring you know, we
have the water resources necessary to live the life that
I want to live. Because she was asked that question,
you know, is management is your Basically she was asked
(15:32):
the question, is your job the most important thing? And
she said, no, no, no, the job is not the most
important thing. Making sure we get people in here, regardless
of their actual qualifications, who are different than the people
that were here, that's that's the number one goal. And
she's single handly responsible. She's the oversight of that. Particularly,
I forget, the name of the reservoir from which they
(15:55):
should have been able to draw water to fight the
fires was empty.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
There's nothing there.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
Yeah, that was her deal, right, And so I mean
her house didn't burn to the ground, right, I mean,
it's just it's incredible that that would happen in this
day and age, in a country like the United States,
but it did. And so for everybody, I mean, if
you're fortunate enough not to be living in the Los
(16:20):
Angeles area, it's too easy to say, well, you know,
I mean, that's unfortunate for them, But it didn't happen
to me. And I'm gonna move all my life. No, no
pay attention. This is what you get when you vote
for lunatics who don't care about actually doing their job.
They just care about these abstractions that are at the
(16:42):
end of the day meaningless, but that they will prioritize
over your health and safety and the health and safety
of your family. Voting matters, right, and it is your
fault that this happened if you voted for these people.
I mean Los Angeles. My entire extended family is from
(17:03):
California and from you know, San Francisco, south right, and
so that part of the world used to be incredibly
well run. There was a time with this would Reagan
have happened, Yeah, I mean there is a time there,
so it's not it's do not provide the excuse for
(17:24):
these folks like, oh, well, I mean sometimes you know,
these these strategies happen. No, no, no, there was a
time when this would not have happened in the state
of California, and that time has sadly come and gone
because of the leadership in the state of California. The
rest of America pay attention to that it could happen
(17:44):
anywhere when the leadership takes their eye off the ball,
when they don't care about their actual constituents. They care
about some abstract political philosophy.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
This is what happens, you know what, you know what's
interesting the I mean, California was a Republican state until
a generation ago. I think you're right, and you know
it was well run, but it's it is just so
tragic what's happened. And you know, you don't want to
(18:14):
say that chickens have come home to roost, but the
chickens have come home. This is just like it's devastating,
and you've got all these people who are just burned out.
You have incompetent leadership that has no clue what to
what to do. And you know, the guy who ran
from Ayor against this hack is this developer Caruso, who
(18:35):
like this is one of the things he ran on.
One of the things he ran on was this was
this wildfire prevention deal he ran for the mayor of
La He lost to this woman. And then he's a
guy who developed all these high uh end shopping centers.
All of his shopping centers are fine. You know why
because he hired private firefighters. Imagine that, imagine that's even
(18:58):
a thing. I heard private firefighters to go out and
prevent the fires from spreading his properties, and without without exception,
he was successful. And he would have been the mayor
and this would you know, this just wouldn't have happened
to this extent. And and you know, and and the
governor is just there's something wrong with that dude, because
he is, you know, already talking about land speculating like
(19:21):
in Maui and rezone it. And it's just you imagine
having your house destroyed because of the incompetence of these morons,
and then have the governor come on talking about how
you know they're gonna have to they're gonna have to
restrict the development of where you just had your frickin' home,
so you may not be able to rebuild.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
I mean, you forget suing him. You want to go
down there with a baseball bat.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
Well, he doesn't care. I mean that, you know that.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
That's it.
Speaker 4 (19:45):
I mean, and again it is what it is in California.
I mean, it has been progressing in this direction for years.
And as my old man is famous for saying, you know,
for any problem them, however long it took to screw
it up, that's how long it's gonna take to fix it, right,
like you know. I mean, if it's I it's a
(20:06):
problem that happened five minutes ago, good for you. You might
be able to fix it in five minutes. But if
it took twenty years to get where you are, it's
gonna take twenty years to unwind it.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
Then.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
Unfortunately, that's the case in California. So I mean, it
just is what it is there. But the important thing
for the for the rest of us who don't have
to live in California is hey, if you think, oh, well,
that's just the way California is, it didn't used to
be that way, right, It's not mandatory. The California is
run by idiots, and it.
Speaker 3 (20:32):
Is Nixon, Dick Nixon, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (20:34):
Nixon, Reagan. I mean, and it is it is possible
that even if you live in a state and you're
very fortunate, if you do where you look at and
you go, man, are theyship's actually pretty good? Like I
think these people get it. It's not mandatory that it
remained that way. Right. If you vote for idiots, this
is what you'll get. So don't do that. Go to
school on what happened in California. It's just heartbreak and
(20:57):
I said, that's where my family's from. I spent a
ton of time. I spent some of my growing up
years there. It's a beautiful state, and it has just
been ruined by the fact that folks put in place
morons and lunatics and self focused just a holes run
(21:18):
in the place, and this is what you get. And
then to your point, now you get Gavin Newsom, who,
if he had a lick of humanity, would be just saying, man,
you know, maybe mistakes or maybe they weren't. I mean,
even if he had a lick of humanity, he's not
gonna have any humility and he's not gonna he's not
gonna be willing to take responsibility because that's just not
who the guy is. But if you just had a
(21:40):
lick of humanity, he'd be saying, hey, we're going to
focus on our people. We're gonna focus on taking care
of those who have suffered this loss. But he's not.
He doesn't care, he doesn't care about you. He's just saying, yeah,
I mean, well, you know, we got a chance here
to continue my political philosophy, which prioritizes fish over humans.
And so yeah, I mean the fabulous smelt and that's
(22:02):
what he's gonna do. He's just gonna say, I'm sorry,
he can't build your house here anymore, because I'd like
for the smelt to be able to move in. What
kind of a house does the smelt live in, by
the way, I mean, if you're building a smelled house,
what does it look like?
Speaker 3 (22:14):
Probably like the reservoir. But they can't live there because
that's dry as about because there's no water in it. Yeah,
this dry.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
You know, it's interesting. Trump could use this opportunity because La.
You know, La is hosting the Olympics next year?
Speaker 3 (22:26):
Is it next year? Yeah, twenty six, the Olympics. You
love the Olympics, don't you.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
I do like the Olympics. I mean the opening ceremonies
I could do without, but the competition is great.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
I mean, you love that French thing, right when they
made fun of the Last Supper, they mocked it with
a bunch of crust.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
But you know that is the French. I mean of
the French ever not been that way, right, Unlike California
that once was a reasonable rational place, France has always
been France.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
But any in any event that that's so, Trump could
do this whole Marshall plan for California, really do it,
you know, and then part part of that is use
the carrot and stick approach and force them into compliance
with other you know, states like Florida in terms of
some of their policies and their regulations.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
I mean that that's that's the time.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
Look, only Nixon could go to China's then's the true
j did go there, I think, but anyway, he went
there in spirit after he killed Kennedy chi Ching there
it is, there's the references. But you know what else
is interesting, like Trump already hasn't even taken it. Well,
as of this recording, he has taken office, but but
(23:34):
he get the hostages released in the Middle East without
even having taken office.
Speaker 4 (23:40):
Well, a very reminiscent of Reagan after the Desert Won
debacle under Carter right being held by Iran right, I mean,
before Reagan even got sworn in, Iron was like, uh
here here, here's all your people. Please don't come over
here and kill us all.
Speaker 3 (23:55):
So you know, you know what's interesting is like Jesus,
Mary and Joe I.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
I I remember four eight years ago when you had
that Flynn talking to the Russian foreign minister and everyone
was talking about the Logan Act, remember.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
That, right, Yeah, yeah, no one act until that time.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
So and and then you can't do this still and
so in this case you got Trump saying, you know,
they better release those hostages before I'm president.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
All hell's going to break loose. And then you have.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Then you have, you know, the whole this whole negotiation
go on. And Trump sends his Middle East envoy who's
going back and forth and who actually went to Tel
Aviv and told then, Yahoo, you need to take this deal.
This isn't you need to take this deal because Trump
is taking office in a couple of days, and he
(24:48):
is telling you because you're never going to get a
better deal than this, and and you know who took it,
and there was all Trump and then and then that
just just Biden is so horrible. I mean, the final
his final speech in the Old Office was just disgusting.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
I mean it was it was it was talking about
money and politics.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
When he's become a millionaire on a senator's salary, I
don't know how that happens. But and then he was
asked about Trump's contribution to the piece uh this piece
of cord or whatever and he said, He's like, is
that a joke?
Speaker 3 (25:20):
Is that a joke? I mean, just and Trump's envoy
was going back and forth. He's the one that.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Drove the deal, drove the deal and uh and but
it's just like it's just the good news is this time.
I think the Trump people know what they're getting into,
so it seems like they get better people involved. They're
going to be I think a lot of confirmations the
day he takes office, so it's not gonna be this
power vacuum where you have a bunch of these Obama
people sitting around. And plus Brad plus Today's New York Post,
(25:49):
I know, the paper of record in your home as
well as mine. It was announced that Michelle Obama is
staying away from the Trump inauguration because Barack Obama is
now dating Jennifer Aniston all so known as Jennifer Maniston
by some people who don't like her looks.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
So I was, you know, sort of rolling along with you.
You know, I'm sitting forward in my chair discussing. I'm like, okay,
you know, yes, And then then you mentioned Michelle Obama
and I had read somewhere someone told me that she's
not going to go to Trump's inauguration. Who cares? Right?
I mean, who cares? So I thought, you know you
were going to kind of go there and say blah blah,
(26:26):
but you didn't, buddy, So there is is there any
truth to that Barack Obama is having an affair with
Jennifer Anasa aside the Manison thing, which is funny, I've
not heard that before.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
But Madison, what well, I listen, this is just what
I've heard.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
But I mean, you know, Michelle Obama didn't show up
at the funeral for Jimmy Carter, God rest his soul
on too soon, and.
Speaker 3 (26:52):
Yeah, yeah for that.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
And then she's now announced it because she was on
an extended vacation Hawaii.
Speaker 3 (26:59):
It must be ice, right, it must be nice.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
And then and then she and then she's down there,
she's announced she's not going to the inauguration, and there
is a there is a conversation afoot that says that
he president Barack Obama is actually dating Jennifer Maniston.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
Hmm. I didn't know. I didn't know that that's something
you did.
Speaker 2 (27:22):
But apparently, you know, the the upper one percent or
one of the hoity toity class, that's what they do,
so they do.
Speaker 4 (27:30):
It's it's just yeah, I can tell you that the
lovely and talented missus Christis Chief would have a thing
or two to say if I proposed dating Jennifer Manis, Well, anyone,
how do you think that way? He just called her up,
kind of like used to do in high school, a
little bit shyly, you know, kind of doing a bad
(27:50):
job of beating around the bush and trying to make
small talk before you finally get the balls to go, Hey,
you want to go see a movie?
Speaker 3 (27:58):
I mean, The Orange Julius This?
Speaker 4 (28:00):
Yeah, I mean, is that you think that's how that went?
Speaker 3 (28:03):
Strawberry Records and tapes?
Speaker 4 (28:04):
Maybe we'll go, Yeah, some records.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
I imagine probably not. I imagine it was probably more of
some sort of moondoggle where he was getting a donation
for his foundation.
Speaker 3 (28:15):
But god bless.
Speaker 4 (28:17):
Euphemism for something, Jeffer Aniston gave him a you know,
a little donation for his foundation.
Speaker 3 (28:26):
Little in kind donation in kind some you're not going
to show up on the Federal Report forum there at
the Federal Election Commission, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (28:37):
Anyway, he's not running for anything. Brad he's think he's
he's barred by the constitution, he can't run.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
What else is going on?
Speaker 2 (28:45):
So there's a bunch of interesting things in the in
sort of the criminal justice thing that I think our
our listeners need to keep an eye on.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
Have you heard of the Haggler.
Speaker 4 (28:58):
I've heard of marvelous Marvin Act one.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Of the great prize fighters of all time. Goody and
Pat Petronelli I think trained him.
Speaker 4 (29:09):
I believe you're right, buddy. I would not have come
up with that on my own, but I believe you're right.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
It's from Brockton, where also Rocky Marciano was from Rocky Marciano.
Speaker 4 (29:17):
Rocky Marciano.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Yeah, but so so Hagler was a great fighter and
then hearns from round one is just absolutely terrific.
Speaker 3 (29:24):
But you know, you remember the old Batman.
Speaker 2 (29:27):
I do, so they you know, you had the the Riddler,
the Joker, the Penguin, the Podiatrist, all those guys that
you know, mister Clean, mister Freeze whatever, mister Clean is
some very different but so so now you know, and
you had that and that was like iconic, right, you
(29:48):
had Caesar Romero is the Joker. Yes, yeah, Latin lover
Caesar Romero. He was the joker, and then you had Burgess.
Meredith was the penguin also played he trained Rocky. So
there's you know, there's a link to the Petronelles killed
by by clupper Lang.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
Right.
Speaker 4 (30:06):
Yeah, well, I mean it's just had a heart attack,
I think because Rocky was being such a puss.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Anyway, So in New York City, now, you know, you
have these new rounds of crime.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
You know, they have these people that now.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
Go around and they're they're the thing is they just
go and they punch people or they'll give you like
a what's it called stone cold stunner. They just go
up to people and randomly, uh, just stun them.
Speaker 4 (30:34):
Yeah, makes a perfect Meanwhile, the governor of the state
is forcing you into the subway because she's taxing no
vehicles around driving Manhattan, so she's just sending you down
there with these Somebody sent me a video the other day,
some gal who was not like. To look at her,
you would not have said she's crazy. Right, Like oftentimes
(30:54):
you get homeless folks or whatever, and you look at them, Okay,
that person I need to stay away from. Just to
look at this person, you would not have said that
she was reasonably dressed, and she took and again, if
your children are listening to this, it's your muff time.
A dildo with a suction cup on the end of it,
(31:14):
stuck it to the window of the subway and just
started going down on it in front of God and everybody,
just and you know, some random human being was like
huh and took a video of it. And the capture
of the video was not like, can you believe this?
The capture of the video was like, Yeah, this is
(31:35):
what the subway is like. This is what the current
mayor and governor of the City of New York and
State of New York, respectively. This is what they're trying
to force us all to be a part of by
taxing our ability to safely drive our own vehicle to work, Right,
we have to get on the train with these people.
Speaker 3 (31:56):
So yeah, if you don't get pushed in front of
the train, happens to knife, right, I mean, you know, nice.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
Yeah, But anyway, they have a new criminal in New
York called the Haggler after midnight. The Haggler after midnight,
and the Haggler apparently is only available after midnight, although
I suppose he's got a day job or something. Yeah,
it's probably a clerk at the d m V. And
he will he will haggle with his victims. He'll hold
(32:26):
a knife to them and haggle with them about what
it is that he's going to steal from them. Right,
the haggler, it's a m O bra, it's a m O.
Then he rides off on a scooter.
Speaker 3 (32:38):
Apparently.
Speaker 4 (32:40):
Motorized scooter.
Speaker 3 (32:42):
I believe it's a motorized Believe it's a motorized scooter.
Believe me. He's not going to scoot away. And yeah,
I believe it's a motorized fashion.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
And he'll be basically say what are you willing to
give up? And then they'll give him something. They'll say no,
I want that, and then they'll say no, I want this.
And he hasn't killed anyone yet, but he, you know,
he and listen, it's it's entrepreneurial, I guess it is.
Speaker 4 (33:04):
And negotiating is always good form, right, I mean it's
good form just socially. I mean not to just say
abruptly say give me that, but to say, okay, well
let's you know, let's discuss what I'm going to steal
from you what it is that you have and possessed
that I'm going that I don't deserve and have not earned.
But I'm just going to take. Let let's talk about that.
(33:25):
So that's a little more polite way to go about it. Plus,
if the person opposite you is not a good negotiator,
and frankly, you know, as an aside, even if someone
had a tendency to be a good negotiator, once you
put a knife in their face, you know, the skill
set drops a little bit there. You know, you might
find out they have something that they shouldn't have told
you about. Right, So, if you're looking at them and
(33:46):
they seem to have a nice watch, maybe a pen
in their pocket, you say, well, okay, you know what
we why don't you give me that pen? And they say, well, no, no, no,
I like the pen. I'd rather give you the watch.
You say, all right, well, you know, take the watch
and you know, perhaps your wallet And they say, no, no, no,
I don't want to give you my wallet, but I'll
give you this. You know this very nice. I don't
(34:07):
know whatever that I had in my pocket that you
didn't know about. See, they shouldn't have given that up
in the negotiation. Right, the guy would have never found
out about it was in their pocket. But in the
you know, in the in the heat of the moment,
they might give up the fact that they possessed something
you didn't know about. So the negotiation technique is solid.
That's a solid technique. Now someone should hit this guy
(34:27):
in the head of the lead pipe, let's be honest.
But the negotiating is is a good technique.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
Yeah, and you can look at them.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
You can say, look, I got some scuffed shoes here,
I got a couple of four leaf clovers. Oh, and
I've got the Hope diamond. Would you like the Hope diamond?
Do you want the Hope diamond?
Speaker 3 (34:43):
Yeah? That that type of thing.
Speaker 4 (34:45):
Yeah, no, that's exactly right.
Speaker 3 (34:46):
Finally, Brad, have you heard of Nathan Williams, the lawyer.
Speaker 4 (34:51):
Nate Williams.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
Yeah, no relation to but Nate Well, yeah, lawyer in California.
Speaker 3 (34:58):
I'm in Florida, and I don't know if he's in
the intellectual property game.
Speaker 2 (35:05):
He does have some clients in uh what we call
the pokey ah, the clink.
Speaker 4 (35:11):
The clink, the slammer, the big house.
Speaker 3 (35:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
Unfortunately, and then this guy, like this guy is one
of the time. He's like the heavy hitter Rob Levine.
Here in Rhode Island. You got you have your I'm
sure version of that of the billboards and the Resimini's
the power for all those guys.
Speaker 4 (35:26):
I guess our guy out here, Frank, the strong arm
of the law. Frank.
Speaker 2 (35:31):
We get the heavy hitter Rob Levine. He's like four
foot two. It's great. He's a leprechaunt. And so this guy,
you know, and and listen, lawyers are supposed to there
there's an ethical code and you provide certain services for
for you know, there's ethical you know, standards that you
have to stop. And apparently this lawyer took it a
(35:53):
bit too far. Nathan Williams. He would and you know,
all lawyers they have to go and these are not
conjugal visits, Brad, but they would have to go to
the pokey to the clink and visit their clients and
provide their clients.
Speaker 3 (36:07):
With legal documents from a court of.
Speaker 2 (36:09):
Law, ritz courts and so forth, various Kopius Sundry Adams.
But apparently Nathan Williams was enhancing his fee. So whereas
a typical uh, you know, courthouse lawyer in some some
po dunk Town. He's going to get like two hundred
and fifty dollars an hour, and Nathan was getting about
(36:31):
a thousand dollars an hour. And the reason he was
brad is because he was soaking the legal documents in
wild synthetic marijuana known as K two, and he was
bringing it to the inmates so they could get stoned
in jail.
Speaker 4 (36:44):
Aha.
Speaker 3 (36:45):
Again a good business plan.
Speaker 4 (36:46):
Yeah. Again, he's much like the haggler. He's got a
plan and he's implementing it. So what do you do?
You roll up the legal documents, smoke it.
Speaker 3 (36:55):
I guess I have no idea. I have no idea.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
All right, only a bunch of his clients overdose because
he misjudged the amount of the synthetic marijuana.
Speaker 4 (37:06):
That he may you dumbass, Yeah, but.
Speaker 2 (37:09):
You know what, the novel novel not a bad I
mean that's something you can tell the haggler. You say, look,
I got these legal documents here. If it soaked in
K two, you take those, take the hope diamond.
Speaker 4 (37:19):
The legal documents, and Haglers he goes, what do I
want legal documents? Aha?
Speaker 3 (37:24):
What do you want here?
Speaker 2 (37:26):
Get a load of this at you roll this up
and smoke it. Yeah, so that's that's it. I mean,
I listen though, But again, entrepreneur, you can't fault him
for that. Although I think he's going away for a
long time now.
Speaker 4 (37:38):
It was going to bring him the K two soaked
legal documents.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
Probably his wife.
Speaker 2 (37:42):
Could those are those would be conjugal visits, yes, could be,
could be.
Speaker 4 (37:48):
Well, buddy, I you know again, we we we we
did it. We you know, sort of made it clear
that voting is important, otherwise you might wind up in,
you know, a version of a Los Angeles conflagration. We
unmasked Obama's dalliance with Jennifer Maniston, and now here we
(38:08):
are with marijuana soaked legal documents, which, frankly, if you're
running any sort of you know, high end luxury podcast
as as you and I are obviously doing, that's where
you put a.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
Pinion like a house in the house in the Palisades.
You know what was interesting. I saw this one of
those houses in the Palisades. This is terrible, but it
survived the It survived the fires and then again rammed
by a mud slide.
Speaker 3 (38:38):
Does terrible?
Speaker 4 (38:39):
Almost feel like gods to tell them trying to set
someone's trying to deliver a message to the good folks
in California that.
Speaker 3 (38:48):
Yeah, buddy, well, I mean, you know, right and half
anyway that is they have it.
Speaker 4 (38:54):
Well, we'll do it again next week if the world survives,
and by the time you're listening to this, you'll know,
if the world survives the inauguration, then we'll be right
back here the same time and the same channel next
week on IP frequently.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
This has been IP frequently, once again clearing a forest
of lies with the machete of truth.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
You're welcome.