Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
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(00:22):
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Happy streaming.
Speaker 5 (02:03):
Oh but Hitler, Am I right?
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (02:06):
Yeah, I've been pretty committed to thinking we're right about that.
Speaker 7 (02:10):
Every single one of his Nazi supporters must be so
happy with themselves today, Yeah, especially.
Speaker 5 (02:16):
As Jewish supporters. But I've been wondering do.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
You think all of his supporters are actual Nazis.
Speaker 7 (02:23):
Yeah, Like, how wouldn't they be?
Speaker 6 (02:26):
I don't know, they'd just be like over half of
Americans being Nazis.
Speaker 5 (02:31):
That's a lot.
Speaker 7 (02:32):
It's Trump, so sounds about right, does it.
Speaker 6 (02:35):
I mean that'd be over one hundred and fifty million
Nazis in America today. At his peak in Germany there
were only eight million Nazis. I mean, there's eighteen times
more Nazis in America today than there were in Germany
in nineteen forty five. And if that's true, do you
think some like really bad stuff would be happening by now?
Speaker 7 (02:56):
Well, it hasn't happened yet, which means the only other
possibility is that Trump's about to make it happen.
Speaker 8 (03:01):
JP Sears, who you heard right there, taking woke culture.
Speaker 5 (03:04):
And turning it on its head.
Speaker 8 (03:05):
And he is at comedy work South this weekend starting tonight.
You're gonna have your chance to win tickets to either
tonight's show or the Late Show coming up on Saturday.
JP Sears joins me Ryan Schuling live in studio.
Speaker 6 (03:18):
JP Welcome, Ryan, Thank you for having me, appreciate your time,
and I for the listeners.
Speaker 5 (03:23):
I apologize.
Speaker 6 (03:24):
You may not be able to see Ryan's shirt defund
the thought police. That is a movement I am thoroughly behind.
I got to get started right there.
Speaker 8 (03:34):
And this kind of inflection point for you as a
comedian because I was made aware of your comedy by
my sister who loved you making fun of like vegans
and gluten free diets, et cetera. And somehow that has
turned into this anti woke movement and you're right at
the front of it.
Speaker 5 (03:50):
When did that change happen for you?
Speaker 6 (03:52):
Yeah, the change happened basically spring of twenty twenty. If
you didn't hear, we had a little COVID and coming
at us. And you know, my comedy, whether it's like
calling out like the gluten free movement, which you know,
I eat gluten free, so I love to call out
things I'm.
Speaker 5 (04:09):
A part of.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
But it's really all about using the truth principle in comedy,
where you try to get people to laugh away the
deception so that a.
Speaker 5 (04:17):
Greater truth can be seen.
Speaker 6 (04:19):
And all the you know, pretentiousness around gluten, it's like,
all right, let's shine the truth through that and we
can laugh at the absurdities and with what culture it's
kind of like the same thing I'm doing there. There's absurdities,
so let's try to shine the light of truth so
we can see the absurdities and laugh at them the
way they deserve to be laughed at.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
And you know, with like the thought police, you know, we've.
Speaker 6 (04:43):
Been living in a time, this inflection point where truth
is under attack. You know, we're told here's what you
need to think, and if you don't think this way,
then it's some kind of hate speech. And it also
words are violence. It's like, wow, words are violence. See
someone in the UFC use words to try to defeat
their opponent.
Speaker 8 (05:02):
You mentioned UFC, and we've seen this culture shift and
I got to tell you you're like a surfer at the
front edge of this wave, JP and what you were
able to represent.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
You took a stand and there was a risk involved
in that.
Speaker 8 (05:13):
Well, we've seen all these people follow, whether it's Dana White, UFC,
a lot of the fighters. We saw Donald Trump appear
at one of those matches. There was raucous applause and
one of the champions handed him his belt. Joe Rogan,
Jones John Jones and Joe Rogan has him on his
podcast says, you know what I got talking to this guy.
Speaker 5 (05:28):
I like this guy.
Speaker 8 (05:29):
What are you witnessing right now in the culture.
Speaker 6 (05:32):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting to see that Trump supporters
come out, whether you like Trump or not. It's an
interesting phenomenon because it's like they had been in the closet,
even back in twenty twenty when I came out, like, yeah,
I'm voting for Trump. Here's why. Like it or not,
that's my reasons. Like that was like a risk, and
a lot of people were maybe behind him, but we're
(05:54):
out with it. And then you see people like Joe
Rogan waiting till the eleventh hour comet as a Trump supporter.
Speaker 5 (06:01):
So to me, the past few years.
Speaker 6 (06:03):
It's kind of been like gay people coming out of
the closet in nineteen seventy five, like it's risky, you
get persecuted. But now it's like we live in a
society where you're accepted for who you are. Where if
you're a Trump supporter, yeah, maybe get some backlash from
people that have a little bit too much anger inside,
but it's way more accepted now than it was in
(06:25):
twenty twenty or even before that, which is.
Speaker 5 (06:28):
A really great cultural shift.
Speaker 6 (06:31):
Because I think the light of truth should shine and
if you're supporting someone great, you don't need to be
scared to let that be known. And we're living in
a point where a lot of people shed their fear
about that in the past year.
Speaker 8 (06:44):
JP sears joining me live in studio and you can
see him live this week and a Comedy Works South
and will be giving away passes during the next break,
So stay tuned for your chance to win that tonight
seven pm and then on Friday, two shows, one at six,
one at nine. You have your chance to win that
one Friday at nine and then Saturday two shows five
pm and eight pm, again all at Comedy Works South
(07:05):
at the Landmark. You can find out more at comedyworks
dot com. You offer a very special experience for fans
at your performances. To JP, why don't you tell us
a little bit more about that?
Speaker 6 (07:15):
Yeah, well, first off, Ran you didn't mention it, but
the ticket giveaway, each pair of tickets that's got a
government resale value of one point six billion dollars, you know,
until the Department of Government Efficiency kind of trims at value.
That is a very valuable giveaway we're doing. And then yeah,
at this shows. I mean, doing live shows is the
(07:38):
most fun thing I get to do, and I'm blessed
I get to have a fun life doing the work
I do. And then we also offer a VIP experience
where we do a private Q and a session and
it's a chance to just get a little bit more
heart to heart at a human to human level with
the people that are part of that experience before the
show or after the show. To pay on the schedule,
(08:00):
which I love. I love being on stage making people laugh.
It's just a joy. And also just connecting heart to
heart that's an immense joy as well.
Speaker 5 (08:09):
Your comedy, and I mean this is an ultimate compliment.
Speaker 8 (08:12):
It kind of swims in the same sea as a
TV show that I loved, which was Portlandia. I love
that show. Yeah, it doesn't surprise me that you do.
And Freda Armison led the effort on that show, and
it was at a time where again it's kind of
what you're talking about. It's good natured fun looking within
members of the left. So yeah, this is a little crazy, yea.
You know, the hers and Hers book store and all
(08:34):
that sort of thing, and you kind of take off
on that. Where did we lose our way JP in comedy,
where there were the scolds that came in and all
of these people that wanted to cancel comedians, maybe like
yourself as well.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
I don't know when that happened. Yeah, it's a good question.
Speaker 6 (08:51):
I think it probably happened, maybe started creeping in in
twenty ten, and it reached its climax probably in twenty
twenty two.
Speaker 5 (09:03):
And I think it's dying off. And I think what that.
Speaker 6 (09:06):
Comes from is the old paradigm of the world, which
certainly involves the old paradigm of comedy, where there was
centralized power, where comedians had to rely on the system,
if you will, whether it's Hollywood or Netflix, or a
TV deal or a sponsorship with a company. Comedians had
to rely on a centralized power for their livelihood. So
(09:27):
the comedians would self censor. They would kind of fall
in line, unless they were like too big, like Dave Chappelle,
like that guy. He's been the pioneer of just free
speech and comedy this whole time, free thinking. But then
we're living in a new paradigm with old ones dying off,
and the new paradigm is decentralized power. And actually I
think in the price of bitcoin just skyrocketing. That's almost
(09:49):
a symbolic representation of the shift of power. So now
decentralized power is a comedian has their podcast or YouTube channel,
they're doing their own shows. They have almost no reliance
on any system. In fact, a lot of comedians, including myself,
look at this system what's left of it, Hollywood movies,
(10:11):
TV shows and say I want no part of that.
That is not interesting and for a lot of it,
it pays less than what we can get paid going
on our decentralized self made path where we control our
destiny with our online content and then selling tickets to
shows off that. So I think the past two years
(10:33):
that's it's really become evident. The old paradigm is very
much on its deathbed and the new paradigm is elevating
like never before.
Speaker 8 (10:42):
Such a great point. Jpcares joining us and again his
performances this weekend. You can find out more details Comedyworks
dot com at Comedyworks South here in the Landmark. It's
literally almost walking distance from where we are right now.
It's why JPC, that's.
Speaker 6 (10:55):
A very bigoted comment to the walking impaired community, right.
Speaker 8 (10:59):
And go see that's the thing you start going down
this primrose path of cancel is and well, I won't
do that. I won't make fun of these people. You know,
I had Carlos Mencia and he performed a comedy works
out not that long ago, talking about this, about this
concept of punching down, Like you can only make fun
of people that you can punch up at, and if
you do that, you limit yourself. And like you're saying
(11:21):
these constraints, we're breaking free of these shackles. With all
the online content other sources of information and entertainment that
people have, they're making their choices and they're buying the
ticket to take the ride with JP Sears. Why do
you think that is?
Speaker 6 (11:36):
I think people are sick of control. They're sick of
people being told what they can and can't say. They're
sick of being told what you can listen to. They're
sick of being.
Speaker 5 (11:45):
Told how you need to react.
Speaker 6 (11:47):
If someone steps out of this narrow lane of political correctness.
So I think people are really sick of control. I mean,
we're born with a free will, we live in a
free country, and we kind of forgot that. And the
good news is it's painful to forget our freedom it's
painful to outsource our freedom to someone else's control, which
(12:11):
we then consent to. Okay, PC culture, I'm afraid of cancelization,
so I'll fall in line. I'll pretend like I'm angry
that Dave Chappelle said this. So people are sick of it.
We you know it didn't fit. People are rejecting it.
Speaker 8 (12:26):
You made such a great point too, about the old
norms and how I used to consume late night television.
I think you and I are about the same age,
Johnny Carson. Then after that, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Conan O'Brien,
even and you could sign up for a good time
when you tuned in.
Speaker 5 (12:40):
Now I can't watch these shows.
Speaker 8 (12:41):
Sometimes I edit audio, whether it's Stephen Colbert or Jimmy
Kimmel or even Jimmy Fallon. At this point, I feel
like I'm watching kind of variations on a theme, all
the same show, all hard anti Trump, all all politics,
all the time.
Speaker 5 (12:55):
What are the if they were.
Speaker 6 (12:56):
All speaking and thinking freely, What are the odds that
one hundred percent of them agree on all the same
stuff exactly? The odds are almost zero. There's going to
be some variation, But the fact that there isn't variation.
Speaker 5 (13:11):
It kind of tells.
Speaker 6 (13:12):
Us, like, you know, these people, they're talented puppets. They've
got a narrative that they're beholden to. They agree to it.
We live in a free country. They can do that.
They have a right, and then people have a right
to be sick of it and not watch it when
they feel sick of it and don't want to watch
it anymore. So I think people love authenticity, they love
human connection, and I don't think we're really getting much
(13:35):
of that from like these late night Hollywood shows that
are kind of all part of the same system, same narrative.
Speaker 8 (13:44):
Kind of along the lines of the intro the video
that you caught about liberals reacting in the aftermath of
this Trump victory and it's like nuclear winter for them
and they're trying to figure out why, how did this happen? Well,
I can kind of start the conversation and have you
dovetail off of it.
Speaker 5 (13:58):
JP.
Speaker 8 (13:59):
You've mentioned one of them, Dave Chappelle, you know, does
a special on Netflix. A lot of the employees threatened
to quit, and Netflix told them to pound sand and
they stood by Dave Chappelle. That was an inflection point
elon Musk buying Twitter, free speech, opening up that avenue.
Speaker 5 (14:13):
I follow you there. That was an inflection point.
Speaker 8 (14:15):
And then you mentioned the last one, the last domino
maybe to follow Joe Rogan, who dominates the sphere of podcasting,
all these different forms in fronts and with these voices
that are coming out in favor of free speech and
the liberal establishment, they've lost their control over all this.
Speaker 5 (14:31):
It's driving them nuts. Yeah, it is driving them nuts.
Speaker 6 (14:34):
And one of the common denominators that you get with
all those folks the Dave Chappelle's, the Joe Rogan, you
get a real person. Yeah, you're getting what they really think.
Whether it's through comedy or conversation, you're getting the real person.
Now when someone's just kind of playing the talented role
of a call it a useful idiot. He's nineteen eighty
(14:55):
four vernacular. You might get entertainment, but you're not getting
a deep, rich human connection. And you know, in the
maybe liberal post gaming of the election, you can see one.
You know, Donald Trump, he was very connective. He'd go
on three hour long podcasts and you can listen to
the way he talks. Whether you like him or not,
you can tell like, what he's saying is what he thinks.
(15:19):
He doesn't have these talking points, these word salad, things
that don't address the question, but are rather designed to
evade the question because there's something to hide or there's
not permission for that candidate to just say what they think.
So there's no real human connection there, and there's something untrustworthy.
When there's not a human connection, I think our survival
(15:40):
reflexes go off and say there's some level of deception
there that registers as danger at a subtle level, whereas authenticity, Okay,
there's not as much mystery, not as much threat, you know,
when we're looking through our reptilian brain, So we can
kind of lean into that a little bit.
Speaker 5 (16:01):
More thought police. I'm wearing it here.
Speaker 8 (16:03):
But the evolution of this when it used to be
in the eighties and with Tipper Gore and I remember
Frank Zappa testifying on Capitol Hill against censorship, and then
that was coming in large part from the Christian conservative right,
and now the paradigm has shifted so much. Johnny Rotten says,
you know, being a conservative in today's culture, that's the counterculture,
that's the punk rock of our time.
Speaker 6 (16:24):
JP are you a punk rocker? I like to think so,
And you know, a note of realism, because I agree,
it's so easy to see the pattern. Like back in
the day it was liberals crusading for free speech. The
right was why were they against it? Why they want censorship?
Now the polls have shifted. And if you call yourself
(16:46):
a conservative, and I do, don't be fooled into just
doing the group think thing, because I think evil in
deception it'll go wherever it can go. So right now,
you know, if you agree with me politically, you'd say, oh,
right now, the right is on the side of truth, yeah,
and the devil masquerades as an angel in disguise. There
(17:08):
will come a day when the major deception is on
the right again, and I hope we can be sovereign
enough beings to recognize that and distance ourselves from any party,
any candidate that is exhibiting unvirtuous behavior. You know, I
remember when I was a teenager in my early twenties, you.
Speaker 5 (17:29):
Know, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, this WMD hoax.
Speaker 6 (17:33):
In Iraq, like they were on the right, and that
was the major point of deception.
Speaker 5 (17:39):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (17:39):
So I think we need to know that evil deception.
It's it doesn't care where it comes through, but it'll
try to come through somewhere and it'll fool people. But
we need to be free thinking, sovereign beings to recognize that.
Speaker 8 (17:52):
Such a great point. Think for yourself. Don't believe everything
you're told. What does it believe none of what you see,
in half of what you hear, or whatever.
Speaker 6 (18:00):
And don't even believe everything you think, like question of
your beliefs.
Speaker 5 (18:03):
Right, Well, that's the thing.
Speaker 8 (18:05):
You in these videos that kind of launched you into
viral stardom were making fun of something that you actually did,
which was adhere to a gluten free die out.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
So where did that idea come from?
Speaker 2 (18:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (18:14):
That idea?
Speaker 6 (18:15):
Like I, you know, I was surrounded by people that
we were all doing the gluten free thing, and you know,
we're cool because we're doing it. But I would notice
my friend's behavior and my behavior, like I'd go home
and visit my parents, and you know, my mom's making
a beautiful dinner and I'm doing this pretentious thing like, well,
you know what is that is that?
Speaker 5 (18:34):
Did you make that with regular bread?
Speaker 7 (18:35):
Mom?
Speaker 5 (18:36):
Well? I can't eat that?
Speaker 6 (18:37):
And the truth is I could. I just wanted to
eat gluten free. I wasn't diagnosed as a celiac, so
you know, I start looking back, I'm like, I'm being
an a hole. Like being gluten free doesn't mean you're
an a hole. So I'm going to call out that
a whole nature that I've I'm exhibiting disguised as a
gluten free crusader.
Speaker 5 (18:58):
Self awareness primust form.
Speaker 8 (19:00):
And you'll get that this weekend with JP series take
people through your act, what they can expect at to
come out and see you this week ay one point
six billion dollar experience because it's all about the money obviously.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
Yeah, it's on my show. I do an hours stand
up and you'll.
Speaker 6 (19:13):
See a great opening comedian, So I do an hour
stand up.
Speaker 5 (19:18):
There's political jokes in there. Certainly. I'm also a father.
Speaker 6 (19:23):
I've got a four year old boy, so there's certainly
some parental observations that I've got bits on and some
random conspiracy theory.
Speaker 5 (19:32):
Stuff just because it's fun.
Speaker 6 (19:33):
It is fun, so and of course taking the piss
out of the other side, but also self deprecating what
I believe as well. I think if you can't make
fun of yourself and what you believe, your side in
the political war. Then you're taking yourself too seriously, so
you can expect to hopefully I have a good time,
have some laughs, and maybe think a little bit deeper.
Speaker 8 (19:55):
We'll be there Friday night, looking forward to that and
JP series FA say conversation.
Speaker 5 (20:01):
JP. Thank you so much for your time. Oh, absolutely,
thank you for having me right.
Speaker 8 (20:04):
Oh, you just appreciate you being in Denver. You can
find out more online at Comedyworks dot com. When we
come back, we'll have your chance to win tickets either
tonight's show that's Thursday night, seven pm or the late
show on Friday night at nine pm Comedy Works South
at the Landmark back with more Ryan Schuling Live after.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
This, Black Friday is coming. And for the adults in
your life who love the coolest toys, well there's something
for them this year too. Bartisian is the premiere craft
cocktail maker that automatically makes more than sixty seasonal and
classic cocktails each and out of thirty seconds at the
(20:42):
push of a button. And right now, Bartisian is having
a huge sight wide sale. You can get one hundred
dollars off any cocktail maker or cocktail maker bundle when
you spend four hundred dollars or more so if the
cocktail lover in your life has been good this year
or the right kind of bad, get them Bartisian at
the push of a button, make Bark quality Cosmopolitans, Martini's, Manhattan's,
(21:05):
and more, all in just thirty seconds, all for ae
hundred off amazing toys.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
I't just for kids. Get one hundred off of cocktail
maker when you spend four hundred through Cyber.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Monday, visit Bartisian dot com slash cocktail. That's b A
R T E S I A N dot com slash cocktail.
Speaker 8 (21:28):
Oh yeah, Jesse Thomas, spin in the hits.
Speaker 5 (21:34):
There it is. I remember this one back.
Speaker 8 (21:37):
With you on Ryan Schuling Live Our. Thanks to JP
Sears for visiting us live in studio. If you missed it,
where were you? What happened there? You were invited? You
knew this comedy works South this weekend and your chance
to win tickets? Right Meow, co founder and CEO of
Brave Ai, also super fan of JP Sears Kelsey Currents
(21:58):
coming up with this particular trivia question.
Speaker 5 (22:02):
Oh you want to go on Mike, Let's do it.
Speaker 8 (22:04):
No, you don't have to go on you got goot,
You're got might know or live You're live on the air, weird.
Speaker 5 (22:09):
This is live radio weird, all right.
Speaker 9 (22:13):
Based off of the interview that you heard this afternoon. Yep,
what is the approximate resale value of a jpcies ticket
to Comedy Works self?
Speaker 10 (22:24):
Either tonight or tomorrow tonight or.
Speaker 5 (22:26):
Tomorrow tonight, Friday night and Saturday night.
Speaker 8 (22:29):
And you'll have a chance to win tickets to either
tonight's show or Friday's late show, which is nine pm.
And Kelsey's right, he gave this number twice in American dollars.
That's your other hint. Yep, what is the approximate resale
value according to JP.
Speaker 5 (22:43):
Sears, God's honest, true, Yeah, I love tickets to his
own show.
Speaker 8 (22:47):
So the closest guesses you might have an approximation, you
can send us those at five, seven, seven, three nine.
I'm gonna need your name first and last, your cell
phone number, and the show that you prefer to attend,
whether that's tonight again seven p or Friday night at
nine pm.
Speaker 5 (23:03):
You can pick either one of those.
Speaker 8 (23:04):
You got to tell me though, and then we'll get
you squared away two different pairs of passes so two
separate winners and you have two tickets each.
Speaker 5 (23:12):
What stood out to you, Kelsey about what you heard
from JP.
Speaker 9 (23:15):
It's just a really genuine guy. Yeah, he's really down
to earth. He's exactly right about the group think taking
over different political sectors, which is very concerning, especially when
you think about younger generations and how they're being taught
to think and are they gonna think critically for themselves?
Speaker 10 (23:38):
And I think that's really the.
Speaker 9 (23:39):
Mission of the right, regardless of Republican, Democrat, conservative liberal,
That should be our mission is just to teach people
to think for themselves. And that's I think one of
the things that resonates most for me with JP is
just that he has a really good understanding of us
thinking critically of ourselves.
Speaker 8 (23:58):
For me as a gen xer and going through my
educational experience, so the math that I'm able to do
born in the year that I was in nineteen seventy
four was whatever year it was in the eighties, that's
what great I was in. So in nineteen eighty five
I was finishing fifth grade, so you going down the
line there, But my teachers, whether it was the high
school level or when I went into college, I never
felt like.
Speaker 5 (24:18):
I was being told what to think.
Speaker 8 (24:20):
I felt like I was being taught how to think
critically to your point, Kelsey, and I think that's so important.
Speaker 5 (24:25):
That's what GP said. Don't just take the right's word
for it that we're on the right side. Now.
Speaker 8 (24:30):
We are, but there's a reason why we can't forget that.
And once the right forgets it, he's right. The nature
of things in our history, a political pendulum will swing
the other way as soon as we screw this up
on the right. So yeah, and that's the thing with
young people today, gen Z. I talked to such an
encouraging and inspiring young man, Weston Eimer yesterday, and he
(24:50):
is leading the effort for not only Donald Trump and
the Republican cause, but for the youth of Colorado in
standing up and thinking for yourself and even if that differs,
even if we disagree on something. This is the part
where the left lost everybody is if you were not
in lockstep monolith believing everything they believed down the line,
(25:11):
then you were outcast. Well guess what you create enough
outcast the way the left did, then we get an
Elon Musk, Then we get a Telsea Gabbert, then we
get an RFK junior, then we get a Joe Rogan,
and then look what you're left with only true believers
and it's a very narrow portion of the American population.
Speaker 5 (25:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (25:27):
Absolutely, And all you have to do with people to
test where they are in their own journey to hopefully
some enlightenment is ask a lot of questions. And I
think that people tried to do that. GP referenced it
with commelin her word salads and trying to hide behind
things and not really having an answer. And that's what's
(25:51):
happening on the left right now, is you just try
to ask questions and they can't answer the question. And
there's an in office Inawten City there that I think,
especially kids and younger generations, I think they have this
like sixth sense that maybe we as adults turn off
a little bit, but I think kids, which is why
you're seeing these college campuses, you know, kit freshman sophomore
(26:15):
at frat parties and they're doing the Trump dance and
they're you know, they're they're learning all these things because
they've they've got a gut sense that as we get older,
we probably lose some of that or we get financially
tied to one modality of thinking, and it hinders us
and they can't You can't escape it if that's.
Speaker 10 (26:37):
Where you're being pigeonholed.
Speaker 9 (26:38):
So the left, on the media, on the left right now,
they can't escape it, even if they wanted to, if
they wanted to be introspective, which is why you're seeing
Jen Sackey lean into the trans ideology when it's it's
a losing battle. It is it is, we've voted, we
told you we don't like it. But she hog tied
(27:00):
to it. Financially, she cannot.
Speaker 10 (27:04):
Get a pay check.
Speaker 5 (27:05):
It's a grift.
Speaker 10 (27:05):
It's a total grift, and you can't back out from that.
Speaker 9 (27:09):
And I think they're seeing that on CNN and MSNBC,
which is why Comcast is trying to schlup them to
the highest bidder, because they can't get they can't back
out of it, and they can't say, okay, well we're
gonna I can't remember the Democrat, but you just shared
a clip of him saying I don't want my daughter
playing against some men and right, and the people are
(27:32):
backing away from that and calling him a transphobe and
all these things, which is not true. At all, but
they're so financially co mingled with this ideology that they've
they can't escape.
Speaker 8 (27:46):
It's a losing bet, it's a losing message to your point,
and for gen z S, let's not forget these are
a lot of the kids that lost high school years
with their proms and their athletic endeavors to COVID, and
they were being told what to do, and they're being
lied to about masks, about the show and that they
would prevent you from being infected and prevent you from
transmitting it. And when you're lied to that much, you're
(28:06):
going to stop believing people, and you're definitely gonna stop
believing the establishment. And when one side features Elon Musk
and Joe Rogan and Rfk Junior and Telsea Gabbard, suddenly
we're the cool kids. I'm not used to sitting at
the cool kids table politically, but that's where we are
right now and it's up to us to keep it
that way. So again, your chance to win tickets to
see JP sears either tonight that's seven pm, Comedy Works
(28:29):
South that's Landmark Greenwood Village or Friday night, nine pm.
That'll be the show that Kelsey and I are going
to so we're looking forward to that. Five seven seven
three nine. Got a couple entries already, but still your
chance to win. Really a stooped question from KFC over there,
and that is what is the dollar amount assigned in
United States dollars by JP Sears the resale value of
(28:52):
a ticket to his show. Send that number your best
guest the show you want to attend, and we'll line
you up as a winner for that. Now, Greg Shaler,
you have a guess in here, but you said Saturday.
I can't get your tickets to Saturday. I don't think.
I don't want mel to take my head off. So
if you can do Friday at nine, let me know that.
Speaker 5 (29:09):
Greg.
Speaker 8 (29:10):
Five seven seven three nine will round out with your
text to close out the show. After this final time
out on this Thursday edition of Ryan Schuling Live, after this.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Black Friday is coming.
Speaker 1 (29:20):
And for the adults in your life who love the
coolest toys, well.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
There's something for them this year too.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
Bartisian is the premiere craft cocktail maker that automatically makes
more than sixty seasonal and classic cocktails each and out
of thirty seconds at the push of a button and
right now Bartisian is having a huge sight wide sale.
You can get one hundred dollars off any cocktail maker
or cocktail maker bundle when you spend four hundred dollars
or more so, if the cocktail lover in your life
(29:48):
has been good this year or the right kind of bad,
get them Bartisian at the push of a button. Make
Bark quality Cosmopolitans, Martini's, Manhattan's, and more just thirty seconds,
all for a hundred off.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
Amazing toys aren't just for kids.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Get one hundred off of cocktail maker when you spend
four hundred through cyber Monday. Visit Baptisian dot com slash cocktail.
That's p A r T E s i a n
dot com slash cocktail.
Speaker 11 (30:21):
Are you familiar that in that report it revealed it
children were pimped out by their aunt, which it turns
out the ant wasn't even related to the child the
so called aunt.
Speaker 5 (30:32):
Are you familiar with that story that was in there?
Speaker 12 (30:35):
There are a number of incidents that are reported in
that in that Florida report. Some of them I can
probably recall better than others. Some of them might I
would challenge and dispute, but that one, I don't remember.
Speaker 11 (30:49):
And do you remember the teenage girl that was in
a house with unknown men with no private bedroom for her?
Speaker 5 (30:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 11 (30:57):
Are you familiar with the sponsors that you lies a
strip club in Jacksonville as an address for where this
child where a child should be.
Speaker 5 (31:08):
Settled?
Speaker 12 (31:10):
Connresson, As I said, I don't have the information on
that floor to grand jury report in front of me.
I certainly can go back and take a look at
it and try to get back to you.
Speaker 8 (31:19):
The paraphrase Ace Rothstein is portrayed by Robert de Niro
in Casino. Either you're too dumb and you got fooled
by it, or you were in on it and you're
part of it.
Speaker 5 (31:29):
Either way, you gotta go. You're fired.
Speaker 8 (31:31):
When a goofball was trying to run a casino on
his behalf or at least part of the floor and
then they were robbed. Javier Bessera, the HHS secretary, has.
Speaker 5 (31:42):
No business being in that position. That's why I just.
Speaker 8 (31:44):
Scoff and you should too. At all this criticism and
meticulous evaluation of the appointees and nominees by Donald Trump
for his cabinet, where was this when Javier Bessera who
has no experience in health and or human services, was
a lawyer in his background. These were all little political
(32:09):
gifts back for Biden's supporters. Jenny from the Block, Jennifer
Granholme was one of his strongest supporters.
Speaker 5 (32:15):
Will make you Secretary of Energy.
Speaker 8 (32:17):
I have more experience and energy than Jennifer Granholme, because I've.
Speaker 5 (32:21):
Spoken at length with the president of KOGA.
Speaker 8 (32:23):
I'm going to put that out there Colorado Oil and
Gas Association, and she had no working knowledge of energy
policy or how energy is created, or what kind of
plan would be put in place going forward to get
us onto a non fossil fuel grid and what that
would look like and how much time that would take.
I'm all for the evolution of it if it makes sense,
(32:45):
but it has to be a consumer driven model. You
cannot force a revolution upon your people. A revolution must
come from within, like seventeen seventy six, like we hope
for from the Iranian people.
Speaker 5 (32:58):
But they have to want it.
Speaker 8 (33:00):
And if you want a green energy revolution, you've got
to inspire people. You've got to win hearts and minds.
You've got to prove that it's more affordable and more efficient,
of which it is neither at this point, not even close.
We are dependent on fossil fuels. They are reliable, they
are affordable, they are safe, they are effective. And the
consumers when there is a better option, when it is
(33:23):
more plentiful, moon it is more affordable, when it is
more convenient where you could charge anywhere that you drive,
then yeah, they will buy electric vehicles. But when they're
more expensive, harder made to maintain, more expensive to replace
the batteries for them alone, which are worth more than
the vehicles themselves. This is not a practical product and
(33:46):
a capitalistic economy based on a consumer driven needs and wants.
Where is the need and want for an electric car
other than what's doing the right thing for the environment.
Other than that? Also, how do you produce the energy
to charge these cars? Where's that going to come from?
If not fossil fuels, solar and wind, You're insane. We
don't have enough of that. Nuclear Now he can have
(34:08):
a conversation, but they don't want to have that conversation.
These are unserious people in very serious times, So I
don't want to hear about it now. Nominees for Attorney General,
now that Matt gets has stepped aside, are trending on Twitter.
Mine was Josh Hawley, and his name happens to be
trending the most, and I just think he would be
a home run higher by Donald Trump for that position.
(34:32):
He's been an attorney general in the state of Missouri.
You've seen him during Senate hearings. This guy's relentless, he's smart,
he's sharp. I don't think he has anything any skeletons
of the closet that we know about, but you never know.
We'll see other names. Ken Paxton, the current Attorney general.
He's often been in battle down there in tex Texas.
I happen to like the guy and like him even
(34:54):
more because of what he's been through. Pam Bondi, I
think she's very solid, has been consistently Donald Trump's corner
when it comes to legal aspects of things that he's endured,
and then also in the state of Florida where she
was the ag.
Speaker 5 (35:07):
All good names, this one. No Trey Goudy, No.
Speaker 8 (35:15):
Three of those four would be perfectly fine with even
not Trey Goudy hard Pass. Let's go to the tax
five seven, seven, three nine, Alexi had the right guess again,
We're still looking for one winner.
Speaker 5 (35:27):
Because she's turned it down. She would have been one.
Speaker 8 (35:29):
She does say hi to Kelsey, and Kelsey says high
back about the dollar amount resale value that JP Sears
claims his tickets to his show are worth. Greg Shaler,
you are a winner. You'll be going Friday night at
nine pm. I'll withhold the number for right now because
we're still looking for one winner. What is that number?
JP said it twice. It's a big dollar amount. It's
(35:49):
very large, totally big and if you guess correctly or
even the neighborhood got one more spot of two passes
available either for tonight's show. That's Thursday Night, Comedy Works
South Landmark, Greenwood Village seven PM's the show tonight nine pm.
Speaker 5 (36:03):
Four of the.
Speaker 8 (36:04):
Free show on Friday, courtesy of Mel Gibson, My good
friend over there and Comedy Works Out JP Sears. What
a great conversation. If you missed it, you're just tuning in.
Highly encourage you to check that out on the podcast
thanks to Jesse recording that for us. Just one of
the bright lights in comedy in today's Body Politic. A
couple other texts here. Make no mistake, Mitch McConnell is
(36:25):
still the most powerful GOP politician in the country. He
may have officially stepped down as leader, but he's still
in charge. Fun is effeckless dope. That might be a
bit harsh, but we'll see. I'll give him a chance.
But you might be right. I hope that you're wrong. Well,
you might be right. Trump's second term is already an
epic failure. Y'all just don't know it yet. Thanks Cocaine, Mitch.
Speaker 5 (36:44):
Oh, come on, he hasn't even been sworn in yet.
Speaker 8 (36:47):
And I'll be at the inauguration providing you coverage on
all the shows over there in Koa on this program.
I'll be phoning it in and then I'll check in
with Dan as well, but I will be there in Washington, DC.
We're working out some details pertaining to Representative Lauren Bobert
in her camp, and I want to thank Drew Sexton
for looking into those for us. But should give you
(37:08):
a pretty interesting behind the scenes look at inauguration day
in a historic day really for everybody on our side.
And I figured, if I don't go now at age fifty,
will I ever go. It's now or never. It's Elvis Presley,
and I'm going damn it all right, And Alexa ads
she loves JPC here well who doesn't, and she wants
to go to the show but probably can't two to
three days after surgery. But Redhead's rock, yes, JP, notably
(37:31):
if you've not seen him. He's got gorgeous long red
hair and he's just like a Viking warrior. And I
admire him and I'm a little jealous of him. It's
got way better hair than I do. Oh, this is
a good one to end on. I think we need
a female verifier for sports. I hereby nominate Loraina Bobbitt.
Speaker 5 (37:51):
Ooh. On that note, John Wayne Bobbitt, not great.
Speaker 8 (37:56):
I will send you off into the sunset and stay
tuned coming up. John Precatory and Weld County Sheriff Steve
Reeves both joined Dan Kaplis to discuss the Tienamen Square
comparison made by Denver Mayor Mike Johnston on ice agents
coming to their city.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
Black Friday is coming, and for the adults in your
life who love the coolest toys, well.
Speaker 2 (38:17):
There's something for them this year too.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
Bartisian is the premiere craft cocktail maker that automatically makes
more than sixty seasonal and classic cocktails each and under
thirty seconds at the push of a button, and right now,
Bartisian is having a huge sight wide sale. You can
get one hundred dollars off any cocktail maker or cocktail
maker bundle when you spend four hundred dollars or more so,
if the cocktail lover in your life has been good
(38:41):
this year or the right kind of bad, get them
Bartisian at the push of a button, make Bark quality Cosmopolitans, Martini's, Manhattan's, and.
Speaker 2 (38:51):
More, all in just thirty seconds, all for ae hundred off.
Amazing toys aren't just for kids.
Speaker 1 (39:00):
It off a cocktail maker when you spend four hundred
through cyber Monday.
Speaker 2 (39:03):
This is Baptizer dot com slash cocktail.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
That's b A R T E sia n dot com
slash cocktail.
Speaker 3 (39:11):
Top reasons your career wants you to move to Ohio.
So many amazing growth opportunities, high paying jobs and technology,
advanced manufacturing, engineering, life sciences and more.
Speaker 10 (39:23):
You'll start to.
Speaker 3 (39:24):
New heights just like the Wright brothers, John Glenn, even
Neil Armstrong. Their careers all took off in Ohio, and
yours can too.
Speaker 10 (39:32):
A job that can take you further and a place.
Speaker 3 (39:35):
You can't wait to come home to have it all
in the heart of it all. Launch your search at
call ohio home dot com.
Speaker 4 (39:42):
It's beginning to sound a lot like the holidays. The
Roku Channel your home for free and premium TV is
giving you access to holiday music and genre based stations
from iHeart All for free. Find the soundtrack of the
season with channels like iHeart Christmas and North Pole Radio.
The Roku Channel is available on all Roku devices, Web,
Amazon fireTV, Google TV, Samsung TVs, and the Roku Mobile
(40:06):
app on iOS and Android devices. So stream what you
love and turn up the cheer with iHeartRadio on the
Roku Channel.
Speaker 2 (40:13):
Happy Streaming,