Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Hello everyone, and welcome to the Truth here on the
John Dom to be a John Rocca channel. I am, you know,
got a lot going on in my mind, got a
lot going on in my life right now. We've made
some moves around the background here, making some changes, doing
some different things going on here, just trying to make
(00:35):
the I know I'm saying this. I'm trying to say
I'm making the background a little less busier. But it's
a little busy right now because we're still kind of
in the process of making some changes to the look
to make a little cleaner, a little more precise, so
we'll see. But yeah, that was like the focus of
my mind earlier today. And then I watched the South
(00:55):
Park episode, which we'll talk about in a little bit,
which absolutely went nuke on Trump and everything involved with
the MAGA movement. I was really surprised by how far
they went considered they just signed a massive deal for
one point five billion dollars and Colbert just got essentially
a show cancel for political reasons or of financial decision.
But just as I was like considering whether I was
(01:18):
gonna go live or not to or do a review
of that, the news came that hul Cogan had passed,
and this is a really interesting situation for me, a
lot of complicated feelings. H So I thought I pop
(01:39):
on here for a little bit to talk about it,
and if and hear from you guys, you know, sending
it to you want to put in some comments or
send in your stream labs and super chats as we
go along. It's it's pinned in the chat and all
of that, and then the description of the video. But uh, yeah,
a lot went on for me when I saw the
news that he had passed seventy one years old, apparently
(02:02):
surrounded by family and friends. It was a cardiac arrest,
at least that's what TMZ is reporting right now. And
what can I tell you For those who maybe are
new to me or new to my show or new
to my channel, maybe you saw the South Park Oh
sorry about this, my cheersley. Maybe you saw the South
Park thing and you're like, oh, let me see what
(02:23):
you's got to say about this. What's the whole Cogan stuff?
And well then you should know I was a massive
fan of Hulk Hogan growing up. I mean, such an
integral part of my life. So I'm just going to
talk about it and if you want to tune in,
tune in, if you want to drop out, drop out.
That's just I'm going to talk about it for the
(02:44):
first probably twenty thirty minutes of the show, and then
we'll get into the South Park stuff and if there's
any questions at the end, I'll answer them. But like, yeah,
I mean, just a tough situation for me on so
many levels, because, as I said, I grew up being
a massive fan of Hulk Hogan for so many reasons.
You know, he was the guy who led the way
at the first WrestleMania. He came along at a time
(03:06):
in my life when I was being bullied by a
lot of kids and so seeing someone like him and
cheering for the under times, the underdog, the guy who
was constantly getting betrayed, the guy who was fighting a
way to defeat people who were using nefarious tactics. And
again I'm a child watching this stuff, and it was
(03:28):
it really worked on me, you know. I know, he
was the king and the the top dog at WWE,
but when you're a kid, all you see is this
hero who is fighting against all these people trying to
do terrible stuff to him, and of course you get older,
you know, you realize the game and it's all scripted
and everybody's playing a character. But when you're young, it's like,
oh my god, what is this? I love this? And
(03:49):
this wasn't a time when you had the Internet and
dirt sheets and all this kind of stuff and you
could read about you know, people questioning the conversations about
who was whether it was real or not, and you know,
the story about the Iron Chic and hacksall being caught
in the same car, like those are things that didn't
filter down to a lot of us, you know, And
so for us, it was like just amazing. This was
(04:10):
right at the time when pro wrestling became huge, the
first wave of it becoming huge, and Hogan was a
massive reason for that, you know. And so for me
and even the prayer, you know, say your prayers, the
demandments that stuff that I kind of instilled into my
life as well when I was a young kid about
you know, do the right thing, believe in God, lift
(04:31):
weights and eat you know, all of those things. So
those things helped turn my life around at fifteen and
start lifting weights and start working out and start doing
all these kinds of things. And so yeah, it was
such an important part of my life. And I lived
and died with Hogan matches. I mean, I remember WrestleMania three.
(04:52):
I went over to a friend's house to see this
because I couldn't I mean, we were a poor family.
We couldn't afford at the time pay per view, and
those pay per views at the time I think were
like one hundred dollars or one hundred and twenty five
dollars or something outrageous like that, if I remember correctly,
back in the nineteen eighties. And I remember a friend
of mine, Jason Griffin Griffith, he had a his mom
(05:13):
was cool with buying these pay per views for him,
so he would invite me over to watch these matches.
And I remember being there all day for WrestleMania three
and seeing the match with Hogan and Andre and I
just was just I mean, that was the culmination of
everything that led to in my fandom, that led to
(05:34):
that moment him body slamming Andre. And of course, later
as you get older, you go like, oh, well, he
body slammed Andrea a few times in different iterations in
the past, but you didn't know about. Again, you didn't
know about when you were a young teenager or a
kid watching this stuff, and you were just so blown
away by it and his promos. I mean, those of
you remember me in the shmowdown as he's the belt
(05:55):
back there, you know, the pro I was very influenced
by Hogan's promos, the Rocks promos and stone call Old promos.
Those are the things that went into a lot of
the impromptu promos that I would do after matches or
before matches that style, because it just I just loved
how he was, you know, some brother and just get
into stuff. And it was before it became parody, before
(06:16):
it became ridiculed. It was amazing to watch it when
you were a kid. And so I really loved him,
I realized, honestly, I really loved him. And I remember
when he faced the Warrior in WrestleMania six. I remember
this being such a massive, uh event, you know, because
you were leading. I was coming of age to the
point where now I understood he was a you know,
(06:39):
he was a face. Warrior was a face, and so
they were facing each other belt versus belt, uh, and
it was huge. I mean this I can't even tell you.
For those of you who didn't grow up during that time,
like people weren't talking about this in like school and
out in the neighborhood, stores and people were. It was
(07:03):
well known. This was a mainstream thing that was happening.
Big networks were covering it. You know. It was massive deal.
And now, of course it's just standard to see that
coverage of big events coming up. The John Cena heel turn,
all of that was massive, you know. So for me,
he was a big hero. And when you lost to Warrior,
(07:24):
I remember just being super down about it, just super like,
oh man, I can't believe it. It's really over. And
I wasn't a cynical twenty or thirty year old like
the people who were older than me watching wrestling at
the time, we were happy to see Hogan lose the
belt because they were sick of the quote unquote five
moves of doom and all of that. To me, it
was like, wow, my hero finally lost, like legitimately right.
(07:46):
It wasn't nefarious tactics. It wasn't a brass knuckles, it
wasn't a ball shot, it wasn't powder in the face.
It was a legitimate loss. Even though I mean later
you see Hogan kicking out real quickly after the three
instead of letting law, instead of giving him a legitimate win.
But well, what do you call that? I guess what.
(08:06):
I can't remember what they call it? Where they have
to where they should lay there after the three count
to really put someone over. I guess he didn't put
him over again, so it'd say fully, But you know,
I remember that moment and being like, oh man, what now?
And then of course he went through the different iterations
and found his way back to the belts, just like
he did when he'd lost it and took it back
from Brandy. I mean, the Mega Power stuff. I'm wearing
(08:26):
my Randy shirt in honor of him, of Randy because
I you know, and I'll tell you this, I tossed
away all my Hogan shirts because of things that happened recently.
But we'll get to that. But anyway, the it was
just massive for me. He was so big in my
world and in my life, and I remember just being
so caught up in everything that was going on with
pro wrestling because of him. He was the funnel. I mean,
(08:49):
Dusty was my first wrestler that I ever loved. Dusty
Rhoades watching old Georgia Championship wrestling, n w A wrestling,
and of course Flair. But I didn't love Flair. I
didn't love Flair the way I love Dusty in the
way I really loved Hogan. Right, Dusty was like my
gateway drug to Hogan, so to speak. And just Hogan
was so massive. It's it's hard to really quantify for
(09:11):
you all how big he was. You know, maybe like
the rock I guess at the pinnacle of the Rocks powers.
Hogan was like that big. He wasn't in movies that
were worth a damn, but he was just so big
in the mainstream. And so for me, there was so
much that was caught up in, like, you know, loving
what he was doing and having him overcome all the odds,
(09:32):
handicapped matches, Friends turning on him, very famous paul A
mist a wonderful turn on him. I think tug Boat
turned on him with tug Boat when they became the
natural disasters with earthquake. Yeah, there were so many people,
I think, sad vicious turn like, there were so many
people that turned on Hogan throughout the Savage obviously very
(09:54):
famous one as well, and then Andre of course the
Andre one was massive. I mean, those things are still legendary.
The Piper's Pits with Hogan and the Giant where he
rips his shirt off and he's no, oh, you know.
I mean, that's maybe the best acting Hok Hogan ever
did was when he was reacting to Andre ripping his
shirt and the blood and the chain being ripped off
(10:15):
with the cross, I mean, like, this is great, right,
and then his yes when he agreed to the fight
echoes through the halls forever. You know, It's such an
amazing moment. And the match was the maatsure was good,
it wasn't great. That's kind of the thing with Hogan
is the matches were never amazing necessarily, but the emotional
journey they took you on were pretty great. Except I
(10:36):
would say the Rock match in WrestleMania eighteen. I think
that was probably the best WrestleMania main event that he
ever wrestled, and Hogan did an incredible I mean, the
Rock didn incredible job with Hogan playing off Hogan and
playing with the switches in in the Tide and all
of that that happened throughout the match of whose face,
Who's heels? It was great, you know. So for a
(10:59):
very long time I had a soft spot for Hogan,
even through the Gawker stuff. I was like, well, they
videotaped him by himself at his house, and look, you know,
I think it's horrible what he said, obviously, but again,
you're in the privacy of your own home. You don't
expect to be videotaped or recorded in the privacy of
(11:19):
your own home. Not saying that it's okay to be racist,
but I was looking at it like, ugh, you know,
I felt bad for him. The stuff with his son
and that car crash that really kind of started to
bother me even more on top of the Gawker stuff,
and then all the other scandals that came around him,
the whole the steroids trial there with events, and as
(11:42):
you get older, you start to hear from other wrestlers
and you start to hear from some of the comments
they made about him, and yeah, you can easily dismiss it.
Lord knows, you know, quite a few of the players
in the shmowdown said terrible shit about me behind my back,
which Christian told me about, you know, and it was
just like, oh, yeah, of course. And it's because you know,
(12:03):
they want to be on top, and so they're upset
that someone else is on top and they want to shine.
And so I was able to dismiss some of the
other wrestler's comments through the years, like oh, they're jealous,
or they you know, they're mad they didn't have the thing,
or they thought they were really going to be the shit,
when in fact they didn't have that extra oomph that
you need to be over the top. And so it
(12:23):
was easy to dismiss initially. And then as the controversy
Starling started piling up, and as you started reading more
and more about people's comments about him, it started to
sour me a little bit on Hogan. But you know,
but every time he came back, I was happy to
see him. I watched that Hogan Knows Best reality show.
You know. I was into everything he was doing. You know,
I would buy the shirts, I'd buy some of the merch.
(12:44):
I still there's a legendary wrestling shirt of him, I
think posing or kneeling down and it says Ichi Bond
or no, actually just just an Ichy Bond shirt with
Hogan's name in I think Japanese letters or something. It's
an amazing shirt and I've never found It's like my
white whale of wrestling shirts. But like so when I
(13:05):
tell you this, so much of my life I loved
and enjoyed him, and he was such an integral part
of my child just like Stallone. Like those guys are
the guys. They inspired me to work out and fight
back and stand my ground, and you know, and it's stupid,
it's ridiculous now looking back as a man of age,
looking back to the things that formed you when you
were a teenager or a young adult. But those are
(13:25):
important times, those are really important nostalgic times. And the
people involved in those times, you know, are important people
in your life, and you try to forgive them. You
try to give them grace. You try to give them
a little bit more leeway or runway, Like when people
go after Tom Cruise. Now I still get like, I
still get upset because Tom was also another massive part
(13:47):
of my life in the eighties with Top Gun another movie.
So I have my people that I defend and I
try to give grace to you know. But as the
years go on and the controversies pile up and the
really confusing decisions that he made, it really knocked all
the veneer off of him and the bloom off the
(14:09):
rows of Hogan, and you start to see that this
is a guy who really was very limited in his
ability to understand the mistakes he was making and to
take responsibility in the correct way for the mistakes he
was making, Like even the stuff with him coming back
to WWE and he tried to have a meeting with
(14:30):
the Black wrestlers, and the way that meeting went and
the way people related, I think Kofi Kingston some like
some of the things he said was like, oh my god,
you know, and I know other black wrestlers have defended
him and stuff, but like it is tough to look
at and it's tough to process. And as I said,
the car crash, then all the drama with his wife
and the divorce, then Brooke Hogan separating from herself from
(14:53):
him and her mom so that she could like kind
of live a normal life. And God love her. She
was very gracious to accept my follow on Instagram because
she doesn't accept too many people that follow her on
instut it's a private account. You have to request follow.
So clearly she is a person who's very guarded of
her life. And you know, having watched that show, the
(15:14):
reality show, having seen the things that they endured. You
just kind of go, yeah, I get it. I get it.
I get what's going on there. Let's messing with Mosey deal.
So yeah, I mean you see that, and so you go, Okay,
I get it. I get it. But yeah, but that's
why it's so complicated today, like I should be in
(15:34):
pieces honestly, when I mean, I'm more. I was more
upset about Malcolm Jamal Warner dying earlier this week than
I am today about Hogan. I'm more just kind of
sad and I and I thought i'd be, and I'm
sad because I don't feel more and I would like
to feel more. But unfortunately, the stuff he did in
recent years, and you know, his real American beer and
(15:58):
him coming out to the con to support a man
who is pretty abhorrent in my opinion, tearing his shirt
and all of that nonsense, you know, and the comments
and the things that have come out about him. It's just,
you know, it makes it a bummer that he's gone,
But it makes it a bummer even more so that
I don't feel more, because like five years ago, I
(16:21):
probably would be devastated, you know, utterly devastated, But this morning,
I'm just kind of like h you know, and maybe
that'll change, but I kind of don't think so. And
so it's just heartbreaking for me personally because he's such
(16:42):
a important part of my life. But you know, he's past.
So let's talk about the things that I loved about him.
I don't want to dwell too much in the controversies.
Everybody knows the controversies, but I mean you have to
also give the man has done. I think someone said
my friend said it best on his text. I don't
(17:05):
want to say his name in case he doesn't want
me to say it put his name out there, but
he said, what do he say? Where is it? What
did he say? I'm sad that Hulk Hogan, the wrestler
from the nineteen eighties is gone. Terry Balaya can get fucked.
And I think that's a I think that's a sentiment.
I probably that's the place I'm probably in more than
anything else, Like I'm sad the hul Cogan has gone,
(17:26):
but Terry Balay can kiss my ass. And so I
would just want to talk about the things. I mean,
like growing up, as I said, like we should celebrate that.
I mean, the hul Hogan was amazing, like amazing the
way he was able to grab the public and capture
their attention, and the kids, and the way they did
those promos and the stuff that you saw him doing
(17:48):
and talking about the things he was supporting there, the
stuff with Cindy Lauper, the rock and wrestling connection, all
of that was great. His stuff with Savage, you know,
people want to bash him, sorry about that. People want
to bash him and make fun of him now and
ridicule him looking back on the stuff. But that stuff
really worked, and he worked great programs, Like the programs
(18:11):
worked because of Hogan as well. Like if people want
to credit oh Randy, people want to credit Orndor or
Andre's Like Hogan had to playoff of that stuff. And
you know, at the beginning, Hogan understood how to give
and take and not be so caught up in putting
himself over. It was putting the angle over, you know.
And later when he had more to lose, he was
(18:33):
much more concerned with putting himself over. As those of
you who know the whole Sting Hogan debacle in WCW
that led to that terrible main event, will it testify
to that. But like he was so amazing man I
mean the twenty four inch pythons getting in the gym,
and I'm saying he influenced me so much, and so
(18:54):
watching him win those belts, well, I mean, I think
he won sixty won the belt six times. Watching him
do the things he did, the tag teams, he was
involved in, the way he promoted the events, even the
smaller events like a Saturday Night's main event or their
version of Raw earlier in the days, you know, the
Sunday shows, like all the stuff that he was doing
(19:14):
was so great. So you have to give him credit
for carrying professional wrestling. Nobody would still be talking about
professional wrestling. Wasn't Folk. I don't care what Flair did
or NWA, and it was not an explosion globally the
way WWE was. And a massive reason for that is
hul Hogan. Yes, Vince McMahon promotion all that and the
(19:36):
terrible shitty what he did behind the scenes to a
lot of the promotions, but it was Hull Cogan, and
so you have to give the man his flowers. It
was Whule Cogan who was carrying that thing on his back.
And yes, you had Piper and Savage and all these
other great wrestlers, Steamboat came through, Flair even came through.
Eventually you had all the great Brett Hart, you had
all the fart Foundation, you had him all going through
(19:58):
in the eighties, Jake the Snake. But it was really Hogan, right,
everything stopped and started with He was the massive reasons
and he carried the WWE on his back and brought
it to prominence. And I don't think kind of like
Jordan when Jordan was a massive superstar. I think there's
(20:19):
still money owed to Hogan, money owed to Jordan for
what they were able to do to put these put
the WNBA back on top of sorry, put the NBA
back on top, and put the WWE over the top
for lesser money when they were building it up, you know.
And so it was amazing what he was able to do.
(20:40):
As I said, I lived and breathed with it. And
then the Andre stuff was amazing. Then the Warrior stuff
was amazing. And then when he went to WCW and
became the NWOSH, I don't even have a picture of that.
What the hell I was rushing to get this up today.
But yeah, when he became a member of the nWo,
that changed professional wrestling. It made people like respect him
(21:03):
all over again for his ability to read the tea
leaves and no, no, hear the stories. Oh it was
Bischoff took the idea off something from Japan and brought
it to the WCW. It was going to be Sting,
you know, it was Nash and Hall, We're going to
be part of It was going to be Sting, and
then Sting didn't want to do it, so Hogan did it.
But Hogan had a tough time embracing it. But who
(21:24):
gives a shit how it all came together. When it
did come together, it was mother effing gold. It was gold.
It got me back into pro wrestling. I had fallen
off of it in the late eighties. Like I even
didn't even watch the Vegas the WrestleMania nine one, Like
I didn't even care about that. I only read about
(21:45):
it later. So I was like moving on from wrestling
because I was doing other things. And then when Hogan
went to WCW, there was this feeling like, Okay, maybe
he's the Red and Gold again, or it would be
kind of cool and Yello Rother, it's kind of cool
to see that again. But when he turned, he turned
at the right time for those of us who had
(22:07):
grown up loving him, because we were coming into a
certain age in the nineteen nineties where we were much
more cynical about the world, we were much more about
wanting truth. The music was reflecting that with gangster rap
that had blown up in the late eighties into the
early nineties. Movies were reflecting that because that was the
birth of the independent movement, which was connected to the
(22:29):
nineteen seventies films that were questioning the system, daring to
talk about sexuality in a certain way, exploring other avenues
of existence that were not being profiled in films in
the nineteen eighties as consistently, and so like all of
it was this. It was this strip away of the
veneer of falsity and get to the ugly, bitter, gritty truth,
(22:53):
you know. And so the nWo represented that for me
and wrestling it. They caught it at the right time.
They said what they wanted to say. They were the
bad guys that you wanted to cheer for. And all
of a sudden, the face paint and the characters from
the nineteen eighties looked incredibly out of date, as did
nineteen eighties movies. When you got into the nineties and
(23:15):
things changed, and they Hogan was so smart to catch
the wave and he ran with them. I mean he
rode that wave. Yeah, they did eventually crash on the
shore and the nWo fell apart, and it was end
up leading the WCW getting bought by Vince. Yes, but
for those what two to five years that the nWo
was around with Hogan leading with National Hall, it was
(23:36):
some of the greatest nights of wrestling ever, and the
Monday Night Wars all none of that would have been
possible without Hogan sting. Turning heel would have never had
the effect that it did with Hogan, and I still
put that at number one. Fuck the John Cena heel turned.
I mean that has become such as I predicted a flaccid,
(23:59):
wet fall heart of a heel turn. Yes, that night,
some people were shocked that a guy who was way
past his prime turned heel. So we can watch these
terrible matches the last few months. But when Hogan turned heel,
he was still in his prime. He was still able
to deliver in the ring, and it was great to
watch him in the matches that he had. You know,
(24:20):
of course, there's the finger Polka doom Less said about
that the better, but like he was fighting with the
young towns like the Giant, him and Nashy, or him
and him in the Goldberg, Him and staying like there was.
It was amazing to watch that in the nineties. And
that's why that heel turn is still number one, and
no one, no one can convince me otherwise with their
(24:41):
ret conning or their revisionist history. That was earthquakes because
Hogan was still doing it scene. It came out of
retirement from being in Hollywood and all that. Hogan was
still doing it. So when he made the turn, it
was massive, massive, massive, and it caught those of us
who had been his fans when he was at the
(25:02):
Goodie two Shoes in the eighties, who occasionally slipped in
the hill tenancies. We were in heaven watching him lead
the nWo. And because it was sticking it in the
face of the establishment. It's why I'll be nWo for life.
It's why it's called the Truth, it's why it was
called the outlaw Nation. It's finger poking in the face
of the establisher, putting a right in its eye. And
(25:22):
I love that the nWo did that. And what they represented,
you know, and eventually it got too big and whatever.
But but then he came back to the WW we
got massive response and they ended up putting the strap
on it. That's how big the response was. When he
came back to the wwe became nWo or go sorry,
came back as nWo, and then of course the Rock
(25:44):
and Hogan match turned him and then he went face
again and people loved it. He defeated Triple H and
won the belt. So there's so much about what he
did in the world of pro wrestling that is amazing.
And again, we would not have this business without him.
I don't care what they try to tell you, don't
listen to anybody else. We would not have the business
(26:06):
as big as it is without Hogan, which makes all
the stuff that happened afterwards, it makes his passing all
the more complicated to process and deal with and navigate
and have feelings about because of how great he was
when he was on the stage, how great he was
when he was there, you know. And I think it's
(26:29):
amazing that Hogan outlived Flair. I mean said Flair outlived Hogan.
That Flair who's had one thousand and thirty four heart
attacks has been able to outlive Hogan, and he delivered
a nice tribute to him. I here, where is it?
I know I have it here somewhere. Where is it?
(26:51):
I thought I had it here? Here it is okay,
Flair said, I am absolutely shocked to hear about the
passing of my close friend, Hulk Hogan. Holka has been
my side by my side since we started the wrestling business.
An incredible athlete, talent, friend and father A friendship has
meant the world to me. He was always there for me,
even when I don't know why. He's capitalizing every word
of this. It's weird. Even when I didn't ask for
(27:13):
him to be. He was one of the first to
visit me when I was in the hospital the two
percent chance of living and he prayed by my bedside.
Also lent me money when Reid was sick. Polkster, no
one will ever compare to you. Rest in peace, my friend,
you know and so, and I get it. People want
to focus on the negative stuff, and I totally respect that.
I totally respect that everyone's got their process on how
(27:35):
to process stuff like this. So I'm not going to
tell you how to feel about it, but whatever, But
for me, it's like it's just really complicated to see
how this all went down. And it's complicated when you
see people talk about this stuff so and you know,
it's just like I mean, I I you know, Stallone
(27:58):
for me, as I've seen recently, he's gone on the
Trump route as well, and so it's tough for me.
I love Stallone, maybe even more than Hogan, possibly but
probably yes, more than Hogan, and it's been tough for
me to see him make these decisions and do these
things and prop up this fake want to be tough guy,
and it's tough. I still think I'll be devastated when
(28:22):
Stallone goes, or when Schwarzenegger goes, another personal icon from
the eighties for me that changed my life. But like
the Hogan one is tough and I'll probably still be
processing it. I'll probably still watch his matches with joy
and remembrance. To separate the as is to use that
phrase to separate the art from the artist, right, because
(28:43):
what he did in the Ring was art. Whether it's
low art or high art, it was art. And so
for me, I will always remember and think the universe
for his existence, because he changed my life and he
gave me a hero to root for at a time
when I needed heroes, when my life was full of
(29:05):
bullying and getting beat up and made fun of and
ridiculed and hurt by people and friends who would occasionally
betray me in middle school or high school, which mirrored
a lot of what Hogan went through in the WWE.
So you know, for me, there's always going to be
a nostalgic love for my formative years of Hogan and
(29:31):
what he brought to them. But of course all the
controversies sadly stained it all, and the last couple of
years for me was pretty much the straw that broke
the camel's back, and I, yeah, I just kind of
lost my love for him, which is sad, honestly sad
for me as a person who cares and puts his
(29:53):
heart out on his sleeve for better or worse, it
was sad. You know. I donated all my Hogan shirts.
I didn't even try to re I just donated him
to whoever could want him, and I put it in
good will, got rid of all my whole Hogan paraphernalia.
So I have nothing to where to honor the man
(30:14):
because of all of that, and that was my decision,
just like it was my decision to love him for
so many years. It was my decision to finally walk
away from it and make a decision for myself. And so,
but today's the day to honor him for what he
did do and the happiness and joy that he brought
to millions and millions of people, and the amount of
(30:37):
people whose lives he changed by being Hulk Hogan, who
grew up with him and who idolized him and who
learned from him. And yes, you could, oh script it,
it's all fake, Oh yes, of course, But when you're
a kid at that age, at that time, you brought
(30:58):
into it, and when he's telling you the demandments and
the prayers and all that stuff, and eat your vitamins
and be respectful and all those dear mother and father,
like all those things were if important to kids like
me informative years who were getting into ar wrestling. So
I think he affected millions and millions of lines, like
(31:19):
it's not overreaching to say that, And so many people
were touched by what he did and moved by what
he did and cheered him on from Afar. And I
know there's still a number of people who still cheerfu.
Especially if you're a Trump or Maga person, you're even
more excited. And he came to your side overtly at
(31:40):
that Republican National Convention. But you can't take away, no
matter what, for us, you can't take away our joy
of having experienced that. And I think that's what I'll
come back to when I think about him, is the
great matches and the great moments, and the great promos,
and the the happiness and the cheering, and in my
(32:04):
pajamas as I watch him win a match, and this
Doe bowl haircut Latino kid jumping up and down when
he wins a match, and all of that, and you
having my dad go, what's wrong with you? And you know,
all of these things. And I saw him once alive
at the Capitol Center. My father took me, much to
his chagrin, took me to see them. And it was
(32:25):
amazing to see Hogan in person at that age, you know,
and so so many things. But I also recognize the
all the stuff afterwards, and it is what it is,
and I will I think I fully embraced who he
was as a person and judge him as such, but
I'll never you know, not still enjoy the moments and
(32:47):
the matches and the promos and the scenes and the
vignettes and some of the stuff with him that just
decorated my life, you know. And so I do say
rest in peace because he was stuffing through a lot
of health stuff. And just because we have a different
political opinion doesn't mean he doesn't deserve to rest in peace. Certainly,
(33:08):
the racism stuff is difficult, but you have to take
someone's life as a whole and balance it and measure
it out in an equal amount. And so for me,
so much more good happened from him in my life
than negative, and so I have to look at it
(33:30):
that way that I accept all the negative stuff and
then accept all the positive stuff as well. And I
have my own personal journey with how to honor him
and how to you know, let him go respect and peace,
rest in peace, so to speak. So again a warlock says,
I don't separate there, great and Warlock, you've done everything
(33:52):
right in your life. You've never done anything wrong, I'm sure,
and you've never said anything wrong, You've never made a
bad misstep. A perfect human being, I'm sure, and I'm
sure you're you're you know you're a great person, not
a garbage human being, because I know that a garbage
human being wouldn't come on to someone's stream who's expressing
(34:13):
complicated feelings for the loss of someone who was a
childhood icon for him. And a garbage human being wouldn't
put out angry, toxic, vile messages in the in the feed, right,
That's not what a garbage human being would do. No, no, no,
A a non garbage human being would absolutely attack a
person for expressing complicated feelings about a person who is
(34:35):
very influential in their lives. Right, that's what a non
garbage human being would do. Am I correct on that,
a warlock, Take a look at yourself, buddy, get some help,
get some therapy, because that's not what a person who
is not a garbage human being does. You know, you're
a garbage human being for doing that. You're a garbage
human being. Come for coming in with your hate and
your anger and your vile toxicity and your rhetoric and
(34:57):
all of that. As I said, you're allowed to feel
as your feel about this man, but there's a way
to quantify everything you know, and so you coming in
with your anger and your hatred and your desire to
judge other people because you haven't accomplished anything in your
life and you want to shit on someone who did
for their actions and missteps and horrible things. They said, Fine,
(35:17):
that's your right, but don't think you're not a garbage
human being with some of the actions you've taken and
some of the things you've posted. You know, so take
a look at yourself, buddy. It's you who's the garbage
human being. A man has died, a man has dyed,
a life has left the earth. Okay, so there's a
there's it's okay to point out all the great things
(35:37):
he did and balance it out with all the bad
things he did, and look at him as a whole.
And I hope someone in your life a warlike when
they give your eulogy, they balance you out as a whole,
and they take and give grace to some of your
missteps and mistakes, which I will bet a million dollars
you've made numerous times with people in your life, and
(35:58):
they will balance it out when they deliver your eulogy.
And that goes for everybody. Because I haven't been reading that,
I haven't been reading the comments. I hope someone is
able to do that with you. So I just want
to let you know, all right, let's move on from that. Uh. Well, see,
(36:26):
and as I said, yes, a black man can understand
that he was an icon butt Holkon wasn't. Absolutely, of course, yes,
I said it. I don't know if he's unapologetically racist
because he did try to apologize. He did try to
say he was sorry and all this stuff, so you know,
he did. You can't say unapologetically because he did try
to apologize. Again, I'm not trying to excuse the man
(36:47):
for the things he did, because I didn't. I hated
the things he said and the things that he was
heard on tape saying, you know, And so that's the
way I look at those things. But what do you
say to the black wrestlers who've come out to defend
Hogan book or t and other people, Like, what do
you say about them? You know, yes, feel the way
you want to feel. But also the man has just dying.
(37:07):
Like there's a way to navigate that where you accept
the negative and also be okay with the positive. So anyway,
all right, let's uh, let's let's move on from this.
Let's move on from this. Rest in peace, brother, Yeah,
(37:28):
rest and peace man uh and of course condolences to
your family, condolences to his friends, uh and and many
fans who still love him, and the many fans like
me who have complicated feelings about him, you know, sending
out condolences to all of you all and myself on
this one as we process this loss, because I think
a lot of us are probably hurt that we're not
(37:50):
feeling more for this, because we there should be tributes
on high, there should be massive baggages put out and
all of that, but so many of us are lost
in some complicated feelings about it, and we're allowed to
be so. All right, let's move on to another thing here.
I've seen some people have blessed some super chests. Thank
you so much for sending them in. Wiley test said, sorry,
(38:12):
John free Loss. I know HI meant a lot to
you before all the awful stuff he supported lately. You're
the best. Thank you, Wiley. Appreciate that You're right. He
did mean a lot and still does in some ways,
you know, because those are things that are ingrained in
you in terms of the things you were inspired to
do because of people who are for in your formative
viewers who affected you. Ethan Lanari's va says, completely lost
(38:33):
all childhood love I had for him. His undying support
for evil was just too much. I wish I was
sad like I would have been as a kid. Yeah,
it's very Ethan. I think your feelings are valid. You're
absolutely valid to feel this way. Brothers, It's part of
the complicated legacy of this man. So I absolutely hear you,
my friend, and send you, know, send understanding for the
way you feel. Mike Gallagher says Hulk and Ozzy, Oh yeah,
(38:55):
Ozzy as well. Earlier this week I found Ozzie with
Ironman used as the entry song for someone Yes discovered
Rocky because of Hogan. My grandfather got the pay per
view for WrestleMania one. He died three days before it. Ah,
we watched it the night of his funeral. Lots of
emotions this week. Wow, Mike, damn Mike, sending you all
(39:15):
kinds of fucking strength and thoughts of comfort, dude. But
double whemmy for you in so many ways. And I'm
sure a lot of people losing Ozzy. Ozzy is very
important to the metal community, and it isn't like there
isn't a you know, a ven Diagram crossover of the
wrestling community and the heavy metal community. I'm the crossover
pretty big. So I'm sure a lot of people are
(39:35):
feeling it this week. And if you grew up in
the eighties, Malcolme, Jamal Warner, so that's your threesome right there.
I'm sure that Ben diagram is actually bigger than people think. Malcome, Jamal,
Ozzy Osbourne and Hulk Hogan. That's a hell. Those are
eighties icons that we've lost all in one week and
people were feeling and people are feeling it, you know,
So thank you, Mike. I appreciate it. Brother. Uh Let's
(40:01):
move on. Calvin said this, John, I really believe you
don't have to be the most perfect human being to
be allowed to criticize others, especially if it's a public
person exposing themselves for decades. Yes, criticize, fine, But if
I'm on here talking about someone who affected my life
and talking about the complicated feelings to allow your rage
out in such a toxic way, the man is not
(40:23):
even cold yet. I think there is a difference, right,
and so that's the difference. And there, I'm not saying
you have to be perfect to criticize others. But there's
a time and a place for everything, right, and is
this really the time? Is this really the place? That's
my question there, Calvin so Nuance, guys, nu wants all right,
(40:45):
let's move on to let's move on to this situation.
Last night, I look, I'm scared to put these photos
up because I don't know if they're gonna come from
my channel or take the show down. But last night
South Park went super nuclear on Donald Trump with their
new episode for season twenty seven, called Sermon on the
Mount where they delivered one of the most hilarious and
(41:12):
controversial and just I mean just shocking evisceration of a
sitting president. They had him like Saddam with Satan from
the South Park movie. They had him in some really
unsettling images that were there on the walls. It was
(41:34):
crazy stuff. And then they did a psa where they
aied his face onto a guy who is overweight there
crawling through the desert. It was that this episode, and
I also think it was one of the most incredibly
genius episodes. This is maybe the best episode they've done
in years South Park, because there's more going on here
(41:58):
than you think. It wasn't just Trump, like I think
that was fascinating about the episode. And if you guys
haven't watched it, I'm gonna spoil some stuff, but I
hope you guys don't care. But like this was insane,
Like I just was so blown away at the genius
of this episode. Yes, on the top layer, you see
people are on the right and Trump's people are going insane.
(42:19):
Oh Trump, but he was I mean like he used
they used Cartman to go after NPR like it was.
It wasn't like it was only Trump. They went after
a lot of people here. They went after the people
who bent the knee to Trump. They went after people
who betrayed the Democratic Party like Jake Tapper and uh,
(42:39):
what's his face over there, Joe Scarborough and others with
that that political donor who switched Lindy Lee. I forget
her name is Lindy something like that. I can't remember
what her name is. Like, they went out using that
PC principle as the thing. And they also exposed this
idea that this hypocrisy that the right was mad for years,
(43:00):
that they were being indoctrinated to believe in the equality
and DEI and all this stuff, and here they are
pushing their idea of what they think is correct and
forcing people to be a part of it, and using
the PC principle to talk about and then cloaking it
all in Jesus and God and all of that kind
of stuff. I thought it was genius. What a brilliant
(43:22):
commentary in a time when everyone is scared and everyone
is bending the knee. I mean, Columbia University just paid
the government two undred million dollars so they could save
their funding. They basically said that the government will is
okay to come in and tell them who's allowed to
be enrolled in Columbia University who isn't, to make sure
they're hitting their white quota. How ironic is that now
(43:46):
the other side is calling for quotas the other side
is calling for like I think it's fascinating to watch this.
If you're upset about what the other side is doing
and you become the other side when you get into power,
you're essentially just repeating the same batterns, and so it's
just it was a great evisceration of that, and the
commentary using Jesus in essence throughout the whole thing as
(44:07):
a commentary about like even he is like sued into
the situation and he is taught. He talks about Colbert
when he's doing that sermon on the Mountain, like we
don't want to get canceled. This is amazing because this
episode essentially put Paramount in the crosshairs right as they're
about to try to do this merger, and they just
(44:29):
signed like a one point four one point three billion
dollar deal the south Park guys did with Paramount to
keep doing the show. So, and if you study everything's
been going on this week, David Ellison came out, who's
going to be the guy in charge there? It's guy
Dants of Paramount after the merger and said, we are
(44:54):
not going to have DEI practices at Paramount. We're not
going to have any kind of DEI problem. And here
is south Park coming in and just eviscerating the man
who is in charge of the government and the FCC
guy serves at the pleasure of him, who is going
to approve this merger potentially. So I just thought it
(45:18):
was genius to make a commentary throughout on everybody, right,
Like the opening of the show is Cartman complaining about
NPR being canceled by the President because he loved listening
to he talks about derogatories. Lesbian's complaining about this or
that or talking and it was so derogatory in the
(45:39):
commentary he was making about the left, So South Park
again cleverly, cleverly poking fun at the left, and these
were I mean, I was laughing at these jokes, you know,
because the left can Most people on the left can
take a joke. Most people on the right, it seems like, can't.
And so they were. It was hilarious the stuff that
(46:02):
carpensand and so this underlying storyline with him trying to
figure out who he is now if he can't be
the rebel anymore, he can't be the person who is
antagonize everybody by being inappropriate. That it's okay for everyone
to be inappropriate, I thought was great. And the fact
that Kyle doesn't say much throughout the episode I thought
(46:26):
was an interesting part of the episode as well. And
the stuff with and then eventually Cartman with Butters trying
to get him to be a part of what he's
doing in some suicide pact, I thought was also genius
because then you realize suicide pack can't go forward because
of course they're in an electric car, so I mean,
(46:50):
those are the things that you look at and you go,
this is this is smart. This is how people of intelligence,
which of course they're trying to stop having people of
intelligence be a part of our world anymore by trying
to stop the funding for all these higher education institutions.
But seeing all of that, I mean, it's just so
(47:11):
funny to see how they put it all together, you know,
And so I just was so in love with what
they did in this episode. And look, yes, of course
I'm an anti Trump person, and so seeing the commentaries
that they're with those pictures on the wall and the
thing with him in Satan mirroring the thing with him
(47:32):
in Saddam from the movie years ago, it's kind of
interesting to see this kind of coming a little bit
full circle and comparing him constantly to the Middle East thing,
and also the hypocrisy of being Christians. Yet when you
see the the shindig he's having on the White House
lawn and how depraved and hedonistic it is while they're
(47:52):
singing about christ. I mean, this is just brilliant stuff.
Exposing the hypocrisy that lies at the foundation of MAGA
in so many ways. I just thought was brilliant and smart,
like it wasn't low hanging fruit. Like that's the thing
that's the brilliance about South Park when you watch it
and they really do it right. It's actually an intelligent
(48:13):
approach through encased in what looks to be low level art.
And I think that's what's the gift of South Park
when they get it right, when they're really on point,
and they were on point in this episode throughout this episode,
and I just was so blown away by I thought
the PSA went a little far, Like I was like,
(48:33):
that is main even for me. I was like, that
is that is madness. That is way too far. And
I love that they end with Butters and Cartman, and
Cartman says like they have an exchange, and Cartman says,
is the credits are rolling right when it says Trey
Parker and Matt Stone. He says, I love you man,
And that's essentially Trey Parker, I think saying that to
(48:55):
Matt Stone, like, hey, if this is our last episode,
they cancel us, I love you man. It's been a
great making the show. So again, this is the kind
of gutsiness that you don't see from older rebels, like
older rebels get soft. Older rebels become Jake Tapper writing
a book about Biden instead of saying anything about Trump
or Joe Scarborough, or you see so many of these
(49:17):
old rebels who all of a sudden get soft as
they get older. Like George Carlin was one of the
rare old rebels who stayed a rebel all the way
to the end, stayed calling out the bullshit all the
way to the end. And I respect that. I mean,
Bill Burr's doing that now, and it's great to see
Bill Burr doing that. And so there must there has
to be art that speaks truth to power, or we
(49:38):
do become an authoritarian state, and we do become a dictatorship,
you know, an authoritarian state, and we can't become that
as America. We can't. And so I think this was
a much much needed and the timing of this was amazing.
The fact that they recorded a cold bear line in
(49:58):
this and put that in there for Jesus to say,
I thought was brilliant, you know. And there's the hypocrisy
of using religion to cover up all these hateful things
that they're doing to try to force people to believe
in Christ and force people to accept Christ in the classroom. Right,
you've seen that happening with the Ten Commandments. I think
down in Oklahoma, right, they're trying to force the Ten
(50:19):
Commandments to be in the class Now, they're trying to
force science teachers to teach the Bible instead of evolution.
Is what the fuck is going on? You know? And
so it's they're doing the exact same things that they
were complaining about the left doing. They're doing the exact
(50:40):
forcing people to accept these things, forcing people. So there's
a hypocrisy here that I think was very well exposed
and highlighted and ridiculed in this episode of South Park.
So I was I was just over the moon seeing
that kind of stuff happened. The White House response, Yeah,
(51:02):
they came. I think they came after this. Yeah, they said,
who was this? The White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told
Rolling Stone in the statement this morning, the left's hypocrisy
truly has no end. I mean, never mind that they
were making fun of both the left and the right
for years. They have come after South Park for what
they labeled as offensive content, but suddenly they are praising
the show. Just like the creators of South Park. The
(51:23):
left has no authentic or original content, which is why
their popularity continues to hit record low. So this show
hasn't been relevant for over twenty years. And so after
he's saying, the left was, you know, oh, the show
and this or that, and the show has been bad.
The show is like this. Now he's like, the show
has been bad and the popularity and nobody cares about
the show hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas
(51:46):
and a desperate attempt for attention. They just signed a
deal for one point four billion dollars. You uttered, dope,
they aren't perfectly fine, and clearly a paramount wouldn't sign
a deal with them if they weren't making money doing
South Park. President Trump is delivered on more promises in
just six months than any other president in our country,
and no fourth rate show can derail President Trump's hot streak. Meanwhile,
(52:06):
he's trying to run from the Epstein Files, which they
allude to in the show, which I thought was hilarious
as well. He's had his boy Johnson recess the Congress
so they have they don't have to vote on exposing
the Epstein file or release in the Epstein files. And
his people are meeting with Gallen Maxwell today to essentially
work out a deal for her to probably say only
(52:28):
Democrats were in the files, give me a pardon, you know.
And meanwhile, it's a hot streak, so you know, you
just kind of look at all this stuff and you know,
can't we get a little bit of truth? Can't we
get I mean to bring it back to Hogan. Can't
we get a little nWo against this stuff that's going
on in our world? Can't we have the rebellion, the
rebels poking in the eye of the establishment because they're
(52:51):
the establishment now they are no longer the rebels, Which
is what that whole show was about. Is Cartman realizing
he is the establishment now, not the rebel anymore. So
how can his life have any purpose if he's just
part of the establishment. And I thought that was genius.
Oh and the stuff with the South Park residents, you know,
(53:11):
the Trump character suing everybody, which is so weak, but
the Trump character suing everybody throughout the whole episode I
thought was hilarious as well. And them having to take
suing him for five billion dollars, And I mean it
was so topical that it felt like they wrote the
episode yesterday, you know, with Trump suing the Wall Street
(53:33):
General for ten billion dollars for that letter, which they,
you know, were happy to have the lawsuit put in
front of an Obama appointed judge because now when he
throws it out, things they see it's Obama in the
conspiracy against It's the deep state again, it's all the
stuff that is manufactured, and if you have half a brain,
you can see the conspiracy stuff that's going on here
(53:54):
and the way they're working things out so that they
keep looking like they're the victims of the hole situation.
So yeah, I thought, is that everything I wrote down
about the episode? I think it is. Yeah, the prec principle.
Oh I love the Garrison moment they break into his house.
That was hilarious. And the show kept using the F
(54:14):
word for gay people. So like, you know, for all
the complaints about them attacking Trump, they totally were goating
the left as well throughout the whole move Throughout the
whole episode, I mean Cartman wearing the woke his dead shirt.
I kept thinking of the WNBA players over the weekend
wearing paists, which you owe ys black shirts with the
(54:35):
white lettering. So I don't think that was a reference that,
but I the timing of it is hilarious. Faith Yeah,
pictures of Trump ye, having Satan say, having Satan say
he reminds him of the guy who used to date,
which is essentially the sixty minute segment was genius as well.
Having those reporters and anchors being nervous about talking about
(54:55):
it because CBS has gotten sued and they've capitulated, so
they this is a paramount show, ridiculing the President for
canceling the Colbert and CBS being okay with so sorry,
ridiculing CBS for canceling the Colbert Show through Jesus, and
then ridiculing them for bending the knee for sixty minutes
(55:18):
and having those people walk away from the show because
they don't have journalistic they're not allowed to have journalistic
freedom to create the shows because they're afraid of Trump,
you know. And this is all on David Elson and
share Redstone, and I love that the Writer's Guild is
calling for an investigation here to find out what's going on,
because this needs to be exposed one hundred percent. And
(55:38):
I hope there's an attorney general in New York or
in LA who is willing to take on this case
and subpoena all the text messages and emails from Ellison
and Redstone and everybody involved in this merger and put
them out there. I would love to see that, so yeah,
but yeah overall, and I love the beginning of this
new season. I thought this happenedisode was genius. I utter genius.
(56:02):
And I can't wait for I can't wait for for
the Diddy episode because if you've seen the preview, the
trailer they've released for the shows coming up, Diddy flying
through the air and that whatever that thing is, man,
I can't wait to see that. So I'm so looking
forward to that. So yeah, a great, great show, y'all.
Let's see here. Fantastic, says Rip Thunderlips. Yeah all right,
(56:23):
Rocky three. I totally forgot yes, Rocky three as well.
And this was before he became Hulkogan, so I had
to appreciate him as Hulk Coagan like later, right, or
appreciate Thunderlips through the prison of Holgoguan later. But yes,
Thunderlips the Ultimate Mail versus the Ultimate Meatball Ethan Lenaris,
Virginia trem Matt still got one hundred percent, one hundred percent,
(56:44):
one hundred percent. They just need to be you know,
arts needs to be inspired, and it's just you know,
you've got to find the right. I hate to say
this to the right. Well, I don't hate to say it,
but you got accept it. Like the left's evisceration of
the right in art is so much more inventive and
funny and crap and creative than the rights of miseration
of the left. It really is. It just is because
(57:06):
the left can take a joke the right can't. Ethan
in Thersba says, I hope this whole season is just
ripping Trump. No, no, no, there's a lot more. There's
a lot more. As I said, puff Daddy being or
Pte Diddy being in the promost makes it fun. There's
a lot to make fun of going on in our
society right now. And I hope they evserate everybody and everything.
Cowboys fantas uses, how John and my fellow nation brothers
(57:28):
and sisters. I know Trump is everywhere because of what
he's doing here in the US, but please don't forget.
And I don't know what the second part of is
because they hadn't sent it in yet. Daniel Haygood says,
love you, Rocus stay sharp. Thank you, Daniel to do
my best. They'll probably cancel my channel now, but I
appreciate it, thank you so much. Can't Karen tell me
to cancel my I can't, Karen. I can't start to
(57:51):
Exchange New Worlds just debut. I have to watch Stars
Exchange New Worlds and I have to watch south Park now.
So I'm sorry Cowboys fan. With the part two, what's
happening in Gas as we sleep with our taxpayer money?
There are thousands of one thousands, Lane dead and Starbon death,
yet we do nothing. Well, that's you know. I'm not
speaking out on that because that's a very complicated issue
(58:12):
with a lot of stuff going on. All I'll say
is this, I'm heartbroken for all the innocent lives being
taken on both sides of this situation. But this situation
is like centuries old, and so to speak on it
and take a side, for me, the only side I
take is that I don't I want to end innocent
(58:33):
lives being taken in that region. I hope peace can
be found. I hope weapons are no longer taken up
to kill people because they're on the other side of
an imaginary line in the sand. And it just is
devastating when you see the stories and see the videos
on all sides of what's going on there. And when
(58:54):
you've seen and I've lived as long as I have
and seen the videos from all sides that have gone
on for decades, and the death and destruction that has
happened on all sides for decades, it's just devastating, utterly devastating.
So that's what I would say. So all right, and
I don't think I do you have any stream labs
(59:15):
that came through Oh one, yeah, we'll talk through. Sixty
five says what's going on with Clara and the Sun
and no showed upcoming festivals and it wrapped filming in
early mid twenty twenty four. What have you heard? I
haven't heard anything about Clara in the Sun, but I
will ask Jeff about it tonight. So yes, guys, don't
forget Tonight four PMPT, we go live with the Hot
mic me and Jeff Snyder, and we'll probably talk more
(59:38):
about this stuff and other stuff going on in the
world of entertainment as well. So join us live in
any big comic on news that drops this week. So
just want to say that, but guys, thank you so
much for joining me. I'm going to wrapping it up here.
I know Chris is going to start his show, so
if you guys want to head on over there, feel
free to do that. I'm gonna go take a little
bit of a break and then prepare for hot mic tonight.
I love you all madly. Thanks for sitting. Almost four
(59:58):
hundred of you were hanging out with me for a
majority of the show. So again, I'm very blessed and
honored that you would do so and listen to what
this idiot has to say about anything. So I appreciate
it very very much. And as I said, for those
of you who have complicated feelings, who are grieving or
couldn't care less, I guess I said, I totally understand
all your feelings when it comes to Hogan, and let
(01:00:19):
me know what you thought, what your thoughts are about
Hogan down in the comments section below, and what your
thoughts are about the South Park episode. Let me know
what you think about it too, So I want to
hear what you all think and if I left out
anything as well. So all right, have a great Thursday,
don't forget four PMPT come back here live Me and
Jeff Snyder for the hot mic, and I'll talk to
you next time with another brand new episode of The
(01:00:40):
Truth Piece. Until that