Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Jimmy's Jo Gigs.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Welcome back to United States of Australia. I am back
from vacation. We had a week off and there's a
lot to catch up on. And joining me my most
loyal soldier, it seems at the moment, is my man.
Just Josh, he's my friend and he's yours. Welcome buddy,
Oh hang on, that click didn't work. Let's try that again.
(00:49):
There we go.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
Welcome Josh, appreciate it, glad to be back with you.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
It's great to have you. And unfortunately joining us is well,
we don't know. We hope he's going to join us,
but we're going to assume he's not going to be here.
Is Jay Scoop as usual in Ukraine. Let's hope he
can jump on, but never easy over there getting power.
And the other man that's not going to be here
(01:18):
is our man, Robbie and I had a great joke
about tit size considering our guests today, but he's not
here for me to do that tit joke. So let's
get to the Tits. We all know her from WATP,
but I think more importantly from once over with Kaylee.
It is the lovely Well.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
Thank you so much for having me.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Thanks for coming back.
Speaker 4 (01:43):
I gotta tell you, every single your intro gets me.
Every single time. I was like, backstage, wait into you
brought on, just laughing my ass off at that. It's amazing.
I love it.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Yeah, I was. That's one I was proud to think of,
Like I just take this strain national anthem and put
cross the clown. It's perfect.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
So it's so good.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Yeah, thanks for coming back. It's great to have you back.
On last time we talked about Chopper, reading the film Chopper,
and this time I noticed the other day you were
talking about your passion for heavy metal, and I was like,
what do you think about Metallica? And you said, I
have my thoughts and that's all I need to hear.
As long as you've got thoughts, That's that's what I
(02:25):
want from somebody. So we are going to talk about
Metallica today. Josh, you're a Metallica fan as well. And
look where I think we're differing ages. I'm not aware
of Kaylie's age, and I would not dare to ask her,
but I know Josh and I have a bit of
a bit of an age gap there. So our experiences
(02:46):
of when we found Metallica. I think it will be interesting.
But of course, Kayleie, I caught you on this little
piggy on Friday. I believe it was so I understand
that you are a little bit up today with what's
going on with the Toe.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
Oh yeah, god, I love the Toe. I spend too
much of my time thinking about Aaron. Aaron has replaced
stuttering John for me, which is horrible somehow.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Yeah, it's amazing. I mean, that's when stuartering John was
on a break, was when sort of Patrick Milton popped
up talking about Steel Toe, and yeah, I've been onto
it for yeah, since well basically since Patrick found them.
That's when I found Patrick, and so yeah, it's been
like it's been a slow turnover for me over the
last year and a half, but yes, certainly over the
(03:35):
last few months he's taken over from stuttering John for me,
and so much so that I was like, I gotta
start doing this on my own show because I have
my own thoughts. So without further ado, let's get into it, and.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
April adds, nothing, it's gonna be great.
Speaker 5 (03:49):
We're scripping this morning.
Speaker 6 (03:50):
Come on, it's time for it's time for, it's time
for movie and the scramp. It's time for it's time
for it's time for movie and the scramp.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
It's gonna be.
Speaker 6 (04:05):
It's gonna be mediocre media oprarit. Fuck, it's time far,
It's time bar, It's time for movie.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
And the scrap. Yes, it is time.
Speaker 3 (04:18):
My favorite line is it's gonna be mediocre.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
It's mediocre as fuck. Yeah. I love that because for us,
like I just assume we're gonna be mediocre as fuck.
So I kind of does set off the segment quite beautifully. So, yeah,
it's been an odd Ice Scooby's here and it looks
like he's camera lest which is understandable. Welcome Ice, crap, Yo,
what's up?
Speaker 5 (04:41):
Can you hear me?
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Okay, yeah, it sounds awesome. Yeah, all right, you want
a bunker again? Because you sound great?
Speaker 5 (04:47):
No, No, I'm in a moment here. After a couple
of these people leave here that can't show their faces,
then I will turn my camera on. I'm at my
apartment in the capital, so I'm good. And even better,
I found the technician to fix my MacBook that was
literally like dead, like I thought I was screwed. I
(05:11):
thought I was thousands in the hole on this freaking thing,
and I found the guy a magician over here to
fix it and then pull it out. I mean, I
don't know if you remember, but it got water damage
and it was I thought it was done for.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
So I don't worry. We just sent like eighty five
billion more to Ukraine.
Speaker 5 (05:29):
Man. Oh that's why, that's why you gave me a discount.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
He gotta tast. He got a tast.
Speaker 5 (05:36):
And I see another face I recognize from a previous show.
Speaker 4 (05:40):
Hello, Hello, how are you, Kayley?
Speaker 5 (05:44):
Good to see you.
Speaker 3 (05:45):
It's Miss tight Box. It's Miss tight Box.
Speaker 4 (05:47):
Oh yeah, sorry, very important, very important that miss. I've
earned the miss very good.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
Uh scoopa? Obviously, yeah, you jumped on because you saw
the lovely Kleian thought you had to be a part
of it. But do you get the opportunity obviously you're
in and out of power and Wi Fi and all that.
Do you get the opportunity? Sorry, we've just jumped into
our steel Toe segment. Do you get the opportunity to
catch up on any of what's going on?
Speaker 5 (06:16):
I only catch all my steel Toe news from United
States of Australia.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
That's excellent.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
That's what I like to hear and ten other people
agree with you at the moment, which is great, but
we're going to kick it off just with just another
I just love the bumbling idiot moments from Aaron and
you know, so this is tangentially the goal. He's got
himself a new sponsor, and he's been told obviously that
(06:49):
just like the firearms thing, which we'll get into later,
advertising nicotine is not generally something youtubed into either, and
people let him know about it, and he wasn't too
pleased about it.
Speaker 7 (07:04):
So that no reading the chat and no vaping during
the show, because that's weird too, like you're just sitting there,
you're talking about something.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Just that vape looks so fucking gay.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
By the way, gay is the highest insult for him,
which I just think is fat. Everything's gay. If he
doesn't like it, it's gay. Now. I have a vape
right here, and it's medically prescribed because it has to
be in Australia. We live in a police state. But
(07:38):
I do I don't know if you guys notice where
I've dragged on the vape. I mean, I do have
the big wind screen in front of me to kind
of cover it, but I think he's maybe fractionally exaggerating
how people draw on their vapes on a stream, but
I don't know it does get do you get the sense? Kaylee?
This is a hurt man that he's found out. He's
fucked up again.
Speaker 4 (07:59):
He's so stupid. Also, I've never thought that vaping looked
gay until I just watched him suck his cheeks all
the way into his mouth. He doesn't, My good sir,
that is how you suck a dick, not avate like
that was not a good example. I did not enjoy watching.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
That very good. It's a great point. But so yeah,
obviously he's he's lashing out. He's also, and this will
be a common theme throughout the show as well, lashing
out a little bit at his buddy Johnny Crutches. So
he's been taking shots at and digs at Johnny. Obviously
vapes on his show. I'm not sure if he vapes
(08:40):
on Aaron's show, but he vapes on his own show.
So these are more digs at Johnny Crutches as well.
Speaker 7 (08:45):
Edibles are out there, there's so many other options.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Pill form.
Speaker 7 (08:50):
We's sucking on the vape thing for and I've done
the vape pens they're whatever, but it looks gay and
trying to sell more shit he hates to sell.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
No, no, no, I love Benny and I love his shirt.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
Someone reminds him that you wanted this guy to be
a sponsor. You're shitting all over his product and calling
it all completely gay.
Speaker 5 (09:18):
I wish Robbie was here right now because when he
said he does the vape pens, it makes me think
of when Robbie said he did weed or something. Yeah,
he worded it in this weird way.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Weed does me.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
But also it sounds like he's only lashing out at
people to do weed vapes because he said there's edibles,
Like I mean, I know there's like chewing tobacco and shit,
but like I'm using a nicotine vape because I need
to quit cigarettes. And that's two weeks straight, by the
way without a cigarette, think very much. So yeah, trying
(09:57):
to wean my way off. I don't. Yeah, Like it's
there's vipes of old coins. Yes, some people vipe wade,
but a lot of people nicotine and say, I don't
know about the edible nicotine. I don't know I'd be
into that Other than those I guess they' built those
mouth drops or whatever.
Speaker 4 (10:13):
You could just snort it. You can do I mean,
you know, inject it right into your veins. All of
those things are are fine. According to Steeltee.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
Do the kind you know, shoot it up your butt there.
Speaker 3 (10:29):
I'm sorry, Aaron, this is so fucking gay.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
Oh yeah, look at that.
Speaker 5 (10:36):
I didn't know you loved the men until that moment.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Yeah, what's what flavor? Is it?
Speaker 3 (10:43):
Sunset Sherbert? Oh, the flavors?
Speaker 5 (10:47):
The title might be gay.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
I don't come up with this ship. But the best
one I found I was with Justin.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
And I was the guy one. Yeah it was.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
It was called it was called Trucker's Daughter.
Speaker 5 (11:00):
Oh so I'm fairly certain the guys that are are
vaping the the THC are the ones that are in
charge of naming these products.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
Trucker's Daughter, Trucker's Daughter. The guy was like, I think
I want to try that.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
One, don't. We all want to try a Truckers up.
Speaker 7 (11:23):
But and look, Benny's been a friend of mine for
a long time. I don't like it on stream. I
don't like it when you're doing a show. I think
it's really unprofessional to be sitting there go while you're
on and also quit trying to take big rips off
your Nobody's impressed.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Nobody, all right, So that's yeah. I just love him
immediately shitting on something he's supposed to be selling as
a as a product, Like.
Speaker 4 (11:55):
Why would you take a sponsorship if you don't like
the product? Like you have to sell it, and you
have to sell it every single second, like Carl is.
I hate to give Carl compliments, but Carl from the
he understands marketing and and he believes in the products
that he is doing and so he's not shitting on
them on the back end like that. It's so stupid,
(12:17):
Like well, I would never ever ever buy a vape
that Aaron sponsored, Like well.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
Is he going PayPal Venmo and Benny's vapes?
Speaker 4 (12:27):
Now?
Speaker 3 (12:27):
Yes? Well you wonder.
Speaker 5 (12:32):
How how he like, did he just say, oh, here's
a sponsor, I'm taking it no matter what, regardless of
you know, or is he okay? Because like one of
my favorite people. I don't know if you've ever watched
stuff with Shaquille O'Neil, like behind the scenes, but like
for him, you know, you see him on so many things,
but he actually he does not choose anything unless he
(12:56):
you know, likes it, uses it, any of that stuff,
and and just it gave me more respect to watch
how how he chooses what he works with behind the scenes.
But you know a lot of people, especially if it's
their first sponsor or too, there's gonna be whatever alteric
you know, maybe they hate Trump and it'll be a
thing for Trump, right they're like fuck you, I don't care,
(13:18):
you know. Or Kamala Harris they don't like her, Oh,
but they're gonna pay me money.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
I love her.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
You think Shack has General Insurance?
Speaker 5 (13:28):
No, the General is one of his main one of
his main ones stands behind them. I remember watching him
filming some kind of thing behind the scenes about the
General in particular, So yeah, he actually does back then.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Look, I could see myself like at this stage where
our podcast is at, like Joe Feenie from the Creative
Control Network, who handles the podcast side of our show. Uh,
if he came to me and said, we've got this sponsor,
can you writ a few ads, I'm sure whatever it is,
I'd take it because any money that we can use
to put back into the show, blah blah blah. Absolutely,
(14:06):
But there's a difference between those things that are just
generic across podcasts. So actually finding somebody that you know
that you're going to sponsor their thing, like it should
be a like a both way transaction. For him, it's
just the money you're giving me. What He's showing no
respect to a guy that he calls his friend but
(14:28):
immediately shitting on the product, Like that's that's the standout
about this guy is like just how g garbage is
to everybody in his life. He's always thinking about himself
nobody else.
Speaker 4 (14:40):
That's a really good point. Yeah, that would be the
equivalent of me going into a restaurant that I hate
and being like, hey, will you sponsor me and then
shitting on them and being like, oh god, their food
is horrible.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Anybody goes there is gay. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
My favorite thing about this guy though, is like he
should be making so much money because you could slide
him into any B movie action a bad guy, like
you know, like he's totally that guy, right, the one
that's like, Oh, all of a sudden, here's the hero.
(15:17):
Oh you know what, I'm gonna kill his whole family. Yeah,
you know, like while he's in the middle of sorting
some codes.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Yes, it's funny to say that back when we had
and I think it's still our highest feed episode when
we had the girls from pretty Anti socialon we have
a movie night on Saturday Night with the kids, and
the kids choose the movie, and I actually thought that
Aaron is actually the classic antagonist in the kids movie
because he's such a dog and a bumbling idiot that like,
(15:47):
he's got all these sinister thoughts in mind, but he's
incapable of achieving it, and that's why a chipmunks can
outfoil him, or you know whoever it may be. You know,
like it's that's what I think he is. He's a
he's a kid's movie villain.
Speaker 5 (16:04):
Yeah, he's not even good enough for the adult.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
Yeah, exactly the next one.
Speaker 5 (16:12):
He couldn't he couldn't have a punch in the face
from Steven Sagar that would be above him.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
He can get a point of the face from a
sixteen year old boy beating the shit out of him
in the boxing mate.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
And everyone was very happy about that, I'm sure.
Speaker 7 (16:30):
But so that was very funny on the barber shop
something that wasn't funny today, And I got to thank
somebody on Twitter for getting me that the dirt on
this I'm.
Speaker 2 (16:38):
All right, So I completely forgot what the whole this
gets to something that I want to talk about. But
there is some more to it. So this is where
we get to the gun sponsorship. So it's against YouTube
terms of service to sponsor anybody that sells guns or ammunition,
blah blah blah. So every time Aaron reads an ad
read for Middland Armory, he's breaking YouTube terms of service
(17:02):
and somebody reported him. So I believe that's what this
discussion is. But then they get more into a bit
more legal talk, and I just find it amusing what
Aaron has to explain.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
I'm going to say who it was.
Speaker 7 (17:14):
Uh, there was a guy in nlo's discord, which, if
you guys didn't know this, nobody likes onions is apparently
a SJW like cancel culture, anti free speech type of community.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
All right, because this guy called serial killer.
Speaker 7 (17:29):
The reason our morning show today is only available on
Rumble and Facebook and Kick our kick is back up.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
And running back the guy we got kick, Facebook.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
Rumble and you fuck yeah Kick.
Speaker 7 (17:41):
The reason that it's down is the guy called serial
killer with a C serial like the food. Yeah, a
guy and I have screenshots a guy, dude, he's on Discord.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
Yeah, he's probably fat and.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
Gay, fat and gay. Of course he's got to be
gay as well. Everybody on Discord is gay and they're
all so extremely fat, but they're also in cells, so
I don't know, hey, you know, for the gay or not.
It's all very very confusing. But if if you're on Discord,
you're you're evil. Read it, you're pretty evil as well.
(18:13):
Kiwi Farms tops, you're good, good people on Kiwi Farms.
A few weeks back, I read the Wikipedia descriptions of
those three websites and only one of them is referred
to as a doxing website that has driven people to suicide.
But anyway, so he.
Speaker 7 (18:31):
Goes on and he's bragging about how he reported us
and got our episode taken down today because of some
community guideline stuff, and I was like, well, that's really interesting.
I've got to add to that, but I know we're
not going to go any further than that.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
All right. The key point here, Aaron's not sure where
Matt's going. Aaron's worried that he's going to point out
the actual community guideline that he was not following. Because
Aaron needs to be the victim, so we don't need
to point out what he was doing. That is he's
completely his own fault. Now, I don't agree with reporting channels.
Don't report channels. That's dumb, that's silly. But Aaron, you're
(19:10):
the only person that's responsible for you breaking the community guidelines,
and you do it blatantly over and over and over again.
So he had to stop Matt there from adding any more.
But by the way, Matt is useless.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
Kelly, Oh, I was gonna say, nobody's allowed to change
Aaron's narrative. Aaron's narrative is Aaron's narrative is Aaron's narrative.
If this is gay, then it's gay. If this is
the conversation that we're having, then this is the conversation
that we're having. If this is what the goal is,
then this is what the goal is. If we're going
to start rolling over the money from the morning shows
into the evening shows so that those meet the goal,
(19:47):
if we're going to include the sponsor money because those
are going to help meet the goal, Like anything that
he wants to do, it's just Aaron's rules all the time,
and I hate.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
That so much.
Speaker 4 (19:57):
If you want to talk about things that make you gay,
like you are such a little prick. I hate it
so so much, it's so inappropriate. He refuses to listen
to anybody else at any time.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Yeah, and there's some of this stuff where and this
happens with stattering John where you go. It's so mind
boggling that you can't see what's so obviously in front
of your face, Like this has to be a bit. Yeah,
and then it keeps happening and you're like, it can't.
How can it be a bit? Like it keeps doing it, Like,
sure you should realize that. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
I think stuttering John fakes it a fair amount. I
think we can all agree on that. I think Aaron
is sincerely Aaron, and that's terrifying.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
And I was almost going to call this episode self
awareness because there is some stuff coming up where I
think it's the key ingredient. I think the most important
ingredient to a lolcout is self awareness and completely complete
lack of understanding of who you are. That's the only
way you can become a low coal and has that
(21:03):
in spades. It's phenomenal, the projection that he dishes out
on a daily basis, let's continue.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
I know the ways you know the human being.
Speaker 8 (21:14):
No, no, there's a there's a second one that was
also doing the same thing. This person is, Oh cool, Yeah,
it's someone on Reddit. Oh really to drop a name
drop a name Girl Friday? Who's girl Friday?
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Exactly? I mean you want me to drop a name
drop a fucking Reddit handle? Great, that gets nowhere closer
to who this person is. But this person apparently, well,
I'll let Matt explain.
Speaker 8 (21:37):
Hang on, Tom paralegal on Reddit, who, by the way,
thinks you're a felon and you're going to prison for years?
Speaker 3 (21:44):
What?
Speaker 2 (21:44):
Yeah? Am I really? Yes? You are? Oh my, are
you girl Friday Curly? No? I am not.
Speaker 4 (21:52):
That's a good question, though. I do think that he
is going to jail. I I agree.
Speaker 3 (22:00):
I think he's looks like he's ready to go to
jail right there. Look at that.
Speaker 4 (22:04):
Yeah, yeah, look at he's getting prepared for all the
gay stuff xact. He. I think there's no way. I
think he's probably going to serve like sixty to ninety days.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
You think sixteen? I was thinking thirty days.
Speaker 4 (22:18):
Yeah, everybody seems to be agreeing with thirty. I think
thirty is what's currently on the table. But I just
don't think that there's any way in hell that he
doesn't fuck something up bad enough that they slap him
with a.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
He'll do something stupid.
Speaker 4 (22:30):
And I don't know a lot about I don't know
a lot about the criminal justice system, So I will
say that I could be totally wrong about that, but
I think that he is so egregious at this point
that the courts might make an example out of him
for the hundreds of people that watch him.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
I think, yeah, I think you're right, And I think
part of it is how brazen he is on his show,
and you know, call it a comedy show whatever. If
you're disrespecting the so openly and publicly, they're not going
to take that kindly. And so when it comes to, oh,
should we give him thirty sixty or ninety, yeah, maybe
(23:10):
that judge will go, you know what, you've been so disrespectful.
You can have ninety days and sit there and fucking
think about it. That wouldn't surprise me. I listened to
a lot of true crime stuff and it all comes
down to that judge and their thought process and whatever
information they have in front of them could very well
affect them poorly. But anyway, girl Friday is a paradegl
(23:32):
I've read some of her posts if it is her,
and yeah, some interesting that had some interesting points, but
purely just speculation, like we all do. We speculate it
said they're a paralegal, so not a lawyer in any
any way, shape or form, just saying Hey, I work
around lawyers and I've heard a lot of this stuff
and I have to read through a lot of case law,
(23:54):
whatever it may happen to be. Yeah, this is my
thoughts on it. I've got my thoughts on it from
just watching Law and Order, listening to true crime podcast.
There's little things that you pick up. So, yeah, we're
all speculating this dramatics of being like, oh, they're all
saying you're going to jail. No, No, we're all just going, well,
you keep fucking up, dude, And these are the things
(24:14):
that like, this is case law, these are things that
have happened in the past, This could happen to you. Yeah,
he's not getting it. And just like stuttering John, he
is a phenomenal pause. You can do the drop the needle,
I think sometimes then he gets a phenomenal screenshots everybody
get a screenshot right now, that's a cracker.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
Thank god, I'd better see my goodbyes to everybody.
Speaker 8 (24:36):
Oh yeah, I know someone's been ranting on I get
this bits and pieces from someone else who reads this
shit and has fun with it, because it's the interunt
a fake.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
All these people get bits and pieces from other people.
Just say, you fucking read it, like you know, I mean,
it's no big deal that you went to Reddit to
read this shit that's being said about you, guys, Like
it's fine, just admit it. Like why do you get
piece together, piece Together a puzzle from fifteen other people? Okay?
Speaker 8 (25:03):
But yeah, no, there's a thing on Reddit too, there's
gay apps going on, and girl Friday who's a paralegal
who is convinced that, along with the rest of Reddit,
you have your your supervised visitation. But yet I'm confused
because supervised visitation, by the way, you exchange your children
at the Becker Police Department, right yeah, or like, well
(25:26):
but how is it supervised?
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Yeah? Because then you leave with your children. So now
this shit makes sense.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
Well, the great stuff Matt like he's just a wordsmith,
you know, he really expresses the point and get Aaron
is so fucking confused right now as to what Matt's
talking about. But he is about to go into defending
the supervised visitation accusations, which again it's just people like
(25:50):
Patrick Milton and that just throwing darts and go on,
let's see if this winds him up, and of course
it does. It winds him up when we get nice
little clips like this.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
But this weekend, it's just a convenient place to meet.
It's right off the main drag down.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Okay. Can you imagine the police station being a convenient places.
Speaker 4 (26:13):
So centrally located.
Speaker 5 (26:15):
Yeah, yeah, they assumed there would be a dunkin Donuts
next door or something.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
Yes, literally, it's the only thing on that road. There's
literally nowhere else to pull off. We have to go
to the police court ordered, dickhead. Come on, like, we're
not stupid.
Speaker 7 (26:32):
This weekend, we're meeting at Lake George. Oh okay, so
we're going to do that tomorrow. We're just gonna pick
them up from school. Yeah, straight up.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
So weird.
Speaker 7 (26:42):
I tell you, I'm really hopping around those supervised visits.
I'm like, missus Sellder come this way now, No, we're
going here today.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
It's it's so super.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
All right, So do you know where I dropped my
kids off with my wife in the house I live
in with my wife?
Speaker 5 (26:59):
What happened to the marriage since I last talked to you? Yeah,
you were just together? What happened?
Speaker 2 (27:07):
I've just come back from vacation ten straight days, twenty
four hours a day I was with It was I
was within a mid range jumpshot of my killed kids
at all times for the actually probably seventy five percent
at a time, I could probably dunk it. It was
that close that I spent. I would challenge Aaron to
(27:29):
tell me, at any time of his kids' lives, has
he spent that much time with his kids? Because I
think this man is a horrible father that is putting
his kids in a shitty, shitty position while not shutting
his fucking mouth. And yeah, I think I think those
(27:50):
kids don't want to hang around him. And the supervised
visitation thing is a reasonable thing to suggest, given that
he could be arrested at any time, given he has
a suspended jail term. Go to you first, Kaylie, what
are your thoughts on perhaps his ex wife is putting
(28:14):
restrictions on the kids.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
Yeah, I absolutely think so. And I think that you
just hit the nail on the head. I think it's
that the kids don't want to spend time with him.
Having a father like this sounds like hell. And not
only does it sound like hell right now, but in
ten years, all of this stuff will have fizzled, you know, well,
we'll still have and people will be making on YouTube
(28:36):
or whatever the new service is. Ten years from now,
people will be making little mini documentaries about this whole situation.
So even if the kids aren't watching it now, the
kids are gonna see this and they're gonna know everything,
and they're gonna know that he aired all of the
family's dirty laundry to everybody, and that as a kid
(28:56):
is the most embarrassing thing. I had a situation where
my father was like he basically there was like a
mildly public, like a locally public news article about my dad,
and I was so embarrassed. It's like one of those
moments where you're like, oh my god, this is my
life and now people know about it, and it's the
(29:18):
same thing that but he's the one doing it like
it's it's horrible. He's a horrible father. I'm so so lucky.
I hit the jackpot by not being born to this
idiot like we all did. He's got to be one
of the worst.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
Now because immediately as soon as like the arrest and
stuff happened for the first time in years, he started
putting He's particularly his oldest daughter, but both of his
all of his kids out there to rub it in
Nick Rakata's face, Like, oh, look, that's why I'm kind
of rubbing it in his face. So like I literally
was barely apart from my kids for the last ten days,
(29:58):
like spend the entire time with him. Uh, you know
that is like that was so much fun. It was.
It was such a great vacation, like the kids experiencing
new things, seeing these like thousands year old aboriginal art
and shit, enjoying that with the kids is phenomenal. This guy,
it's got to be a presentation for the internet, you know.
(30:19):
He the Internet has to know that I'm hanging out
with my kids as opposed to just hang out with
the kids. You know, just just do it, Just do it.
Anybody else got any thoughts before I replay?
Speaker 3 (30:34):
I agree with Kayley on that as far as the kids,
there's nothing worse. I guess you could do is to
embarrass your kids with some of your own dumb shit
that has nothing to do with them. And this and
as a kid going to school, other kids are going
to pick up on this shit. Somebody's going to watch this,
and I mean it's AMMO all day long. I mean,
(30:56):
that's a horrible job by him as a father, for sure.
If you want to embarrass your kids, you do that
on your own terms.
Speaker 5 (31:05):
I immediately sympathize with the kids having a flashback to
you know, like my parents split up when I was eleven,
and uh, you know again, I'm from the Bay Area
and one lived on the other part of the Bay
than the other. So I used to every other weekend
have to take the bart train thirty minutes and I
just remember sitting there in that thirty minutes, you know,
(31:26):
just dreading, I gotta go do this this. It was
like I was doing time, you know, and it wasn't.
I mean, it was because the one parent obviously sucked
more than the other. But I can't imagine adding on
top of it it being somebody like this guy who's
also you know, like projecting himself out there, and you know,
(31:47):
like I can't imagine adding that maybe my peers or
other you know, other people that are going to be
around me, are are watching my parent, you know, online,
acting like a tool, and then they get to you know,
it was just bad enough for me to just have
it directly between me and the parent. It's sucking, you know.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Yeah, yeah, I just realized.
Speaker 4 (32:09):
Also, just going off of that, like other parents surely
have watched him. I was a parent, I would be like,
You're not allowed to hang out with those kids anymore.
I would be like, you're not going over there, and
like that's also embarrassing. Is like maybe these kids are
losing friendships over us.
Speaker 5 (32:30):
Like, yeah, but Timmy's my best friend. Yes, but Timmy's
dad is a fucking psychopathic.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Yeah, my apologies for this one, Kyleie, but I want
to address oh things going back. Lucia has no idea
what she's talking about. Listening shit on Piggle's podcast doesn't
make you a specialist. The worst father of twenty twenty
four is going to swing a Nigra Kaida, You clowns.
(32:57):
See this is where you're the dummy when not. This
isn't sports. We're not cheering on a team. They're both
shitty fathers. I'm not talking about Nick Rikata. I'm talking
about Aaron iimhole. This isn't Yeah, we're not We're not
voting on an election. I'm just talking about this shitty
father that I find more entertaining than Nigricata. I find
(33:19):
Nicracata boring personally, I don't Yeah, I don't give a shit.
But yeah, he's a shitty father. He had cocaine in
his house with his children and fucking letting Aaron Emol
fuck his wife apparently. I mean we've only heard that
from Aaron ymhole, so you know, well, I'll take that
with a grain of salt. But yeah, Nick Rikata is
a fucking idiot and a moron. But I'm not talking
(33:39):
about Nick Rakata. Let's continue. Guys.
Speaker 8 (33:43):
You get to pick your children up and then drave
them somewhere without supervision, to be super based.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
It was really awkward when.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Matt, seriously Matt makes Josh seem like Johnny Carson, like
he's such a useless addition to like he just can't
spit the words out and give a proper explanation of
what he's talking about.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
Blowed us to shields this weekend. That would get strange. Yeah,
like my.
Speaker 7 (34:10):
Daughter's trying to get a volleyball and I'm picking up
some golf balls.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
Do you really need to be here? There's a bunch
of gay apps going on. Yeah, so there, I guess,
just I guess jealous. Here's here's the problem with the
reddit and the discary people. Yeah, the whole plan was
for me to be dead by now.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
Yeah it was.
Speaker 7 (34:24):
And I've always said and I was right, And I
think this bothers them. As long as I just hit
go live, it's over right. And so you see how
many people, like in my life, they try to go
after and including my ex wife.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
You ran her off the internet.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
All right. So for months and months, it was leave
my wiffle line, leave my wiffle line. Then it was
attack because she left him. So then it was attack
she's a co call. Blah blah blah. Now we're back
around again. He's playing his victim card again. Where now
the internet ran April off? Not like him screaming in
(35:03):
her face, you know, but his own words. By the way,
they were arguing, and he got nose to nose with her.
I want to keep reminding everyone of that. He admitted
to getting nose to nose with his wife, who was
significantly smaller than him. That is abuse in itself. But anyway,
(35:24):
I just want to keep reminding everyone.
Speaker 5 (35:26):
Looks like he's hurling off the screen from the now.
He's just like, you can't take it anymore. And like
you said, Ozzie, you're like this this guy, his guest
what's his name again?
Speaker 2 (35:39):
The guest match matches her moron to the wrong.
Speaker 5 (35:44):
Yes, he's such a moron. And like you were saying before,
he makes everybody else seemed like a genius. And I'm
kind of thinking, is this that thing where it's the
hot girl, make sure there's always like the very inferior
girl walking around with her? It is it.
Speaker 2 (36:04):
Is having garbage next to you that will just laugh
at what you say, because I'm going to go a
little bit arrogant here. But so if you take away
the goal and Aaron's legal stuff and that encompasses Nick
Rikata and Ashley LaRue and April, you take away those
two things. The only thing anybody has talked about with
(36:24):
Aaron in the last few months is his confrontation with
me where someone pushed back at him. Like people talked
about that, they weren't suddenly they weren't talking about the
Nick Crickata stuff and the and the goal, and that
they were talking about how we had this back and
forth and and no point in his mind did it
click to be like, hey, maybe I should have someone
(36:45):
that I could go back and forth with on a
show rather than just a just a lapdog to agree
with me, you know what I mean? Like none of
that ever. He just he thinks he's the Anthony Kumia
and he doesn't realize he's the O and he needs
to find an Anthony Camea whereas he thinks he needs
an Opie or someone else. Did you sit there and
(37:07):
laugh for long? I don't know what are your thoughts, Kylie.
Speaker 4 (37:10):
I think that that is exactly exactly what it is.
He is the Opie he is. And you also brought
up a good point that you know, if you take
away him talking about all the lawsuit stuff, if you
talk about take away talking him about the goal, what
else is he talking about? He doesn't talk about anything else.
He spent like two minutes saying.
Speaker 5 (37:30):
That like.
Speaker 4 (37:32):
Him and us P, we're gonna go play golf the
other day. And he was like, oh, it turns out
you can get a bucket of golf balls for only
ten dollars, and I was like, okay, cool, Like, where's
That's not a podcast, my dude, that's not even radio like,
and this is it's Aaron's ultimate goal to just be
back on radio, and he it's so boring, like there's no,
(37:56):
there's not a show, no.
Speaker 2 (37:59):
A great it's yeah flat. Kat Jaska just said Opie
was not awful like Toe, which agreed Opie. I once said,
Aaron is Opie if he never found Anthony. But that
is disrespectful to Opie, like and a lot of people
do take away from what Opi was for OPI and Anthony.
(38:22):
Anthony couldn't have done that on his own, yea. And
the facts are since the Opening Anthony Show broke up,
none of those guys have been as successful. So to
say that Opie wasn't important is disrespectful. He was very important.
Speaker 4 (38:36):
I think he were more of the Opie nowadays.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
Agree Opie nowadays is the worst of all them, and
he was always like the least talented. But they needed
that confrontational guy in the room. They needed sort of
his leadership, him taking control like it was an important
part of the team. As much as they like got
frustrated with him and hated him for it. It's never
worked since, Like, yeah, none of those guys have been
(39:02):
able to produce anything. So you know, give give ops
j We'll just see this clip out and then we
will move on to the next her spirit. Uh.
Speaker 7 (39:12):
They you know, they go after other people around my life.
They're like, we can't get to him, and it's frustrating them,
so they go, We're going to become the biggest s
j W cancel culture.
Speaker 2 (39:21):
Cocks.
Speaker 1 (39:22):
We can I do this to people?
Speaker 2 (39:24):
WHOA can this man use the word cock ever again
as an insult to anybody that's not Nope, A man
took your wife. He just took her. You took him
to it, took her to his house, and then he
took her from me. You cannot call anyone else a cock. Man.
It's not just like you say, Patrick can't call people fat,
(39:47):
you can't call people cocks.
Speaker 4 (39:50):
Look when you look at people gay then either.
Speaker 2 (39:54):
That's also those fucking risks.
Speaker 3 (39:57):
Well, when you look up cock, there's Aaron's picture there.
Speaker 2 (40:00):
Yeah, he's fucking mugshot. That's a perfect Well.
Speaker 5 (40:06):
I just actually I can't get I can't get over
his horrible mile runtime on the back there to me,
it says on pace for thirty one the minutes I assume,
so that's how long it takes him to run because
he's covering the rest of it. That's what I'm reading.
That's important information for me to know.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
MVPs, Like, like I did this to Nick. We're gonna sell
out every part of ourselves.
Speaker 7 (40:32):
We're going to debase ourselves fully, look worse than Aaron
will ever look, just so we can try to get
to this guy.
Speaker 1 (40:38):
And I gotta tell you it's an honor I made you.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
Wait, are we talking about Girl Friday? Girl Friday is
as debased ourselves so badly to look worse than Aaron Emol,
You know, like these faceless, nameless people on the internet
making themselves look worse than you who has currently has
a felony charge that you're fighting. You have a ninety
(41:05):
day jail term suspended for twelve months, which you're only
about what twenty odd days into that, maybe thirty something
days into that, You've still got three hundred and thirty
days to go without breaking any laws. Like, I don't
know if anyone's debased themselves more than you, Aaron.
Speaker 7 (41:25):
Listen to me, I made you all do gayops, you
give them a purpose in their life.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
Yeah, but dude, I'm so I'm so good at this
and so much better than you. I made you do.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
Gayaps wouldn't be gay aps. Yeah, that's I don't know
this came. This comes from Internet, like all of this
garbage between different podcasters feuding and that. Like gayops is
when you do like the docsing and you know, go
into people's personal lives and all that. Wouldn't the gayest
(41:58):
of gayops be talking to the cops about what your
friends are up to, what fellow YouTubers are up to.
And also there's a little thing called spousal privilege. When
April got arrested, he is in no way he can
(42:18):
be no way be forced to testify against or say
anything against her. He waived that and said, nah, fuck her. Like,
isn't that the gayest of gayops?
Speaker 3 (42:30):
I would chase that awful? That's part of the that's
part of being married, is Yeah, that's one of the perks.
Speaker 9 (42:38):
Like even if even if you're like really upset with them,
shoudn't you at least pay him the pay him the
gratitude of not selling them out to the cops, Like
wouldn't that be fair?
Speaker 2 (42:50):
Chris Mack has got a little bit of an explanation
for us. Gay ops include docs, ing, sharing, screenshots of
private conversations, swatting, and things like that.
Speaker 5 (43:01):
Yeah, that says the guy a dressed up like somebody's
going to do a sweat.
Speaker 2 (43:11):
Uh, this is rough man. Why did he may make
me do gay stuff? Jesus, gayops will happen during Aaron's
thirty day sentences. Oh God, damn it, it's moving. He's
the Richard Simmons of gayops. Now. I made a Richard
(43:33):
Simmons reference during what Sirandel earlier on equal Pineapples channel.
Go to YouTube dot com and go echo Pineapple and
put a three where the last he should be. Anyway,
and I wasn't sure if I had the name right,
but yeah, Richard Sipons Simmons is the like the super
(43:53):
flamboyant fiers guy. Yeah, uh so two Richard Simmons references
on each of my podcasts tonight is I think fantastic.
H Anyway, I think shout out Robbie. It doesn't glow.
There's much left on this.
Speaker 1 (44:13):
Yes, I think that's pretty bad on your both.
Speaker 7 (44:16):
So it's kind of nice. Thank you to the people
on Twitter who did the investigating on that one. Like
I said, I've got moles inside of everywhere and.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
It's just fun to use them.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
Yeah, uh yes, yes, that's why I left that last
little bit just I've got moles inside of everywhere. He wouldiot.
Speaker 4 (44:35):
He's just stuttering, John, It's just I'm the hero, I'm
the victim. Also, everybody's telling me everything and I'm great.
Speaker 2 (44:45):
Yes, uh no, he's very very yeah, very delusional. Lacking
the self awareness like I said earlier. Uh, that's the
key to a old cow. They have to lack self awareness.
That's why when like, you know, I'm a fan of
Patrick Milton and he does seem to be self aware,
(45:05):
and when people talk about how Red Bar destroyed him
and all that, I'm like, yeah, maybe it was a
different guy back then, but I don't know, Like he
just he seems to know what's going on. But yeah,
Aaron just seems to be one of the more clueless
as to how damaging what he has to say is
doing to himself or it's just a thing of he
(45:29):
He'll just take it because he knows that he's got
these certain amount of people hooked and maybe he can
keep milking them. I don't know, Josh, have you got
any theories on how he thinks he can keep going
with his begging thing?
Speaker 3 (45:45):
Okay, now I don't know how he can personally go
on dealing with the begging thing. But I will tell
you I believe the steel toe for us has started
to consume so much that I'm going to share this
with you that at some point this week, I don't
remember what night it was, I woke up from a
dream Aaron Amholt was flipping me off from outside his
window where I assumed he was doing his show from.
(46:07):
But I was picking up his billfolds that were lost
in the yard with like money and ship, and I
was pulling the cast out of it, saying, is this
the goal? Is this my goal? And I'm like, I've
been watching too many clips shout out style of nineteen
so Throjoe Burrow. But I mean I don't see how
he keeps it going. I mean you can see he's
a defeated man right now. Like it's just it's it's sad,
(46:32):
it's pathetic. Get a fucking job, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
I mean that's the thing, and like like yes, Katty,
obviously I know you have a job, but you know,
people like Kyl and Milton and I'm forgetting some of
the others, but I mean, obviously Rocco. We know Rocco
has a job, but these guys that they do it
and they could make a living with either they do
(46:58):
or they could make a living from their podcast, but
it's not the only thing they've got going on. You know, Like,
your podcast could be successful, but don't make that the
only thing you've got going on. Obviously, Keyley, You've got
a Patreon all that, but yeah, like you've got focused
in other directions.
Speaker 4 (47:16):
Right, you cannot rely on this because you know, we
do live in the age of people getting canceled on
the internet, and you know, there's so many people who
are so talented out there. I never think that I'm
going to be the best at anything. I would love
to be, but I don't think I'm ever going to
be I think that there's tons and tons and tons
of other people who do movie reviews in incredible ways.
(47:38):
So I have amazing amounts of competition, and that's great.
I love that because it pushes me further, but it
also means that I'm never going to rest on the
possibility that this is the only monetary resource for me.
This is something that I love doing. You can't do
podcasting if you don't love it. And it never seems
like Aaron loves it. It seems like he is doing
(47:59):
it because he needs money. That is the wrong reason
to podcasts. That is not why you turn the camera
on in the morning. It should never be the reason
that you turn the camera on.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
No, And there was a clip earlier this week and
I could not be bothered trying to find it, but
I just happened to be. I think it was when
Melton was stream sniping steel Toe the other day and
not transforming it at all. It's just we all sit
there in the chat and just make our jokes about
Aaron and so Deadfool. So Deadfool got gifted a membership.
(48:35):
Now for those of you that donate, I assume people
in the chat would know, but I know Scoop and
Josh you wouldn't know. Dead Fool is linked to a
man named David Chandler, who is a very successful, rich
man who is very kind to podcasts and helps them
out and gives big donations to like, you know, pick
(48:55):
pick podcasts up and help them you know, help them
get to the next level and all that. And he's
given a lot of money to steal toe. So Aaron
got gifted a bunch of memberships. He saw Deadfool got
one and started fawning over Deadful for you know, the
next thirty seconds, it was like, Deadfool didn't give you
any money. There was another guy that gave you money.
(49:16):
You didn't talk about him at all. You just got
excited to see Deadfool and you're like, oh, maybe I'll
get some money from Dead Fool. Like that to me
is so gross, like you know, we I actually I
forgot to shout out Big Greg and Iowa gave a
donation after the show went off the air last week,
and he actually doubled what Skeaty Tooth John had given
(49:39):
And that was an amazing thing for me. The night
before I went on vacation, got these two great donations.
So yeah, Steady Tooth and Big Greg and Iowa, that
was like awesome. That was such an awesome moment. And
I'm like, I couldn't be more thankful to them doing that,
just because I'm like, oh, yeah, hey, fucking you know,
we've enjoyed the show. Here's some money, like the demand was.
Speaker 5 (50:00):
A busy guy, because he also gave me a donation
pretty quick after one of our recent shows. I don't
remember if it was right after last time we spoke
or or what, but I think it must the timing
must have been exactly the same. I don't know if
we caught him at at a generous moment.
Speaker 3 (50:22):
Yeah scratcher man, he hit a scratcher.
Speaker 5 (50:25):
Yeah. Whatever whatever it was, it was much much appreciated.
So I'm really happy to know that it wasn't just
my cause that he was helping out that multiple things.
Speaker 2 (50:37):
But it would be insane to think you guys need
to do that every day or do that every week.
Yeah you mentioned Look Skaty toes here. Look hey Skaty soathe,
thank you so much, love your show. Where's the fifty
they gave me last week? Give it to me again,
you bitch, Like that's the last comment that's going up
on the screen. That's who you said.
Speaker 10 (51:00):
Of course, can you imagine how long I stay over
here in Ukraine, Like I've been here over a year now.
If it was dependent on donations, I would have been
over here like two days.
Speaker 5 (51:14):
I would have been gone so fast. So I can't imagine.
I don't know. Maybe it's easier for people who have
a background in sales. I don't know, that's not me,
which is horrible also of me being a singer, you know,
not being able to be your own you know music
like a salesman, you know, coik can. But yeah, I
(51:35):
just I can't imagine trying to be dependent on it.
I would want it to be a passion and then
if I could make something off of it, cool h
And you can definitely see that with our young lady here,
that she has a passion behind what she does, not
just trying to chase money.
Speaker 2 (51:53):
Exactly. That definitely is no. You exactly right, and we
will get into talking about what you do, Cayley. But
we did put in the head that we're going to
talk Metallica. So yeah, still Toe's done. We're done with steel,
We're moving on the metal. Yeah. I heard Kaylee mentioned
(52:14):
the other day that she loves her metal, and so
I sent a message to say, I said, what do
you what do you think of Metallica? And she's like,
I got my thoughts, love their early stuff blah blah blah.
And I was like, great, let's let's talk about Metallica
because Metallica is the bell and end all for me firstly,
and my passion has been reignited in recent times by
(52:35):
some YouTube videos I've been watching and all that. So yeah,
we'll start off Kayleie being the guest, I want to
ask you, like, what was your introduction point to Metallica?
You know, do you remember specifically what the song was
or that, or the album or anything like.
Speaker 4 (52:53):
So, I know I had a weird introduction to Metallica.
I was trying to think about this. I started listening
to metal before I started listening to Metallica, so I
had gotten super into like D Side, Cannibal Corpse, Immolation,
like all of that sort of stuff, and I had
(53:15):
never heard Metallica. And I had started meeting all of
these other metal heads because I would go out to
concerts and I was all excited and you know, everything
was great. And I remember that I was in a
car with somebody and they were playing Metallica and somebody
was like, oh, yeah, this is Metallica, and I was like, oh,
this is the band that I'm supposed to know about,
Like I had read about them in the magazines I had.
(53:37):
I was aware that they existed, but I just had
never actually heard them, and I wasn't a big radio listener,
so I don't think I ever even caught any of
the stuff that was like on the Black Album or
anything like that on the radio. Like I never actually
heard any of it. And so I remember after that
moment that I was like, oh no, I need to
(53:57):
actually go out and buy Metallica CDs listen to this
because I am screwed if I don't understand this. And
I was very happy because I went out and bought
all of their CDs at that point. This was probably
in like maybe nineteen ninety nine, nineteen ninety eight, nineteen
ninety nine.
Speaker 2 (54:17):
Oh yeah, so you got all the way out to Reylad.
Speaker 4 (54:19):
Yeah yeah. And then I was so glad that I
did that because when all of the Napster stuff happened
in the early two thousands, I had not downloaded any Metallica,
and I was like, yay, I'm not going to tail.
Speaker 2 (54:33):
You know, it sucks about that I got dinged on
the Napster thing because a friend when that song, I
just no, I don't even think it was that. It
was the kid rock when they sampled Metallica. That's what
it was. Someone sent it to me and it uploaded
to my napstock and then I got my naps to
taken down because I had a Metallica song and it
wasn't even a Metallica song that was Metallica sample. But yeah,
(54:55):
I was fuming because I'd gone out of my way
to not download Metallica shit.
Speaker 4 (55:00):
So I went through when I bought all of their albums.
I don't remember what song it was that I was
listening to in that car ride, but I am a completionist.
I like to listen to albums start to finish, so
I started right at the beginning and went all the
way through and just listened to all of the albums.
I was playing guitar at the time, so I used
to like try to play along with all the different
(55:21):
songs at the end of the day. And I thought
it was really cool and I was not cool at all,
but I loved it, and I really really enjoyed a
lot of the stuff that they did, and it was
it was a brand new type of music for me
because I was so used to those guttural double bass
like all of the death metal tropes. I had really
(55:42):
never heard anything like Metallica before.
Speaker 5 (55:46):
Yeah, I was just gonna say, I have like the
ultimate Metallica fail story. And because of your background what
you just said, I'm curious what you will think about
this because so as most people know, I do singing,
but my background from when I was growing up was
totally not what I ended up singing, you know, like
(56:10):
it was it was.
Speaker 11 (56:10):
On the R and B side and wrap and all this,
and then grunge and then and then uh, finally later
on when I started singing, you know, it was like
hard rock metal.
Speaker 5 (56:22):
You know, I'm kind of drifting along those lines. And anyways,
the one time I was ever kicked out of a band,
it was because it was something I said about Metallica
and what I what I said was and I was
just innocently I was like, uh, I don't know, I
don't know if he's called an observation or what. But
we were talking about metal and to me, and I
(56:45):
think metal like I think just like the hardest shit,
you know. And I felt like over time when death
metal really was become death metal, I was like, whoa,
you know, that like changed the curb a bit.
Speaker 2 (56:59):
Now.
Speaker 5 (56:59):
A lot of the people who said they were metal
before it just feels kind of more like it's hard rock,
you know, like it is metal, but it's like light metal.
You know, what do you what do you call this?
And so I made a comment about that about Metallica,
and one of my bandmates was like, the ultimate Metallica fan.
I was like, are they are they still considered like
(57:21):
metal metal now or what? Yeah, this guy's gotta go.
It was immediately. I mean, I was brand new. It
was a formed band where they were only looking at
It wasn't like we formed like slowly, you know, slowly
or in piece by piece. They were already together, needed
a singer. I was brand new, and I made this
(57:42):
ultimate you know comments. But it wasn't like I was
trying to be mean. I was just saying, like to me,
I thought, like me, growing up, metal was like there
was no death metal like Metallica. What they do was
like the hardest, but then they took it to another level,
and I was like, well, what does that mean for
(58:04):
the rest of them? So I was just making a comment,
but I mean it's.
Speaker 2 (58:10):
Understandable, and especially I think Metallica did go more the
way of hard rock through the nineties and was less metal.
But I think. For me, it's always been about the
music from Metallica, like and a song we're gonna listen
to you later on and that's not going to be
on the live show. But they've got criticism for the
(58:33):
way they went on their second album. These guys are
like twenty twenty years old, twenty one years old and
writing a song like Fade to Black, like is so
such a beautiful song, and it's it blows people away
that will like just have this thought about metal music
(58:54):
and then they hear Fate to Black and they go, wait,
this is heavy metal. It's like, yeah, it's just it's
musicians constructing it. Josh, I think you're a little bit
older than myself. Do you remember your intro to Metallica?
Speaker 3 (59:08):
My intro to Metallica? And I will say I love
it because what got me into Metallica was Dave Mustain.
So I found Megadeth before I found Metallica. And when
my first Metallica song was probably nineteen eighty seven, somewhere
around seventh eighth grade, somebody was like, you got to
listen to this. It was battery the guitar. The guitar
(59:29):
starts and you're just like, all right, here we go,
and as soon as the drums kick in, it's like,
oh my god, I thought I knew music. I don't
know music yet. So finding that in nineteen eighty seven,
and then starting my freshman year in high school and
Justice for All was being released, I mean basically right
as school was starting, that album defined fucking high school. Yeah,
(59:51):
I mean it was so good. I mean, it's never
going to go back like that. Ten guys in the
back of a pickup truck, nobody's worried about falling out
the back. This is Texas in the late eighties, early nineties.
You got two fucking speakers in the back of the truck,
you know, the old homeschool fucking radio shit. So it's
(01:00:12):
three hundred watts in the back and playing kill them all,
fucking pulling into the parking lot. Everybody knew you were
the heads. You were the fucking stoners. Yeah, I don't know.
Metallica was the shit. It was great.
Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Well, I've got the difference. So I'm a millennial. I
was born in nineteen eighty three, so in nineteen ninety
six when Metallica released Load, I was thirteen years of
age and my brother's three years older. He bought Load,
and then he was playing it, and I just I'll
never forget the song King Nothing. The song King Nothing
(01:00:47):
grabbed me. I just I don't know, I liked that guitar.
I liked the hook of the chorus, where's your crown?
King nothing like it? Just yeah, I don't know it was.
It just stood out to me. And then I just
started listening until It's was before it, Here of the
Day was after it, and yeah, before I knew it,
I listened to the whole album and I was like,
I like this band, and little did I know that
(01:01:09):
that stuff that I still love to this day. I
do love the album's Load and Reload. A lot of
people shit on them. I think they're great, but by
nowhere near is any of that my favorite Metallica stuff.
When I then went back and discovered what they did
through the eighties just phenomenal, Like could just changed the
way I looked at the band from the beginnings of Load.
(01:01:32):
For me, hearing Load and then going back, yeah, amazing stuff.
I never forget buying Ride the Lightning and then opening off,
opening up with that bloom bloom, and You're like, what
the fuck is this? I thought this was Metallica, and
then all of a sudden, like a punch into your
face comes the opening Far with Fire. You're like, oh, okay,
(01:01:53):
game on. I'm like, yeah, this is this is fucking
heavy metal. So yeah, I want to go through to
each of you which would be your favorite album and
your criterias to what is your favorite album? Because of
course the song's across all about albums that we love
to death. But uh, let's start. I'm gonna start with
you Skype. You'll favor Metallic album.
Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
Well, I want to point out so for me, uh,
you know, I talked about that dumb move. I mean,
but the first time I actually, like really really got
exposed to Metallica, I mean I i'd heard them on
the radio or whatever, but like since I wasn't a
genre was focusing on, uh you know, I didn't know
like who that was. But my friend in high school
(01:02:36):
learning how to play guitar, that was when I got
exposed to it. Because the sec is like seeking destruct
and I'm like, oh, what the fuck is this? You know,
and then he's like, who should make parody song? Yeah, Josh,
it started back then. Uh so I was already like
fucking around with the lyrics like to these songs, and
(01:02:58):
I had no idea, you know, like I'm I'm like
messing like with the bible of you know, metal here.
You know, like these guys are way more than I
even really understand. But that was that was where I
really got first exposed to them. And that song Seeking
Destroy will always be something for me. But when I
(01:03:19):
think of like all the I mean, god, it's really hard, right,
Like I'm sure like for a lot of people, picking
any iconic song for a iconic band or singer, right
it's it's tough any Beatles or whatever, Beyonce, whatever, It's
got to be pretty tough. But you know, and then
there's ones like maybe you would have chose at one point,
but they got played a gazillion times, so you know,
(01:03:41):
like the Inner Salmon Era and all that. It's just
like I probably would have picked that back then, but
now I've heard a million times, I would probably have
to go with the one that would piss everybody off.
And I mentioned it before, but not a single song,
but the same anger album because every buddy said.
Speaker 12 (01:04:01):
Changed it and it sounds like and I was like, yeah,
but it sounds raw, and and you know what, like
I appreciate it, and especially as a singer, like you're
always trying to not make your last thing sound like
the next thing.
Speaker 5 (01:04:13):
And and I was like, you know what, I appreciate
that that they went that route. So you know, it's
like fucking around, let's see what see what this does.
So I'm choosing the same anger album Good for You.
Speaker 2 (01:04:27):
It's my least favorite album, but like it came out
at an interesting time in my life, but I do
I I'll always have a standout favorite song from every album,
and from that song from that album, Some kind of Monster.
It's just so heavy, Like I just love that song.
It's just heavy in your face, Kylie, what's your You
know what?
Speaker 4 (01:04:47):
The worst song on that album is though fran Tic
tick tick tick yeah, yeah song dude. Also, there is
no album ever. I am glad Jascuta you are not
a drummer, because if you were a drummer and you
said that was how the hell do you make a
snare drum sound like a goddamn tom It's nonsensical. That album,
(01:05:09):
I'm sorry is trash.
Speaker 5 (01:05:11):
In the words of Midfield, I'm just the idiot singer.
So no, no drum, no, no musical prowess.
Speaker 2 (01:05:19):
There is a YouTube channel that's uh like recorded that
with the drums properly, and like the songs do sound better.
It's still not a good album, like it's not, but
the songs they sound better. But Kelly for you out
of old egg catalog, what stands out as a top
album for you?
Speaker 4 (01:05:37):
It is so hard for me to pick. So I
have a special spot in my heart for Kill Them
All because it was actually recorded right here in Rochester,
New York, where I am from. So actually all the
w A TP guys, Carl and producer Chris and Andy
and Croge, we all live right down the road from
where Kill Them All was recorded, which is amazing. There
(01:06:00):
there's lots of actually funny stories about Lars. I don't
know how true this is, but like there's stories about
Lars being in some secluded room to record drug drums
and he was like afraid and so he had to
have like people coming and like checking in on him
because he was a giant pussy because he's Lars. But anyway,
(01:06:22):
so that's up there. I think that the best musicianship
is on Injustice for All. I think that that is
a like through and through that is the most musically
successful album. But I think that the album that is
perfect start to finish for me is probably Master of Puppets.
I think it's the perfect opener, and I'm a sucker
(01:06:44):
for a good opener, and it is just beautiful and
complete and exciting. I just love it. I love it.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
Yeah. Look, it's no one is gonna call you an
idiot for saying master us. And look, Josh all well John, Yeah, Josh,
you want me to go next? Soor do you want
to take it now?
Speaker 3 (01:07:10):
You can go next if you'd like, sir.
Speaker 5 (01:07:11):
Can I ask you which album was sad but true
true black black album?
Speaker 4 (01:07:16):
The Black Black Okay, I like the Black Album. Also
a lot of one on it, but I like it
a lot.
Speaker 5 (01:07:23):
No, that was the one where I think, I told
you guys, I didn't realize what the words were, and
so I thought it was this depressive sad patrol song,
sad Patrol, You're sad.
Speaker 2 (01:07:39):
Very good. Uh yeah, so all mye come from the idies, look, unfortunately. Yeah,
and Justice is the fourth for me in the eighties
because and and it's phenomenal and like I love half
sort of sorrow and black and then yeah, it's it's
it's a great album, but it's fourth in the eighties
(01:07:59):
from Ride the Lining and Masterpuppets are like, they're both
so great. Like in terms of Metallica, I think they're
great storytellers and those two albums tell some fucking stories.
And yeah, like for whom the Bell Tolls and it's
for such again, for such young guys to get inspiration
(01:08:22):
from these books and old movies and all that where
they create these amazing stories out of which, actually, going
back to Justice, that the one film clip where they
added the Johnny got his gun clips in with it,
that in itself is an amazing story told in what
(01:08:43):
an eight and a half minute video film clip. Just
brilliant stuff. But I love both of those, but I
am going to kill them all, Okaylee, I just think
Metallic is a live act. And as much as I
love that, much as I I love this storytelling and everything,
if you sat me down and said which songs do
(01:09:04):
you need to hear when you see Metallic Alive, I'm
gonna sit there and say, Hit the Lives, four Horsemen,
Motor Breath, Whiplash, Seek and Destroy, No Remorse, Like I
want to rock out to these songs. So yeah, if
you're telling me live, I've gotta pick. Kill them All
has got the most songs that I need to hear.
Love Go, Josh.
Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
I'm with you as far as the eighties shit go,
but I'm it's Injustice for All and Ride the Lightning.
I probably lean more towards Injustice just because it was
during high school. But that album, I would say them,
led Zeppelin and Pink Florida are the only guys that
can do ten minute songs and I don't have a
problem with that. Ten minutes is sometimes not enough, but no,
(01:09:48):
and Justice for All is still relevant to today of
what they speak on that album. I mean, that album
is basically like nineteen eighty four in its own storytelling
as it goes what's happening today? He Ride the Lightning,
like you said, from the first track to the end
to all that shit. I even told you I love
Trapped under Ice. That's like one of my favorite freaking tracks.
(01:10:09):
Nobody nobody's playing I never play it, No, they don't,
but uh, and the cool of Katula and then Orion,
I mean, I didn't say Master of Puppets, but Orion
is probably it's one song I play religiously from Metallica.
Speaker 4 (01:10:25):
That's got to be one of the best songs.
Speaker 3 (01:10:26):
It's a great solo.
Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
Great Do you guys ever sit and wonder what Metallica
would be if Cliff never died? And I love Jason.
I'm a huge Jason Newstead fan. Like I just thought
he was like he just he's so metal, you know
what I mean, Like he was the guy on stage
representing metal. But Cliff Burton was a was a genius,
(01:10:49):
and I think he did really direct those guys in
a lot of ways.
Speaker 3 (01:10:55):
Would they would they have gone to the Black Album
because that became like barb Rock produce. I believe the
Black Album and he's produced a lot of big albums
for bands, kind of turned that sound around, like that
was from Injustice for All to Black. When I considered
it at that time, everybody, like all the people that
didn't like Metallica started to like Metallica all of a
(01:11:15):
sudden because they're like, oh wow, you know, nothing else matters.
This is so great and it was like this big
fight on it and shit, like some people are like
Metallica is not what they were. And I still say
the Black Album is a really good album. It didn't
change my feeling on it one bit. It just the
sound got produced and sounded.
Speaker 2 (01:11:34):
I don't know, well, it's I think it's easily the
best produced album for sure. The Black Album loved and
ReLit to beautifully produced as well. But the Black Album
just had such great songs. And yeah, but yeah, Kylie, yeah,
thoughts on yeah, basically, thoughts on Cliff Burton is what
(01:11:55):
I'm asking, Like, Yeah, he was such a big part
of the early magic.
Speaker 4 (01:12:00):
He was so incredible. I don't know if you've ever
heard the stories also about I think it was when
they were recording Ride the Lightning, Kirk was like, I
don't know what notes to play for the solos, and
so Cliff used to just tell him, like, oh, play
these notes. And so at some point when they were
recording Ride the Lightning, he was like calling like Cliff
(01:12:22):
had already left the studio, and so Kirk was like
calling him and being like what should I do next?
Speaker 11 (01:12:28):
You know?
Speaker 4 (01:12:29):
And I think that Cliff is the magic of Metallica.
I you know, I don't think that I don't think
that there would have been a Metallica if it hadn't
been for Cliff. I think that it's a complete tragedy.
Tragedy that he passed obviously, And I think that we
can probably all agree that the worst Metallica bassist was Rob.
Speaker 2 (01:12:52):
Well, you get poor old Ron mcgalvney could.
Speaker 4 (01:12:55):
Probably be that's a good point.
Speaker 2 (01:12:56):
Yeah, he was the original and he even on the
stands it h I've heard interviews with him. He's great
about it, like he couldn't wait to get out of
the band and let Cliff take over, like he's really
cool about it. But no, you're right, and Rob's the
longest serving bass player of Metallica, which is made even
in the band, like twenty odd years at this point.
Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
That's crazy, that's fucking crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:13:18):
But yeah, like it's you know, I mean all the
I think they put all the songs written by Metallica.
These days, they don't do that. Yeah, individual writing credits
for Oh Jason only got three writing credits.
Speaker 3 (01:13:29):
But I don't think the Black album was would be
made if Cliff Burton was still there.
Speaker 4 (01:13:34):
I agree with that.
Speaker 3 (01:13:36):
I think I would have gone stayed really hard.
Speaker 4 (01:13:38):
I will say if Cliff, if Cliff had if Cliff
had been around, it's possible that Metallica wouldn't have maintained
the relevancy. I think that Cliff a lot of the
time was kind of the logic behind them, and so
I don't know if the napster stuff would have happened.
I don't know if they would have changed their sound.
I don't know that we would still I don't know
that kids today would still love Mattell in the way
(01:14:00):
that kids today love Metallica, in the way that we
all loved Metallica. Like I think, I think that they
have really found a way to completely defy generations. And
I think that if Cliff had been around, he was
a little too traditional maybe for that that's just a feeling.
Speaker 5 (01:14:18):
But didn't they have a member of the band uh
die like in some auto accident, like really really early
and this was.
Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
It was Cliff in the bus accident.
Speaker 2 (01:14:28):
That's the guy we've been talking about for Oh.
Speaker 5 (01:14:32):
I thought he said he had been in there twenty
years or something.
Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Rob has been in their twenties. Cliff Cliff thought in
ninety six, so like it was like five years into
the band.
Speaker 5 (01:14:41):
And Okay, it was like a bus accident, right or something.
Speaker 3 (01:14:45):
Yeah, it's just amazing that there longer than Jason, and
Jason was there for a while.
Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
I think Jayson went, yeah, like that's alwaysy.
Speaker 4 (01:14:56):
We're talking about this, and like we're talking about a
band that had it's not only been around for that long,
but has completely maintained relevancy. We're talking about members who
were part of a band for fifteen twenty years. That's insanity.
Like Metellica is something special. It is so special. Love
them or hate them, love their new shit or hate
(01:15:18):
their new shit. Anger is horrible. We're just going to
say that one more time. But you have to respect
the hell out of what they've done now.
Speaker 2 (01:15:30):
And they've done, you know, and as much as I
agree with you the magic was there with Cliff, but
you just can't deny the shift volume of amazing guitar
riffs and great arrangement and then you know, linking up
with the San Francisco Symphony to just take it to
another level of just like how beautifully written this music is.
(01:15:51):
And like, I think a lot of people miss that
in the fact it's metal, so they don't think of
like how actually beautifully structured it is. And and that's
what a lot of them, a lot of them in
the San Francisco Symphony talked about. I was like, this
music is so symphonic, and James would be like, yeah,
I don't know, I just put my fingers here and yeah,
(01:16:13):
it is this brilliant. So they had like creatively that
they created this amazing music. So we have something that
we're going to go do. I was gonna say behind
a paywall. There's no paywall for our podcast feed. We're
going to do a podcast only this. I'll probably upload
it later to the YouTube channel as a video, but
(01:16:34):
we're going to go record a reaction to Fade to Black.
We're going to go listen to Fade to Black and
react to it. So if you're not subscribed to the
podcast feed, head on over to your favorite podcast app.
Subscribe to United States and Australia. This next segment will
be shoehorned in to around about now. So yeah, fuck
(01:17:02):
those YouTube listeners. We're over here on the podcast having
a good old time. And I had an idea and
unfortunately Robbie has bailed out of this as well, So yeah,
you're listening to the show. Previous Robbie had promised that
he would be here for this particular part of the show,
but apparently he vomited, and I mean, come on, gow up,
(01:17:24):
we all have a bit of tummy trouble. From now
you might have lost way. Actually, you should weigh yourself, Robbie,
if you're listening, weigh yourself. You might feel better about
yourself if just had a good spew good times. But no,
we're here, we've just been talking Metallica, and I wouldn't
do something different just for the podcast listeners, and I'll
probably put it up on YouTube later, but for now,
(01:17:46):
we're making it an audio only podcast exclusive reaction to
Metallica's Fade to Black and obviously, yeah, with all of Robbie, well,
Robbie's mental health mess that he's got going on, I
thought this song would be a great one for him.
If you're here for the first time. But he's not here,
(01:18:06):
but still joining us is Kaylee from Once Over with
Kaylee and w Atva. He also known as Lucy Tiebox.
Speaker 4 (01:18:14):
Yes, thank you very much for having me. I am
excited to not watch Robbie cry, but I guess I'll
just imagine him vomiting.
Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
Yeah, you know, I was kind of hoping that, yeah,
maybe there'd be a suicide of time, but oh, you know,
we wouldn't get ahead of ourselves. But also, here is
just Josh and Jay Scoop. I mean, why am I
You've been listening to the show. You know who's here.
This is just a continuation of the show. What am
I doing? I'm an idiot? Do you guys remember the
first time you heard Fader Black? Kelly? What you What
(01:18:44):
were your initial thoughts before you listen again? What are
your thoughts of Fader Black? And So?
Speaker 4 (01:18:50):
I don't remember the first time that I heard it.
I love it. It's beautiful, It's absolutely beautiful. It's been a
while since I listened to it. Actually, in preparation for
this podcast today, I was re listening to seventy two seasons,
their most recent.
Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
Anything about It, but I didn't.
Speaker 4 (01:19:08):
I haven't listened to Fade to Black in a really
long time. So I am excited to re listen to
it with a critical ear.
Speaker 2 (01:19:15):
Yeah. Good. That's the part of the thing here, is
uh yeah, listen out for different things you haven't heard before,
I guess, or you know, maybe you have for they
they're standing out more to you these days, Josh, what
is Fade to Black man to you?
Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
Fade to Black? I remember listening to it religiously on
the ride the Lightning Stuff, and it was always I
remember right towards the back of the album track is
it okay or one side or the other whatever, I just.
Speaker 2 (01:19:43):
Oh, yeah, yeah, because you're an old fight. Yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
It was A and a B side. Motherfucker.
Speaker 2 (01:19:47):
Yeah. It was the end of the Ice on. It
was the end of the Ice for sure.
Speaker 3 (01:19:51):
So it's a great song. We always knew it as
the suicide song. Hey, this is a song that everybody's like, hey,
don't listen to Metallica. They're trying to you know, remember.
Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
But by the way, that's it's a reason I've gone
off of YouTube for this is because the amount we're
going to say suicide.
Speaker 3 (01:20:11):
That's what it was. I mean, that's what everybody knew
it as. It's like, it's a great song, but it
was never one. I was always I didn't fast forward
it per se. But it's it's a good song. It's
just not Metallica for me. I like the pace.
Speaker 2 (01:20:24):
I like the give Me to Speak, and that's what
that's And that was where they you know, when people
ask them about like people calling them sellouts, and they're like,
when did they people start calling his cellouts or like
second album when they heard faked the Black. Yeah, they've
been hearing it forever because again, they've never been afraid
of just following their musical instincts, and I've always respected
(01:20:47):
that about them. It's like, well, this is what like
even with Scoop calling Saint angry, you know, the Standout
album earlier, like obviously you know he's trolling, But at
the same time, Kallie and me brought out the stand
drum and it's like, yeah, like atrocious decision, but they
stay true to what they thought they were doing at
(01:21:08):
the time, and that's I think, you know, you can
always respect Metallica for like, no, this is what we're
gonna do. We don't. We're not gonna shape it for
what people we think people want to We're just gonna
do what we're gonna do. How familiar are you with
Fight Black exactly?
Speaker 5 (01:21:25):
I agree with what you're saying. Live and Die By,
you know, staying true, you know, just like sports Live
by the Three, Die By three, Live by what maye
you get into metal and start doing metals because you
were like all the other stuff, right, We're gonna do
what we want to do. Uh, but you guys exposed me.
Not one of you gave me enough clues to let
(01:21:47):
me know which song this is exactly, because if you
give me some mouth, guitar and three notes, I'll probably.
Speaker 2 (01:21:54):
Know what it is.
Speaker 5 (01:21:54):
But nobody enough that sounded like the San Francisco Symphony.
Speaker 2 (01:22:05):
I deliberately that ship, just like you wouldn't.
Speaker 3 (01:22:11):
The cliff.
Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Now, that's good, that's good. S great, because I think
you come in with a different el. I'd rather you
not remember which song it is. I know you'll know
it as.
Speaker 5 (01:22:20):
Soon as it plays, I'll know it. But this is
the era where I listened to music more than I
listened to words. It's stupid, right, because I'm a singer,
but I didn't really queue into the words until just
you know, like a little bit, a little bit later on,
and so I was just yeah, I was just more
(01:22:41):
about the music. And so there's so many people from
especially Metallica when they were hitting it big and all that. Uh,
and then there in the nineties in particular, where there's
a lot of artists where I don't know who it is,
but as soon as you play it for me, I'm like, oh, no, oh,
that was who that was. And I feel so stupid
(01:23:02):
because I just wasn't paying attention or doing the work
to find out who was making all this incredible music
of these songs that.
Speaker 2 (01:23:08):
I loved well. I think great iconic bands have certainly
have their own sound, you know, and like the tooth
that stand out to me, and someone suggested it in
the comments earlier, is Metallica and a CDC you know
it as soon as you hear that riff, like you
may never Like. I remember when Death Magnetic came out
and a friend of mine had it before I had it,
(01:23:30):
and I was in his car and there was this
song and I was like, this sounds like Metallica, but
I've never heard it before. And I was like, is
this Metallica? And he goes, yeah, it's the new album.
I was like, oh fuck yeah. So like there is
their own sound. ACDC is exactly the same. They just
as soon as you hear the way that riff is going,
you're like, that's a CDC sound, So yeah it is.
(01:23:53):
It is interesting that you point that out that yeah,
you always know it. For me, with Fade to Black Again,
it was like shocking to me after hearing fight Fire
with Fire and Creeping Death and just all this heaviness.
All of a sudden, this beautiful piece of music gets presented,
(01:24:14):
but still in a reasonably heavy way, Like there is
definitely heavy parts of this song. So let's jump on over.
I've gone with the I'm not video fault, idiot. I've
gone with the version with lyrics so that we can
all read along with the exactly make sure we know
(01:24:37):
exactly what James is saying that. So, yeah, what we're
going to do is the song is Fade to Black
by Metallica from the Rider Lightning album, and yeah, it's
certainly a favorite of mine. I think it's again I
was saying earlier about Metallica being storytellers, and it's not
just storytellers and the lyrics, it's the music goes along
(01:24:58):
with the story, and I think this song has great
examples of that, which I'll point out of what how
I think what the story I think is telling. But
anybody just raise your hands, shout pause. If you've got
something you want to comment on, probably raise your hand
as the best. I'll keep an eye on this. Let's
kick off fade blank.
Speaker 5 (01:25:24):
I want to see some air guitar, Josh.
Speaker 3 (01:25:28):
Left or right?
Speaker 5 (01:25:30):
Yeah, turn up that volume, man.
Speaker 2 (01:25:34):
Don't know. Yeah, pretty low is it? It's probably gonna
blow my ear drums out. I'll go back a little.
Speaker 5 (01:25:44):
Bit, but yeah, I definitely knew that in three notes
or less.
Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
Is that better? Yeah, I'm gonna pause it there, so yeah, again,
(01:26:35):
like I said before, you hear that that acoustic start
and then this when the electric comes in, like it,
it's beautiful and right now this song is teetering on.
This could be beautifully positive or this could go really
really dark like it's it's interesting the way like this
(01:26:59):
is all kind of kind of a little bit chairpy.
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:27:03):
It's a great intro. Like you said, you don't know
where it's going yet. It could go to a good,
happier place, or it might be getting about to get
really dark.
Speaker 5 (01:27:12):
But you know it's cool. Is this has already given
me flashbacks to arguments between my lead guitarist and my
rhythm guitarist. Of course, they wouldn't call each other that.
They would call each other the guitarist and who's going
in front and back? They're arguing about it, and so
I'm already imagining the guy who's got.
Speaker 13 (01:27:32):
It and he's just fucking tired of being the one
who's got to sit back there doing that but that's
just as important to me as the guy who's you know, like.
Speaker 5 (01:27:46):
Each part serves its role and without the other, it's
it's not gonna work. So whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:27:53):
But yeah, like the rhythm guitarist is the lineman and
the league guitarist is the fucking star wide receiver are
out there.
Speaker 4 (01:28:03):
I've never understood music less than that description right there.
Speaker 2 (01:28:08):
You know. But that's what I say. That's the beauty
of Metallica. And again, I've been on a Metallica binge.
My my passion has been reignited, and listening to James
talk about it, I think it was maybe that Aleard
Stern interview, one of the old interviews where James is like, no,
I just want to sit back and play rhythm, like
Kirk's way better at that. Kirk can go take the
(01:28:31):
lead like I don't. I don't, I don't care about that.
I just want to write riffs and just keep a
nice melody going and all of that. Like I think
that is the beauty. James just wants to write riffs
and then he's happy to sit back like he's the
lead vocalist, Like let Kirk be this be the star
on guitar. I guess, and Kirk's very very capable.
Speaker 5 (01:28:53):
Well, so, so what would happened with us a lot
of times is so you know, in the writing process,
you'll have these guys to be like, hey, I've got
a new riff. Right, That's how it usually it starts,
and so then the singer and it will listen and
practice or maybe you'll be sent to us and then
people get excited about something where they don't get excited
about it. Well, what tends to happen is one of
(01:29:15):
the guitarists tends to usually write a little bit better
than the other. If you're lucky, they both equally write great.
But eventually you have to start making choices Okay, we're
gonna go with this, or we're gonna go with that,
or not with that, And if one guy starts to
get less than the other guy, then some egos might
come into play. And I noticed no matter what band
(01:29:35):
I was in, if you had two guitarists, there was
that balance with that. And so I immediately was thinking
about that as I'm listening, you know, to the rhythm guitar,
and I'm like, this is beautiful. Oh, but I bet
that guy right now is pissed that he's not getting to,
you know, dance around like the other guitarist is right now,
and he doesn't understand that it's just as crucial, you know.
(01:29:58):
And okay, maybe the X song you know your your
riff will be the one, but to lead. So anyways,
I just wish I could be a fly on a
wall when they're constructing things like this, because you don't
just get this right, like it's there's a lot to
it along the way to build this, and I would
just be curious to see their writing process as they're
(01:30:22):
happening and see if the fights.
Speaker 4 (01:30:24):
You could watch some kind of monster the documentary and
get to see you entirely too much about that and
then not want to see it ever again. But it's
all about your favorite album, Saint Anger, so you'll love it.
Speaker 5 (01:30:36):
I wonder if that's the one, because there's one where
my friends made me watch some some of it, and
there's the one where he says I'm just the idiot
lead singer or whatever, and then and then and then
and then I was started quoting that all the time
because like, I can't read music, but usually most of
my bandmates can, and they'll be up well and I'll
(01:30:57):
be like, I just need you to do this because
I don't know how to tell them, you know, in
music speak, I say guitar speak. I don't do guitar speak.
I'm just the idiot singer. But I know that that
sucks right now? So can you can you change anyways?
Speaker 3 (01:31:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:31:16):
I would. I would love to not just Metallica, but
but any of these to hear. Okay, well that's how that.
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
There's some kind of monster thing. It's funny because I
was so excited for that and you're like, it suck
and changes in such a horrible place, But I was
so excited for it because a year and a half
in the like life of Metallica, It's one and two
were phenomenal, and that they were amazing. Look and you
(01:31:44):
know the creation of the Black album and you got
to see like the lighter side of them making jokes.
And there's so many things that I'll still quote to
this day from James and that, like talking to Lars
saying you want to hear it with vocals ghost, I
(01:32:05):
wouldn't ask you to do a drum roll if your
arm fell off, you know, like it just so many
great moments in that, So yeah, to watch those documentaries
and then be so excited for some kind of Monster
and then be like, oh, James is being a real pussy.
I drove this is not going well.
Speaker 4 (01:32:25):
I drove six hours one way, so twelve hours total
to go see that in theaters and then I hated it.
Speaker 5 (01:32:34):
And anyway, what was James? He was like heavy and
his addiction or whatever and just like just being.
Speaker 2 (01:32:43):
He was a drunk. He was a drunk. He went
to rehab and then they tried making an album after
he came out of rehab, but he had all these restricts. Yeah,
it's it's pretty bonkers.
Speaker 3 (01:32:54):
That's not go back to the eighties. They were alcoholica.
Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
Yeaheah, well I heard you Jason. I was listening to
an interview with Jason and when he quit the band,
and like he said, James, like it was in the morning.
It was at ten o'clock in the morning or whatever,
and James had a like, you know, a tall can
of beer and he was already drunk because like it was,
he was getting drunk first thing in the morning. And
like some kind of monster was like a year or
(01:33:19):
two after Jason quit the band, if that you know,
So yeah, he was he was in a pretty bad place.
But that's that's like twenty years after, nearly twenty years
after he wrote this where it.
Speaker 5 (01:33:31):
Was in a context when when did this song come out?
Speaker 2 (01:33:36):
So this was I think this was eighty three. I
think it was only three.
Speaker 5 (01:33:42):
Yeah, so they're how old when they put this together?
Twenty one?
Speaker 2 (01:33:47):
Yeah? I think I think they were born in sixty three,
so yeah, I.
Speaker 3 (01:33:51):
Think twenty it's eighty three or eighty four.
Speaker 2 (01:33:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:33:55):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:33:55):
And the backstory behind this, so they they're all their
equipment got robbed from I think it was a U
haul trailer that their manager or something had, uh, And
so they thought they were fucked. They thought their careers
were over. And James in particular, I think one of
the ants or whatever his mum had helped him buy
and his mom was dead now and all of that stuff.
(01:34:17):
So they were like, yeah, understandably pretty dark place. But yeah,
we've gotten away from the song itself. Let's get back
to it. I love that they don't like that, they're
(01:34:58):
happy to just let it linger, you know, I mean,
they don't rush, rush into the song. And as a podcast,
I'm sitting here going fuck, we're just sitting here listening
to this ship over and over. But it is kind
of a thing of like I do respect the fact
that they ease their way into it. They don't rush
into the way the song starts. It feels right, Yeah,
(01:35:18):
setting the mood, I guess just pause it that all right?
(01:35:54):
So I think we've set the tone. Now, we've got
the point things that are going well. Things are going
well for this young man. Yeah, but it's I don't know,
like it's still the music under mate is still quite uplifting,
you know what I mean. Like it it's almost like
(01:36:14):
the person is getting some sort of solace out of
the music. Yeah, anyone else got any thoughts before?
Speaker 4 (01:36:26):
It's too sad, nobody has thoughts right now. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:36:28):
I never married the two before. I never even thought
about it. But yeah, it is interesting the tone of
the music with these words.
Speaker 3 (01:36:39):
Yes, lyrics are dark. Music is sort of still as
an uplifter.
Speaker 2 (01:36:44):
Yeah, I'm just going to go back a fraction because
we're about to find out why it is still a
heavy metal song.
Speaker 3 (01:37:10):
Just to let you know it's Metallica.
Speaker 2 (01:37:19):
H all right, So again for me, that's then that's
(01:37:45):
the that's the anger coming out, right, Like this is
storytelling and it's that they're depressed, but there's kind of
this uplifting music and they're trying to sell you how
bad it sucks. Now they're angry and they're lashing out
about it and what I love about this song? And
there's a few songs that can do it. I think
the watch Sharps did it with Seven n Ice and Ami.
(01:38:06):
But where the chorus is just a guitar riff, there
is no lyrics to the chorus. It's just a guitar riff.
I don't know anyone have any thoughts on the change
in the tone of the song.
Speaker 3 (01:38:22):
Well, obviously it definitely got heavier, Like you said, you
could feel some anger coming through that through the guitar.
Speaker 4 (01:38:32):
I don't know that. I might be just totally out
of the loop on this, but I don't know that
it was that thoughtful when they were creating it. Yeah,
do you think that that they were like, Okay, we're
going to make all of the emotions of depression or
do you think that they already kind of had the
song and then added the lyrics, Like don't I don't
know anything about the creation of the song.
Speaker 2 (01:38:52):
That's a good point yea.
Speaker 4 (01:38:53):
To me, it seems like, hey, we want to write, Like,
at least I know from my friends who have been
in bands, usually the lyricist is working and maybe G.
Scoop can comment on this a little bit more, but like,
usually the lyricist is working totally separately from the band
and then you kind of figure out where it goes in.
Speaker 2 (01:39:11):
Well that's the key thing though, because James is kind
of the key riffer. Yeah, and he's also the lyricist.
Like I don't know, I do think there's there's a
genius there with James, and I want to do more
of these, go through these because again I've been listening
to Metallica differently, like I do think the music goes along.
I think James writes his lyrics by what the music
(01:39:34):
makes him feel, if you know what I mean. And uh,
and he can't He has his melody first and he
figures out the lyrics later. Like there's uh, there's tapes
of James where he's got a he's got a song
that's all written and he just mumbles the melody of
the lyrics because he knows that's how it's supposed to sound.
(01:39:55):
He just doesn't have words for it yet. So I
think he does piece of these songs together of that
why to sort of take you on an emotional journey,
and he doesn't throw many songs. But yeah, maybe I'm
over analyzing it and I'm definitely up.
Speaker 5 (01:40:08):
For That's actually how how most of my writing happens
is I know what the sound of what I'm gonna
say is before I know what the content actually is.
And as I you know, wrote more and more, obviously
I married the music with with what I was doing
better and better. But yes, definitely earlier on, like sometimes
(01:40:31):
it would be and somebody would say, like, it kind
of doesn't make sense what you're saying into the movie
and it's like, what are you talking about? I fucking
wanted to say that there, and That's what I'm saying,
you know, you know, you're just kind of you're not
necessarily paying attention to all the details like somebody else
else might. So yeah, you know, like the lyricist a
(01:40:54):
lot of times is in their own world doing their thing.
And I know it's different because the leads saying your
plays guitar in this situation, and when the lead singer doesn't,
that can drastically change things. But yeah, there's a lot
of times where somebody sent me something they didn't say
what they were thinking or feeling. I wrote to it
and they're like, whoa, okay, well that kicks ass. Oh
(01:41:17):
you don't like it? What's wrong?
Speaker 2 (01:41:19):
Well?
Speaker 5 (01:41:19):
No, I just I thought the song was gonna be
about you know, like murdering kittens, but you wrote it
about you know, you're feeling great about the day or whatever. Right,
it was like totally different concepts, but it came together.
Our two pieces came together and we made something, you know,
really cool about it. But yeah, you never know when
you put the two together, especially if the singer does
(01:41:42):
not play, you know, if they didn't have anything to
do with the riffmaking. My impression of this so far
has more to do with for this song has to
do with the what inspired it. I can definitely hear
the stuff from the seventies, you know, like the influence
(01:42:03):
from the seventies in their music, but definitely obviously still
original and modernized, but just how it's being written. And
of course in the seventies they were less afraid to
make a song longer like like this. But that's what
I hear more. But I never would have thought of
what you were saying about these lyrics tied to this
(01:42:24):
music until this moment. So it does kind of blow
my mind what's being played to this right now? Like
you know, a movies sometimes will play some some maybe
it could be like I don't remember if they had
music during this part, but like Thoman Louise going off
the cliff, but they might be playing something in the
background that doesn't match. You know, two women are going
(01:42:44):
off of fucking cliff to die us tell you yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so they do that in movies a lot, and
so I wonder how much for these guys that they
really care or were they really actually trying to go
for some kind.
Speaker 3 (01:42:58):
Of in the don't I don't know, I go I'm
going with Kayley on this at the moment. It's early
in the career, so I can see this just being
like the music was written and somebody's like we just
threw lyrics at it and said boom.
Speaker 2 (01:43:11):
I think this this song, particularly for James, was pretty
like I've heard him talk about writing it when he
he remembers writing the riff and stuff on the couch
when they all he had was his guitar. He didn't have,
you know, he didn't have his answer ship anymore. So, Yeah,
I do feel like there is something deep with James
(01:43:32):
in this song, that he really brought something.
Speaker 14 (01:43:35):
Special out of himself again for like a twenty year
(01:44:33):
old kid, twenty one year old whatever he.
Speaker 2 (01:44:35):
Was at that age. Like heavy, it's really heavy, like
such like that. All of this stands at testa time
again we're talking about this what forty three years later,
forty years whatever it is, it's it's it's brilliantly, brilliantly written.
Everything is it goes along so well, the lyrics, the music.
(01:44:58):
For such young men to have this kind of the
thought process and this ability to create is uh. I
think is one of the most phenomenal pots of this.
Speaker 3 (01:45:09):
I haven't thought about it, but maybe now that you've
opened my eyes to say, what did Maybe he wrote
this song about his mom.
Speaker 2 (01:45:17):
I think his mom was a part of it, the
fact that she helped, you know, she helped him get
money to buy these particular round or.
Speaker 3 (01:45:25):
Whatever, just saying the point of missing one inside of oneself.
His mom's important to him, is I don't know. I mean,
that's just like you said, it's it's deep.
Speaker 5 (01:45:36):
Yeah, yeah, and and and it's crazy because you think
of I always try to whether it's music, sports, or whatever,
I try to compare, like, man, what do I feel
like I was capable of doing at that age?
Speaker 15 (01:45:50):
You know?
Speaker 5 (01:45:50):
And so of course, since I do sing, I know
exactly how horrible I was at that ageing like to
think of that he was all already there, They were
already there, and so I don't know for you guys,
if you feel where where your creativity was at that age.
And then just going back on on the music, because
(01:46:13):
the other thing that I was thinking about was like, Okay,
how how would he write these lyrics to this music?
But I remember that sometimes you don't key in on
the whole package. There might be one instrument that drive
like for me, for some reason, a lot of times,
the bass is what I don't know, just for some reason,
I'm drawn to the bass on what I end up writing.
(01:46:34):
And so I'm listening to just the roots of this
song as he's going along with this depressing thing, and
it kind of actually does make sense that they you
said they had things going and then they lost their
trailer and they thought that's it.
Speaker 2 (01:46:49):
Right, yeah, bically, yeah, So so they.
Speaker 5 (01:46:51):
Had things going there like dang ding, and then they
lost their tail up, Dan, Dan, it's just constantly that's
what it keeps doing with the music. So that's that's
what I that's the best I can do to tie
in when he's singing to the music. If you keep
hearing it keeps doing that, it's like things might be
(01:47:12):
going great. No he said, I was me and now no.
Speaker 2 (01:47:17):
Yeah that's Kelly.
Speaker 4 (01:47:19):
I just I can't get over howavy the riffs are.
And really I think that heavy is the perfect way
to describe the song. Yes, maybe it's not our traditional
metal heavy or heavy metal way of doing things, but
it's heavy lyrics, it's heavy riffs. This is a beast
of a song.
Speaker 2 (01:47:38):
It's it's emotionally heavy, you know, like it's it's heavy.
Speaker 3 (01:47:43):
And I thought Robbie was emotionally heavy.
Speaker 5 (01:47:48):
Yes, yeah, you describe it. You might get kicked out
of the band how you described it.
Speaker 2 (01:47:55):
You know. A great point fight to black is the Rubbie.
Speaker 4 (01:48:00):
Ma poor vomiting Robbie. I hate to do this because
I am so much I have to run, So please
enjoy listening to the rest of the song, and thank
you again so much for having me.
Speaker 5 (01:48:18):
Bye, guys, metal band name you just created. Vomiting Robbie,
that's the next big I love it.
Speaker 4 (01:48:25):
That's that's for sure the one. All right, bye, guys,
take care.
Speaker 2 (01:48:30):
Yeah, alright, let's get through the song and wrap it up.
I knew there was a chance that she would have
to go. I was about to Oscar, so yeah, blame
it on Robbie.
Speaker 5 (01:49:00):
M hm.
Speaker 2 (01:49:20):
See, I see this is like now standing up a
bit more confident. Yes, you know what I mean? Does
that field this?
Speaker 5 (01:49:27):
We got inspired by something?
Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
Yeah, this is always the favorite part of the song.
Speaker 5 (01:50:16):
Yeah, honestly, I didn't remember that part of the song.
And I'm not saying that like, oh because it wasn't
good enough for me to I honestly just didn't remember it.
Speaker 2 (01:50:28):
Well, yeah, that's where I feel like. That's like I say,
the riff feels like it like it stands up and
it's more confidence, and it is the they are Yeah,
I'm going to kill myself Like that's it becomes that moment, Chris, Yes,
I'm about to go do that And what is coming now?
I is one of my all time favorite guitar solos.
(01:50:52):
And I think if you had a movie scene of
somebody killing themselves, this is the guitar solo dont we
get that.
Speaker 3 (01:51:21):
That amos feels like you're slipping away at this point.
Speaker 2 (01:51:24):
Yeah, id dating.
Speaker 3 (01:51:59):
M like, just wait for it. Hammett was ready.
Speaker 2 (01:52:51):
Just amazing guitar playing amazing for Joel Well.
Speaker 3 (01:52:58):
Good job, Joe.
Speaker 2 (01:53:01):
Yeah, just I don't know that the way that just
it sort of builds and like I say, when that
when those kick drums come in, it's like the hearts
beating harder and faster and harder and faster than that
guitar sol that builds up until they're the well we were,
you know, and it's like it boom, it's over, it's done.
(01:53:22):
They're dead like it is, they're dead exactly. I just
think it's phenomenal musicianship. Yeah, it takes you an amazing place.
You guys, wanna give us some final closing thoughts on
(01:53:44):
Fate to Black kicking off with you Scoop.
Speaker 5 (01:53:48):
Yeah, again, I would love to hear them talk about
this song like their memories when they were first writing it,
you know, like a lot of the specific ex behind
it because you really never know. And again, like I
wish everybody could experience what it's like to just be
(01:54:08):
in that garage, in that studio, pad whatever, it is,
and that's where the magic really happens, because you're sitting there,
it's just you guys, and you're just figuring it out.
And some of these things sometimes happen on purpose, and
some things are by accident, and more often than not,
(01:54:29):
what the person listening thinks is not what they actually
were trying to do or what they're actually saying. And
that's the beauty of it is that it should be
left open for interpretation, you know. And it's like, I
had no idea. What was that one song by Chevelle
(01:54:50):
It was Pins and Needles and it was literally just
about like how when you you know when you're when
you're getting the feeling back from your that was the
comparison they were talking about. I was like, oh, that's
what it actually is about. But yeah, you know, you
never know. And and sometimes even in our band, one
(01:55:10):
time we wrote a song that was called well we
made it cute and called it nothing, but it was
supposed to be nothing, and it was literally the music
was wasn't inspired by it by anything. None of my
words made any sense. It was just random things that
I was just saying in each line, and somehow it
did sound like we were actually saying something, and we
created something that was meant to be and the whole
(01:55:34):
joke was there was it wasn't meant to mean anything.
But if somebody listens to it, guaranteed they're gonna, you know,
find something behind that song for them. And that's why
I like it when the artists try not to say
like too much, but they at least give you some
of like how they how they created it.
Speaker 2 (01:55:56):
M very good Josh to.
Speaker 3 (01:56:02):
Fade to Black. It's a great song. It took me
back down memory lane because I can't say I've been
playing Fade to Black. It doesn't make my list or
whatever in the Metallica rotation, but the song in itself,
it's constructed very well. It's all open, Like Jay Scoop said,
to everybody has a different interpretation. I mean, what means
(01:56:25):
to you might mean something else to someone else. I
think they were I think they were ahead of their
time during that time with where they were taking music
at that point, and Fade to Black just showed how
mature they were when they were so immature.
Speaker 2 (01:56:42):
Yeah at that point, no agreed. Yeah, Look, eighty is
one of my favorites of Metallic. Is just genuinely love
how well it's constructed. Again, I think their storytellers more
than just their lyrics. It is the music and lyrics
tell a story together, and and if you'll follow along
(01:57:04):
with with you know, the different sections of the song
they do sort of set the tone for what's going on.
So yeah, no, it is. I just think it's one
of the most beautiful songs ever written.
Speaker 4 (01:57:17):
I really do.
Speaker 2 (01:57:18):
Black is a banger. And yeah, thanks for this has
been your bonus podcast bit. We're gonna kick over now
to the pre recorded live and into the show that
we did.
Speaker 5 (01:57:35):
So the Spart's gonna feed the Black.
Speaker 2 (01:57:38):
It's Gonnat's gonna fade the Black. I'll probably do the
old South Park.
Speaker 3 (01:57:54):
I don't know how many times we're gonna have to tell.
Speaker 2 (01:57:56):
You all, man now imow, Kaylie, thank you for joining us.
We appreciate you by You're always a fantastic guess. I
let everyone know where they can find once over with Kaylie,
your Patreon, everything you do well.
Speaker 4 (01:58:18):
Thank you so much for having me. This was a
super super fun time. I am always happy to talk
about music or movies, so this was an honor. You
can find me on YouTube at once Over With Kaylee,
which is c A Y L e Y. I do
movie reviews over there. I review a little bit of everything.
So coming up this week, I'm starting. I reviewed Saw
(01:58:39):
one and I am going to be doing all of
the Saw movies. Also coming up is It's Pat, So
you know, there's a lot of variants, a lot of
yeah we got we got a lot of stuff going on.
Speaker 2 (01:58:53):
One one of the few movies that made me feel
like had a physical had a physical reacting.
Speaker 4 (01:59:04):
I thought you talking about It's Pat, and I was like,
what happened?
Speaker 3 (01:59:08):
Yeah, I did too.
Speaker 2 (01:59:09):
I thought was going and I I got extremely nauseous
and you couldn't even see him sowing the ankle, but
the thought of it and everything like it was well
shot to make me go, this is fucking horrendous. I
feel nauseous.
Speaker 4 (01:59:22):
But there's a lot of a lot of magic in
that movie, just like there is with Metallica. So you
can also find me on Patreon, which is also once
over with Kaylee c A Y l E Y. And
on my Patreon, I do popsicle reviews and I just
ate a garbage Plate, which is a local Rochester food
in Lingerie, So there's lots of fun stuff over there
(01:59:46):
as well. I review on Patreon. I review anything that
is sent to me in the who Are These Podcast mailbox?
So if you ever want to see me review anything,
you can send that over to who Are These Podcasts?
Where I am a guest host.
Speaker 2 (02:00:02):
Sometimes I might get Robbie to take a mood photo
and get your to review that.
Speaker 4 (02:00:08):
Yeah, I totally do that.
Speaker 2 (02:00:12):
Be kind, Be kind, okay, Okay, I have to be honest,
Yeah you do. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:00:20):
I have to care about my sponsors, you know.
Speaker 2 (02:00:23):
For sure. Schmiel Blackman's Yes, shout out spill Spiel just
sent a donation to my paper. Thank you, buddy. He's
done that a few times over the last few weeks.
Always appreciate it. Kayley's tearing up. Yes, he's loving that
metallicat all.
Speaker 4 (02:00:39):
I love it. It's so fun.
Speaker 2 (02:00:42):
Yeah, and was that mistress Meg a c DC? Next
time I'll talk. I got here a CDC man myself,
so yeah, we can definitely talk next time. Scoop, where
can everyone find you and help you out?
Speaker 5 (02:01:01):
M Okay, Well on the script, I'm not saying the letter.
It's Twitter, Okay, That's what it is. That's what it's
gonna stay at Jesse Creams j E S S E
c R E A N And if you want to
help out getting these first aid kits, help build these
individual first aid kits for the people over here. Doesn't
(02:01:22):
have to be about politics and money. Just save some
lives over here. There's a lot of good people dying
and they would not die if they have a simple
turn kit that costs thirty bucks. You can help me
at Jany twenty five m at yahoo dot com. You
can put that in in the PayPal So that's w
A N y A two five Mazon mic at yahoo
(02:01:44):
dot com five five.
Speaker 15 (02:01:49):
Good job scripe. Yeah, help scape out if you can.
Uh yeah, it helps in some taple about politics. It
helps in some tap Uh just Josh, you find.
Speaker 3 (02:01:59):
Me in two on Twitter, or you can find me
here in Cincinnati somewhere trimming somebody's house. I'm not trimming bushes.
Speaker 2 (02:02:15):
Wow. Earlier on this evening or the sevening my time
this morning, you Mesti. I did a show called What's
Your Randall. It's a look back at the Ricky Devas
show on x FM and into the podcast day, the
podcast days. I do that with Echo Pineapple and it's
on his YouTube channel equal pineapple, Just imagine equal pineapple
(02:02:38):
and put a three with the last he should be hyah, No,
I know, I just yeah, I realized I could link
it into my own catchphrase. Yeah it's a it's a three.
It's a three at the end of ecule pineapple instead
of I don't know why you had to do that,
(02:02:59):
but you had to do that. But yeah, what's your handle? Yeah,
check it out, give it a chance. We enjoy doing
it and we hope you enjoy watching it. Also, outside
of that, just hit like and subscribe here, and yeah,
help us get to five hundred. We're trying our best.
Give us a chance, and yeah, head over to the
(02:03:20):
podcast feed and subscribe over there on your favorite podcast app.
Otherwise on Twitter, I am at that sussy guy. Just
imagine that ouzzi guy and put an ass whether he
should be We'll catch you next time. On the United
States of Australia see destruct