Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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(00:20):
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Speaker 2 (00:48):
It is time to leave your warriors outside and laugh
with us inside the Treehouse. I'm Dan Olmley along with
Trey Trendholm and Raj Sharma. Thank you for joining us today.
Today we will begin with NASA shocking news. NASA says
Earth is running out of oxygen, which means two things.
(01:12):
Number one, the lack of oxygen might explain why so
many of us keep doing and saying so many stupid things.
And number two, and this is my favorite one, the
plot of Spaceballs just got real. Granted, the NASA timeline
(01:34):
is a long way away of when it says Earth
may run out of oxygen something to the tune of
a billion years from now. But it's new information and
they're saying it's you know, the oxygen is being depleted
at a level a little more accelerated than I think
they originally thought. Look, I mean when I was a kid,
(01:54):
I think we were all taught in school that eventually
the Sun is going to keep growing because it's a
yellow star, it'll eventually get bigger. And when it gets
bigger to more like a red star, it will just eventually,
you know, melt Earth. It'll get big enough where the
Earth will melt in its present, but we'll all be
(02:15):
long long gone before that happens. I think that was
in the neighborhood of five or seven billion years when
the Sun was going to melt Earth. Well, we're going
to run out of air long before that, sort of
like the billion year mark. But any of us really
think humans will still be around to run out of
air in a billion years?
Speaker 1 (02:35):
No, No, I think the Earth will do what the
Earth seems to do, and that is something cataclysmic will happen,
wipe everyone out. There'll be lush greenery everywhere, and the
oxygen will be replenished.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Yeah, look at all this air and no a holes
to suck it all up. Yeah, all the cockroaches are
still going to be saying, told you this planet's ours.
It really is amazing though to think like in terms
of the life span of the galaxy the planet our
(03:09):
own individual lives, how obviously minusculeed it is. But according
to this new study where NASA scientists believe Earth's atmosphere
will collapse within the next billion years, but before that happens,
experts reckon, the decline will first begin only ten thousand
years from now. Which is it as far away as
it sounds, Yes, it is in human brains, Yes it
(03:35):
is in space time. No, that's like a blink of
an eye. But to us humans, ten thousand years that's
a long time, right, That's why none of us are
really worried about it. But scientists from NASA and Japan's
Toho University concentrated on the relationship between the planet's oxygen
(03:55):
levels and the Sun's gradual warming when trying to understand
the evolution of Earth's app sphere. As we all know,
the Earth's climate is set to get hotter, but when
you might not know. What you might not know is
that the Sun's luminosity is also anticipated to increase. So
as that happens, bad things happen. So, as Trey put it,
(04:20):
very very wisely, eventually the planet will do what it does.
It'll wipe off the you know, the major species and
start back over and things will be pretty.
Speaker 3 (04:31):
Or maybe the other way around, when it could be
an ice age, right, That's.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Why I said something catasclysmic. I mean it, Yeah, you
could have you know, a younger, dryest type thing where
just to you know, fragments of a comet just bounce
off the Earth's atmosphere, but just enough to cause basically
a nuclear winter, white almost everyone out and start.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
Over, save mother nature the trouble.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Yeah, Trey, how do you not write for Hallmark?
Speaker 2 (04:59):
He does. It's just you know how they have the
shoe box collection. Tray's cards are the ones that are
in the shoe box under the bed with the pets.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Ashes, the Ethic collection.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
I actually think we should do that Tray's greeting cards.
Oh yeah, for special occasions, birthdays, graduations, romantic holidays.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
We can have air and do the artwork you do
the yeah text.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
Yeah, I mean some of these kind of write themselves.
I mean, NASA says the Earth will run out of
air in a billion years, but yours will run out
much sooner than that if you don't pick what we're
gonna have for dinner.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
On your ninetieth birthday, Nana.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
What's the point.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Tray's gonna tell his mom this horrible is that NASA
just discovered and he's going to show her her brand
new NASA pillow. So the ultimate reason I wanted to
share this story wasn't because it's obviously it's not impending
to him or anything, but because it actually had me
thinking that Spaceballs and the plot of space Balls could
(06:19):
actually happen to planet Earth just way after we're gone.
That being said, this kind of goes back to the
conversation Trey now we're having last week about essential movies,
especially when you get into a new relationship like Trey is.
Trey is in a new relationship and Raj he discovered
recently that his new lady has not seen some of
(06:39):
the movies he has, which threw him for a loop.
She's ten years younger, so it kind of makes sense.
But Trey, what was one of the movies? You were
really surprised that she hadn't seen.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Star Wars for one, just because she's a big Jay
and silent Bob fan. And uh, as you pointed out,
you know, Jalen, Silent Bob Strikes Back is just laced
with Star Wars references.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Yeah, Raj, you're in a new relationship as well. Are
there any moments like that that you've had with your
new your new love interst or you thought you haven't
seen that?
Speaker 3 (07:16):
No, I think the genres of movies that we enjoy
are wildly different, and so I like when I I asked,
I'm like, have you ever seen like The Godfather? Godfather too?
Speaker 1 (07:33):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (07:33):
Yes? Have you seen a Bronx Tail? No? Uh, you
gotta watch that? And she like, you know that she's
like stranger things. I think something she would like or
you know, so I really haven't crossed into them, but
anything that she'll put on like, I'll watch, Like, I
don't mind.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Do you do you ever find your Have you ever
tried to force her or any other relationship you've been
in to watch a movie that you should be required viewing.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
No, I'll tell them why I like it and why
they should watch it, and who's in it might intrigue
them as well, if it's you know, somebody that that's
the favorite actor of theirs, or or somebody that you know,
likes that sort of storyline or you know, so on
and so forth. But no, I've never actually sat somebody
sit down and watch this.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
If you love me, you.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
Will watch this, all right, So take it more broad
not just romantically. But what's a movie that when someone
tells you they haven't seen it, it shocks you, Trey
you threw out, like with your new girlfriend Star Wars.
I think that is one that if someone say they've
never seen any Star Wars anything, that's pretty surprising. But
you know, Raj is one of those people that hasn't
(08:44):
seen some things that shocks you and me, Trey.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
But mine. I mean that's the genre I like is
like mom movies. So if you haven't seen The Godfather
like we have we have, we got to put aside
three hours uh for dinner one night because you're going
to see this movie. It's one of the greatest movies
ever made.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
So mob movies, which one would you say, would you
do god Godfather over Goodfellows?
Speaker 2 (09:14):
Yes, easily, Godfather or Godfather Too.
Speaker 3 (09:20):
You can do the one where they combined the two
of them, which is pretty cool, but Godfather Too I
even enjoy. This is how sad I am like about
mob movies. I enjoyed three. That was the worst one. Wow, Yeah,
I even enjoyed that one.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
You don't get to make fun of me and my
appreciation for the American ninja movie franchise after that admission
of you loving Godfather three, I enjoyed it.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
I loved the first one. I love the second one.
I enjoyed you know, the trip back home and the
you know the stuff and the things with the daughter
and the you know, have something what Sunny's bastard child. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
I will say mob movies are a really difficult genre
to pick one that would be considered essential viewing because
there's so many good ones. I guess the king of
them would be Godfather. I guess it kind of started
the whole genre, but there's so many good ones that
came after it that it's really difficult to just pick one.
(10:27):
But so Trey Tara, my wife heard our conversation the
other day about some of the movies that your girlfriend
hasn't seen, and my wife told me that she hasn't
seen Jaws. I've known her for sixteen years, and I
always assumed that she had seen Jaws, because anytime I
(10:48):
would mention it, she knew what I was talking about,
but I didn't realize she's never actually seen the movie.
It's pop culture referenced enough that she knows a lot
about it and she knows certain things from it. But
she said, I haven't actually seen the whole movie, and
I said, okay. And again, she told me early on
that she had x's that forced her to watch movies,
(11:09):
kind of like you're saying, Raj, if you haven't seen
The Godfather, you need to see the Godfather kind of thing.
And I always told her, I will not do that
to you. I am definitely into movies more than she is,
but I'm not going to force you to watch a
movie you don't want to. That being said, she watched
Jaws this weekend.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Okay, and.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
She definitely feels that CPS should have been called on
my parents for allowing five year old me to watch
that movie.
Speaker 3 (11:37):
Yes, also, you should have made you should have brought
that up before you moved to the Islands to make
her watch Jaws.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
Here's the thing, though, the Jaws movies nuts we live
in the Caribbean. Great white sharks are not that much
of a thing in the Caribbean. They're in much deeper
colder waters. So well, Caribbean great white is not an
issue until you get to Jaws four. It's Jaws one
(12:08):
and two that it's in the you know, the northeast
in the New England area. That's where you had to,
you know, to really watch out for him.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Yeah. I just think she's like, Babe, I just got
done watching Jaws and like, sweet, let's go for a swim.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
But it's interesting because she she told me, and I
didn't realize. She's like, she's like, I don't think you
realize how often you reference Jaws. And I was like, well,
now you know why, Now now that you've seen the
movie and you know what it is and all the
things that are and I've seen it a bunch. And again,
the first time I watched it, I was like four
or five years old. You watch a movie like that
(12:46):
at that age, you damn right, it's going to impact you.
I mean, professionals call it childhood trauma by today's standards.
You you know, us it was just the eighties.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
Is that why Tutsie had such an effect on you?
Speaker 3 (13:02):
Working Girl.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Nine to five.
Speaker 4 (13:09):
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cookdfw dot com. A fellow porn star is slamming Bonnie
Blue for wanting to film with barely legal teens. Now,
(15:52):
this is not anything new for Bonnie Blue, and because
of this, once again Bonnie Blue finds herself covered in controversy.
The former friend of controversial sex worker Bonnie Blue has
panned claims that the twenty six year old will be
in Australia for schoolies. I think this is kind of
(16:13):
how Bonnie Blue got her start. Bonnie Blue is the
one we've talked about on the show a handful of times.
She's the one that did the thousand guys and twelve
hours or something, and just it's all about exploits and
over the top porn things with her. She basically got
her start by convincing newly graduated Australian guys to be
(16:38):
in her adult projects. Right, and then now I guess
she's going back to her roots, and now she's being
slammed for it by fellow sex workers, which to me
is kind of fascinating. Schoolies. The annual Rite of Passage
where year twelve students in Australia blowoff steam after her
year of studying has also become the playground of adult
(17:01):
content creators. These creators film with barely legal teenagers and
upload the videos to their subscription sites to make money,
and it's caused uproar among parents in the past. One
of the most controversial to do this is, of course,
Bonnie Blue real name Tea Billinger. Last year, the Australian
government denied the British national a visa to get into
the country to film on the Gold Coast with the
(17:24):
schoolies' students as a backup play and she had a
Deafiji along with a friend to take part in this
annual event. Oh my God. Blue has claimed that despite
this issue of her Australian visa being canceled, she will
be hitting the Gold Coast for schoolies in twenty twenty five.
(17:47):
So my question to you guys is, if you're eighteen
years old, is this a good idea? Bonnie Blue comes
a knocking' and you decide to go a rocking.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
And film it and put it out there forever. No,
that's what it is. That is a terrible idea unless unless,
unless that's the career you want to get into, then
that's a good start.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (18:14):
You know, entry level position.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Gotta pay your dues.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
Uh huh. But if you're like, hey, one day I
want to be a high powered attorney, that's a bad idea.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
Unless unless your plan is to represent a sex workers.
Speaker 3 (18:40):
Then then you again you can talk about you know,
past experience. I guess yeah, but no, I mean, none
of that's a good idea, Like that's that's just that's
a again, like I said, unless you're trying to get
into the industry, sure, that's a great, that's a great
(19:00):
I don't know if they call it a reel, But
I don't think there's a really big auditioning process outside
of the videos you see of the audition process. I
think you just kind of go to the place and
you sign up. Yeah, I'm like cool.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Last year, she went with Annie Knight, who has been
dubbed Australia's most sexually active woman, to take part in
the annual event, but after the pair relocated to a
popular resort in Nade during the annual student celebrations, Fiji's
Minister for Immigration declared Knight in blue or prohibited immigrants,
and deportation proceedings were commenced by local authorities. The two
(19:39):
then fled to the island. They fled the island nation
before they could formally be deported, so they deported themselves.
But now Annie Knight is basically saying this is not
a good idea. Stop. She says that Bonnie Blue is
taking advantage of these scoolies. Is she is this like,
(19:59):
is it preditor Tori or is she just taking advantage?
Speaker 1 (20:03):
But they were doing it together in the pasty. Yes,
so she's had to change the heart.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
It's it's look. Porn stars can also evolve. We all
of us have evolved on various issues in our lives.
You know, we might be more accepting of something now
that maybe we weren't ten, fifteen, twenty years ago. Maybe
Annie Knight has realized the airs of her ways and Bonnie's.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
I don't think it's product. I mean they're getting paid,
I'm assuming. No, they're not getting paid. They're they're creating content.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
Well, no, basically, I don't. I don't know if the
participants really get anything other than the action. I don't
think they get any sort of money for it. They
sign a release, then they release, and then Bonnie Blue
takes it all. It runs with it right to the bank.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
That's a little exploitative, right, Yeah, that's.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
Why I'm asking the questions, Like, look like I understand
as an eighteen year old guy, you might be like, yeah,
I want to do this, yeah Boddy bloo booo. But
then that's because you're eighteen and you don't really think
about things. You don't think about things long term. Yeah,
we're all you know, I hate to say it, but
we're all middle aged now. We know that that would
be a stupid thing to do, But it would be
very difficult for us at our age now to go
(21:31):
back to our eighteen year old selves and say, hey,
you don't want to do this, because do you think
do you think eighteen year old you would listen to you? Now?
Speaker 3 (21:42):
I think eighteen year old me was smarter than me.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
Now I think Trey would beat up his eighteen year.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
Old Oh, I would absolutely whip his ass. But you know,
the question then becomes, so when we were eighteen, I
don't know. I think that you didn't have the Internet. Yeah,
I mean so there is the dividing line for me.
(22:10):
Eighteen year olds now they've now had it enough, they
know the Internet is forever.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
That is true. That's an excellent point because we didn't
fully comprehend that back then eighteen year olds. Now, I'd
be shocked if they didn't fully realize that.
Speaker 3 (22:27):
And you're signing a release, so it's going to say
that they own the image and the footage throughout the
universe of perpetuity if it's the actual release that they
make you sign a normal projects and not the adult ones.
But yeah, that's true. That's a great point. Like eighteen, well, yeah,
eighteen year old me and I don't remember who was
(22:49):
the biggest porn star back then, Jenna Jameson. I think, yeah,
and it comes up and is like you want to do this?
Like sure, okay, like it in my head I him
was like, where's this gonna Who's gonna see this? And
then I realized I live in Mesquite and there's a
lot of people. Like I said, when it was it
was hard for us to find porn as kids because
(23:12):
you had to befriend somebody whose dad had porn and
they weren't good people.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
Yeah, you know, it's not like it is now.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
Yeah, he's like, my dad's got porn. I'm like, of
course he does. I thirteen with the neck tattoo, like,
of course he's got porn.
Speaker 2 (23:28):
That's probably the that's probably just the tip of the iceberg.
But yeah, you asked, uh, like, why why Annie Knight
is now not approving of Bonnie Blue's antics, And she's
basically says it's because of the antics. So Annie Knight's
goal with her sex work is to destigmatize sex work,
whereas Bonnie Blue is all about the controversy and the
(23:48):
rage baiting. She's sort of like the stunt person, and
Annie's trying to take the more I don't know, legitimate,
credible avenue with it. I don't.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
At the end of the day, it's petty portn star drama.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
And and who has a bigger following now, like it's
got to be Bonnie Blue as opposed to this lady.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (24:21):
I haven't looked, Okay, not even for the research for
the show, not yet. Let us know what you find out.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
Yeah, sometimes the research needs to happen in two or
three parts. You're listening to the tree House, Visit us
(24:53):
online at Treehouse on air dot com.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Want more Treehouse, check out our YouTube exclusive shows at
YouTube dot com. Slash at Treehouse on Air.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
You listen us online at Treehouse on air dot.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
Com shocking news over the weekend about Elon Musk's package
pay package. More specifically, uh Tesla shareholders approved Elon Musk's
one trillion dollar pay package. That is a standout headline.
(25:40):
While shocking and mad ding to some, it's important to
keep in mind that this is dominantly a stock pay package,
and it is laden with incentives, and not just incentives,
but targets that he slash tests has to hit in
(26:01):
order to qualify for these incentives to hit to possibly
make him the first trillionaire. Without knowing any of the details,
does this sound like he's gonna make too much money?
He's already worth like four hundred and fifty billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (26:24):
Yeah, but he also has like three hundred and forty kids, so.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
They don't pay for themselves yet.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
He's going to need the money a lot of braces.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
Well, that's one of the things. That's one of the
first things I thought of, was like, Man, if he's
going to make that much money, he's going to go
on a tear of making more kids. He's like, look,
how many more kids I can afford now? But yeah,
so Trey, what do you think? Just just face value
incentive and he has to hit all these targets, but
still a trillion dollar pay package.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
For one that sounds more like self grandizing headline more
than anything. I mean, but you know, I mean, if
he makes a cyber truck that actually sells and runs,
I'd say that's worth a hundred billion right there.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
I'm with you. I'm with you. So it's amazing to
me in part that he's worth as much money as
he is while having some products that aren't exactly phenomenal.
We are not fans of the cyber truck inside the Treehouse,
not because of any personal vendettas. It's just because it's
kind of a shitty truck. I mean, there's memes all
(27:34):
over the internet showing you and not to mention, you're
talking about a six figure vehicle that because of the
material it's made out of. Tree told us this a
few months ago. It's a fingerprint magnet. Like I'm not
even sure if the stainless steel stuff I clean my
refrigerator with will get the thumb prints off of your
cyber truck.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
No, it's I mean, it is one of the great
debacles really of especially automotive. I mean, I mean I've
heard it, seen it. Compared to the edzul. I mean,
it's just just an absolute piece of shit. And I
mean seriously, they have there's thousands of them just sitting
in lots because they can't sell them anymore, because they're
(28:20):
just so ridden with problems. I mean that they can't
go through a fucking puddle.
Speaker 3 (28:25):
I mean it's but I see so many of them
here in Dallas, Like it's a wild to me, how
many and various different colors and paint jobs and this
and that. So there's more money going into for the cosmetics.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
But there is there is a market for and especially
since we're speaking of Dallas here, there is certainly a
market for status symbols, like you want that Louis Vuitton bag,
you want the cyber truck, that sort of thing. You're
not purchasing a vehicle for its capabilities, You're purchasing it
(28:59):
for what it you know, what it displays, what it
shows the world kind of a thing. It's a status symbol.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
But a lot of people they're they're buying you see
now they've bought them. The original owner has taken the
depreciation and they've bought it for basically about thirty cents
on the dollar. Wow. Really, yeah, no one wants them.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
And by the way, if you're just looking for a
good truck, to just get you an O five Tacoma,
you're good, and you're gonna spend a lot less money.
That's gonna be able to go a lot more places.
But Tesla's shareholders approved a record setting pay package for
chief executive Elon Musk, a plan designed to motivate the
world's richest man with as much as one trillion dollars
(29:38):
in additional stock. It's fascinating to me how many times
I have seen corporations and companies and CEOs say your
compensation shouldn't be motivation. And here's Tesla's shareholders saying we
had to keep this guy motivated. So here's here. We're
just gonna money whip it.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
Isn't it also some it's government subsidized.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
It's also very heavily subsidized company by the government.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Yeah. Yeah, well the government subsidizes electric vehicles.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Yeah, okay.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Now, this new pay package, which includes twelve chunks of stock,
could give Musk control over as much as twenty five
percent of TESL if he hits a series of milestones
and expands the company's market cap to eight and a
half trillion dollars over the next ten years. Right now
that cap is one and a half trillion, okay. The
board described the package as pay for performance, designed to
(30:35):
motivate Musk to transform the company with new products such
as autonomous vehicles, robot taxis, and human eyed and humanoid robots.
One of the things that he has to do is
I believe it's like one million or ten million. I'm
trying to find it in the story and I saw
it earlier and I've lost it, but it's something like
(30:56):
a million humanoid robots sold, a million robot taxis on
the road. I mean, some of these benchmarks that the
company is going to have to hit. I just don't
see that happening, even if things were really running great
for him. So it's a great headline. It's attention grabbing headline.
(31:19):
Trillion dollar pay package approved. But I don't think he's
going to come anywhere near that, not that he needs
the money.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
Tall chunks of stock is what he calls his kids.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
Chunk A chunk, G chunk C just.
Speaker 6 (31:37):
Split along with Mom Musk have said go ahead, Trey.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Well, I say it's a good headline for the company.
I mean he is associated with that company, and like
him or not, I mean, obviously the guy is smart
at what he does. He may be I could doodle
at times, but I think a lot of this is
I'll call it the Steve Jobs effect. Is if you
have a company with that is so centered around one person,
(32:16):
they don't want to make the mistake Apple did and
let him go.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
Yeah. Yeah, because if I think Tesla realizes, for good
or bad, they're married to him, because you're right. If
he goes, then there's very little confidence in the company
because then they have to find somebody else and that's
going to be a rebuilding process, and that's something Tesla
is not wanting to do. So they find themselves kind
(32:46):
of stuck with the guy. Now. To Elon's credit, he
did say that he wants a big enough ownership stake
in Tesla to be comfortable that the robot army he's
developing did not fall into the wrong hands, but not
so large that he couldn't be fired if he went crazy.
Speaker 3 (33:04):
Said Musk while doing Ketamine.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
I know, and that's look, this is old hat, but
it's true. With great power comes great responsibility. So we're
supposed to trust his own barometer for his level of
crazy when it comes to developing a bunch of robots.
I mean, this is a Hollywood script. It doesn't this
doesn't take a genius to write this film. It's pretty obvious,
(33:33):
like all the ways in which you could get bad
things happening out of this. Also, not to mention like
I haven't seen the movie in quite a while, but
I remember it pretty accurately. James Bond Moonraker, And when
I think of that guy, the Eve, the Villain and Moonraker,
(33:55):
it reminds me of Elon Musk a little bit.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
See South African and on Drugs.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
No, it's like the richest man in the world. He's
developing all this new technology. He takes it a little
bit further than Elon has. He basically started a space
cult and wanted to relocate everyone to the Moon. But
I mean Elon kind of wants to do that with Mars,
So I mean it's not a horribly huge deviation.
Speaker 1 (34:21):
I mean that that is one problem. I mean, you
are giving this guy this huge incentive package, you know,
based on on robots and and automated cars, and his
ultimate goal is to not be on earth.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
So yeah, who's who's the comedian that's talking about this?
Like they like Elon Musk wakes up every day and
is like that that's where I want. I want to go.
I'm tired of here now I think it's Josh Johnson.
He's like, I'm tired of here, so now I want
to I've bought everything here, so now go there. So
(34:51):
it's very very accurate. When you have that much money,
you got to start figuring out what to do with it. Yeah,
you can buy the yachts, who can buy the planes?
You can buy that well one, I mean, and you're
still worth four hundred fifty billion.
Speaker 2 (35:05):
Dollars and that's before this new pay package. Yeah, you're right.
It's like, okay, so what is my motivation?
Speaker 3 (35:13):
You know?
Speaker 2 (35:13):
That's all right, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
I would like to buy Mars exactly. And somebody's like
for a trillion dollars maybe, and he's.
Speaker 2 (35:23):
Like, I'll be back chanage accepted.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
You have layaway.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
I can't wait to see his Mars salute when he lands.
For all things Treehouse, go to Treehouse on air dot com.
You sure to find and follow us on social media
for the show. It's at Treehouse on air. For me,
it's at the Daniel Malley, For Trey it's at Trey
Turnhome one, and for raj it's at Comedian Raaje. We'll
see you next time right here inside the Treehouse, which,
(35:58):
by the way, if Elon wants something to do with
some of his extra cash, we'll sell out gladly. I
mean for a lot less than mars. We'll see you
next time inside the Treehouse.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
H