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October 5, 2025 • 78 mins
Join us on the Fireside Chat as we speak with 6oodfella, who has been more active on the YouTubes lately.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, hello everybody, and welcome to Honey Badger Radio.
My name is Brian and this is the Fireside Chat
and today we have a returning guest, an old friend
of the channel. Good fella, welcome to the show, sir.
How are you hello?

Speaker 2 (00:15):
How you then? I'm just currently copying this shocking post
on my twelve feet.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Yeah go ahead, yeah please please do.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
I think thanks are good? Thanks a good mind. Hopefully
everyone watching is okay? Anyone catching on the non live
streams okay as well?

Speaker 1 (00:32):
Yes, yeah, people will see this later as well. And
just like making sure that I'm able to see the chat.
So I'm just bringing it up here WI chat because
we're we're going out on a couple of different one.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
I've got James and Shane signal and good afternoon evening,
and Norwegian has said Hi, I'm on YouTube. Yeah I see.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
Gabriel has given you a Scottish flag and a and
some Scotch apparently. Anyway, so we were just uh, you know,
I looked at our history to see the last time
that we had you on and it was so long ago.
It was when Count Dankila was arrested for his dog.

(01:26):
Do you remember that?

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Yes, yes, that was that was a way logal.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Yeah, yeah, And I think for a while, I you know,
because I've always been subscribed to your channel, but YouTube
gets up to like sketchy stuff, like sometimes they'll just
unsubscribe you from something silently without you knowing. But I
didn't see your content for a long time, and then
I thought, you know, maybe you stopped doing stuff. I

(01:52):
don't know, did you have anything to say about that?

Speaker 2 (01:55):
Well, I did, like take a break for a while
and then came back and then took a break for
a while, and there was just just a lot going on.
Things are different now because like my son's sixteen now,
so I don't need to be like around for him
all the time. You know, he's pretty much in his
room with his friends, well on the computer with his forens,

(02:16):
I should say, and it kind of keeps to himself.
But when he was younger, obviously he needed me more
around more so I didn't really have the time to
just oh, what I'll make a video about and all
that kind of stuff. But then I did. I think
that I know everybody says this, but I really do
feel like I would being strangled on YouTube and still am. Actually,

(02:38):
I mean if you think about it, right, I've got
like over twenty thousand subscribers. Right, I've had over twenty
thousand subscribers for many years, and I'm lucky if I
break like a thousand views on a video, and that's
just very strange to me. That's like, that's just very odd.
And also before before the changes to YouTube, because that

(03:00):
has been changes recently. Like I was posting comments on videos,
videos that people like that subscribed to me would also watch,
and my comments would be there for months without one
reply or one like or anything, no interaction at all,
and it's like, all right, my comments might be rubbish, right,

(03:24):
But when you compel them to newer comments that are
rubbish and they're getting loads of comments and likes, and
you're like, what's going on here? Man? Not one like,
not one reply? Obviously I was being strangled at some point.
I think that's changed, maybe now because the rules have changed.
I got demonetized years ago, right, I was never doing

(03:47):
YouTube for the money anyway, but I got demonetized, and
that pissed me right off. I don't use bad language
on your stream. I don't want to get you in trouble,
but that really annoyed me, man, because I felt that
it was unfair, but whatever. So then recently I came
back Grand Theft All five was it wasn't he remastered,
but it was like the definitive edition or whatever, the

(04:09):
latest edition, right, and I was going to start playing that,
and I thought, actually, do you know what, I'll stream
it that way I can talk to the chat and
you know, so I streamed the whole game I had.
I think it was like seven videos. I played the
whole game on my last video. While streaming this. On
the last Grand Theft at All video YouTube sent me
a message saying that you're eligible for monetization again. What

(04:33):
would that come from? I never even I never asked
for it and nothing. So I went, okay, so I
applied for it, and then they gave me monetization again.
I thought, okay, that's interesting. I think something's changed somewhere,
and started making more videos, thinking let's see what the
change is like. But I don't think view wise there's
not been much. I just compare it to the subscribers.

(04:53):
I think people subscribed to me early on and then
they just either dead or the bots or whatever and
just don't exist. All these subscribers don't exist anymore because
I just you know, I don't know. I don't know
how YouTube box. I can't I can't figure it out. It, man,
I can't figure out I I'll just keep making y
deals with my camera and my make and making jokes

(05:13):
and just see how well it goes. You know.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
Yeah, So when so you said that you think that
that this you got remonetized or approved for remonetization. When
did that happen? Like how long ago was that? Because
I know that YouTube recently confessed that they were in fact,
like you know, banning people for political speech like stuff

(05:36):
that they were saying about. You know, if you talked
about COVID nineteen, if you talked about vaccines, if you
talked about lockdowns, if you talked about well, at least
in America, if you talked about the election and you
were like suspicious of it. I'm sure there were different
rules in different countries, but they recently like allowed people
to come back on the platform that they had banned

(05:58):
some And I don't know if that's like around the
same time that this changed for you too. Well.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
I just checked out that the video date on the
last Grandift doll video was the sixth of July, so
I don't know. I do know around about that time
or before that time, that Trump did mention that he's
going to come down heavy on YouTube and the likes
for their censorship. So maybe they started taking steps then,
I don't know, or maybe it was just because I

(06:25):
was live streaming a video game and they picked up
on the fact that I was live streaming a game
and they just thought, oh, this guy's got a gaming channel.
I don't have a gaming channel. I just play games
now and again. And I mean, I would never like him.
People have a got me for playing games, but I
would never like stream puzzle Quest, which I'm addicted to
right now, because I was boring to watch.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
Puzzut that's a real game.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
It's boring to watch though for the for the viewers.
You know, there's nothing in it for the viewer. But
a game like Granded or Watchdogs Are Red Dead, the
viewer can not only enjoy watching that, but can actually
also help you a lot, you know, with what's going
on in the game. I like interacting with the chat
and stuff when I'm playing games. It's quite good.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
And yeah, I do that too on my gaming channel.
Honeybatter Arcade.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
I play.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Cyberpunk twenty seventy seven, which is a lot like you know,
it's open world and there's like a lot of conversation threads,
and I like talking to the chat while I play
those games too. It's fun and just talking about it,
like you know, I like to talk about like sort
of like the I don't know some of the philosophy
in the game, some of the stuff that's happening, like
what I think about it in real life persons, things

(07:38):
like that. Like Red Dead's like that too, right, So.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
I read Red Red Dead. That's like when I was
playing Red Dead too, there was a part in it
where John Marston said something about rolling out the red carpet,
and right away it was set in like eighteen ninety nine,
So right away, I'm on Google women. When did that
become a phrase, rolling out the red carpet? I think
it was like nineteen oh two or something. Found so
it was actually that's what it didn't belong in the game,

(08:06):
But it's we little things like that, you like, hang
on a Seconday, I let me chick see how accurate
that is. But a good a good thing about it,
as well as like You can be playing a game
and somebody in the chat, oh, hey, just over there,
there's a good item or something that you didn't know
about you. Oh man, do they can help you out
while you're playing? You all bad? I like I like it.
I like streaming. I used to do it on Twitch,

(08:27):
but I just hate Twitch. Twitch is rubbish, man, Like
they've got these They've got these things like bits. I
still don't know a bit is to this day. I don't.
I don't even care what a bit is, right, But
they've got these things called bits. And then if you
if you live stream on Twitch, they remove your video
after like three months. What's the point in that? That's
what if something great happened in that video, you know,

(08:50):
and then they just delete it? Like what the hell?
That's so I don't like I don't like Twitch, man.
So that's why I just decided I'm just got to
do on YouTube.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
No, I won't. I won't. I used to try to.
I didn't get it. Uh, I just didn't think it
was as good as I streamed to YouTube and rumble.
We're streaming right now to room YouTube X and Rumble
at the same time, and so I prefer those platforms.
X is Uh, they got some work to do on
their live just in terms of the interactivity, but it's

(09:18):
not bad like I stream there, but yeah, I won't
stream the twitch anyways, not just because I don't get it,
but also why would you stream anywhere that throws birthday
parties for Hassan Piker?

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Like, well, I I I either he must be he
must have amazing protection, he must have promises from people
and Pella.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
Oh, he's like, yeah, he's a NEPO baby though he's
like you know, a millionaire sun or something like some
massive landowner. It is like you've seen those pictures of
him like as a young man, like on a horse,
like wearing like anyway, though, so how is your son doing?

(10:00):
What's how is that? Because the last time I think
when I knew you, he was like like six years
old or something. He was very young, Like when I
saw you back in I see am I twenty sixteen?

Speaker 2 (10:11):
Was that when I was twenty sixteen? That's what I
was actually talking to him sor about that today. I
just couldn't remember what year it was twenty sixteen. He's
sixteen now, it was seventeen in two months, and it's
I don't know, scary time, man. You know, that's why
I like, that's why I'm so interested in the dating
scene right now, even though I'm not in the dating scene.

(10:33):
I'm just really interested in it because I know him
and his friends are going to be entering the dating
scene soon and it's just terrifying, you know. But yeah,
I'm quite I'm quite pleased by how he's turning out.
Like he had a he had a meeting with his
career advisor, you know, I think it was last week,
and he said he wanted to be a chemical engineer.

(10:55):
So I was like, Okay, that's pretty good. That sounds good.
So hopefully, hopefully just does I just hope he does
better than me. That's really the main goal, you know,
Just just do better than me. Man. That's that's that's
that's the whole point, isn't it. Just do better than
I did.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
Yeah, that's what every father wants, right, They want there,
They want their sons in particular, but they want their
kids in general to be at least doing better than
they did, you know, like a boid the mistakes you
might have made or whatever, and it's it's got to
be a relate to like no longer be in the
dating scene too, Like I'm done with.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
That right really, definitely. I don't know. I don't know
how I would have coped with today's if it was
like this when I was younger. But I just I
don't know. I've never used a dating that in my life.
I would never use a datingnap. I'm old school, Like
you actually had to go and speak to a women.
You actually had to go and speak to them. You

(11:51):
had to be interesting, you had to make them laugh,
you had to make them want to see you again,
and you know, there was all this pressure, but it
was good. It was like it was like a game.
It was like a game, like can I complete this mission?
Can I get this woman's Well, we didn't really do
snapchat back then, obviously, but it was things like him

(12:12):
either arrange a meeting, or you get the phone number.
And even that's changed because back then, when you got
her phone number and you phoned her, you might end
up speaking to her father or her mother on the
phone because it's a house phone. So that it's not
like today. You know where where I think guys have

(12:33):
got this editing that we didn't have when we were younger,
You know where they can say something and then they
can go and I'm not happy with that. Delete, write
it again, delete, write it again until they're happy with it,
and then send it. But when you're actually approaching a woman,
you don't get to edit. So, yeah, you come across nervous,
you know, a bit of a doc you know sometimes,

(12:56):
but women actually find that cute, so it's a good thing,
you know. But but guys don't really do that now,
which is a shame.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
That's true. It is a shame. So I got somebody
in the chat asked, this was in our vertical chat, said, Hi, goodfellow,
how did the court case work out? I assume that's
not well, I don't know what that's about exactly, So maybe.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
There wasn't There wasn't a court case. It got thrown
out by the I always say this one wrong, the
procurator fiscal, which is the I don't know.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
I don't know what that or something is that what.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
They arrested me for a tweety put me in jail
over the weekend, and then on the Monday morning they
let me go. When I was in the courthouse and
when I was thinking back on that, do you know,
I don't even know what police station I was in
for the weekend. I don't even know what. They just
took me from the house to the police station at night,
so I didn't know which police station it was. I

(13:57):
think it was Pitch Street, I'm not sure. And then
from there driven to the courthouse. And then when I
was at the courthouse, I was there for two hours
or something, and then they were like right off you go.
I was just let go, Like what and the lawyer
that I had said they just dropped the charges because
they didn't it because every question they asked me, I

(14:19):
said no comment. They had to prove I sent the tweet,
and they couldn't do that. So they didn't have a
case because I just said, no comment. Do you have
any iPads in the house? No comment? Does anyone else
live with you? No comments? Every answer was no comment,
So they didn't have anything. You know, they were forced
to prove, and obviously they can't prove. They can't prove

(14:40):
that somebody sent a tweet. They can only prove where
it was sent from. Yeah, so I think the whole
thing is a waste of everybody's time. And I just
threw it out. It didn't even make it into court.
That's how bad it was a sympathetic it was that
it didn't even make it any court. But it was
enough to arrest me though, and take my fingerprints, my DNA,
my mug shot, know, over a bloody joke. So yeah,

(15:04):
I've never I've never like, I've never liked the police since.
To be honest, I used to. I used to stick
up for the police all the time. But it was like,
to me, they're just trait us. I don't know where
the line is, you see, That's what them. I don't
know where the line is. Like during COVID, if they
were ordered to shoot you in the face for not
getting the vaccine, would they have done it? Because they're

(15:26):
doing everything else they're told to do. So if they
were ordered to go and shoot somebody in the face
for not getting a vaccine, would they then say, oh,
I'm not doing that or would they go well as
the job? You know, I can't trust people like that, man.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
Mm hmm, yeah, I can see how that would shatter
your faith in you know, like basically like a system
of law and order. If the laws are blindly followed
without like a moral frame, like that's obviously like you know,
there's like immorality right as opposed to illegality. I got

(16:00):
a super chat from ZARYANX. He says, hey, goodfella, did
they ever catch the person that hacked your account that
one time? Or did they just give up because actual
work is too hard?

Speaker 2 (16:10):
I think actual work is too hard. But then that
that's that's the things we had they had. They have
went further with it. On the day the tweet was sent,
I had a I met a bunch of people in
the park and I brought them back home. I can't
remember who they are. I left my computer on one
of them, probably senter. I don't know who it was,
you know, So there's no way they could prove it,
and that that's why that's why they've thrown it out.

(16:32):
But talking talking about the police again about how unfair there,
there's another thing that bugs me about them is they're
supposed to be impartial, right, but they drive around in
cars with the Pride flag on them. That's not impartial,
you know, because, like I've said before, with him in
some kind of argument with a gay neighbor, right, and

(16:53):
he's flamboyantly gay, and the police turned up in a
Pride car. I mean, what am I supposed to think,
am I Am I going to think? Or they're going
to be fair. They're going to be impartial, they're not
going to take the obviously flamboyantly game inside. They'll they'll
totally be fair here. Or am I going to think,
oh they've turned up in the Pride car, or they're
obviously going to be on his side. You know, it's ridiculous,

(17:15):
absolutely ridiculous that they drive around looking like a bunch
of clowns and they're supposed to be impartial, and they
have the unlike everyone else. They have the perfect excuse.
So when the government say, hey, you need to put
Pride flags everywhere, they just have to say, no, we
need to be impartial. They have the perfect excuse, and
yet they still do it. They still do it, dancing

(17:35):
at Pride parades and stuff, and it's just making a
mockery of everybody. I just don't like them anymore. They
just annoy me, just annoying.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Yeah, apparent. I guess if you had a Pride flag
in your house, maybe you'd get like better treatment. It
might be a consideration.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
And well it's I think it's been done before where
people who have used these rules. I did hear about
a guy. It might have been in Spain or something
like that, who and he said he identified as a
women so that he could benefit from the system. I
think it was like alimony payments or something, and he's like, nah,

(18:10):
identify as a woman. Then he didn't have to pay
alimony anymore because of the law. And it was either Spain.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Vaguely remember that. Actually, I think.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
People have taken they're taking advantage of this nonsense where
you can just like, if I'm going to go to president,
I'm identifying as a woman, I'd tryally go at a
women's prison a lot easier, so I can see why
they do.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
So Okay, So this is interesting because I noticed that
you've been posting on x lately about women a lot,
and it puts in It puts in perspective once you
explain that your son is getting to that age where
he's like gonna be looking for looking at women, and uh, well,
he's already there because he's sixteen. He's probably already like

(18:57):
thinking about them at least, and that means that you're
gonna be navigating this healthscape of dating to help him out.
So like, like, well, first of all, look what kind
of social like with your son in particular, like what
kind of social network does he have? Does he go

(19:17):
to a school, does he do it all online? Does
he have a friend group that's in like that's an
IRL one or is it all online? What do you know?

Speaker 2 (19:27):
Yes? Yes, and he goes to school, normal school, and
he's got friends there, but as a bit like a
lot of people his age, and most of his friends
even though he's in school with him when he comes
so me hangs out with him on his computer, if
that makes sense. Even though even though the friends, like

(19:47):
when I was younger, we actually had to meet up,
you know, but now they don't do that. And that's like,
that's one of the reasons I'm I'm interested in all
this because if he ever comes to me for advice,
I don't want to say I don't know, So I
have to kind of look into it to find out,
you know, what's going on and how it is, even

(20:10):
though I really don't want to get involved in it.
It would be I know, it'll be nice to meet
a nice woman and all that, but it's just not
not today. It's not going to happen that they're just
I said that I think women are ruined for two generations,
probably three, but I'm hoping it's just two. I really
believe that they're ruined for two generations and the need

(20:31):
to get their act together because the behavior is driving
men away. It just is. I know that's sounds misogyny
or whatever, but but it is. It's driving it's driving
men away some of their behavior.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, have you seen the data that the
Gen Z men are like in Gen Alpha men are
less interested in dating than their previous generations, and they're
just walking away from marriage and you know, they're just like,
they're just fine. It's sort of like what happened in
Japan back when I started doing this in you know,

(21:07):
twenty thirteen, they were talking about the herbivore men.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
And yeah, it's that like it's something like that, right,
But I think it's got more to do because in
Japan it was the problem seemed to be that those
men were too distracted by you know, things like like
anime and hobbies.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
And stuff, and they didn't really like they didn't learn
the social skills to approach women. But I think here
and also there was a tremendous pressure in Japan to
be like, you know, a salaryman and like, make good
money here. I think the problem seems to be that
women have this extremely distorted view of what they're supposed

(21:50):
to be getting out of a relationship with a man,
so they have an extreme amount of entitlement, and men
are seeing that and they're like, no, this is not
what i'm this is not what I want. This doesn't
benefit me, Like they're literally they're just asking them, what
do you bring to the table, and women say, what
I am the title. I know.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
It's such a stupid thing to say, but see that
the excuses they make, like oh, there's video games or
there's this, and that. There's always be, always been hobbies
and stuff that men can focus on always, So that's
no reason. That's not the reason men aren't going after women.
The reason men aren't going after women is because of women.

(22:32):
Women have changed. Men have not changed. You could take
a men, You could take a man from the nineteen
twenties and bring him here and he's just going to
be the same as the rest of us. But women
have completely changed. You take a woman from the twenties
and bring her here and she's going to be like,
body count, what the hell are you talking about? Women.
You know, it's just going to be a completely different

(22:53):
They've changed so much to the point where men just
don't want that anymore. That's not what they want anymore.
Sure as a shame though, because I know, I know
people will think I'm being horrible, but I would. I
want everybody to get together. I want men and women
to get together. But but I really believe men and

(23:13):
I'm not at fault we have women are no.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
I think men want good women like and and they're
just not seeing them, so that the uh and again
that doesn't mean that they don't exist, but like they're
not showing up, you know, and that is a that
is a concern. Like you know, we can get into

(23:37):
birth rates and stuff like that. I think that one
of the things that's sort of proof of that is
that men are entering the look these young guys at
least they're looking for answers. And one of the things
they're doing is they're returning to church because they're hoping
to meet a good woman in church really, you know,
and they're thinking like this would help, and women are

(23:57):
not doing that. Like you've seen the study about out
men's political like like gen Z, men's political leanings versus.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
Women's than the women.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Yeah, but like not just that, but like when you
look at how far right men have gone, it's not
very far, it's pretty moderate. But when you look at
how far left women have gone, it's like through the roof.
You know, they're like they want to you know, they're
getting nose piercings and they want to They're getting tattoos everywhere,
they want to kill their babies. They're completely lost their minds.

(24:33):
And men are looking at that and they're like, this
isn't worth it, So, you know, it's kind of crazy.
And I saw that you I want to see. I'm
looking at your X page right now and I'm going
to show it to other people. Teach. You took the
ambivalent sexism test and we went through that on let

(24:57):
me show it off to the audience that they can
see it too, Alison, and I took this test the
other day too. I saw it on your channel and
I watched you go through it, and I thought we
should do that too. So you got eighty five percent.
I got I want to say, I got eighty two
or something like that, maybe eighty six something. It was
close to this, and some people in our check got

(25:19):
one hundred percent. So I mean.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Hostile sexism alf alphas?

Speaker 1 (25:25):
What do you think about I mean, I know this
is just like a silly test that's like on the internet,
like it's not you know, but I think that these
things googet do get referenced by, you know, like other
outlets that are like pushing a narrative about men and women.
But uh, what were you thinking as you were taking this?

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Just just being honest, But a lot of them more generalizations.
You know, it was very difficult to like, I find
a lot of answers were yes or no with a
butt you know, yeah, and like like, for example, should
men protect women? Well, yes, but women should also be
worthy of protecting. We can't allow them to you know,

(26:07):
run around and do what they want, and we've still
like we're still expected to protect them when they're the
ones causing all the trouble, so that there comes a
point where it's back and forth. But a lot of
them were too general. It was too general. But yeah,
this would get used in the same way the Bechdel
test or beach Deell test, whatever you call it, that

(26:28):
get that gets used, that actually gets used when making
a movie. They actually check the Bechdel test, which is
for people that don't know. It's like when women talk
to other women and it's not about men or something
like that. And it's just so ridiculous that they have
to go through all these things. Why can't you just
why can't you just enjoy the movie? Why you just
watched the movie and decide did I like that movie

(26:50):
or did I not like that movie? Why do you
have to dig this deep at the stuff?

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Man?

Speaker 2 (26:55):
It's mental? But when you when you were mentioned, I
wanted to say when you're mentioningbit, we all want a
nice woman, and that's true. It would be great to
get nice women. And yes they are out, but they're
probably in the same place. The nice guys are at
home avoiding the dating game because it's a nightmare. They're
probably avoiding it because we've got our horror stories about

(27:19):
false accusations in me Too. But they've also got their
horror stories from the feminists telling them that every man
is dangerous, you know. Yeah, so a lot of them
are probably like, oh, I don't want to get involved
in that and all that. So there probably is a
lot of nice guys and a lot of nice women
that would be perfect for each other, but they're so
terrified of the dating game the way it is, they're

(27:39):
just avoiding it completely and they're at home single when
they could be together. But about it.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
Yeah, so when I mean like, no one has to
use dating apps. Dating apps are absolute cancer, and I
think that they're almost like, like I don't know, the
predatory in a way, like the people who make them.
I think they make a lot of money on those.
So what would you do instead for your for your son?

(28:07):
Would you basically, like like I do, they do social
sort of like you know, in person meetups, like I
don't know, like some kind of events, you know, like
they would have stuff like that, wouldn't they Where there'd
be like a public place and young men and women
go there and maybe it'd be for something else, but
they'd be there to meet each other. It seems like

(28:27):
that would just be the better way, you know, than
going on an app and swiping. I think that that just,
you know, I don't know, I don't have it works.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Although although I don't use dating apps, I know what
they are, I know how they work, and I think
they would maybe work better for both men and women.
Right if let's say it was tinder, and Tinder had
a panel, a panel of men and women, say five men,
five women, but absolutely brutally honest men and women. Right.
And the five women they get to judge every mine

(29:00):
on his appearance, and they give him a score from
one to ten. Right, there is no ten, one to nine. Right,
they give him a score of one to nine. And
the five men they do the same for the women.
But they absolutely be brutally honest. Right. Then make sure
that all the threes are matched with two threes and fours,
you know, and all the eights are matched with seven

(29:20):
eights and nines rather than matching eights with threes. It's
not going to work. It's not going to work. But
they can't do that. If they did do it, they
would have to do it in secret because it would
be judging women on their appearance and that's not allowed.
You're allowed to do it with men, but you can't
do it with women. So they wouldn't be allowed to
do it. But I think that would solve a lot
of problems. If people were getting matched with their equivalent

(29:43):
rather than matching with somebody a lot higher or a
lot lower. How is that going to work out for them?

Speaker 1 (29:49):
Mm? Hmmm hmm, Yeah, I think that. I think that's right.
But I don't think especially women, they tend to just
like give me each other, you know, they're always like
patting each other in the back yas lighting is what
I call it, just say you're ten no matter what
you look like, you know, because they just don't want
to disrupt the sisterhood, and so that's always going to

(30:11):
be a problem. I think men are pretty good about
being brutally honest with each other, like dude, you're like,
you know, like they're probably meaner to each other than
they need to be, But I think it's good because
it keeps them stoic, you know, like well like they
can take it, yes, But women are too nice to
each other, So.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
Guys are likely to Guys are likely to make a
joke if they wanted to say something to another guy
and make a joke of it. That women they would
just rather pretend it wasn't too at all, you know,
like if one of their friends was drinking too much,
guy might make a joke about it, but a woman
would probably no, you're not drinking too much, not at all,

(30:52):
because she doesn't want hard feelings. And it's like it's
no helping, that is it.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
No, that's the problem. Right. They make tolerance the highest good,
like just putting up with stuff, and it's like, yeah,
but telling someone that as long as it makes you happy,
it's fine, isn't actually love because it could be like
you said, it could be heroin, like it makes me
feel good, I want to use it, you know, Yeah,

(31:18):
that might not be the best thing. So uh. ZARANX
gave us five dollars super chat.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Zaraings and says good fellow should have his son watch
About a Boy for the correct way to approach a
woman sing along to shake your Ass by Mystical Near
your Crush. I've never seen that. Is that a movie? Movies?

Speaker 2 (31:37):
I can imagine. I can imagine that that song goes
like though, I mean, if if it was up to me,
and it's not up to me, because it's my son,
it's his own life, but if it was up to me,
I would cham to stay off the data. Still ever
use a diner and only approach women because there are

(31:58):
women out there literally begging men to approach them. On YouTube, TikTok, Instagram,
you name it. They are begging men to approach them
because they want to be approached, So we know this right,
but we also know the risks. But I would rather
he did that than go on a date app, because

(32:19):
I believe and I know men use dating apps and
they might not like me saying this, but I don't
think a woman can ever respect a man that uses
a dating app because she never gets that first interaction
of him approaching her, showing how confident he is, how
nervous he is, all that kind of stuff, showing how

(32:40):
much he likes her as well to actually approach her
like that. She doesn't get any of that from a
dating app. And then once she meets a guy on
a dating app, it's too late because you can't have
that first interaction against So she's never ever going to
get approached by the guy. And I think women need
that otherwise they just won't ever respect you. It's not easy, though.
It's not easy to do that. It's it's not easy

(33:01):
to do it. But if you turn it into a game,
and the game is how many rejections can I get
this week? Rather than how many numbers can I get?
Turn it into a game, then when you get rejected,
at least you're getting something out. But you're getting another
score on your rejection cab, do something, make a game
of it, have fun with it. But you need to
You can't. Can't go on dating aps. Man, it's just

(33:22):
not good. Man, it's not good. Imagine just sitting there,
but it's sitting there. You could sit there on the
toilet and you could send, hey, how are you doing
to five hundred women? Do you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (33:33):
How?

Speaker 2 (33:34):
What's what's going on? Man? What's going on? How long
it would take to individually approach five hundred women, but
you can do it in two minutes on an app.
What's going on? Man? Something's not right?

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Yeah, for sure, for sure. Let me see what you
guys are saying. No, that's why I think that dating
apps are just like completely broken. I mean when they
first came out, they were broken. They've always been broken.
And a lot of it has to do with like
the way that it affects like women's minds too, because
if they see they're getting hit up by like thousands

(34:05):
of men, no matter what they look like, because there's
a you know, there's a thirsty dude born every minute,
and some guys they just like they have really low standards,
and so women will see, well, man, I must be
really hot, and then they start raising their standards because
they got everyone in their DMS or sending them messages
or whatever. And you don't know where these guys are

(34:26):
from too. There could be like a bunch of thirsty
Indian dudes, which is like a very common thing. I
know it sounds like brutal, but it's true, Like the
Middle Eastern guys are thirsty as hell to and you'll
get a lot of messages from these guys and they'll
make you think that you're, you know, way more attractive
than you are, and so then you'll you start to
buy into it, and then you start like thinking, oh,

(34:49):
I can do better than these guys. Right, So this
kind of like goes to your head. And I don't
think it's not the same as like meeting someone at
school or at your job, which is where most people
would meet. Think, you know, the me to movement kill
that sexual harassment and everything, but that would have been
where it would have happened or in like a library
or a church or somewhere. Right, Yes, but I think

(35:12):
that we can get back to that because I don't
think dating apps work. I think that that's like they
just don't. They're just they just kill you know, they
inflate women's egos and destroy men's.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
So I do think, I do think we do have
to go back to old school because that worked, that
actually worked, and I absolutely agree women are gassed up today. So,
like you say, she could be like a three right
and out of shape, not that pretty, maybe in her thirties.
But she goes on a day and app and she's

(35:41):
getting loads of guys saying, oh, I want to be
with you. That makes her think, well, man, I'm more
valuable than I thought. So then when she meets another guy,
she adds another standard to the list because she's getting
all this, she's getting gassed up, and she's thinking, actually,
I'm worth more than this. And then next thing you know,
she's got a big long list of things that that
a guy needs to have before he has a chance.

(36:03):
And it's like, you know, you're a three right, I
mean right? And I saw that. I saw the guy
I don't know his name, but the CEO of the Grinder,
the gay one, the gay dating app, right, and he
was he was talking about straight dating apps and he
said the problem with the straight dating apps is they

(36:23):
don't cater to men. They only cater to women. You know,
there's nowhere, there's nowhere on the apps for men to
get any tips or help or advice, or there's nothing
for men on these apps. It's just all catered to women.
And he even even pointed out that that some of
them require a height, but you can't ask for a weight.

(36:44):
And then that's just like catering to women through and
through because women like tall men, but they also don't
like to give away their weight, So that is totally
catering to women. And I mean men. Men eventually are
going to see this, you know. But and and take
the percentage of men as well. Right out of all
the men on a dating app, one hundred percent of them,

(37:06):
what percentage of them are only on there looking for sex?
Because I'm honestly thinking over ninety easily over ninety how
many of them are looking for a relationship, you know?
But I bet I bet like about eighty percent of
the women are looking for a relationship. Though I'm not
going to get on a dating app.

Speaker 1 (37:25):
Yeah, did you hear about that? Tea? Well, first of all,
it's gonna go back that Tinder. I think it's either
Tinder or bumble. Uh, They're going to be adding a
height filter for women so they can filter by height,
so if they so they can say I don't want
a guy sure than six feet, so they only get
guys that are six feet or tall. So they're adding

(37:46):
a high filter, no weight filter.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
But the guys that claim the sex feet and over.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
Yeah, And I think it's bumble though with bumbles, But
like the feminist one where the women have to make
the first move, I wouldn't go on there my life
depending on it.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
But no, I.

Speaker 1 (38:01):
Already I'm married, so I'm not going to sweat that anyway.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
I don't. I don't have it. And against women having
a preference, if women like men over six feet, all
that's totally totally fine, But men also have a preference
for slim women, So how come we can't get awake?
You know? So yeah like that. But the thing that
annoys me about women's preferences is that they will give
you a list of like twenty probably more, a checklist,

(38:28):
and the man must meet all of these requirements. But
yet everything on that checklist gets thrown in the bin
if he if he's wealthy, and you know what I mean,
Like now all of a sudden, he doesn't need to
be over six feet, he doesn't need to have a
good job, he doesn't need to you know, be kind
and generous and all that crap, because he's got money
all of that list. So so they claim they have

(38:50):
these preferences, but they really don't. They really don't. Money's
what they're after.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
Yeah, well, women ultimately want security and they think that
that comes in the form of money, and the more
money you have, the more secure they feel. So yeah,
I mean that's what it comes down to. Have you
seen the ICK List? Do you know about the ick List?

Speaker 2 (39:12):
You know, I've seen, I've seen. I've not seen the
full list, but I think it's over two hundred.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
It's constantly changing. It's because like being being added to it.

Speaker 2 (39:20):
So it's it's it's crazy as well, like the the
red flags and the X like everything's a red flag
and a nic and it's just like there's a video
now now that we're not doing this at nine, I
will probably make it tonight. And it's about the fact
that forty five percent of women are going to be
single within the next twenty years or something. But it's

(39:43):
going through a lot of examples of women and what
they're looking for in a man, and I just find
the whole thing very interesting. Women are just shooting themselves
in the foot and they just don't realize it. But
I'm want to I'm going to cover that in a
video later tonight, but.

Speaker 1 (39:55):
They're gonna be like a live or you're just gonna
record something and throw it.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
Up livestream, probably live stream a love in, which is
over four hours from there.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
And yeah, I saw that too. So, like speaking of which,
you have made a couple of videos and I wanted
to like get it from the horse's mouth. One is
that you commented on you basically stood up for Erica Kirk,
Charlie Kirk's wife, and what was it. Let let me

(40:25):
just get the context in case there are people who
don't know, And what was your defense, Like, what did
you want to say in favor of her?

Speaker 2 (40:34):
Well, it's just people are obviously I'm not defending her entirely, right,
It's just it's the fact that people are attacking her
for the way she's grieving, right, or for the way
she's expected to grieve right. And my point was I
was thrown in the position to be in a single
father when my son was four, right, didn't ask for it,

(40:57):
but it happened. And when that happened, pins yeah, you
have to get on my life. And you can't mope
around because you've got young a young child. In her case,
she's got two young children. You cannot mope around. It
doesn't do the kids any good. They still need to
be fed, you know, their homework still needs to be done,

(41:18):
their clothes need to be washed, and iron life still
goes on. You can't be sitting moping around crying all
the time. And we don't know what she's doing in private.
She might be crying in private a lot, she probably is,
but publicly she's putting on a strong face. So I
was sticking up for her for that. And I was
also sticking up for her for the fake crying because
this is something I've covered for many years. Women always

(41:40):
fake cry. They've been doing it for years. But now
it's okay to criticize them for it because Erica Kurr
did it. About a month ago, Sharon Osbourne did exactly
the same thing at Ozzy Osborne's being there. You know,
she was pulling all the crying faces, you know that,
But there was no tears because she's makeup, and she

(42:00):
doesn't want to make up to run down her face.
No matter how warproof it is, it's still going to
run down her face. And women know this, so they
also know they have they're expected to put on a show.
Actually said that was a male privilege. We're not expected
to put on a show. Nobody would ever say to us,
why aren't you crying? But they would say to women, well,
why isn't she crying? And also she can't win either

(42:23):
because if she smiles, hey, why are you smiling? Your
husband just died. If she cries, as she's not really crying,
that's affect. That's just a show. What do you want
from this woman who just lost her husband in front
of the entire world? What is it that you want
from that? She's in a very unique situation, and they're
all talking like like they know what it's like. There's

(42:43):
no way you know what that's like. You don't know
what that's like. And also another point as well is
that it's a very strong Christian family, so presumably they
all believe that Charlie's in heaven now, so isn't no
reason to smile as well? You know? Yeah, so that's
why That's why I was sticking up for because I
don't like this. I don't like this. She's getting judged

(43:05):
for the way she's grieving or the way she's expected togree.
Just grieve in her own way. Just leave her the
hell alone. My god, was it two weeks ago? I mean,
it's different if it's a year from now in your
criticize now, that's fine, But it was just two weeks ago,
for God's sake, Leave her alone, man, it's meant to.

Speaker 1 (43:23):
Yeah, it is, isn't it mostly women coming after her too?

Speaker 2 (43:26):
Definitely? Definitely, yeah, definitely.

Speaker 1 (43:29):
This is what this This is something that you see
when you've been doing this for a while, is that
when you see women getting attacked online and you look
a little closer, it's almost always mostly women doing the attacking.
So there's just women. You know. I've often said that
because I know you're a gamer, so you can understand this.

(43:50):
Social media is call of duty for women. Like that's
it's it's like, you know, it's the call of duty
lobby for women. They they're brutal to each other, and
will you know, because they're constantly engaging in sexual intersexual competition.
They want to be like you know, you remember when
the girl posted her ring and or like her engagement

(44:11):
ring online and all the women like descended on it
and they were calling they were talking about the sides
of the ring. They were talking about this other stuff.
I mean, this is what they do or the the
you just did a video on Laura Lumer, right, and
I guess there were a bunch of women posting pictures
of themselves yep, comparing their their looks to hers based

(44:32):
on their age or something like that.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:35):
It's just it's that they're they're they're brutal, you know,
they're really really they're really brutal, like and I don't
think it would be like guys are brittle each other,
like you say, called you guys have but with each
other all the time, right, even when we're friendly, with
brutle with each other. But the annoying thing about women,
the thing that annoys me is I don't mind that

(44:55):
the brutle to each other. Go ahead and fight. I'll
just enjoy the show. But can you stop pretending to
the world that you all love each other and that
you're a sisterhood, you know, because it's so fake. We
can all see that it's not true. Stop wind is
our will. No, it's not true. So just just be real. Basically,
we know you hate each other, so just admit that

(45:16):
you know you hate each other. Mm hmmmm hmm, especially
things like getting married. Imagine imagine hating another women because
she's getting married. Sad about it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (45:29):
Yeah, it's sad. It's sad because it because that's the
thing that's crabs in a bucket. It's actually one of
the main problems aside from what we were talking about,
that women are dealing with, is that they're not They're
being torn down by other women that are miserable in
their own life, and they're like, well, if I'm not happy,
no woman is going to be happy, and so they

(45:49):
just you know, try to be cause I mean you
would think that, uh just just like objectively, not because
I have like any bias or anything. So I don't
know her, but Erica Kirk is like she kind of
like has had a really good life, right. She she
had a man, she had two kids. She was like
miss she was like a Miss America was I forgot

(46:15):
what state it was, but she was like Miss Colorado
or something, so, you know, and like wealthy and happy
and like married with children, the whole, the whole thing.
But like women that are in that position, especially if
they're married to a man and they have kids, like
other women, they they will attack that ruthlessly. I mean, yes, again,

(46:37):
I don't know if it's bitterness or envy. I would
think it's there's a little bit of envy and resentment,
but it's something that I see a lot. Another one
is you know about the uh the Mormon uh what
is a ballerina farms. It's like a woman who was
a trained ballerina and she gave up her career because

(46:57):
she married a guy who owned some you know, and
they started a ranch and they have like a big
farm and she just basically like you know, posts her
farm stuff on social media. But because she gave up
being a ballerina to live this life, other women are
just dogging on her there, saying that she essentially gave

(47:19):
up her dreams, that she's a pick me and a
sellout because she didn't like follow her dream And I
mean it's you know, it's just brutal. But like sometimes
life where you know, the way it works out is
that you just kind of like change gears because you know,
you just decide to do something else, like things don't.
Not everyone gets to be a rock star, you know.

Speaker 2 (47:38):
True, I think I think that hams to everybody. Like
like when I was in school, I didn't want to
be I wanted to be a radio DJ. When I
left school, I wanted to be a chef, and then
I became a chef and then I hated that and
then just I mean, you just move on. You change
your mind all the time. So going from Ballodina to
working on a farm or ranch, that I mean, if

(48:01):
that's what she wants to do, that's what she wants
to do. I mean's nobody's business either, you know, like
why did they even? Why do they care?

Speaker 1 (48:08):
But the.

Speaker 2 (48:11):
Being envious of Erica Kirk, Like not only was she
married to a good man, but she was married to
a tall man. He was a giant guy. You see
how tall. He's massive, So you didn't, but then he didn't.
But when you see photos of them standing up next
to people, you know, it's like, you guy's a giant.

(48:33):
So a lot of women wouldn't be that either, because
that's what they're after, right, A good man that's tall,
so you know, yeah, but it's weird. How like, Well,
I made the video. I made just a bit Laura Luma, Right,
I made a joke about comparing me to Brad Pitt,
nobody Johnny Depp. Sorry, right, And in order to make
this joke, I had to first I tried to make

(48:55):
the joke with Brad Pitt. Right. I could not find
a bad photo of this guy, right, No matter how
how I tried, I could not find a bad foot
Brad Pitt. And I was thinking, my god, this guy
is so good looking, you know. And then I went, okay,
I'll tie Johnny Depp, and I found one with him
wearing a mask. Is the best I could do, right,
And then but when, but when I was looking them up,

(49:18):
I was just thinking good for you. At no point
was a thinking, oh, why isn't that me? Why am
I not him? Why do I not look like that?
I was just thinking good for you. You know. That's
but yet women are they're just completely different. They don't
want any other women to be better than them in
any way, in any way. It's just like they can't this,

(49:39):
like they can't handle I don't know why that is,
but very competitive.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
Yeah, yeah, and it's not it's something that people don't
acknowledge either, like we you know, we everybody pretends like
that's only a problem that men have is this hyper
competition and this tear each other down and all that,
and it's like, yeah, that happens with men, but like
happens with women's women too went a lot and yet nobody.
The issue is not that it exists. The issue is

(50:04):
that we everyone is supposed to pretend like it doesn't exist. Well,
can you.

Speaker 2 (50:12):
Think of it of any time in history that it
might have happened? And I just don't know about it, right,
but can you think of any time in history where
a male athlete paid someone to injure another male athlete
because they were competition? Because that I'm an ice skating
remember remember the name, that's the one I and that

(50:38):
doesn't the one that.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Was injured, the one of the chat remembers. But that
was from the eighties, nineties, that's right.

Speaker 2 (50:48):
But I mean, you don't you don't get that in
male sport. But yet we're the ones that are seen
is violent, and yet women they're so competitive she actually
tries to get her injured so that she can I mean,
as men too, absolutely crazy, But it's those men are
dangerous and stuff.

Speaker 1 (51:05):
Yeah, Tanya Harding, thank you? Do you know that Tanya Harding?
After that happened, I swear to god, she put out
like a porno.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
Oh god, I mean, I.

Speaker 1 (51:16):
Don't know if that was because she didn't win, so
she she went like completely the other she did like
she injured Nancy Kerrigan, and then she went on to
makeup or leak a sex tape or something. I never
saw it, but I knew it was out there because
I remember back then you would read about that stuff
in magazines.

Speaker 2 (51:32):
So these you hat up at these lawyers that are
ambulance chasers. But there's also these porn directors who are
looking for women who are like once famous, who have
fallen down and you so that they can get them.

Speaker 1 (51:46):
Go.

Speaker 2 (51:46):
By the way, if you want to make an in
for yourself again, you could make one of these movies.
You know. It's that's really sneaky, really sneaky.

Speaker 1 (51:53):
Yeah, it's predatory. It's gross for sure. So so you're
you're do you game with your son by any chance?
Like I know that you do gaming sometimes? Do you ever?
Do you guys? You guys do stuff together?

Speaker 2 (52:06):
Yes, all the time. We played them during the summer holidays.
There we completed two two player games. One was Split
Fiction and.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
The Yeah I heard about that one good, yeah, looking
really good, like feminist trash. But it wasn't actually.

Speaker 2 (52:24):
Right, No, no it wasn't. It wasn't a really good
See if you're looking for a game to bond with
your child, really good, so's it takes two but the
same make us made this. The two make made the same.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Oh yeah, I played that one.

Speaker 2 (52:35):
I made both games. Yeah, it's really really good. Also
there was another one, another two player one. I can't
remember the name it. It's something it's like it's like
a match three game in boss fights. I can't remember
I can't remember the name of I swear it's. It
was really good though. Again two player game, you get
different abilities each and you have to work together to

(52:56):
you know. So, and I've had just check because I
can't remember the name of it. I bite Bond, that's
the one. I just got a game called bite Bond,
which is also to play a game. I just got
that Friday there, and we're going to play that together
as well. So I get gamings like him really important
for bonding. I think I hate when people just dismiss
gaming is, oh, it's for kids, you know, it's you

(53:18):
have no idea what you're talking about, man, And absolute
great way, great way to to especially to bond with
your child, because bonding with your child, they like different things,
so it's hard to find something that you can bond
together with. You know, games are great for that, and
I'll always defend games for that reason.

Speaker 1 (53:36):
Yeah, absolutely, you know they're gonna be I've been saying
this for a long time. People who dog on on games,
and a lot of people do that. They they usually
do it because they don't know what the value is.
But also they think that like things that they like,
like movies or sports or you know, I don't know,

(53:58):
like television shows like that, for some reason, those things
will always exist and that those somehow are better and
they're not. In fact, TV and movies are shit right now.
There's very little that I want to watch. There are
some some things I heard was good, but most of
it is trash. But games, they're they're the future of that.
Like it's like still telling a story in a new

(54:21):
way that's interactive and yeah, being able to play with
other people like bond with over it or treated like
a social thing. I think it's like extremely underrated. So
I think it's really cool that you're playing games with
your son. I think that I'm very jealous. I mean,
I'm play agames with my wife and I have some friends,
but it's it's not like doing it with your kid,

(54:41):
you know, I think that would be super cool.

Speaker 2 (54:43):
It definitely, it definitely is. It definitely is. But it's
people put them down. Like I remember years ago when
Gavin McKennis is on YouTube and he said them, oh games,
video games are for children, and I posted in the comments,
I said, great livestream. You say, of completing Kingdom Hearts,
then it's a game where all the Disney characters in it,

(55:05):
you know, you have to fight the baddies and all
that kind of stuff just for kids, right, so on
you go complete it in front of your audience then,
because there's no way he'd be able to do that
even though it's for kids, right. And but they they
always like to put it down, put games down. And
I think the Hollywood side they're envious because games make

(55:25):
more money. The women side they're annoyed because it's taking
attention away from them. That's that's the truth. You know
that is the truth. Like if every if every game released,
you had to play with a woman, women wouldn't complain
about games, you know, they just wouldn't. It's because they're
not involved. They're not the center of attention. They absolutely
hate when men enjoy something. It's not just whenever they

(55:49):
enjoy anything, you know.

Speaker 1 (55:52):
Yeah, I mean that they can't stand that. It's it's
that's right on, that's basically what it is. And but yeah, yeah, no,
I think that that's really cool. I would make a suggestion.
There was a game that I played with Lindsay that
I thought was a blast, And what do you guys
game on? Like is it a console PC?

Speaker 2 (56:12):
Or PC? PC?

Speaker 1 (56:14):
Okay, so I mean you can get this anywhere. But
I don't know if you liked Resident Evil? Do you
like Resident Evil? Or if you're playing those?

Speaker 2 (56:22):
I late four four was really good game, though the original.
I haven't played the remastered one and at Late four.
I love three, the original three Nemesis, but I haven't
played anything new ones well to me better.

Speaker 1 (56:37):
No, I wasn't going to suggest something new. I was
going to suggest Residue with five because five or two
player Africa? Yes, and and of course you know it'll
probably never get remade because it's racist, but it is, like.

Speaker 2 (56:54):
What, it's ridiculous. It's absolutely how many zombies were eight
before that one? And then it's set in Africa and
they still can't make them black without somebody complain, And
it's just like, well, what what what? What do black
people want? Do they want to be involved in things
and treated like normal or do they want to be
excluded because of it might offend them. I mean they

(57:16):
have to, they have to make a decision. I would
rather be included.

Speaker 1 (57:18):
It's just I want to be a zombie too. Well
I was. I was represented in four because they were
all Latinos. But but but I would say, actually most
of the people who are complaining about five were were
not black. They were white, like.

Speaker 2 (57:33):
Games probably I probably, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (57:36):
I think most of them were. But but yeah, I
mean you can get five for like twenty bucks and
uh together and stuff.

Speaker 2 (57:45):
I think four, so I should have got ah, I
should have got a ah. I've deal with all of them.
In fact, you know what I'm on. I can actually
check it out. I think I've got five. And you
see what two people can play it on the same you.

Speaker 1 (57:59):
Can play it split screen, or you can, or you
can if you each have your own PC, you can
play it with your own screen, which is how I
play split screen too. I think pretty sure what.

Speaker 2 (58:11):
I might I might look into that. I know I
knew that was too clear, though, I may look into that.
I don't rather play in the same same screen because
we're in the same house. It because to play and
well maybe like the full screen, but I'd rather it's
not really the same if he's sitting in another rim.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
You know, the TV is big enough, it doesn't matter, right.
So Spanish are Europeans, Yeah, but they speak spanin they were.
They were trying to make the case that for it
was racist too because the Spanish it didn't reply. Well
the Romanian, well they not Romanian, No, they were, they were.
It was in Spain for Spain. Yeah, yeah, they were

(58:51):
like Spanish. Las blagas was what the infection was called.
But yeah, anyway, so let me see if there's a
that was a I mean, it was good talking to
you again. I'm glad you're doing well as you're wearing
glasses now.

Speaker 2 (59:09):
I don't think you were just reading glasses. I don't
need them for every day just it could whenever I'm
on them on you know, I'm I need my glasses
and yeah, which is annoying because they usually reflect you know,
the lights you.

Speaker 1 (59:22):
Stand it just those porn tabs, so we don't see
them all right, Well anyways, so I think that, like,
I don't know if there's is there? So, like, what
do you you have a video coming out today where
you're gonna be talking about this forty five percent of

(59:43):
women are going to be single, which you know sounds
like a disnswer, But I don't know what men are
supposed to do about that. What other kinds of content
are you? Like do you want to make? You just
make whatever comes to.

Speaker 2 (59:56):
Mind, Just just whatever comes out a so something that
maybe happen, something will catch my eye and I'll just think, oh,
I could get a bit of fun out of this.
You know. I always think of the viewers, like would
they enjoy this? Would they think this was funny? Like
there's one I wanted to cover. I think it's from
a couple of years ago. But it's like, you know,

(01:00:17):
the way women invade everyone's space, right every time men
get together, they invade men's space. Where I read a
story about a gay nude resort and women insisted on
being allowed in. It's like they can't even get a
gay nude resort without women saying they want And I
just thought that was quite funny, you know, that's like, yeah,

(01:00:44):
mm hmm, think that was the one place that they
wouldn't want to be, you know, but yet they still,
you know, they just have to insist on.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Is that men. One thing they've definitely lost is their
own spaces because every time men come up with a
space that's just for men, women come along and they
insist on being a part of it, and it usually
destroys the space. After that, you know, they get in
and they start changing things and they start asking for
accommodations and then they take over and then they kick
the men out or the men leave, and that almost

(01:01:19):
always happens. Like you mentioned the resort, I don't know
if that's gone, but like the boy Scouts, yeah, the list,
there's a list. I mean, there's a lot of places
where this has happened. There was a was it like
men sheds in the UK. There were like these wood
these like sheds where men were doing woodworking stuff and

(01:01:40):
they were like old men, like senior men, and women
wanted to be a part of it, and so the
men let them in and they're pretending like everything is fine.
But I don't think that it's it is. I think
that it's changing now, and then it's only a matter
of time before the men shed which was for men
is just gone. So this is like always how it goes.

Speaker 2 (01:02:03):
We can protect against that, though, we can. What we
can do is whenever men start a club, we can
just call it the accountability club. Then they won't want
to be part of that. No, women's going to want
to be part of the accountability and taking responsibility club
and learning how to see your sorry club, which then
they won't want to be anyone needed.

Speaker 1 (01:02:23):
Admitting you're wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Ay e, they're not going to want to join that club.

Speaker 1 (01:02:27):
Yeah. Yeah, that's a good idea. We should. We should.

Speaker 2 (01:02:33):
Open it, open it to everybody. Men and women are welcome,
because we know they won't done that, so they even
say they're not welcome. Just say everybody's welcome, and the
women won't turn up and will be we'll get some
peace at last.

Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
Yeah. Yeah, it's dope, all right. I think I think
that's good. I mean I was gonna say, oh yeah,
so let me ask you this because I've been I
have a couple of things that I've been asking people
lately when they come on the show. One is, what
did you think about And I look, I know we

(01:03:05):
don't have to get into like whether or not we
agree with these people or anything like that, but like,
just what happened to Charlie Kirk, like the fact that
he was assassinated, and then the way the left reacted
to it with the celebration and stuff like were you
surprised by any of this? And what what do you

(01:03:27):
what does it like? Does it change the way you
see the world at all.

Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
It's say I saw a similar thing in my own
country when Margaret Thatcher died, and I saw how the
left reacted to that, and it was sickening, right dinged
only which's dead and all that nonsense. You know, it
doesn't matter whether he didn't like market Thatcher or not.
She just died show some respect, it is my opinion. Anyway.

(01:03:54):
That's just that's just how That's just how I have you.
When Charlie Kirk was held, I didn't expect it as
bad as it was because I didn't think Charlie was
was that big. You know, I would have expected it.
If Trump was killed, I would have expected them all
to do that. Charlie Kirk, he almost was. But Charlie

(01:04:17):
Kirk was just a guy that was going around talking
to people, So you would never have thought that his
death would be celebrated in such a dullish fashion the
way the way it was. You know, but these people,
these people are are I don't know, I don't know.
I don't know how you can How many steps right?

(01:04:37):
Will you think of the amount of steps involved? And
the brain doesn't kick in in any of those steps.
So the first step, right, you find out Charlie Kirk
is dead and that makes you happy. Your brain doesn't
kick in and say, well, well, why are you happy
about this? What's wrong with you? Okay? So the next
step is you get your phone out and set it

(01:04:58):
up so that you can record. The next step is
hitting and record. The next step is telling the world
that you're happy that somebody you don't know was murdered.
And then the next step is uploading it to the world.
And none of those steps did they say maybe I
shouldn't do this. I just find that we title everything.

Speaker 1 (01:05:17):
All of those steps. They don't have their faces or
their identity voice.

Speaker 2 (01:05:23):
They've got their works uniform on, and at no point
did they think to themselves, maybe I shouldn't do this
because he was just killed and I didn't even know them,
you know. But but now they're all out with out
of context quotes, and no, it didn't really change the
way I see the world, but I suppose it made
me see them. For now. It's at the point where,

(01:05:46):
all right, you don't want to prove us wrong. You
just want us dead. You know that's really what you want.
And we know that now.

Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
It's hard.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
It's hard to be friends with people when you know that.
You know, it's hard to be friendly to somebody that
you know once you did just because they don't agree
with you.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
Yeah, but the.

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Whole Charlie Cirk thing right regarding the conspiracy is what
I believe for now. It might change, But for now,
I really believe that a guy shot him because he
was brainwashed by the Left for years to think that
he was the next Hitler, and a czy guy shot him.
I don't think it's I don't think anything like that

(01:06:32):
unless I'm showing proof. But I really do believe in
this instance it was a madman shot him. And that
was it, And I don't think there's a big conspiracy
behind it, but I might be wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:06:43):
No, I think you're right. That's what I'm leaning on
that too. I think that it's it's already enough that
from what we know about the guy that he was like,
he had a trans boyfriend, and there were furries. He
was into the furry stuff. And I'm not saying furries killers,
but you know, I think there is something dysfunctional about
being a furry, and he didn't. He felt that he

(01:07:07):
was doing the trans community and the left in general
a favor by taking out Charlie Kirk. He was going
to be the hero, and the left treated him like
a hero too, So I think it's it. Sometimes it's
just the simplest answer is the right one. If I
learn more information, then I'll just change my position. But

(01:07:28):
I don't think. I think that's probably completely feasible. And
what it also puts in perspective for me is if
they would do that to someone like him, And he
was a very high profile guy who was going around
college campuses and he was basically trying to change the
minds of future voters, and I think that's why he
was seen as dangerous. But the way I see it is,

(01:07:50):
you know, this kind of stuff's happened to us too,
Like you know, we've had bomb threats on meetups that
we've done. We've had this happened during Gamergate as well.
Like some people in gamer Gate and the Gamergate is like,
you would think that that's probably about as unserious as
it gets, but to these people, it's very serious. They

(01:08:11):
have like gone after American McGee, the developer who made
the games, the Alice games. I never played them, but
he was a big deal at the time, and some
other people, like a personal friend of mine, Jennifer, who
lives in Canada, and she's had her life threatened, actually
an attempt made on her. They have gone after other MRAs.

(01:08:33):
I know that Mark Angeloucci was assassinated under suspicious circumstances.
And he was like a big like men's rights lawyer
that was very successful. He was doing a big case
where he was going to overturn or at least change
the draft, you know, like get that revisited to remove
it for men. And there's again Trump. They tried to

(01:08:54):
kill him at least two times that we know of,
maybe more.

Speaker 2 (01:08:59):
You know, and the petsay as well. She's she's had
the threats as well.

Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Oh yeah, yeah, that was that's right. They killed a
dog and they drove out of the country.

Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
So so it was just a matter of time then,
really well yeah, for something like I.

Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
Was going to get through to someone on the non
left basically, And that's why I think, you know, like,
I mean, this is I don't know, it's just I'm
not that surprised that something was gonna happen to someone,
but I was surprised that it happened to him because
he was pretty like moderate, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
That in but I think they saw him as a
as a transhater, as transphobe, you know, which it wasn't.
They just disagreed with the children being transitioned and all that.
But that's enough to make your transphobe these days, I
think I think that's probably what all stems from plus

(01:09:58):
years and years of the left telling everybody that everyone
on the right is. That doesn't help. They're still doing it,
by the way, they haven't stilled still doing it. I
think they took like an let off and then he
just went straight back to it again. So they're still
doing it.

Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
Ice truck and uh, Antifa is. I think they're like
doing a massive approaches in Portland right now because Trump
sent the military down there. I haven't followed up to see,
but I'm hoping that. You know, Antifa has been designated
as a terrorist organization, so I'm hoping that, like they
just figure out where their money comes from, cut off

(01:10:33):
their financial supply, and arrest everyone that has broken a
law and just get rid of them. So that's what
I want. Yeah, it's exactly. It is exactly what I
voted for. Do you see that? Did you see the
Pokemon thing with the illegals? That the ice video? Oh?

(01:10:54):
Somebody made? Oh you got it. I'm gonna show it
to you later. Somebody made. Actually I can I can
find I did. Hold on a second, I'm gonna show you.
Probably saw it. It's a probably uh video, not ice type.
It's crap. Yeah, yeah, here it is. Here it is.

(01:11:16):
It's from the Department of Homeland Security. They put this
out and I will share it with you. You can
hear this. You're gonna find this funny. I'm gonna play
it really quick.

Speaker 2 (01:11:30):
Will be.

Speaker 1 (01:11:33):
No one ever was.

Speaker 4 (01:11:37):
You have.

Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
To train them in my car as.

Speaker 4 (01:11:44):
Travel for why.

Speaker 1 (01:11:51):
To understand that's inside.

Speaker 4 (01:12:03):
Yeah, the best part of this.

Speaker 1 (01:12:16):
Is the end. Jesus, they got cards for the guys
that they arrested, and I think I think they actually
uploaded them, but I haven't checked, but they may have

(01:12:38):
cards for like the various criminals that they've arrested. I
don't know, Pokemon, but I love that this guy has
got like a foil card. It's like an extra special
one for child endangerment.

Speaker 2 (01:12:54):
It's really funny that the Trump administration that's just the
is sharing memes and stuff and that's just not caring.
It's really funny.

Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
They're killing it. They're killing it anyway. I'm thinking myself
for having missed most of this, Yes you did, but okay,
so we got to wrap it up unfortunately, but this
was it was really good catching up. And I'm glad
that your your son is doing well and you're basically
hanging in there right despite everything that's happening in your country. Yes,

(01:13:27):
I mean we all have we all have our problems,
but you guys are huh.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
Of course, of course we'll yeah, yeah, we'll have different
issues right over here at sem speech issues, but just
speaking code now, I'm just speaking in code. Most of
the time. You know?

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
Oh really do you do you? Uh? Do you know?
You know about the wasn't it made illegal to boast
about sexual conquests and pubs? Did you hear about that that? No,
it's in Scotland. They made it illegal to boast about
sexual conquests.

Speaker 2 (01:13:59):
Hold on, I didn't hit it that. I would definitely
have covered that. I saw that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:04):
Yeah, let me let me I I covered it a
while back. If you go to a club and you
and you tell a story about your sexual conquests and
somebody overhears it and they don't like it, Yeah, so
the Telegraph, I will share this with you. Hold on,

(01:14:27):
here we go.

Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
You will ny thing?

Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
Maybe it's on ground news. No, let's try this. Looks Mac,
looks Max?

Speaker 2 (01:14:49):
Is this a sneaky Is this a sneaky way to
get us to stop asking women about the body camp?
Is that what that says?

Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
Yeah? Maybe it's not. Letting me open a good link.
I'll try knew it was really quick. Oh my gosh,
what is this? Yeah, just give me the story. Yeah,
men in Scotland who loudly boast about sexual conquests could
face jail. Baroness Kennedy of the Shaws was paid by

(01:15:15):
Nicola Sturgeon's government to conduct an investigation. It's a misogyny
north of the border. So why just men? Why just men?

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
Like why wouldn't women boasting about it? Be because I've
heard women talk like this, so why aren't they?

Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Also, that's because when girls do it, they're getting that bag,
but when guys do it, they're hurting women. So that's
I mean, that's that's the logic, I guess.

Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
I mean, to be fair as well, I don't think
it should be illegal, but I don't think people should
be doing that anyway, like stupid, right, But it's a
bit yeah, I like, you know, like him a gentleman
doesn't speak or doesn't tell or whatever, you know, doing
that is a bit. I don't really like that behavior

(01:16:05):
in men or women, But it's jailed for it just
because somebody like doesn't like it. My god man, yes
for sure, crazy man.

Speaker 1 (01:16:14):
Well yeah, so yeah, I guess, like if you go
to pubs, definitely speaking code, especially about your sexual conquests.

Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
But I mean it's you need to speak in code,
like well, you know when you hear it, if you
know what I mean, Like you know, you know we're
talking about when You can't just say you'd like to
punch somebody in the face. You know, you'd have to

(01:16:41):
say something like I would like my hand to meet
their face someday or something like that, or setting a
pleasant manner. But you kind of just say the words.
Because social media doesn't like it. You have to speak
in code. Although to be fair to YouTube, ever, when
I was talking aboutetting my monetization back when I upload
a video, it does give you all the options now

(01:17:02):
for you know, hate speech and stuff like that, and
it gives you examples. So they have updated that. It's
definitely better than before because before they used to say, hey,
you've committed hate speech, we're removing your videal, but we're
not going to tell you what you said. And then
you're like, well, how am I going to not commit
that same crime again? Then I don't know what the
crime is, but the bit if they've updated it now

(01:17:24):
it's more specific. Still not enough, but it's better than
where it was.

Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
Okay, well, I don't know. I don't think it should exist,
but like at all, like you should able to say
whatever you want.

Speaker 2 (01:17:37):
But definitely should. Yeah, Unfortunately you have to navigate these rules.

Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
Mm hmm, yeah, for sure. Well anyway, so yeah, I
gotta wrap it up there for sure, but it was
it was good talking to you, sir. So like I guess,
like let people know where they can follow you. I
put your YouTube in your ex and the description.

Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
I don't know, if there's a bad, H, that's a
better That's where I'm most of the time. YouTube X
That's where I'm most dating.

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you should definitely follow his ex because
he's he's it's pretty lit and he's constantly like posting
fun stuff on there and coming after people and it's
usually where he shares his videos too. So anyway that
that's'll be in the description. Thank you again for coming
on the show.

Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
A good fellow.

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
Really appreciate it. This nice scene.

Speaker 2 (01:18:26):
Thank you very much, Brian, Thank you thanks for having
me on. I appreciate it all right, Thank.

Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
You, Thank you guys for coming on the show. If
you guys liked this video, please hit like subscribe. If
you're not already subscribed, hit the bell notifications, leave us
a comment, let us know what you guys think about
what we discussed on the show today. And please please
please share this video because sharing is caring. Thank you guys.
So much for coming on today's episode of fireside Chat,
and we'll talk to you guys in the next one.
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