Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
A crypt and this is a scriptor. I wanted quick
and against my enemies. Yeah, you see, you.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Wanted to say, and then allonet of raision, but Apple
get you from the wielder.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Hello everyone, what is up? I am Rob It is minifoul.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yes and very well. I've had a few days in
juven on America, the wild Atlantic West, with my mickey
and the wind standing in fields. I know this. I
haven't done that, but it was a lovely little break,
gorgeous landscape up there. I think that there's a few
places you you would really enjoy a hike.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
I've been. Yeah, I haven't hyped over that I could.
I've been up like kind of where Gordo lives, which
is kind of it was kind.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Of pretty close to be, just north of and I.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Drove off through Goal to get there.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
Yeah, we went out to so I think it's the
bones of an hour's drive outside of Galway City to
get to Clifton, and then from Clifton you can get
basically to the edge of Ireland. But the beaches out there,
I kind of assume it's because they're so westerly and
there's just nothing there, Like the water is just crystal clear,
there's no no ferries, there's no you know, there's nothing
(01:33):
going around mucking the place up. But it's really beautiful.
And the sand and I don't know why the sand
and like dogs, bay and stuff, but it's so like
white and fine, you.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Know, white and fine, yes, racist sand. Just did you
get swept out any carns or anything like that?
Speaker 2 (01:52):
This time? I respected the ocean. I did swim, but
it looked it was raining for little loyal as we
were swimming, but like it looked like it was a storm.
Like it was beautiful. But also I can kind of
understand why all those poets and all out from the
west were the way they were, because you're confronted with
just like that, the majesty of nature.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
Yeah, like if you you can even sense it in
some places here and Waxford and Longer Coast, like if
you went and lived in like even kill Mark, which
is like kind of built up, ye, But like you
write a fucking cool last novel if he there he.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Writes that like no one would for fifty years, and
oh he was actually a genius. Yeah, I say you
one thing that I was driving back and like it's
a five bones of five hour drives right the way
back and like, coming through Galway, there's a fellow who
looked like if Hull cortg was h positive more bags
but like your man literally running out to the middle
(02:47):
of the road to get a bottle cap and everyone
driving at twenty and I was like, what the fuck.
But he had the little like he had like the
Hull Cogan hair, but really long, the fine like again
fine White's hair, really long. But just like, yeah, they
are the more the more westerly you go, the more
people start getting corrupted nature.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Like that's a long standing thing about people that either
moved to Nofens, people from Galaway, but it's a bit
of a more big like and they're a little bit
and I.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
Like allway lost, like I've only ever been in the
city before. The sign was driving through the city, which
is fairly hair raising that times as well. But Cliftland
is just like going out that way, man, It's just
it's just like it's gorgeous. Yeah, I was eating skillets
of seafood. Yeah, a skillet. I had a tall glass
(03:43):
of shut up juice the other way, just a pint
of all their own little breweries and stuff. Good evenings
like a fine. I was trying the whiskeys and the
pines and I was smoking fagg I went off like
(04:04):
this is garbage. Like yeah, So after a course of
antibiotics from my haunted ires, I decided to go back
on the cigarettes, and I've never looked back.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
That's all going together.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
It seems to be could turn on me at any moment.
It's very hard to cooperate with uncooperative ours. In generally
it is cooperative at the moment. Thankfully it was your
We have like the opposite end problems. You have like
mouth problems and I have iris.
Speaker 3 (04:31):
Problems and all talk se as well.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
There is a lot of that. Yeah, there's a lot
of that. I'll get the colonoscopy and you get the
endoscopy and between the two of us will meet in
the middle somewhere.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
Crosswords, are we actually recording?
Speaker 2 (04:48):
We think we are. We definitely shouldn't cross or we
should try.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
Not in the stomach. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
I probably took it to have more of a sexual meaning.
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Of course. How everyone hopeus we well hopeus that I
sound a lot better this week. I listened back to
our episode on Monday, and I was like, oh fuck,
I sounded like hot Death. So yeah, I hope everyone's
doing well. We have a lot to talk about today.
We actually do talk about Galway in this episode, funnily enough,
(05:22):
before we get into it, I'd like to remind everyone
if you could leave reviews wherever you listen, that'd be fantastic.
If you want to do some more, Patreon would be
great to support. Over there really helps us out. You'll
get your odd three episodes, exclusives and all of that
jazz over there too. There is a back catalog now
of sixty sixty five odd episodes that span the last
(05:44):
five years, so it's definitely worked going and checking out.
There's a lot of other kind of weird and wonderful
stuff we've posted over there, and as well, you get
access to our discorder it can come and hang out
and chat.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
We're playing Wordle at the minute.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
We have a word going. I seen that a couple
of things I don't like about Wardle, so Lenny should
be quite good. I think she's cheating also put out there,
but not the That's why I don't like about Wordle
is that it's very easily cheatable. I don't actually think
Lenny cheating, but I think Wardle in general, you can
(06:18):
just look up the world every day, which that's me.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
It's just Lennie is a well known smart girl. Maybe
she's not cheating. Possible that she do better has to
be cheating. Strong mind and so the other thing then.
Speaker 3 (06:30):
As well, that I don't like about wordle is well
this is more of a meeting. But I am sometimes
I just get annoyed and quit yep, and I get
like Eddie and I just go off.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
I don't know if I've ever played word. I remember
people were like, this is like, what's not audio?
Speaker 3 (06:56):
Everyone has a video?
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Is a better name for that, though, I'm just gonna udio.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Is it like action g I Joe a football game?
Speaker 3 (07:09):
Yeah? No, it's like saboutio, but not at all. Like
it's a good little word problem. I guess your brain going.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
You need to guess the words. You get like five
tries and just guess all the words, Like here's the
four letter words.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
What is it? It's all five letters? I think? So,
like right, so let's say your first word is claim.
It'll tell you what letters that you got, right, and
if you're in the right place or not.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
So, so you're basically just throwing out a.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
Ward first, you're trying words all the time to try
and get the right word.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
Oh, and then it tells you where So it says
there is an L. Yeah, and but I won't tell
you where it is? Is it if the L is on?
So you wunt and claim and the second letter is
L but it will be flame. Yeah, but I will
tell you that that L is in the right Okay,
And then you'd be like, hmm, what else exactly? Go
to the brain flame.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Yeah, we've been we've got a couple of we've got
about a twenty five restrict going on the Yeah I have.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
I've seen it popping up on the gaming part of
the discord. But I'm not not played. I know I'm
on the duo lingo now trying to jose. The Portuguese
have a and one is like so annoying. It's a
verb to be that's permanent a verb, permanent verb and
(08:30):
temporary verb. So if you say I my name is Rob,
I am right, that would be permanent. But if you
say I live in Wexford, we'd have to use the
temporary verb, because so there's two different ones to be from.
Wexford will be the permanent verb. You'll always be from
but to live in Wexford, you may not live in right.
(08:51):
I like that. It's fair, it's good, but when you're
trying to learn it, it's like trying to say the
same thing. So you're changing between now and a and
you don't know why you at this level of learning. Okay,
that's that's my journey.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
At Okay, Yeah, I get you. Yeah, yeah, no, I
do want to learn language at some point in my life. Busbur.
I don't like to speaker language. Yeah, sure, chat to
just I literally live with someone who's fluent in our
head of tongue.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
I'm just don't learn language like you live in the
only island in the world that speaks never used pointless
learn something else.
Speaker 3 (09:31):
So yeah, so yeah, that's that's the crack. Well, well,
we'll check in on our news section now at the
end of the episode, because we've got lots. I'm sure
we're very rivet in people with lots of news and
fair you know, we're just we're just interesting individuals. If
any of our interesting listeners and have any sort of
spooky stories, maybe have questions up, anything that they'd like
(09:54):
to send in would be nice. We'd like to read it.
Where should have ended them.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
You have a massive intellect and incredibly gifted at the studio.
Just right into Monster Fuzz podcast at gmail dot com.
Send in your your story and we'll read it out
on a mini fuzz that will be class ghosts or
something if you want.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
You ever see a ghost?
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (10:16):
You ever get attacked by a dinosaur?
Speaker 2 (10:18):
No? Too? Maybe what was that thing he sent me?
Primeval war? It's meant to be?
Speaker 3 (10:28):
But that other fellows, your man, the main fellow, like,
he's like, did you like the kind of commander he's
not due he's in ship. I can remember his name,
but he's in ship.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Yeah, I know, I can't remember. Yeah, it's not like.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
He's got that head where you're like, I know him.
He's in lots of stuff.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
It's not like it, but he isn't everything, Like yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
A little bit. And so you know you're talking about weather.
I was do you want to talk about this artical
hair from the bell and it's this is by the way,
it's the articles from there bought this article like on
this particular news story is big news in the UFO
(11:07):
UF community. It's doing the rounds at the menace. Let's
know what's.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Correct, ladies, and gentlemen, there is an alien spacecraft the
size of Galway which is coming to attack Earth in
just months. So yeah, so start spending your money because
it's only three months less. We're folk savings out the window.
A mysterious object the size of Galway could potentially be
(11:34):
an aggressive alien spacecraft. I love that could potentially just
make up anything. Could be a comment with dinosaurs who
have laser beams for.
Speaker 3 (11:42):
I want to tell you the science.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
Oh science show that rhymes with us loosely sounds like
Rather Signs, which is a movie about aliens. I probably
destroyed Leny be like, no, my winning streak then is cheating?
Speaker 3 (12:00):
She goes, oh no, I've had three tries, and may
I fucking get it there, get ahead of them.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
I don't know if that's cheesy.
Speaker 3 (12:07):
It's being driven.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
She's listening to Far Beyond Driven by Pantea, just with
the sole aim of beating you.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
I'm coming for it on wordle No, he's not getting
any transatlantic flights, just world just word remotely.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
I'm coming for you, right So anyway, they're said to
attack Earth in November, a new study suggests. Earlier this month,
experts confirmed the discovery of a rare interstellar visitor, only
the third ever detective detective speeding through our Solar System
at an extraordinary pace. A draft scientific paper published on
(12:44):
Tuesday proposes that the object known as three I Atlas
thirty one atlas I'm assuming, might be extra terrestrial technology
and could launch a surprise attack on our planet.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
It's so much of a surprise if we're not a name,
but everything for.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
Three months might happened three months surprise attack Like sorry,
the Japanese might fomb Harbor three months on all the
surprise attack? The fuck. The researchers suggest that the object
orbit is such that it would make it easier for
an intelligent alien craft to approach Earth un deticted. The
(13:19):
adlings seem to know what we're doing. The report claim
is that when it gets close closest to the Sun
in late November, the object will be hidden from Earth's view,
allowing it to execute a covert high speed maneuver to
snowdown and remain in the Solar System to secretly prepare
for an attack. Trum, I think yeah. Scientists also note
(13:41):
that thirty one Atlas, which sounds like it could be
a pop band, has an unusual trajectory that brings it
very close to planets like Venus, Mars, and Jupiter, something
highly unlikely to occur by chance with less than a
zero point zero zero five percent probability. There's a much
high chance than all of us being here, So there
(14:02):
you go. One of the authors of the paper, which
has not yet been peer reviewed, is Avi Lobe, a
renowned Harvard astrophysicist known for his controversial research and outspoken
views on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. He gained widespread
attention for suggesting that the twenty seventeen interstellar object um
(14:24):
oh Omuamua might be an artificial probe created by an
alien civilization based on its unusual acceleration and shape. I
do remember that, Yeah, I do remember.
Speaker 3 (14:33):
Probably, No, the twenty seventeen is pre monsterful, it's about
three years.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
But I do remember that. Adam Hibbert and Adam Crowle,
both from the Initiative for Interstellar Studies in London, have
teamed up with their colleague to pend of paper that
delves into the realm of the hypothetical regarding interstellar st
object interstellar objects. The trio clarify their stance in the paper.
This paper is contingent on a remarkable but this that's right,
(15:03):
I've read that right. Sorry, this paper is contingent and remarkable,
but as we shall show, testable hypothesis to which the
authors do not necessarily ascribe, yet is certainly worthy of
an analysis and a report. Despite the speculative nature of
their work, they caution the consequences should the hypothesis turn
out to be correct, could potentially be dire for humanity
(15:23):
and would possibly require defensive measures to be undertaken, though
these might prove futile. Yees, so we can't we can't
destroy the aliens. I kind of was thinking, I just
I think it was when all the war news was
going on with Ukraine and Russia and Iran and Israel
and Gaza and Paasa and all this sort of stuff.
Gaza and yeah, yeah, and I just thought that, like,
(15:47):
we're here doing the show, like blah blah blah, bullshit
talking shit, and then you know the words of Creed,
how quickly life can turn around. Then you're just in
a war zone. That's shite, Like, isn't it bless what
I'm saying? Yes, And if you're fighting aliens, while that
is a little bit cooler than traditional warfare, probably very
difficult and terrifying.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
It would be really annoying probably for a lot of
people in power if like alien shot up, because it
would you and if I so many people, like people
would want to be wann to fight because they'd be like, yeah,
we need to actually sort out to essential threat. But
like the governments will be like, no, no, we need to
actually fight each other.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
Off because it's left versus right, not not down versus up. Yeah,
it's it's a mad thing. Like it's like when you
think about the world, the holistic world, the full thing,
and how we could actually solve all of the problems
by just having a little bit less and giving a
little bit more and being egalitarian, and that sounds like
(16:44):
such a fucking out there idea.
Speaker 3 (16:46):
It's also also like but again, and I did touch
on a little bit last week, but like there are
a lot of places in the world where people live
and die without really worrying about much.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
Yeah, but they don't have much as well. The more
you have, the more, but like aids you need, like
like to be fair, you need security, food and water
and community, but.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
Even security, like do you need security if you live
in places where people aren't really robbing each other, do
you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (17:13):
But I think that might be part of the community.
But then the other part of it is to say,
like as humans and being tribal for hundreds and hundreds
of years, like they think about where we are now,
Like we were all in little small communities two hundred
years ago easily.
Speaker 3 (17:29):
Yeah, thousands of year or so.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
Yeah, but we were always breaking each other up, like
you know, we always were, like these guys don't like them.
So while we've kind of this is probably the most
cohesive we've ever been as a species.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
So chimpanzees are out there right now fighting on the
woods over yeah, like rival troops of chimpanzees are fighting
each other over like a fucking bamboo trade or not
a bamboo.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
Because and that's in their nature. Like even I've seen
this today. So we we recently, I don't know if
we adopted or we fought, I know what the fuck
we did. But we have now an old cat, Cheeko.
He's huge. He's a very docile, chilled out cat, but
if he sees any other cat, he's like it's on.
So like we would put food outside the back garden
(18:14):
to feed some of the cats in the street. And
if Chico sees them eating food, knowing he has all
the food he wants, he is all like he's you
want to see the kitchen, my kitchen. The sitting room
is just a cat playhouse now. And he's just like hissten.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
He's an inner city Dublin bastard of cat.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Like that's the first problem.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
Isn't he from Dublin. He's going to be a bad
explit nature, you know.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
That is true. He's up there, he's Ireland is full.
He spells out Ireland is full. With his cabble and
the other cats.
Speaker 3 (18:45):
Chicos like a labrador man.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
Sure, he's big, he's actually his belly is starting to
like because he has he had like a belly like
me Dad, a belly full of sugar. But he's like
he's he's it's kind of coming back because we're I
think everybody in the block was feeding him. It's a
nice story as well, because we moved to Dublin. He
was a kitten and she wouldn't have had much English
(19:09):
and she wouldn't have known many people. And I'm sure
store yeah, she goes.
Speaker 3 (19:13):
Like bye bye bye, give me dinner.
Speaker 2 (19:20):
Comack. I bought a cook and I just said, you
want to go eat fish? Little yeah, jees in superstition
listens to masterfuls. I think I might have might have
(19:41):
Sophia Vergara be in the video for the Butster for
a song. The likeness was his name again, Ricky Marton,
Ricky Richard Martin Martin.
Speaker 3 (19:53):
I think he was. He's not random lads. Was he
ever in trouble or.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Was he I don't think he's in trouble.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
I think like he was he was straight for a
few years and no, but like no, I think he
was wrapped up in controversies with young lads. I don't know.
Just general homosexual activity.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
I think, you know, I think that's funny. I think
general homosexual.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
You're you're, you're, you're on the tight rope, you know
what I mean? At all times.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
Toss that we were cool with that. I thought that
was fine to do. Now I'm an ally for general
home homosexual activities.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
No, but general homosexual activities. You know, it's two lads,
you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (20:36):
Like, well, actually, it turns out that married men in
homosexual relationships have the best longevity, the highest statistical longevity,
and apparently the lowest is women like lesbian relationships. So
it turns out that women or the problem all along.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
But he's not gay. Yeah, so he says he's gay,
but he says he's gay but he's not. Then he
also I know that I like both men and women.
I'm against sexual labels. We're simply human, human beings with
emotional and sexual needs. I like to enjoy sex and
total freedom, so I'm open to having sex with a
woman if I feel desire.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Right.
Speaker 3 (21:15):
But he does say that men are his thing.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
But he'll he'll dip it in New York City, the
cheap motel.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
He was up to something that was his Wikipedia looks clean, but.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Bigger Alae, she's only fourteen years old and she gave
you a massage or something about him, I don't know.
I'm not saying it. And hateful about Ricky Martin. I
don't mind about something, but I suspect his gainess must
be problematic, is what you're saying.
Speaker 3 (21:54):
Kevin spaceyesque, maybe he's sort a bit of finger nurses.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Kevin Space was because he was with like lads who
weren't eighteen. I thought it was hear me out here,
just a moment, you know, the way when you see
some fucking secondary school teacher she blows a gas get
in her head and starts like na, and everyone's like cool.
So if you just imagine that everyone's gay and you
(22:21):
apply the same logic, is it still cool? Do you
know what I mean? Like, now it's a Now it's
a dude having sex with the sixteen year old. But
if you apply the same logic as a lady. And
I'm not saying I believe this, I'm just trying to
kind of trying to offer a different point of view.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
It's going to say, like two people all cool, my female.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
Likestine's Island had been at sixteen year old lads getting
rolled by other lads, but every but the lads were gay.
Do you think it.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
Would do you think people actually wouldn't like there's just
a load of gay sixteen as much as it was
a lot of them and right a lot of sixty
year old.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Oh, they definitely wouldn't. I go to the island. I
go to the island and just shave five type. But
it is it is like I'm not saying it's the
right thing to do. When you should no matter regardless
of what your orientation is, you shouldn't be nailing people
who on her low the ag Yeah, listen, I okay,
(23:21):
I'm pretty sure.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
And represented it's it's a tailor as old as time.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
A lot of people seem to be interested.
Speaker 3 (23:33):
You Crystal and came up with him, and that's.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
But I would only do it with bros because I
know the sisters can't hang at that young age. Only
the bros can hang. Only the bros.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Yeah, Ricky Martin, let us not write and man, that's
not just type.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
In Ricky Martin controversy because I kind of want to
see what's up now. I don't read.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
I'll read about it.
Speaker 2 (23:54):
I read about the imminent alien invasion while we figure
out what Ricky Martin does. The hypothesis is an interesting
exercise in its own right, and it's fun to peruse,
irrespective of its likely validity. So it's probably bollocks. The
celestial body in question, which is camouflaged as thirty one
Atlas formerly known as a eleven PL three Z, which
(24:16):
looks like Apple Please, is thought to originate from a
fire flung star system and hurdled through space at speeds
exceeding sixty kilometers per second. First detected on January first
by the Atlas Survey telescope in Rio Ortado in Chile,
said Chile. There, now they'd speak Spanish. It's very close
(24:41):
lack root, you know. Thirty one ANTLYSTS has sparked curiosity
and speculation. It's estimated to measure somewhere between ten and
twenty kilometers across, though it could present a smaller profile
if it's predominantly made up of reflective ice.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
So we'll talk about this first and then we'll talk
about Rickie Martin. Yes, so people have come out and said,
like they've rubbish. They're like, not, this is a lot
of ballocks. But as far as I'm aware, it is
behaving really strangely, this celestial battle, and it's kind of
defying how celestial body would usually behave. So like that's
(25:21):
what they're said. The article, like the way it's like
fly by in them planets kind of is like it's
kind of gone. It's acting independently of like planetary orbits
kind and it's.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
Like so it's basically like the Borg cube. Yeah, can
imagine like that could be.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
Origin story, that could be, that could be how it
makes that makes sense? Like an alien craft.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
We've come back free at the edge of the Atlantic.
Maybe they're going to come back like and that because
when you stay out into you know, off the west coast,
into the horizon where the sky kisses the scene, you know,
will you just see is huge. They just come and
take everybody back beautiful sight.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
So like imagine you know, you were a famine time immigrants,
you were about to get on the coffin chips to
head over to the US. That was your last sight.
You'd be sad, you'd be pining for that view when
you got over there. We're abant to get home, back
to Gallaway, you know.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
Just being in the space, in the space for years.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Ricky Martin faced a significant controversy when his nephew initially
alleged that Martin had engaged in a sexual relationship with him.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
Yeah, great.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
Seventeen or However, the nephew letter recanted his claims, admitting
under all thought the allegations were false. Following this, Martin
sued his nephew, saying that the allegations last in fifteen million.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
Yeah, so that's all alleged.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
He can do what his work with that. Ricky Martin
rumor was Martin molested by jose Emmon and as Ricky Martin.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Ye, who's Joe Simon in is Battle.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
Battle Mexican Ballex? Whose Menendez? Let's find out who he is?
This will be a new podcast we do just sayez
he is. I think he's a singer himself from from QB.
He was forty five. Oh, I don't know. Yeah, I
(27:27):
don't know some lads, but apparently they were at mm hmm,
you know Ricky, So you know, Ricky messing messing around.
I don't think it's ever a good look. Like when
your a nephew or your niece is like accusedes you
(27:49):
openly of molestation or rape, you're just kind of like.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
Don't speak to you, never know, never know how to
wait your future. But it's just like no, it does,
of course, like because like I always love all that,
Like it's so insane. Like so like let's say, let's
say what.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
Michael Jackson, for example, Like you know a lot of
people think gods are on that he did like those
kids or whatever. Right, so like let's okay, let's just
say for the second argument that he did. You know,
I'm jas inoson but whatever, you know, trying to hit
the black man down, you know, But so imagine now
(28:28):
like that he did do it and he was just
going he makes them set out a court and pays
him off. Imagine how like fucking weird you'd feel, as
Michael Jackson being like yeah, like I'm fucking good, like
maybe feel powerful, but it's like, yeah, I'm guilty as
fuck and like my mad mind, like I've paid these
bastards off and it's like still like an over that
(28:49):
you're like guilty, you know what I mean. Like it's
such a strange way to live out your life.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
It's sort of like it's like minged, like oh, it's
like your conscience. It's like this what should have happened
here is you should have been judged by your actions.
But because you have so much money and you can
dance and sing like that's there because you could, that's
so good. Do what you want, Like it's fine. It's
fucked up. Yeah, Like it is a horrible but it's
(29:18):
a horrible thing, and you know you do see. I
was only listening to a podcast about a poor girl
who was caught up in those grooming gangs when she
was like fourteen or whatever. And when you hear about
the way the police, the way they process and just
didn't do it about all these fucking scumbags. Then you're
kind of going, is there some sort of is it
(29:39):
corrupt at the top? Is there something going on? But
it is a mad thing that like as a society,
we all sort of agree that that's like the worst
ship to do. And yes, if you have money, horror,
I think that has to be it has to be,
like what's the most evil thing to do? The most
evil thing to do is like to corrupt something that's
totally innocent. And so if you're someone who's just like
(30:01):
you don't have empathy and you're mad on power, I
guess is that somewhere that you would go And then
because you have so much power, it's really hard to
kind of catch you forward if you like. But it's
fucking disgusting ship, Like it's horrible. It's horrible that that exists,
and it's so prevalent.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
Kevin Specy, right, I don't know the crack with his stuff,
but like it was he found guilty. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
I don't think. I don't know. I don't think he
was found guilty. Like I think there was a lot.
Speaker 3 (30:26):
Of callers around him are like dying, right, I'm like
imagine in his head and like laughing, like.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
I think, if you're going to do that ship in
the first place, yeah, in life, yeah, I've got the
world can be reducted to just wrestling. Like even I
saw there was a picture of Bill Clinton getting the
show that was to be fair, maybe he didn't do anything, but.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
That's a bad look, you know, yeah, crypt.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
Yeah, like I mean, but that's the thing is like
I think I think with that stuff honestly, like with
the Epstein stuff on all as well as like it
is one of those things that probably if if the
truth gets out, but it has kind of gotten out
and they're working hard to kind of blurred.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
I think the reason that is not coming out is
because again ele so it's not a left and right
I reckon. I think the reason that all of them
are like fucking because why wouldn't the Democrats have released
that if they knew Trump was on or whatever, because
they probably a load of goons and lot of stuff.
(31:46):
I know Trump was friends. I'm not like you. I
don't know that he did any.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
Bad ship like that anti right wing and again.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
Anti right no, but I mean I don't know that
he did I don't know any of them did, Like
do you reckon that fucking Bill Gates was out there?
They were out there for sure, But what I mean
is like I don't know that that obviously we don't
know that that necessarily means they did that like Steven
hagging sad, you know what I mean? Like he was
(32:17):
out there like stevens gross.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
You know.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
It's like I'm just saying that's so, that's what we
don't know. And to be fair, we don't know, so
we can't say one or the other. But it's not
a good look. It doesn't look good. And the fact
that they're all refusing to release all this stuff, I
don't know, man like, and you also have to ask
yourself was like what the fuck did the jab kill
himself for? And if there was no list like the
(32:43):
soho or did he just all of a sudden feel
real guilty even though he was cost years beforehand?
Speaker 3 (32:49):
See? I think the thing is like with the evidence
and all on what went down, like everyone at the
time settled on yeah, like there was some stuff going
on and there was no room for debate on that.
I think now what's happening is everyone's like figure out
how to twist the narrative in their favor like to,
but I think the reality is, yeah, that a lot
(33:11):
of them are just gone back onstant they're all caught
with their fucking you know.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
There's there's mad like conspiracy about it. One is saying
that like it was part of an Israeli.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Yeah, well Epstein was massa I reckon that's it.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
But then because.
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Trump is married to mass Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
But the whole thing is like so but if you
look at it, because sometimes you have to, why is
it that America keeps constantly giving money to Israel and
all the time, no matter who's in chair Israel And
then you kind of go, oh, maybe like fucking he
has a load of sucking mock on everything.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
Well that was the That's what they were saying, like
was that that basically Epstein was a Massad agent and
like his job was essentially compromise people, but have him
on the hook not necessarily go like I caught you
like you were all one on the red by or whatever,
but just to have them in that web and just
to basically saw basically when anyone fe then then know
(34:11):
like themselves that they can't.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
But think like think about like let's say we all
go to sweet some new friend which comes, we go
to some parody everyone single, you the parody in Galway
probably you a party like Galway so BD and then
you hook up with some girl and you have no
idea that she's like under underage and now you didn't
mean to do it wrong. But he has some money
(34:34):
and he's like, you're coming to all my parties from now.
Speaker 3 (34:37):
Now. That's that is even less insidious than like what
is alleged to.
Speaker 2 (34:44):
Well, no, for sure, the actual reports disgusting, Like the
actual reports are trying to think of it. It was
like a lot of a capture honey trap sort of
a thing.
Speaker 3 (34:53):
The actual reports are more like you know, kind of
thing that's going to happen. The boys like they're all like,
it's not it's not a thing where they went there accidentally,
like or anything accidentally happened that was all consensual because
you would like they were up on it. But it's
all like that. Though even in Japan it's the same
(35:14):
ship like them, you know, like in Akasaka where we
said like we didn't really realize it the first time,
but this time we kind of really noticed it. But
there's a lot of prostitution around there, and most of
them prostitutes are pimped like they're they're they're part of
gangs like you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
And their ladies who are being extorted or whatever. Yeah,
it's it's disgusting because it's such a horrible thing. Like
it's one of the again talking about the ship, it's
one of the worst things you can do to someone
is to like, I own the sexuality of your body
and I effectively rented to people like that. That's just
as well, like misship.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
They can't. Like there's a whole ethical argument of like
when does a young person really know when to make
the right decision in regards to like, hey, I want
to have sex with old strangers?
Speaker 2 (36:03):
Oh yeah, yeah, sure, I think I would.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
Say even up to twenty five man, yeah, yeah, hand
maybe even more.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
Yeah, I think I think the thing is like because
what they're doing more recently is you're seeing old blokes
hooking up with younger girls and people are like, that's
fuck even though it's legal. People are basically public. Yeah,
like people are going, that's a bit fucking much. But again,
you reverse it, like what was the Charlie's Runs, Like
nearly fifty and she was something about getting Ye, it
(36:34):
is weird, but she's sort of celebrated, like it's weird
to watch the And again I'm not making a judgment
statement on that. If I was twenty six and Charlie's wrong,
oh god cha, but you know what I mean, so
like like you wouldn't feel anyway abused or anything. But
then it does seem but then again, women are attracting
(36:56):
to power, and some women are attracted to power and
money and stayed. But then again, I suppose there's an
element of getting something out of that as well, if you're.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
Like the transactions, her is like she gets the desire
of a young person.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
Which yeah, exactly when he gets to nail American fucking yeah,
because he's just he's just like, well they feel wanted
like so like like and he gets to drop.
Speaker 3 (37:19):
You could argue, like a fifty year old dude with
Charlie Shran who's also fifty, like droughout the same stage
in life and and Charlie Strands are very successful individual
so she'd only usually be then successful males in their fifties,
like a lot of them.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
Are hot, poor young feo.
Speaker 3 (37:34):
Yeah, but what I'm saying is that a lot of
them would be very like they'd be desensitized to Charlie
Sran's a lore, you.
Speaker 2 (37:42):
Know what I mean. Whereas well, if they were in
that group, Whereas.
Speaker 3 (37:45):
If you're like fucking twenty twenty three, like and Charlie
s Frank comes along with her golden binge, you're going
to be like, oh, yeah, I.
Speaker 2 (37:52):
Know, like with the twenty three year olds, Well yeah,
I suppose the middle thing is still yeah, you know.
Speaker 3 (37:56):
Charlie Tran is still one of the fucking most beautiful
women on the planet.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
Like fucking fucking punt. She could be a fucking Mickey
Content take off your pants count fuck me rotten.
Speaker 3 (38:13):
Yeah no, but there is some Arkham lizard like there
is yeah.
Speaker 2 (38:17):
Yeah, And it's like but it is funny the way
like like I don't give a fuck. I reckon that
people are old enough to do whatever the fuck you want,
Like I don't place joy. Yeah, but it is funny
when you see all the different angles and there's men
there being like it like they said.
Speaker 3 (38:31):
If you if you wrack up right, if you came
down to like say, we're all hanging about also lads
or whatever, and you rock up in many year olds, right,
and they're like as two years younger. It's one of
the things where like some might be okay with the
(38:52):
most are going to be like you know, like they
hate you now. Well it's the thing is like she
doesn't realize like what's going on.
Speaker 2 (39:03):
And the level she might be the age gap between
you and is more than her actually age. Like that's
fucked up, Like I I think, yeah, you have to
have some sort of common ground, like what would you
even talk to an eighteen.
Speaker 3 (39:17):
Year old about, Like, yeah, you wouldn't much.
Speaker 5 (39:20):
Still glads to be going will talk though to be fair, no,
but yet they have to like not that they have
to like and he just going around the town, which one he's.
Speaker 2 (39:32):
Not being like slipper like he's he's he's obviously talking
and maybe they're having a good I don't know, maybe
they're having a good.
Speaker 3 (39:41):
And Zimmer is not even how to talk, like no,
there's the first stare. No, not they have to stare
like when you talk to him, like they just look
at you and they're like, what's going on?
Speaker 2 (39:51):
Are they the androids?
Speaker 3 (39:52):
Yeah, they don't like social interaction. Their brain is cooked
because of COVID and all. They missed all of that,
like social stuff. So like if you like I left
field and they're like.
Speaker 2 (40:02):
What if you say, what does that metaphorm me?
Speaker 3 (40:04):
The thing is real Zoomers. A lot of zoomers are like.
Speaker 2 (40:08):
The was something we were doing some training work and
people were talking about how the newer generations they don't
like like the older generations like to call you, like
there's people oh yeah, off, like just semi an email. No,
they hate it like a larger I guess. I remember
my sister used to get like she used to hate
having during the Chinese Yeah cares a bit like that, yeah,
(40:30):
and but like I'd be like what and then again
there's only two years between us, but she just felt uncomfortable.
Speaker 3 (40:36):
I get a bit like that too. It's just lazy
brand or I.
Speaker 2 (40:38):
Think I think it. I think there is that there's
a bit of discomfort from the interaction and because you
don't want anything like you just like I want food,
so like I don't care if I have to do
stuff on my phone for I don't want to talk
to you, like I just want the food. And so
I do get that to an extent, but like you
have to have even in work I know they're not
true relationships because they're hinging on like your interaction together
(41:01):
in the company and blah blah blah, but you sort
of still have to have some level of relationship. Yeah,
you know, so it'll be interesting to see. Well, maybe
not show me zoomors show me the light.
Speaker 3 (41:12):
Well, we're going to Rob's animal corner. We've got two
little bits about animals here to talk about today. One
is quite interesting and kind of ties into a lot
of things. But return of wolves to Yellowstone has led
to a serge in aspen trees, which have been on
scene for eight years. So young aspen trees are thriving
in Yellowstone National Parks Northern Range for the first time
(41:35):
in eighty years, and it's all thanks to wolves. Gray
wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone back in ninety five after
disappearing from the area in nineteen thirty. Since then, the
predators have kept elk populations under control, which in turn
(41:55):
has stopped the elk from eating all of the legs,
the leaves, twigs and bark. So this happens in Ireland.
So this is a big problem over here, is that
the they like if you're iver the plant, like say,
we bought fifty acres tomorrow like we would have, and
we planted with trees like we'd actually here have to
fence that whole area off to let the trees grow
(42:17):
because the deer fall, right, So they're really like detrimental
to the ecosystem. So when the ecosystem is not in harmony,
ship like that happens.
Speaker 2 (42:30):
And this is why you get a lot of the culs.
And this is where the wolves come into play.
Speaker 3 (42:34):
Well it's where like it's a man created problem, yes,
so like man should try and help out and get
it back to how it was roughly, because I know
a lot of people are very anti adding predators into
a food chain, like because humans are kind of a
predator in the siense and whatever whatever.
Speaker 2 (42:49):
But like, also, is there a safety thing to consider
if you're adding effectively strong wild dogs, because like, Ireland
is not a super small place, and I think it's
just a super big no Ireland, Like so if you
just consider like even just a blend lock or whatever wolves,
that would suck.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
I think that most of the time wolves want to
attack people, like you see this is the thing like
wolves see the movie de Gray. No, most of the time,
all they.
Speaker 2 (43:19):
Have to stop fighting each other in World War One
to fight like that.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
That was a hard basketballs they were not what if
we don't know.
Speaker 2 (43:27):
It's like when they legalized weed and there was like,
oh weed legally, but then it got so strong everyone
started having schizophrenic ricks and everything.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
No, they were nasty wolves, man, Okay, that's true. So no,
I think in Ireland, I don't know so much about
addam wolves to the food chain because Ireland is quite
small bush. Then again, there's wild horses up and can
be down like you know what I mean, Like true.
Speaker 2 (43:50):
But I feel like a horse isn't going to eat
you know, But.
Speaker 3 (43:52):
I mean, how how often are the buy saying the
wild horses? Like they're often undertained most of the times,
you know what I mean? That's true.
Speaker 2 (43:57):
Then there's there's wild horse kind of colonies Yellowstone and
stuff in there. Like that's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (44:04):
Listen, you could probably don't know about Ireland, like maybe
you'd have to cull lowelves quite actively keep the heart
like the group size down. But I don't know, man,
maybe dinosaurs or something. So here's another for you. Speaking
of wolves, We're going out to talk about the giant mole.
So the you know, we talked about these a little
(44:24):
bit in mean places scene way back when for the ogs.
They'll remember we talked about moles, we talked about Jenny Ornis.
Now they're talking about reviving them again. They're talking about
taking them back out of extinction. It's our good friends
at what was the name of the comes again Boston.
That's not not Bostris, No, it's not Christopher Crispin should
(44:47):
be in here now. But basically more there were twelve
foot tall birds that went over half of home and
they went extinct again by man man wiped them out,
So these we re wiped them out. So yeah, Colossal Biosciences,
these are the guys that are trying to do all
the mammals stuff. We've talked about him before. So that
(45:08):
was the extinction plan, and they want to resurrect all
nine most species. They are actually working with them outre
led the guy Tahoo Research Center and director Peter Jackson,
the manned the legend.
Speaker 2 (45:24):
He's from New Zealand.
Speaker 3 (45:25):
I guess yeah. They'll sequence the more the na from
fossils and out of genomes of close living relatives like
EMUs or tinemos to create more like birds.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
It is it is pretty awesome that like we're at
this stage where we think we can do that. You
haven't seen the new Jurassic Park Jurassic yet. I think
I'm gonna go see it. I think it's probably gonna not.
I haven't heard good reports, but I have you heard
good reports of any of them?
Speaker 3 (45:52):
For I think like the people that didn't give a
good reports for people that like would like the other ones.
I think, And so I'm a bit like.
Speaker 2 (45:59):
Then do we think that this one could be good
and there is an extra bad.
Speaker 3 (46:04):
I think it might be extra bad, but I don't know.
Some people I've heard have just been like, it's kind
of like Dressing part Tree. It's a bit of a
ramp on the island. I like dress Yeah, I don't mind.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
I do think like one of the like there's a
part of the Spidersaurus doesn't make us out. It just
appears like Michael It's which is really fucking dumb. But
I thought Dress Tree.
Speaker 3 (46:30):
Movie't mind. I thought of this one. Yeah, No, I
do want to see it, but.
Speaker 2 (46:37):
Oh might go see it this week. See if I
have a Monday off for the Bank holiday, so I might.
I might go see it. It's this Bank holiday Monday.
Speaker 3 (46:48):
We'll see to the extension plan for these emmen or sorry,
it's harder than dire wolves. Dire wolves diverged from modern
morale wolves five and a half million years ago, so
don't really need to make that many edits. It's quite
easy for them to fucking do their things, just like
dire is it just a bigger so now the moa
(47:09):
stay split from their closest relatives sixty million years ago,
so they need to radically re engineer these things. Now,
there's a lot of challenges. My eggs are larger than
you eggs, so sorry, you can't actually incubate them, and
they'll have to artificially incubate them. But there again, that's
one a lot with eggs and chickens and all that.
(47:32):
Now there's a lot of critics, a lot of people
here talking shit, and they said that engineered birds might
just be designer organisms and not true. Moa. You don't
have to get keep them all. Just let them get
out here and do their thing first.
Speaker 2 (47:44):
I think, as Ian Malcolm said, just because we could
do something, you know we should, but I think in
this case we should do this. Yeah, you could say
they're not true more. But it's a it's a.
Speaker 3 (47:56):
We're trying frontier, we're trying likeas like now they're gone
on about their concerns and they're saying that it's like
an ecological problem. They're saying that the animal welfare is
a problem, and yeah, divert resources from living in the
enter species is a problem. But that's all bollocks. You're
just making up reasons there the fucking winge.
Speaker 2 (48:14):
Like I think we should iron the MOA and send
them into many war torn countries at the moment for peacekeeping.
Speaker 3 (48:21):
You should. And the good news is them and that
there cannot be done within ten years, so that's quite good.
Speaker 2 (48:26):
I think I'm going to be alive for the next
ten years, so that I think. So I hope well
in the next three months or gallaway spaceship.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
So we've done our little article, Simon Harry.
Speaker 2 (48:40):
Very good, very good, very good. The biggest changes well,
obviously speaking of changes, as he's gone, as he's gone,
Humania is gone. Two boys are gone.
Speaker 3 (48:54):
So which would also have a bigger impact on your
life then, and.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
Being honest, it was probably all co yeah, like like
I was not that I don't like black Sabbat, but
I was never probably only like English people very much more.
I prefer racist Americans.
Speaker 3 (49:11):
You think yank Yeah, yeah, yeehaw boy, No waz he
black Sabbat? Can I go to the mall?
Speaker 2 (49:19):
Can I go to the mall? Momies, give me some
of nam gum balls?
Speaker 1 (49:27):
Gumball five thousand were getting gas for the car.
Speaker 2 (49:32):
Ah, get off the sidewalk, man, stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
I fell on the sidewalk.
Speaker 2 (49:38):
I fell on the sidew I'm gonna sue the local
what do they call it? Not the local authority over there?
What do the boys called?
Speaker 3 (49:48):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (49:49):
America, I can't remember. I've finally the mask of America
has fallen from my face. Yeah, it wasn't a huge
Black Sabbat, but they informed the sound of most of
the bands that I love after that, and I think
Gazzi for me, he's a brilliant singer, but the exposure
(50:12):
I got was just him being an unhinged sort of
I'm coming down like he was just.
Speaker 3 (50:20):
You know I I I think I preferred a Hulk Hogan,
but it was a close fought battle. I would have
been a lot into Hoole when he was in w
C like.
Speaker 2 (50:31):
Hollywood. That was when he was with and.
Speaker 3 (50:35):
That I like talk then he was funny and entertain and.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
Yeah, it's a shame again. You know you're talking about
your here and like there's some fucking nasty stuff about
Yeah he's writing some other guy Lad's wife and talking
nonsense about like it's like, ah, fuck, I've soa I've
seen some interesting takes from wrestlers Black wrestlers, and they
were kind of saying, they're like, look, the man he's
(51:02):
fucking wasn't a fan, but they were very gracious in
that they said, to be fair, though, wrestling may not
be where it is today without the Sparkoholgan in the
nineteen eighties. And it's just such a wild thing, though,
isn't it. Like I don't know, like why it was
hull Cogan racist, Like what why why did he say
those things? But it's just such a It's like a
(51:24):
fellow who has loads of money, who's worked with all
these wrestlers who obviously are really good wrestling. I just
tried to even wrap your head around what possible reason
could you have for this? You know, need to have
a reason. I know, it's just it's a wild thing
that you like you'd think that you'd kind of consider
your stance on something and kind of go, does that
(51:45):
really objectively bear logic? You know, and yeah, it's a
wild thing. It's a real shame. And then Ozzie, on
the other hand, was out there singing about the devil
and all but by all accounts seem to be a
nice lad. Yeah, you know, outside the like I think
his persona probably like a lot of musicians back then, now,
(52:07):
he was a drug addlet laniac, you know.
Speaker 3 (52:10):
Well his apparently his that Parkinson's that he had. So
they sequenced his entire genome as a kind of like
I think it.
Speaker 2 (52:18):
Was like does a man takes Yeah, it was one
of those kind of it was like like a type thing.
Speaker 3 (52:23):
It was like a pa or thing and a sequences
entire genome. But they found like that he had like
three unique like things that only he had.
Speaker 2 (52:31):
But also.
Speaker 3 (52:33):
They found that he had a really rare type of
Parkinson's that he had had like probably for like thirty
or forty years, probably medicaid. So even when he was
on like Dollsbourne's all that, like he was like Parkinson's then,
so like he was you know, and then prior to
that too, because like if you watch, like if you
go back and watch Black Sabbat videos, like the way
(52:54):
as he moved and all was really like he's a
very still to yeah in the movie, like he didn't
have like core nation properly, Yeah, kind of like a
fucking like when in Boston scientific fucking robots or something
as well, like rigid, like like he moved like he
was like a PS one game character or something.
Speaker 2 (53:11):
It's like he was missing fra yeah, and like he.
Speaker 3 (53:14):
Held his hands in a real word when I think
his whole thing was like he had like dyspraxia or something.
He was he was very always like that. And then
obviously all the on behavior of eating bats heads off
and bird's heads off and all, you know.
Speaker 2 (53:30):
And again I think back then it's like, you know,
I'm the lad that does that. Yeah, yeah, Like he
can't really do anything now that anyone like that cares about.
But back then, you know, he was, like I'm curious,
like would he have been known as like the dark
sort of You'd imagine parents would have been having a
few with time because he had a punk Sabbath.
Speaker 3 (53:53):
He had like Saba were like Sabbat were like so
punk was way after so like, you know, punk and
England was like late seventies, seventy. I think Zeppelin were
like sixty eight sixty nine I think, so ten years
prior to just after Zeppelin. Yeah, Sabag worn after Zeppelin
and they were very heavy. They were they weren't even
a heavier sound than Zeppelin. Well, you know, if you
(54:15):
list't to Led Zeppelin two and Black Savage, you could
say that the sounds are fairly similar, to be honest,
which only for maybe Robert Plant's voice is a bit
brighter than maybe and to.
Speaker 2 (54:25):
Be fair as he had a great voice yet like
he's got a high register and it's it's constant like
it if you Watchually Osbourne's like it's constant that that.
Speaker 3 (54:35):
If you watch the Osbourne's like he because that's all
free on YouTube. They have a YouTube channel where you know,
it's the Osbourne's YouTube channel, but they have the fall
season two, full season one. So it just popped on
season two with the here the other day after the
said he had passed and like he's always watching like
singing videos and going over his la la. You know
(54:56):
they're not last ye Yeah, so yeah, he was very
much in but apparently live very good. Like my brother's
seen him live and he thought he was brilliant. And
that was about probably twenty years ago.
Speaker 2 (55:08):
Yeah, well yeah, yeah it was no, it wasn't they
didn't play it was years ago.
Speaker 3 (55:14):
Yeah, it was exactly wild. Yeah, it's a.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
Mad thing, like yeah, because like yeah, like obviously Tony
Iomi and like some of those guitar riffs are just crazy,
but even yeah, yeah, that's what it's about to say,
a crazy train man.
Speaker 3 (55:34):
Yeah, like they're all like I did, I did have Paranoid,
but it is a paradoise. There's an album with the it's.
Speaker 2 (55:40):
The one the Black Yeah, yeah, I think I have
it as well.
Speaker 3 (55:43):
And Sabbath Bloody Sabbath. I had to tell with him
when I was a kid, and I did. I loved
both of them, but I never got as hooked in
the Black Sabbath as I did. But says Zeppelin for
whatever reason. But then there's people listen like it is
literally like some people are mad and there's yeah Sabbath,
some people are mad a Zeppelin.
Speaker 2 (56:00):
But I think when we were coming up, Zeppelin was
more even though it was like decades or it was
like more popular or more exposure to him. Whereas and
THEMB I know, like our friend Joe and stuff probably
would have been. He loved Zeppelin, but definitely Black Sabbat
and some of the darker grown not grungier, but just
he was into dark, real fucking heavy music, which was
(56:24):
which is cool. But even at that, like like you
listened to their version of Changes and it's like, yeah,
it's really nice, like nice ballads and it's very sort
of a sentimental song. I look, there were they're brilliant musicians, like.
Speaker 3 (56:39):
Oh yeah, Black Cyburg and as he had a couple
of cool yeah he really did. Yeah, like the Black
Label Society that was while just went Amazon.
Speaker 2 (56:53):
I think, sorry, you're right, that was and he had
another one solo, just just as the Osborne But like
how the Moon and stuff came, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (57:02):
Yeah, Perry Mason and all those terms that he had.
I don't remember that chamber. Yeah, look, I I you know,
I had a lot of time from Sol but it
wasn't sad, but it was sad satura suppose, but Lassie
are kind of like was almost expected Assi for the
last ten years.
Speaker 2 (57:20):
It was kind of cool the way he went out
as well. Yeah, finish, yeah and then it was back
with Sabbath and I listened to an interview with Tony
Iomi was just saying how like they'd finish the show
as he'd have like a you know, wheelchair or something
and get around and they'd have a chat together and
just sort of shoot the breeze. I think, you know,
it was like, do you think we sounded tonight? And
(57:40):
it was like and then there was a falling out
with them. Yeah, there, So I guess it's kind of
a nice full of circle to close the loop on it.
He finishes this tour. I think Tony Omeo was kind
of saying it was almost like he knew what was common.
He just wanted to get this thing done and sort
of move on from there.
Speaker 3 (57:57):
And then Randy Rolds he thought he was just the
first guitarist thing friend, That's right. I think Sharon was
bunking off him. She yeah, well there was that. There
was a whole rumor that they were kind of swingers,
Sharon and Assi. I believe because I went back and
watching Dallsbourne and like Sharon is just like literally inappropriate
(58:19):
with like any man she's around at any point in time.
So you're like, I actually would have been a man.
Speaker 2 (58:24):
A coloring books.
Speaker 3 (58:26):
Well as he's a sucker, doesn't give a fuck. I
don't think he's just.
Speaker 2 (58:30):
Like what the.
Speaker 3 (58:33):
And then now it is part of Sharon looks like
a fucking ghoul.
Speaker 2 (58:37):
She's one of those people like grand I think that
just they're like, look, look I get him, and if
you if you're overweight and you want to take his
one hundred percent, like, but there's people who are like
taking it to a point of looking like they're cracked out,
Like it's not good for me.
Speaker 3 (58:52):
It's like because like, oh I'm twenty stone, like a
better exactly more.
Speaker 2 (58:57):
Yeah, it's it's like a lifestyle choice.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
It's not like I'm size sixteen or eighteen and addressed
like I'm going to get on the Mpic. Like I
think that that's how you should be trying to work out.
Speaker 2 (59:06):
It Like, but I think you're right, but I think
some people for whatever reason, and again, look.
Speaker 3 (59:11):
There's there's a wonder drug out there that helps you.
Yeah yeah, oh yeah, sign me up. Like yeah, Like
there's people out there who'll take a tablet for anything.
So it's like, oh great, there's a tablet that can
get me happy day.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
But you can see it. Like you see a load
of celebrities who in the last little while have all
shrunk effectively, and the common denominator isn't they didn't open
more like you know, they got this this osembic right
stuff by yeah, and like look I know they're they're
talking about side effect. You can take the Ozmpic.
Speaker 3 (59:41):
No, we got a treadmill. Oh very good?
Speaker 2 (59:44):
Yeah, really I think as well, there's anything about a treadmill,
because it's it's a lot of passive stuff that gets
you so like you just turn on a TV show
and just walk for a couple of hours, flying, you know.
Speaker 3 (59:55):
Yeah. No, I I had given up on life, my
body and all both. I went to Japan and I
knew it was going to happen.
Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
I felt like a big, fat worker and I was
like I just had a little bit away and now
want to get home. It's it's a you can't get
away from it over there because you're also small, and
it's like, yeah, like, oh, I'm a big fan.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
When you get over here, you're like, actually, I'm okay,
I'm already found. Ireland rights are fucking huge, But it
is it's a tricky thing because the reality of it
is like no matter how much you go to the gym.
But it's like ninety percent is again if you if
you just talk about like being lean, let's say ninety
percent is just diet, and that's tough because we're in
a society.
Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
I don't even want to be lean lean, Like I
don't give a just lose it. Yeah I'm having a
beach body or all shit like that. Like I didn't
even fuck about that.
Speaker 2 (01:00:39):
Like no, no, but I just mean that. Like it's
like if you think about it, say you go to
the gym every day and you burn five hundred calories.
Those five hundred galleries can just be undone so easily,
but you'll burn at our kind of height, you'll burn
twenty two hundred just from being alive. And it's like,
so if you just if you get more into porting
control things like that, it's actually more effective just for
(01:01:02):
you know, that's true going to the gym though, But
there is something fun about like lifting weights, even though
sometimes control.
Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
Some time there's not working. I was fine, it's the
portion control. There's not fun on that.
Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
It's tricky. It's very true, that's very tricky, but that's
what it has to be like some bitch you want
to have a nice little skinny pair, just run extra.
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
I'm never gonna have skinny hips. Hips do like a
big class hips and so no, no, I'm enjoying it.
I'll get up in the morning dump on the treadmill.
Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
How how much would you do on the treaders?
Speaker 3 (01:01:37):
Well, I'll tell you I'm only started. So I just
did trick Head this morning. But like it's edge. You
do realize now that you're like, oh, I like my
past has gone down quite a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
Were you jogging on it? Like, yeah, no, I the same.
I went running a while ago and flow seven diometers
having yeah, which like I used to be doing it
in ye for COVID. To be fair, we probably had
less mass on COVID. So you're zippier but fat and
(01:02:12):
slow well and as well, Like to be fair, you
wouldn't expect to not run for years and then have
the same pace. So there's an element of like, you know,
training because you and me used to run fairly regularly
back when we started the podcast. Yeah yeah, like I like,
I like going to the gym and lifting a bit
and just doing some easy going cardio like inclines or stairs,
(01:02:34):
or whatever, but I keep like my knees and I
just keep sucking them up and yeah, so like eventually
I was like, what works.
Speaker 3 (01:02:42):
I don't have any of that problem, thankfully.
Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
I don't think I'm aligned very well, which means my
hips aren't probably aligned right so that the knees are barren.
Speaker 3 (01:02:51):
Yeah for whatever and stuff like that. Yeah, I think
my hips tack all the way. I think that's the
way they're supposed.
Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
So you're you're doing it right.
Speaker 3 (01:03:00):
Yeah, I think believe it terribly.
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
May as well done too, mad different in your life
except your little wee baby.
Speaker 3 (01:03:06):
No, we got the cat. Yeah, I'm little kitten, Leona
shouts out. Lena surprised care because it's her Bertha, and
I was like, she's been filing Pastern for a cat,
so I was like it. So it's a half men coom.
It's quite cute. It's all black, so it's a bit
of a witch's calf. But I'm not lovely, lovely little kitten.
(01:03:27):
So trying to get the dog acquaented to the cat
and vice varsa. It's actually the cat is more hostile
towards the dog, but the dog just barks at her
because the dog was like, why is this thing? Even
though the dog has been around cats before, this is
the first time up close regular but not they're doing well.
(01:03:47):
It's funny having cats around again. I think I've grown
to dislike cats because I didn't my sister's cat for
so long, which is a little fucker, and it was
a relationship where I was basically it's caretaker, so I
was just looking after it all the time. I'm not
getting anything out of it as.
Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
A pet, yeah, affection like yeah, because the little sucker, like.
Speaker 3 (01:04:05):
Rachel had a wicked like so you can't even pet
the and try and kill you like so I was
just like.
Speaker 2 (01:04:11):
No crack. There's some cats like that. I was reading
about them recently and there was one where like there
was an old man to get this guy and it
just it has his legs and it's it's biting and
and the vet was like you probably need to kid
like either put it on valuum or kid. Yeah it
was It.
Speaker 3 (01:04:27):
Wasn't that bad, but like it was on the road, well,
like it was annoying that come over for affection. As
soon as you start painting out of gol feel like
properly go feel like trying to bite and all. So
I think for the last couple of years my view
of cats. But I was always a cat lover, like
I was, hadcats and stuff. But yeah, the last couple
(01:04:47):
of years now I've become more of a dog person.
So it's nice getting reacquainted with them. Fun, fun, little they're.
Speaker 2 (01:04:53):
They're entertaining animals in the way they just act in general,
especially at that young age, because they're sort of they
want they want to mess with everything, but they also
don't want to be messed with, so they can't.
Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
The way they just interact is it's always kind of hilarious.
Speaker 3 (01:05:08):
The frogs are doing well.
Speaker 2 (01:05:09):
Oh yeah, the frogs. How big are they know?
Speaker 3 (01:05:12):
Good size? Yeah, Like I can just whenever anyone calls
I just want to see a frog. I'm like, yeah,
go and grab a frog. Just go to the garden,
find a frog. They're like everywhere, so I just know
where to look. I'm like, there's a frog. A couple
of them are fairly tame, so you just pick them
up and they'll just sit in your hand. Yeah, chill.
The frogs are. Frogs are my filter. But that's you're
(01:05:33):
talking about ecosystems. My ecosystem needed frogs like and needed
predators for the slugs because there was the dogs were
running the slugs. They're under control. I don't even do
slug Watch anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:05:44):
Do you think you'll introduce some wolves out there?
Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
Maybe wolves at some point. We have a lot of butterflies,
which is really nice. We have a lot of like
weird insects that you'd never see. And it's all just
because I got all just because I built a nice
the ecosystem out of the garden, just like a little
grove out there, and then it's really making the difference.
It's crazy, actually, it's it's so cool that like hopefully
(01:06:07):
in the future, will probably buy somewhere that has more land,
you know, like half an acre or more, and then
I'll be able to actually do a bit of like
landscaping for real, for real and make a nice little
kind of ecosystem. But especially when I went to Japan,
I was inspired, Like we went to this I don't
think I mentioned it last week, but we went to
(01:06:28):
the same Buddhist temple on the island of me Agima,
and it was cool because all the little Buddist statues
a little small. They had this little red knitted hat
on every one of them, and so like there's like
thousands of these statues of these little red and just
the layout of that, the trees, the potted plants, the
(01:06:48):
way that had it all done was really inspiring, and
I was like, I'd like to actually recreate something on
a smaller scale like that at home. I can't really
do it out in back garden and don't have the space,
but if we do move on, I'll definitely try and
make a sort of a miniature Japanese garden. I think,
you know, give it always a landscape and stuff. So yeah,
that's the crack. Other than that, playing a bit more
(01:07:09):
clear obscurer trying to get through that let's good game,
but I just don't. I'm not sit down playing games
at the minute. Yeah. That's really about it. That's it
for me. Yeah, so we'll wrap it up there then. Okay,
thanks for listening to folks. I've been robbing many fuzz
over and now nice