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November 27, 2025 58 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Well, little crypt and this is a script. I wanted
to quick get my enemies.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Yeah you see, you wanted to say, and then at
little raise you, but Apple gets you from the wilder. Hello,
if you on, what is up?

Speaker 1 (00:30):
I'm rob I am aiming.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Oh what would you believe? And whatever? Whatever. It's a mini.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Fulds miniature, miniature by name, but maximum by nature.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Yeah, we have a few little things for you today.
We have a couple of stories ghost stories, I believe
are the flavor of the day. This week. I did,
as I always do, went and talk a look around
the web for high strangeness news, but there wasn't really
much going on. One one encounter is that the mini

(01:00):
three L or a baby three L at this Commas.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
And Jupiter and all.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
That's gone, like it was just a Commas or whatever.
So they kind of reckoned that the three L will
do much the same at some point.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
Three.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
I is it three? Is true?

Speaker 1 (01:17):
I thought it was thirty one at list because it's
I think it's three, and it means it's that it
was an interstellar inter galact. I can't remember. It's injured
something and that's why it's the third intergalact thirty one.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Like a band thirty one that that's that sounds better.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
Thirty seconds thirty one second.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
Yeah, but no, that was that was in the news
that was going around, and then there wasn't really anything.
There was the usual like people talking about you know,
Congress and military, people talking about aliens. But again it's
it's all much the.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Same kind of I think a new documentary has just
come out that's going to be I can't remember the
name of it off the top of my head, but
it's meant it's probably we know everything in it anyway,
i'd imagine at this stage, but it's meant to be
very eye open and in terms of oh my god,
there's stuff out there. And funnily enough, our main episode
on Monday that is all about non extra terrestrial theories

(02:17):
of UFOs. So this is more of a high strangeness
approach to not even high strange. There's like dimensional stuff,
but we do get into elements of Satan.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
And stuff like that. I've heard of a couple of
interesting texts around the way Bond, like some alien stuff.
There was some theory I was reading about like the
two head Dana and from like our mythology of them
actually being an alien race, and that's partially.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
There's a load of stuff. There's stuff like glory apparently
means like heaviness, the glory of God, and they some
people think that that relates to it's actually the heaviness
of the UFO or what. There's mad stuff out there,
not mad, and like I disregard it, but I.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
Say, yeah, I see one, and it's definitely grounds for
an episode. And I literally haven't read into a much
at all. I read like a small paragraph about it
today and I was like, that sounds really interesting. Something
to do with some tribe I want to say here
in Africa, and I want to say that like they
knew about like constellations and where this particular star was,

(03:27):
and like some village elder like finally revealed that, like
they new about the star and all this stuff in
space because some basically an alien told them and that's
what he said. So I can't remember. I'll do some
more research. I'm literally just literally just popping into my
head there so fascinating interesting. I love all that like

(03:47):
ancient aliens.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Like, so I was, yeah, yeah, it's good fun.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
So it's got fun. So before we get into the
ghosty spookies today. We'd like to remind you real quick
to leave reviews wherever you listen. Also, Petreon is the
best abat to support. The show is an independent Little
Tammy Pubes podcast, so all support is always appreciated. You
got add three episodes in return, you get your exclusive
episodes in return and all of that jazz and hopefully

(04:10):
em and like very soon we'll do our four Hands
again as Patreon exclusive.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Yeah, I think over the Christmas.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
Well, see we have to have her muld Wine as well,
that's our other run.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
So can we amalgamate the two and Slappy we.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
Can do that, but yeah, yeah, so we'll get all
the those exclusive episodes out and hopefully little Christmas special
with him as well.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
There's no video this time, right, we don't do Mike,
we could do. I just thinking otherwise. It's like because
you can probably in the visual you see us drink
and all the rest of it when you're just listening
to you just we're progressively sloppier as it goes on,
which might be fun in its own way.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Yeah yeah, yeah, so head on over check it out.
You compare you early if you just want that gift
that keeps saying giving Santa Claus time, you know what
I mean? Get that yearly decryption em and if they
have a crypto encounter, a spooky story experience, or maybe
a ghost encounter, where did they send that into?

Speaker 1 (05:07):
As we enter December? Do you have any three ghosts
that visited you one year? The ghost of Christmas past,
the future? Who's to know? What day is it today?

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Boy?

Speaker 1 (05:19):
Grab the biggest turkey you can. Stories like that Monster
Phones podcast at gmail dot com and we will read
them out on minifolds.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
You check yourself before you wreck your sylf. Also, would
you believe today? M And before we get into the stories,
I found myself. I was in the shower and Spotify
All All Player was on, So I went on to
the next podcast just randomly put on Joe Rohagan and
it was jaw and One.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
How was that?

Speaker 2 (05:48):
Actually? I actually enjoyed it, Like I enjoyed it for
the most part, which is surprising.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Did you listen to the whole thing or.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Just probably about an hour I got through maybe LaVar
the Portuguese vib to wash, No, not like it was
kind of both that Their pattern now with the minute
seems to be kind of like, oh, yeah, the government's fucked,
like on both sides. I forgot it was not that

(06:16):
if you were thinking that this sounds like that's really interesting,
it is an interesting thing.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
No, I think it's being framed by the as the
collapse of the manosphere, I believe some people on the left,
which is a fucking stupid But look, I suppose one
thing is there's an element of authenticity at least that
you're not just doubling down, because I think a lot
of people will probably be looking at the way that's

(06:41):
gone and being like, wow, that's a bit of a
dumpster fire.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Well it's just I think even themselves now, like it
seemed to be that the power from both atolls was like,
oh yeah, it's all fucked like you know, not as
in like society is collapsing, but just like I like
kind of kind of what we've been saying for a
long time, just yeah, whatever's going on is going to
be bullshit no matter what you're doing.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
Really, they mean, just in relation to their own government
politics and stuff, Well, it is like it is it's
really like, you know, I think Trump to be fair
when because he was on both of their podcasts and
I think JD. Vance. I know Jady Vance was on Rogan,
but he was on the ovone as well. But they
did a really good job Trump Advance of coming across

(07:26):
as the fellow who lives next door to you. Yeah,
but obviously when they got into power, all the policies
they pursued were anything but that kind of energy, which
is uh, look, they probably they probably knew what they
were doing. I mean, but the whole thing, even with
your man Marjorie Taylor Green and if you see her
now and what she's coming out with, and you're going,
is this just someone who has a really good pr

(07:47):
person who knows what to tell her to say, or
does she legitimately and authentically has reflected on the way
she used to behave now she's a victim of and
she's going, actually, sorry, I shouldn't have done that. And
it's so hard to figure out, like, are any of
these people in any way authentic or is it is
it just their parrot enough what people want to hear.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
I've just spilled coffee all over my pants. Have an
interesting experience. I've had em interesting experience. I believe I've
spilled coffee on myself twice today. So it's like some
kind of Carson look like.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
A man who is having my day today.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Alright, yeah, yeah, no, I'm tired of today, so let's
get to it. One of our lovely, lovely listeners. Mister
Elijah writes in with a true story that is one
hundred percent unverifiable in his own words, So if you
would like to take it about em.

Speaker 1 (08:32):
And all right, boys, I hope all is good with you.
I thought it was about time I began to share
my paranormal ish tales with you. I'm no William Wordsworth,
more like a Billy Ballocks true. So apologies from my
Can we read that out? Yeah? Yeah, he says, this
is not my words. Apologies for my spastication. Yeah, look,

(08:57):
can I can I read this out? And I've said
many times We'll begin with my favorite but also the
one that everyone tells me is bullshit due to the circumstances.
This takes place in an outer suburb in Melbourne, Australia,
in twenty sixteen. In the recent years, I had become
fast friends with the chap from the Caribbean who had
moved here around the same time as myself, and would

(09:19):
routinely meet after work on a Friday and wander around
the neighborhood, smoking fat spliffs. Often we'd be joined by
other friends, and occasionally we'd get our hands on more
illicit substances.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
Oh what the hell this?

Speaker 1 (09:33):
Particularly this particular afternoon, we had managed to acquire some
MDMA and decided to take a low dose that evening,
heading out for a walk and a smoke. Just lovely
responsible drug use. There. Walking down the moonlit road, we
looked out into a field to our left and both
slowed to a halt. In the field, I saw an

(09:53):
aeroplane scrapyard. The field was covered in different parts of
aircraft wings lent up again huge aircraft bodies. I looked
at my friend and he too was staring into the field.
Not wanting to influence his answer, I asked him what
he saw. He replied, I can see an airplane graveyard. Man, now, yes,

(10:15):
but it's not there. I walked this way to the
bus stop most days, and it's just an empty field.
The response, it's not empty anymore. We stayed for a
few minutes looking from the fence line. For some reason,
we didn't even attempt going to investigate closer. We kept
walking and turning the corner, looking back across the field

(10:35):
from our new angle, the airplane graveyard was gone, and
we both were a little spooked. We just kept walking,
avoiding the topic of whatever we just saw. So did
we get a glimpse into another time, maybe a portal
to another place, or were we just absolutely fried and
sharing a cool hallucination. We'll never know. I suppose, thanks
boys much, love your favorite sensitive light skin.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Yeah, watch that for sensitive lice.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
That's weird, though, you would you it's very because they
both hallucinated the same thing. So they both take these drugs.
If they both hallucinated whatever, you would imagine, all right,
that's the drugs doing things.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
Now.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
You generally don't really tend to hallucinate on MDM A,
do you, And we'd minor stuff like that. It's like patterns,
sense of slights might be nothing mad. You're not going
to see a different, like a whole thing manifest So
you would wonder. Yeah, we've talked about it before about

(11:37):
drugs putting filters on your consciousness in some way or
opening filters in otherwise. Is it possible that it just
whatever way it affected both of them in that moment,
they were able to see this thing that maybe exists
on a dimension that pushes up against hours or something.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, the fact that it was the same time is
very interesting. It's a thing with and funnily enough, I
was only reading literally about it today, just some stories
about the MT. But people see the same stuff really
like oh the machine l Yeah, We've done an episode

(12:15):
on them and then but as well, like a lot
of people report seeing hieroglyphs, which is very interesting because
you're like, so my first thought when I hear that
is like, is like seeing hieroglyphs is that your brain
on these drugs is trying to conjure up like this
kind of ancient imagery for whatever reason, And is most

(12:36):
people's from a reference of ancient like hieroglyphics sort of pyramids,
Like is that just because that's what we associate with that?
Like like if you get what I'm saying, I.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Don't like there's like an archetype.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yeah, it's an archetype that like people are like, oh, yeah,
you know. It's it's like when people think of Britain,
they think of people with not heat and fucking bad
eat and Gregg's yeah yeah, like or Irish I think
about piss heads and fucking fighting.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Sort of stereotype in your DMT experience.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Yeah, that it's like I'm I'm getting in touch with
like this ancient like I'm on his ancient mystical drugs.
Like it's gonna put me in touch with something, and
then you'll just see ancienty because it's part of what
you there's there's definitely something ism to it.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Yeah, and because they say DMT is that potentially conduit
to the other life or the next life or whatever.
But I know a lot of people would say who
are kind of psychoonotus and they'll take various trips. They've
noticed that if you are religious, you might have a
religious themed experience. Yeah, if you're atheists, you might have

(13:45):
a non religious themed experience. Whereas with DMT, there does
seem to be a lot of people reporting very similar things. No,
I've never done DMT, so I have no idea. There's
a guy I meant once he told me about his
experience with the empty but it didn't it was just
like you end up just having sex with some spirit
personal a class. Yeah, and it was deadly not bloomy moke.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Man.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
He didn't say that. No, he wasn't. He wasn't but yeah,
Like so I don't know because and then you know
yourself when you read the stuff on the internet, I'm
always who's it coming from? Where is it coming from?
Who's collating this? Like we don't really have any metric
to really have good data on it. And I'm not
saying there's not. It's just other other forms of hallucinogenics,

(14:34):
depending on what way they're used, can kind of you know,
you can create a journey maybe, but I do think
that's that's set and set in place, like what's around you,
what you believe in, how you approach it.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Yeah, most of them are like in a fucking tent
with a sham and like yeah, exactly the ahasca shit.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
And you're going on a sort of a journey for that.
Like if you took all you ask and went to
the stores, what would happen?

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (14:56):
And now, to be fair, are used to be I
am kind of curious, Yeah, because we don't have a
lot of I would imagine we don't have a ton
of recreational use of d MT and ayahuasca and it
again and all that, Well, you wouldn't want to probably
take them recreation.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
Gregor again, I just see that.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Even his response was annoying.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
That's not everyone was like, of course McGregor will see
Jesus Christ come down and crown him personally.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
Even at the end, wasn't the last line, It's like
we did it, baby. It's like he's learned.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
Loads well apparently, though it's supposed to be like really
good for addiction law. Like, there's a lot of people
that were saying like, like in the comments and discourse,
I was reading online about McGregor doing this addiction treatment
because he has been quite off social media for like
two months, he's still unbeam. Yeah, but people are like, no,
like he has a really really good chance of being

(15:56):
being sober and out long no for sure treatment.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
I saw, like I watched a few documentaries about him
again and all, and yeah, it seems to be really
good for getting off stuff. Like McGregor seemed to be
honest stuff for quite a while, like it looked like
he was issues with addictions. Yeah, it's it's a it's

(16:19):
an interesting one, like it's just ye, his response that
doesn't seem to be much humble about it doesn't, but
again that that could be his foundational setting.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
I think this is potentially controversial take amongst probably some
of our listeners, and it's just I think a lot
of people that with sobriety. I think for some people,
the attraction of becoming sober if your user is there's

(16:48):
a little bit of narcissism about it, and you can
sort of say how great you are and sort of
preach about it, and that actually appeals to some people
like that. The actual act of becoming sort of a
a leader of sobriety is like a leader of drug.
It's like, you know, like I like someone who's like
getting on drink and they're like, I am mister drink,
and that is my personality. I think. I think that

(17:11):
kind of person when they get solber, can be like,
oh I am now mister solber. I think you see
a lot in those in some of the some of
their members and stuff.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
When I was in Canada, let's go thing over a way.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
If anyone sober, it's great, but oh yeah, ultimately they're Yeah.
I think addicts. A lot of addicts suffer from narcissistic
tendencies and then likewise, when it gets alber, some of
that comes out as well.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
And obviously that's not everybody.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
Who struggles with whatever generalized yeah thoughts.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Or but yeah, it's a it's a hard one to know.
Like I remember there's a guy that I used to
work with years ago in Canada and he had been
addicted to crack and all the rest of it. And
I remember he would say to me like, as I
was twenty five or whatever, so I go out on
the weekend and have a load of drinks and like whatever,
probably by any other standards, you were an addict, but
it wasn't. But he'd be like, you want to come

(18:00):
to a meeting? And I was like no, Like he's
like quite, you know, I like, because I just go
out on the weekend, Like I'm not. I'm not getting
hammered all week I just go out on a Saturday
because I'm fucking twenty, Like you're forty two, so you're
he was the age I am now, do you know
what I mean? But it's funny to have that sort
of wherewithal because if he was like, if you want
to come to a meeting, but I was like, yeah,

(18:21):
but I'm not, Like I don't have a problem, Like
you have a problem, Stop making your problem my problem.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
Yeah there is. I've just gone across some people like
that my life is not across the board. I mean,
I suppose I've gotten sober off different substances in the
past and I just don't even care really to talk.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
I wou'd be exactly the same.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
Yeah, I like like, like it's like, obviously you share
your thoughts if someone was to ask you, or if
you were drawn from sort of experience and talking to
someone about it. But like, yeah, buying large. But some
people need that, like the native Like some people need
the community aspect, which is very important for some people,
which I guess it, and some people need you have

(19:03):
to be able to like try and spread the Gospels.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
And ultimately it's good thing if you think about like
you know, yeah, I'm saying absolutely. I think it is funny, Yeah,
because like I often wonder about what it feels like
to be in the body of someone who's like massively
I don't even know, Like I don't. Let's say, for example,
if you're someone who, like weait is a real real

(19:27):
issue for you and you just can't stop housing cakes
or whatever, I'm always curious about. Yeah, I think it's
all of us at times, like we all understand how
nice it is to eat a cake, but then I
wonder sometimes if someone like has some sort of compulsive
thing with say sugary foods, what does it feel like
to them to eat that relative to how I would

(19:48):
feel Because I'm a big fan of sugar.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
I just feels the same. But they just want to
feel that all the time, and it's an addiction.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
Problem, I guess, so yeah, or is it masking something
like even with alcohol you kind of go like, like, I
know how it feels like to get bused and enjoy drinking.
But if you're like really into it, like what does
what I'm always curious about how it feels because I
only know what it feels. I only know what it
feels like as I feel things. I don't know how
other people feel about similar things. I'm always kind of

(20:17):
curious about how we would experience exposure to similar stimulus.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
You know, Like it's just I suppose if I was, like,
it puts in the moment. Obviously eating something where you're
very conscious you're doing it, and your taste like tastes
is a very powerful sense, so like you're just getting
mouth pleasure, you're getting dull pamain constantly.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
Yeah, I guess if like when you meditated, you went
into kind of a you know, a wonderful ecstatic state immediately.
Then probably loads of people will be addicted to meditating.
But the reason we don't do it is because it's
so fucking boring.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
Yeah, well, like most of all, and the other thing
about eating and any other vice is generally it's quite immediate,
which is why people like, if you look at most vices,
this sort of revolver around an instantaneous change in your
mental state, whereas most things that take ages to get
to that, and as like no one wants to do
with the fucking Dave and David Goggins like sort of

(21:14):
you know, point to get into where you can run
fucking across I don't know what he's doing these days,
but like that kind of work to be able to say,
even run a marathon is probably a better thing. Like obviously,
when you finish a marathon, you have this huge sense
of accomplishment and you know, you feel physically well and
you've got a load of dopmain in your light with yourself,
and you work till that point to get there. It's

(21:35):
like this delayed gratification. But the people that generally get
addicted to things don't really have a good concept of
delayed gratification. It's it's instant gratification is all they want,
and that's from gambling to eat and to drinking to
fucking drugging. Yeah, it's just like I feel shited now.
I want to change that now.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
But then some people it's funny that when they do
get off drink or whatever, Jim because the new thing
of life, it's almost like that the routine has to
be changed, and then Jim will like, over the long haul,
give you loads of good dopamine your.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Gin and back again. That could be Yeah, that could
be the SEL, but I think that's it. Yeah. Yeah,
So if you keep eating, you will die and potentially
have an NDA, which is what we want to talk
about right now. So here is a story. I died
for a few minutes and now I am convinced that
there is something after death, which is something we've talked

(22:34):
about many many times before. You can check out. I
believe we did two d episodes perhaps, Yeah, we've also
talked well, I think maybe did we bring up Endy
is the brother Richard? Maybe we could have done. I
think if we didn't, we should.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
We talked a lot to him. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
Yeah, But anyway, it goes on to say I never
believed in anything, not in heaven, not in souls, not
in the stories of people who said they had seen
the light. I'm a psychologist, and I always thought that
consciousness was just a product of the brain until my
heart stopped three years ago. I had cardio respiratory arrest

(23:09):
while I was sleeping. The next thing I remember was
a deep silence, not darkness, not emptiness, silence. It was
so dense that it felt alive, as if that silence
were something, which is interesting. I suddenly had the sensation
of having left my body, but I couldn't see it
from the outside. It was more of an expansion. I

(23:30):
no longer had limits, no time, no space, but somehow
I was still me and there I felt it, a warm,
familiar energy. I didn't see her, but I recognized her
with complete certainty. She was my grandmother. There was no
words or images, just direct understanding, a kind of visible
hug that told me everything is fine, which again is

(23:51):
something we've talked about. Like that is one of the
main in the stories that I read in Nozend books
that Raymond moodew On or whatever like that was what
a lot of people reported was this like over like this.
Out of the people that reported like encountering another being

(24:11):
post death, like some people said it was like an
orb or some people said it was humanoid in shape,
but all of them described this sense of just a
mutual understanding between them and that they were able to
communicate without talk or animating themselves in any way, shape
or form, that they both just knew that, like there

(24:33):
was some kind of just understanding there.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Yeah, like even without speech and there's a feeling of
unconditional glove or something like that. There was them. There's
a really nice thing I heard recently, and it was
about someone was talking about they're talking about their ancestors
and they had a really nice way that I didn't
really consider before. And they said, well, she was like, well,

(24:59):
I have have sons, and you know, she said, my
sons hope to have children, and you know, go on
and on and at a certain point you will never
meet the future offspring, you know, whether it's your grandchildren's
kids or whatever it is. You know, you just you're
not going to live that long. But she was saying, like,
if you consider from your own point of view, you
would be so interested, and you would have such well

(25:20):
wishes for your your descendants ultimately that you will never
be alive to meet because they have a lineage that
like links back to you and the people who game
before you. And I thought it was this really nice
thing just to consider that you probably have all if
there is, you know, some sort of spiritual realm, all
these great great great great great grandparents and stuff like that,

(25:43):
that they're all rooting for you because you know you're
you're a part of them, Which that was quite nice.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Just hoping our room for you when you're puble to
make you after yourself like.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
We've all been there. I mean, they'd probably be going,
come on, you can do it. That's what you were
talking about being in the show. Was in the show
was like where is this going?

Speaker 2 (26:02):
Yeah? I watched an interview and he happkins recently about
his daughter just in general. Yeah, I think that came up. Yeah,
he's one of those people and I love people like
him that are just really flippant about everything and they're
like everything is rubbish or everything is crap, like you
know that. The interview it was like if you drive,

(26:22):
like is your is your maining or like importance to
like acting and I was like, no, it's crap. Basically,
He's like it's all rubbish. You know, it's just entertainment.
You know, people should really take much from it. Rubbish.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
He's a good Welshman.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
Yeah, yeah, it's all about rubbish.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
Really, it doesn't really matter. I want to talk about
it right now.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Yeah, it's yeah, it's funny. He's just he's tall. There's
an interview with Mike Tyson like that as well, where
it's from like the Nightties Are There two housands where
there's like some fucking news reporter from America gone around
his house with him and he's like, look, Mike, your
legacy and he's like pointing to cameras in the room
with all his belts and Mike has some in his hands,

(27:03):
and I's like, what's the idea? And Mike just throws
him on the floor.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
But it was like cabbage, Like he wants him to
have this big something to say, something really bored and
Mike just like, exactly, that means nothing. That's what it's worthless.

Speaker 4 (27:18):
There's like a twelve year old girl, yeah she asked
the question and like his response is so nilistic. She's
just looking at him like these, you know, He's like,
what the fuck.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
It doesn't matter because everything is going to die. You're
going to die.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
It's when for some reason, there's like some famous people
that are really bogged when they get asked about legacy.
They're just like, it's all rubbish.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
I think legacy is sucking, like and Hopkins was like, rubbish, yeah, rubbish.
When I'm dead, I'm dead.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Like yeah, because he was talking about I think it
was Laurence Olivia. Maybe he did a film him that
they were back when and he was I think it
was Larrence Olivia and I think it was him he
was talking about in the story thing. I might have
been a family member. I can't remember, but he said
he went in and he's seen him lay it out leather,

(28:12):
terrest or whatever, and he just sort of said, oh,
that would be me at some point in time. That's that.
And he was like, that's a great way. That's a
great thing to tell yourself. He was like, instead of
pretending that won't be you.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
That's hilarious. I had to see Larrence dead before I
But it's.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
A nobody's right though, because everyone thinks like, oh, it's
not going to be me or it's not me and like.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
Box On, none of us.

Speaker 4 (28:38):
Have I love.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
I love the idea that there's like someone who just
keeps living.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (28:47):
I watched a really interesting film. It was actually one
of the best films I've seen all year, called Train Dreams.
It's on Netflix. Joel Edgerton maybe is his name, but
I could be getting that wrong. But it's basically about
a guy who's born at the end of the eighteen hundreds,
the very end of the eighteen hundreds, and he basically

(29:08):
becomes a lagger and it just it follows its shot
beautifully like you'd love the visuals, and it shot beautifully
in like the forests and North America and stuff and
about making the train rail and all that stuff, and
it just goes through his whole life. It's very sad,
very life affirming and just very beautiful to watch. But
it's that kind of thing legacy, like it sort of

(29:30):
brings up all those quite yeah, garbage, it's but it's
it's a beautiful movie, really really beautiful movie.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
It's garbage, but it's also really entertaining and when like
the mad counts of the world try and entertain the
idea of legacy because it's just usually ends in absolute bananas.
You've got your like Julius Caesar's, You've got your Alex
oh yeah, your adult Hitler's like all these mad CONTs
who are like again this can You're like I want
to destroy.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
And burn everything, But they're the only people who are
really you know, you have your mother, Trees is your.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
But the real they're chasing legacy like them like in
a way you're candies and your they're not so much legacy,
but like the likes of your like mad cons they're
chasing like they want to be remembered for that.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
But that is that is athology pathology of as well
or you're talking about that like wanting people wanting your
name to be carried down the chel time. It couldn't
be more narcissistic, Like if you consider I think it
was Gordos out of years ago. He's like, if you
want to be famous, just shoot up a school. And
even the diminishing the returns on shooting up school are

(30:38):
diminishing now because like there's so many of them, knowing
it's mainstream everyone, but it's a it's a mad thing.
Is that generally people the real like All the people
that you've named are like horrible being mad. But part

(31:00):
of that, I think part of the reason we remember
them is because of that, because it's like the Serial
Killer documentaries. It's so it's so inherent and also so
alien to us at the same time that it makes
us kind of go Jesus.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Like people love mad constantly no matter what. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Like that's that's how like McGregor buying large. The reason
he's still relevant is because he's been a mad contest
he did it was retired, like his his whole story
that my help was really inspired and it was great
and like it's fighting was great. At the fire, it
was like, as an Irish person, you're watching his rise

(31:33):
and you were going, I can't actually believe like Fair
had him because I grew up watching the UFC and
it was like it was Americans and Brazilians, like there
was never of an Irish champion, like and he fucking
does the unthinkable, but then the downfall was so entertained
and even look look.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
At Demetrius Johnson who gets cut because no one is
looking at him, but like, do you ever see that
move where he did a soup lex into an iron.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Bar Or, like he is not mad content.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
Yeah, if Demitrius Johnson stopp playing Xbox and started like
banging hookers and some coke and just being an unhinged individual,
he probably would have been people.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
And I think people like back in the mad cons
as well.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
Like I think that happens to I think to a point,
we liked because McGregor there was he had like a
sort of a semi coherent humbleness kind of thing about him,
and we were enjoying how much of a messor he
was at the same time, but he transitioned from that
into like just a caricature. The whispers were there, there was, yes.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
There was before he was happy and like and he
was in some house party, a random house party in
Liverpool in a treehouse and there's like a video of
them in a tree house with a lot of people
just like small joints or something, and they're like, what
the fuck could be fair?

Speaker 1 (32:46):
I have small joints in a tree there.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
But as well, it's just so absurd, like this is
a fellow that's like probably fighting for a title in
like six months.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
Oh is this when he was like yeah, oh this
is relatively back in the day and just got away
from because I smoke. I suppose smoking joints in the
treehouse is one thing, but banging lines of coke all night.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
But it's like you're you're a famous awards that lete,
like what are you doing in the treehouse in Liverpool?
Smoker giants a lot, but just like you know what
I mean, Like.

Speaker 4 (33:15):
Even just the stuff that happened, Remember the lads baged
to get a video of him.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
Banging his faces like he was setting him. He was
saying like come to me now bringing the phone.

Speaker 4 (33:27):
It's just something that happened, like it shouldn't be happening
into a world, but that a lad can put his
phone over a fence and just like, don't know, it's.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
Bizarre, bizarre stuff. Let's go back to the n d's.

Speaker 3 (33:42):
Grip grip.

Speaker 2 (33:51):
So they were there, they got the energy. The energy
came in. It was the grandmother and they were vibing.
They were they're getting high end vibes with each other. Dennis.
Sound appeared long, constant, like a rising vibration and around
thousands of lights floating beating, each one with a different identity.
And I knew without anyone explaining it to me that

(34:12):
they were souls. When I was about to join them,
I felt a pull, a force that tore me from
that place, a blow, and I came back. A paramedic
was reviving me. My partner was crying. From that day,
everything changed. I'm not trying to convince anyone, but what
I experienced was more real than anything in this world.
And since then, when I accompanied people who were grieving

(34:32):
or close to dying, I sometimes perceived that same vibration
in the air, a deep calm impossible to describe. I
don't know if it was the afterlife or just a
state of consciousness that we still don't understand, but I
know what I felt, and since then I am no
longer afraid of death. I was clinically dead for a
few minutes and I felt absolutely calm. I recognized my

(34:54):
grandmother without seeing her, and I saw thousands of lights
that looked like souls. Since I came, I am sure
that death is not.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
The Yeah, I think.

Speaker 2 (35:04):
I like.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
I always find that when I read those stories, it's
like I feel lighter afterwards. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Same like when I read the ram and Moody book,
I was like, oh yeah, yeah lost ex kind of
good vibes.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
Yeah, I think so you know, and it's it's a
real nice idea that you like, meet your family again,
you know, whoever's gone before Lucky.

Speaker 2 (35:24):
That My kind of approach was, it was like, even
if all of this is just something that occurs like
naturally before you actually die die, like and all these
people were clinically dead or whatever, that's great, Like absolutely,
you know what I mean. So that's what I looked
at it as like.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
A nice kind of cart and call, like if you're.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
Actually going to crock it anyway, but this happens just
before you're going to crock and then the lights are off,
it's a good the passage into that. But yeah, I
mean there are people who would posit a theory that
like we can't in our corporeal form the way we
are with our brains arise and all that, we actually can't.

(36:04):
We don't have the capacity to actually accurately imagine what
we are actually in right now and what this is,
what the galaxy is, what do you like, we just
don't have the capacity.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
Just so, I was watching a video the other day
and it was like, you use a telescope to you know,
like hyper class telescope that shows you the galaxies and all,
but you're actually looking at the light of the galaxies,
which is thousands of year olds, so they don't actually
look like that anymore, but that's the way they look
to you. And if you travel all the way back
to the start of the universe, it doesn't matter which

(36:44):
direction you travel because it all wounds up. So like
if you think about it just in terms of a
north south, east westro there's no point where the universe starts,
like at a long latitude of sort of cosmic proportions.
It's everywhere. Kind of boils your head a bit if
you're like, oh, yeah, you just no matter which way
you walk, if you could get there at light speed,

(37:05):
infinite light speed or whatever, you would get to the start.
But there's no one location of the stay. It's confusing.

Speaker 2 (37:14):
Yeah, Yeah, it's something that we've talked about a good
amount there, and yeah, I don't think in our lifetimes
we're going to have any kind of solid answers to
any of that. It's again, like I said, I am
of the camp that like it's probably just beyond our
comprehension and moder likely always will be. Like I think

(37:36):
by design, we're probably never going to be able to
actually figure out what's beyond the curtain, So who knows
what it may be? Do you know what I mean?
But it's funny to think about. Fun too, think about
So next up em and we have another little Reddit
ghost story, and it's basically from someone who was saying

(37:56):
that they didn't believe in the paranormal, but they can't
really Expelat end of story, saw now that I probably
do believe in.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
Yeah, at least they're agnostic. I'll keep this short. About
eight years ago I rented a house in Aurora, Colorado.
It was my wife, my two sons, and myself. The
oldest was twelve at the time, when the youngest was six.
I worked at home, My wife worked in an office,
and at the time the youngest wasn't in school yet.

(38:25):
This is about twelve in the afternoon, nothing dark or spooky,
bright sunny day in Colorado. The bedrooms were mostly upstairs,
and we had a full basement with a living area,
laundry room, and a couple of spare bedrooms. The youngest
one would play downstairs often as I was in meetings
a lot during the day. One day, out of the blue,

(38:46):
I was answering some emails and I heard what I
can only describe was a blood curdling scream sheer terror.
I ran downstairs to check on my youngest. As it
was very unusual, I assumed he had hurt himself badly
down the stairs into the basement. The stairs down into
the basement were carpeted and nice. There was nothing spooky
looking at all about the basement. It essentially served as

(39:08):
a secondary home outside of lacking a kitchen. When I
got down the stairs, I saw my six year old
running at me. I checked him for any injuries and
he seemed fine. I asked him what happened, and he
said this. The man is scary. He's a scary man.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
What a scary man? Just give him half a chance.
I bet he'll rob you if he can turn.

Speaker 1 (39:33):
The basement has no walkout, you have to come into
the house to access it. I brush it off immediately
as a kid being imaginative. Then I heard a stomping
of feet going up the stairs. Mind you, I was
maybe five feet away from them, and I could literally
feel the steps like somebody was almost jumping and stomping
their feet on each step. The sound followed the stairs

(39:55):
upwards as well. If I had not seen it. Mind you,
there's nobody in the house besides us, and we don't
have any neighbors or guests anywhere close to us. My
youngest son is fifteen now and he doesn't remember it.
It's the only time I've ever experienced something that truly
made me second guess my position regarding the afterlife or
supernatural occurrences. To this day, it gives me chills thinking

(40:19):
about it. It's the only thing in life I have
ever experienced that I can't truly explain what is love.
I would say it's hard to explain love, it is possible.
And hate. I would love to think it wasn't a
I would love to think it wasn't a hallucination, a trick,
et cetera. Something ran up my stairs after I ran

(40:40):
down to check on my son. The weirdest part for
me is that the running up the stairs was as
soon as my son reached me and I started checking
on him to see if he had hurt himself. And
it was very, very violent sounding, like somebody was quickly
stomping on the stairs. And the thing I can say
to that is interdimensional child molesters.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Absolutely black, hard color Cobberence, not that that's exactly like
the experience that I had. I've talked about on her
the I used to when I used to sleep kind
of the front of the house in my mas the
house to be facing the street, like really early before

(41:19):
I got to bed, like I used to step way late,
Like so you're talking like four or five in the morning.
This was drawing my mad bastard days. I used to
hear like someone running fall clip like that, like like
proper hard sprinting, and it didn't really make sense for
where I was like in like geographically you're like, what

(41:39):
the fuck is that? Like, so yeah, that actually that
story has a little similarities there with like a running
sprinting sound. It's fucking scary. That's weird. I mean my
mad heart that too, so like that. Yeah, so the
ads are like either something was making and either someone
was doing it or it was some kind of joint
spook session. But like she she used to she said

(42:01):
it to me one day, I would have blue. She
was like, you heard I fucking thing like that running
Like I was like, yeah, she's just so weird like
at that time, and I was like, yeah, very strange,
like it could have been to someone some mad work
and all hours out for a run, like but like
it was like flat flowed, slap in your face, off
the ground type of run. Like it didn't even sound

(42:23):
like a sprint, like do you know what I mean?
It sounded like just a weird, weird type of thing.

Speaker 1 (42:29):
It's funny. Yeah, I Rememberana on the podcast.

Speaker 2 (42:33):
Someone comment on that. Actually recently they were like, all
the podcast was read, we'll get her back on, yeah,
which was.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
But she told that story about Alana and the sort
of psychic that they got in when she was kind
of when she was complaining about an old man being
in the room, there's a weird spirit thing there. But
it turns out that the day I can't remember if
she said this on the podcast, but basically the time
when they sort of not that they exercised them, but

(43:03):
like this person helped them.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Here.

Speaker 1 (43:11):
But when at about the time say that that would
happen or whatever, My parents were in bed in Wexford
and they heard what sounded like a ball being smashed
down the stairs, like you know, someone throwing it aggressively.
But again there was nothing there, but it coincided with
this thing that was going on with so I wonder

(43:31):
if it's some sort of thing being ripped away or
taken away from an area where it's comfortable maybe or something.
I don't know. It's it's a it's a bit bizarre.
Spooky things are bizarre. How bizarre? But they are? Yeah,
they're strange.

Speaker 2 (43:46):
I am another news I am. I was still watching
me Ploribus.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
Oh yeah, yeah, I saw a trailer. No, I haven't
watched it yet. I saw a trailer for us. You're
enjoying it yet? The Shark four episodes probably?

Speaker 2 (44:03):
Yeah, so far it's yeah, it's it's it's got it's
hooks in me. I'm enjoying it. So hopefully now it
doesn't go cat Well.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
Look, if you're four episodes in it's still flying the flag,
that's usually pretty positive.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
Yeah, you know, and I do want to check out
that Predator film as well, actually bad Lands.

Speaker 1 (44:22):
Yeah no, I'm meant to see it and I just
haven't had a chance.

Speaker 2 (44:27):
It's probably on streaming like that was a week ago.

Speaker 1 (44:33):
Yeah, well, probably get it quick enough. Yeah, funnily enough
now I am. We just finished watching the first series
of Mister Mercedes Our Sea Days, so.

Speaker 2 (44:43):
I thought one you're talking about last week no.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
I only started watching it, so it's like it's based
on the Stephen King novel.

Speaker 2 (44:49):
I believe.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
It's basically about an aging detective who's retired and there's
one case that haunts the very like you know, stock
sort of stuff. But it's like a killer and it
shows the story from his point of view, and it
shows the story from the detective kind of view. But
it does a good job. It's like a I suppose.
Ultimately it's a thriller. It's not very supernatural, or at
least the first season isn't. There's some weird dream sequences

(45:13):
here and there. But yeah, good little show, good little
show speaking of spooky things that have come to an end.
I cleared Alan Wake. I thought it was good. Alan's
parts I found frustrating at times. I preferred sagas it's
a bit more. I know that you get like a
different ending if you play it again, but I won't

(45:33):
be doing YouTube.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
Yeah, let's check out a lot on YouTube. I when
developers do that and make you play through the same
game hard again all the time, and it's just like stop.

Speaker 1 (45:44):
Speaking of which silenthale that you didn't bother you just
YouTube as well, right, because you have to go back
in and Silent Hill left. Yeah, yeah, no, it makes sense. Yeah,
unless you unless you're dying to do another playthrough.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
It's like like the with sientil F, the the sort
of the there is a mechanical reason to replay it
based on the outcome of the first ending and what
you will get from the second ending, like there is
there is a little slight change the game player that

(46:19):
you'll have to make on the second player if you
want that different ending, which is nice and it makes
sense canonically in the story, but no, it's not worth it,
like this, none of us worth it. It's like, are
you gonna tell me I have to sit through the
ship for six hours? Like, no game is that goal.
There's too many games out. You're bugging me trying to
hold me in my game. Pick an end and don't

(46:40):
be doing this half hours. Like well, we'll throw all
of windings and kind of leave it abstract, like it
kind of works with Silent Hill too, to be fair,
because like, but as far as I'm where, there are
like ship endings and Silence Till too as well. Like
I got a really good ending, so a lot of
good ending. There is no good ending. Yeah, but and
then I was happy.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
You got the water the traditional one?

Speaker 2 (47:03):
Was it no water? I don't think it's the traditional one.
I think mine he just drove into the lake or something, right.

Speaker 1 (47:10):
Because I know there's no one where the hand comes
from the back.

Speaker 2 (47:13):
I think it is. I think it is that one.
But that's when he's drowning. Maybe. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:18):
Did you see the trailer for the new movie, at
least a full trailer. Did you watch it?

Speaker 2 (47:23):
I've seen stills just like.

Speaker 1 (47:26):
It's we're watching the trailer. It looks very faithful, except
James looks like more Thanes. And yeah, i'd probably agree.
Now look benefited the down and waiting. The whole thing
is played. It looks it looks like it's staying extremely close.
This is a garbage.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
Legacy. What do you think of your legacy? Yeah, this
is garbage.

Speaker 1 (47:50):
You wonder does what's the fellow gants something gants he's
a fellow directing them.

Speaker 2 (47:56):
I don't know. I've watched. I was watching today and
I was like, oh, right, we do that really differently now.
It was on those things I drew a concusion from.
I kind of forgot that. There's like archival interviews with
Jay or talking out there, like I kind of forget
that like that. Yeah, there's lots of videos of him
being interviewed, like but it was him, And I watched

(48:16):
a couple of other interviews from that era with other people.
So you're talking like sixties, but like interviews used to
be so different back then, Like there weren't then. There weren't.
There wasn't padded, They weren't trying to like they definitely
weren't trying to fluff you. They were like fucking aggressively
quizzing and challenging on like everything.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
And just he's like he's like, I hear, I just.

Speaker 2 (48:36):
Wrote a book, Like no, No, He's like like sparring
them back, like it's like a spar almost like about
like philosophical things and all, Like the interviewer is like
talking about Freud and like talking about his archetypes of
heroes and what way he handles in the story and
like what is their true moral gold and moral bad?
And this this all happens and like in an irregular

(48:58):
ass interview, like and you're like, jeez, I wish it
was more like that now.

Speaker 1 (49:02):
I think there wasn't such a thing as as like
the marketing and the commercial side if it wasn't as.

Speaker 2 (49:08):
It was really refreshing, because like nowadays, you'd expect like
Talking to be annoyed and walk off if he was
about a life now with that, like he'd how dare
you like question me on my problem?

Speaker 1 (49:19):
Or his publicist would say not answering this question question, but.

Speaker 2 (49:23):
Like he's willingly wanting the sparring with him about his
philosophy on the stories, and you're like, oh.

Speaker 1 (49:31):
And it doesn't seem and as well, I think back
then it didn't seem like the interview and interviewer was
doing this as obviously there's no such thing as clickbake
made back then, but it wasn't almost to raise their
own profile. Like it seems like this is how they
actually feel, at least it seems that way relative to
how it is.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
Like a turbo version of like an unimpressed da from
that era.

Speaker 1 (49:53):
I'm trying to.

Speaker 2 (49:54):
Get that across, Like it's it's like there, it almost
feels like the interviewer is trying to legitimize Talking's craft
by challenging him so that he expresses himself and articul
lets himself, and does he say it to a level
to where the viewer is like, oh, that's legitimate, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (50:15):
Yeah, yeah, I get you. Does he sounds because I
haven't seen this. Does the interviewer like is it that
the questions are.

Speaker 2 (50:21):
Hired or like he's quizical?

Speaker 1 (50:22):
But does he does he articulate them in like a
pointed sharp way.

Speaker 2 (50:29):
Musical kind of like it's almost like a debate. I'll
send him after this, But very interesting just to see
that style of interview. Now, maybe who knows, could have
been just that interviewers style, but I'm fairly sure. I've
seen a couple of other interviews from around that.

Speaker 1 (50:43):
I used to see a lot more kind of not animosity,
but conflict. Remember in the even the late night talk
show hosts, this is back in like the black and
white days. There's one where like your man saying he's
going to box him and all starts thrown out a
slur that nowadays the f slur, which is like you know,
no one nowadays, I only I think it's the more

(51:05):
aggressive version of that. But he says that like that
if you say that to be agad, I'm gonna you know,
and it's but it's really like WHOA, what the fun
was going on? But that seemed more normal.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
I think, and I don't know whether that interview was
the case, but in all that, the TV interviews back then,
it was kind of like a meeting of ego. They
had like the talk show host who was.

Speaker 1 (51:25):
He was the man in his own gate keeper, yeah yeah, yeah,
and then you had the actor coming on who was
themselves and egle.

Speaker 2 (51:34):
But it wasn't their boxing ring, if you will, so
they were getting very like.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
It's funny though, because it didn't seem as much pandering.
I mean, there wasn't like it was real. It was
really funny watching an interview with Sidney Sweeney the other
day and it was like, you're one given the interview
was trying to be like make the genes about white nationalism.
She was trying to do that, and Sydney was just
kind of like you could see she has like Sydney

(51:59):
does have that rest bitch face anyway, like she just
looks when she's not smiling, you're like, oh, she's pissed
off and something. But you could see her like just
giving the stair and being like, I don't think that
that's something that we need to talk about. Whatever she
said and she answers the questions, well, to be fair
to her, but you can see your one even who's asking,
like he was getting angry at the one asking the
questions because she was.

Speaker 2 (52:18):
Coming to get like, no matter what she said, no
matter what she says about anything, people are going to
head her because she's looking. She's got a big bag
ditties like people like women especially are just not going
to like her.

Speaker 1 (52:30):
It is mad.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Why do you think that is because she's fing attractive?

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Do you think that's it? Yeah? So why do you
think that they because they could like the girls who
are attractive but like weird and they're like, oh those
ones are grand.

Speaker 2 (52:41):
There was a story I read sometimes listen, I'm talking
to my fucking batty when I said this, But there
was something about women with big ditties are more likely
to be ostracized from all female friend groups quicker either, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:53):
Because women just know how much we like big tea
about them, like that's a treat. Yeah, okay, man, So.

Speaker 2 (53:01):
The guards are like, I get them, the tribe having
around that big he's getting floppers, get her big milk
and sway hid her.

Speaker 1 (53:11):
It is funny.

Speaker 2 (53:11):
Yeah, So like Sydney, the gay was always going to
get trouble like always, no matter what she said, like from.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
Your one, your one, and I wasn't done like a
Sydney Sweeney, you're on dr make make her be porn
making porn, speaking of addiction. Funny enough. Yeah, I haven't
haven't looked at any Grumble for a long I don't
think I'm ever going to go back to Grumble. It's

(53:39):
been a long half a walk lately.

Speaker 2 (53:43):
You're not I'm not.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
I am winking. I'm still winking, like I'm just not
doing it. I'm just not doing women getting anymore. Ever
since they brought that law in.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
The UK, I said, I best prepare myself, yes, the
skin in your face.

Speaker 1 (53:59):
And then you okay. Not Ireland though, isn't know when
I was gone, like so it was backed on all
of this stuff as well right now.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
But that's all common.

Speaker 1 (54:12):
So yeah, actually, if you.

Speaker 2 (54:14):
Common and more wis or not coming, that's it's.

Speaker 1 (54:20):
The imagination's time to shine again.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
It's just super like you.

Speaker 1 (54:25):
I think they do need to do something about kids
comes off the phones, like yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2 (54:32):
Should just be stopped at home, like this is the problem,
like a lot is like should be just down to
the parent to be a fucking parent, not adope, like
it's easy to hand the kid a smartphone and go
hair stopping. I mean yeah, because it's laziness. Obviously, there's
times really have to do it.

Speaker 1 (54:51):
Look a look at this AI video Sydney Sweeney again
done by.

Speaker 2 (54:55):
Who's Who's scar card skin scared just giving he the all.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
It's like, how do you feel That's here's an interesting
pornography question, since none of us can ever watch it again.
If there is a scenario where you have a born
stay that looks like Sydney Sweeney but she's getting getting
undone by a fellow who looks like Skeleton skars Guard,
how does that sit with you? Would you rather a
more sort of a young younger man.

Speaker 2 (55:24):
Do you feel like I don't care? I suppose, yeah,
I suppose.

Speaker 1 (55:27):
I know I can work with it, like you know again,
but like there's a part of me that just like, no, no, not,
there's a part of me that's kind of going. She
probably even though she probably didn't want to do this
at all and only did it for money. It's like
I wouldn't go to work for free. She probably really
didn't want to do with this fellow who probably is
running the company or something.

Speaker 2 (55:46):
Some people. I read an interesting story today of one
who she was an American Asian and her father was
like super wealthy businessman, like proper, proper wealthy, and she
had a terrible childhood under him like that. She was
always like chastising and being a or. He was always

(56:06):
chastising horror and being a ship bag and all that.
So when she turned eddy and she was like, yeah,
I got a film, all the porn films and get
absolutely railed just to humiliate him. And yeah, that happened,
and he was humiliate headed, but also she was humilily headed. Yeah,
because she tried to do the pivot.

Speaker 1 (56:24):
Nobody won.

Speaker 2 (56:25):
Yeah, so like ten years later she tried to do
the pivot and popped up again as an artist, and
then everyone was like, ah, you got a load. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (56:36):
I think that's the thing that I think if you're
going to get into pornography, to do what to upset
your father probably is the ideal scenario to the man,
you know, get get it stuck to you and show
the man. Yeah, it's a it's a weird thing.

Speaker 2 (56:50):
You have to watch watch yourself in these streets.

Speaker 1 (56:52):
Well, it would be so hard to look at porn.

Speaker 2 (56:56):
Will be going back looking in bushes for an old,
rare porn magazine.

Speaker 1 (57:01):
And yeah, this kind of idea that if you look
at a bush long enough, you know when you well,
you know, if you look at like just a pattern,
it starts to like mold and turn, so like you
have to train your mind to make porn out of
leaves like fucking Persian rugs and ship.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
It will happen. It'll be good.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
Well, I'm I'm grand now because I'm obviously off the porn.
The red meat had some ham there the other day,
which is pretty Me and the cat were sharing some ham. Yeah,
I'll be coming in next week. Walk well, right now,
I have my mickey between my legs just to see what.

Speaker 2 (57:42):
Man, what even is man rolling up in this bitch
to sort of.

Speaker 1 (57:47):
Joke rolling get her up. Yeah, she can start to
come at me hard and say, JK, stop with your
hate or JK.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
Yeah, well what was that there is? Will leave it there?
We will, yes, Fox, We will be back on Monday
when we're talking about UFOs. I've been robbed many fulls
of round out. Bye bye
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