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September 15, 2025 34 mins
In this bonus content, Nils Grevillius, author and Los Angeles-based Private Detective, is known for conducting investigations without regard to local or national borders and having the ability to deliver factual information quickly and efficiently from each of the fifty United States and every continent in the world. Nils joined me on the September 11th Rumble live stream. Here is that conversation.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, thank you so very much
for staying with us through that little bit of a
brief break, trying to make a little cash money on
the side, not a bad deal anyway. You want to
thank you again for being here. As always, I appreciate it.
Our next guest was first licensed as a private detective

(00:26):
all the way back in the Before Time nineteen ninety two.
Although I know most of us watching this think back
ninety two.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Wow, that was just like yesterday.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
He got himself with start to detecting while he was
still a soldier. He was working with clandestine security, border counterinsurgency.
Needless to say, his experience ran deep. Later on, he
worked as an agent at Pinkerton's and eventually he decided

(01:00):
he was going to create his own detective services and
he was going to just work for himself at that point.
And I meanwhile, he's collected a lot of stories, but
more importantly for the purposes of tonight's conversation, he has
developed that mindset that creates the noticing the things that

(01:25):
most people don't, the cutting through the minutia, realizing what
details are important, which ones aren't, how to avoid a
tinfoil hat moment and how to move forward with the facts.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the Rumble livestream for
the first time, but he has joined us on the
radio show before Nil's Gravelius Nils, thank you so much

(01:49):
for coming on with us tonight. Before we get started.

Speaker 3 (01:52):
How are you today, Well, I'm pretty good. I'm glad
that they sent the memo down for the Orange shirts
at all. Not a great situation with the assassination of
mister Kirk.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
No, sir, no, sir, not at all.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
What continues to boggle my mind is the fact that
at a point in time, and we know that hostilities
are running high, that even though we want to believe
we can move about certain areas relatively safely, that there

(02:40):
are none of these conservative folks that are even permitted
on most college campuses anymore without some level of security.
How do you miss the basic sweep of checking rooftops
and making sure they stay clear. It seems like step
one if you've got a clear line of sight or

(03:00):
am I just completely off on that, Well.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
They would sure get a lot of what I would
call as a soldier economy of force by scaring the
hell out of people and keeping them from going to
these things and preventing them from actually engaging. If you
think about what the Biden administration did to President Trump
last year, they were denying him venues by rationing the

(03:30):
amount of security that he could get from Department of
Homeland Security for his events. That way, they could limit when,
where and how he could appear. And at a certain point,
if you're going to go out there, you might as
well just go out there and do it. Charlie kirk
knew that he faced danger. He talked about that many times.

(03:53):
The security detail that he had was mostly calculated. I
think Tim to deal with people up close and in
person who might want to milkshake him, like the like
the the Portland, the Portland tuxedo crowd, the men and
there're the men and women with the purple hair and
the N ninety five masks and the the black clothing

(04:17):
of the Blue Clucks Klan. So I want to I
want to all of us to not walk on eggshells.
These are just leftists. Tim Uh. The day that any
of these bastards can carry my purse will be a

(04:37):
sad day. Okay, I'm not going to limit myself. I'm
not going to curtail myself. I'm not going to censor
myself to spare their tender little feelings. Okay, I think
about it. What is offense, tim It is a temporary
emotional injury, and we have been conditioned. It's become part

(04:58):
of the atmosphere that and I have to breathe every
day where we have to think about whether or not
we're going to hurt the feelings. And some man who
likes to wear a skirt and dye his hair lavender,
or somebody else who wants to pretend as if he's
Rosa Parks or something like that. All of these people
exist on a scale of oppression somewhere between Joan of

(05:20):
Arc and Anne Frank or something like that. And we're
all supposed there and they're all mostly most of them
are middle class or upper middle class white people who
have had every single thing handed to them. And to
hell with race is race is trivial in a polyglot,

(05:43):
multi racial republic. Why walk on eggshells around these people?
And one of the reasons that we have lost power
as we think to ourselves, should I go to that
to that event, should I can consider whom I might
run into? Maybe I shouldn't wear this baseball cap or

(06:05):
this T shirt. Somebody might be offended. Well, ten years
ago somebody at some San Jose high school got offended
because a kid wore an American flag T shirt on
Cinco de Mayo, and it went all the way up
the courts and said, yeah, the teacher, the schools can
can kick you out for wearing your American flag on
Cinco to Myo. Well, to hell with that. What about

(06:27):
Quatro to Julio. Okay, this is the United States. Offend them,
offend away, you know, make them kick you out of school,
you know, prosecute me. Please look at our brethren in
the United Kingdom, in Australia and New Zealand and Germany
and France who are already knuckling under to to the

(06:53):
guano gestapo. Okay, that's how else to to characterize it.
It's a bunch of flaming currents and they're still relying
on the testicular fortitude of toxic masculinity to enforce their doctrine. Okay,

(07:13):
they're sending men out with sticks and uniforms to say, well,
you can't do that, Tim and Nils, if you say
that about this group, you're gonna get brought well to
hell with that. Okay, just do it offend away, Okay.
It's not as if they're going to hate you more
than they already hate you.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Right, It's certainly not possible.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
But you know, I've made the point multiple times, the
proper application of the First Amendment guarantees you're going to
have been someone at some point.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Away exactly. That was the whole point.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
There's no reason to protect speech if it's not dangerous speech,
if it's not hurtful speech. There's still clear cut limits,
like you don't go insiding violence per se. But even
that he gets twisted. People don't even understand what that means.
INSIDEI violence means you're literally trying to manipulate people into

(08:13):
going and do it.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
It's not just saying something when you know it's going
to make.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Somebody angry, but this reaction, it's a clearcut situation where
they just don't have a response. In the case of
Charlie Kirk, he was so very effective at making his point.
A man who used no weapon other than words and
his wit and ancient wisdom.

Speaker 3 (08:40):
Well did they not find him threatening disturbing? Aren't there
ten million blog posts and Internet postings denouncing Charlie Kirk
as you know, an agent of Satan or whatever. You know.
These people, Tim, they're the new Puritans. Think about it.
Nobody has ever really good enough for them, and every

(09:03):
day they amp their their standards just a little bit
higher and change what it is that we're supposed to say. Okay,
I'm done with it, and I was done with it
a long time ago. Look at the man occupying the
White House right now. If they had their way, he'd
have been shot last year, or if not last year,

(09:25):
in twenty seventeen, they tried to imprison him, that sort
of thing. And they do that in lieu of getting
a hold of Tim and Nils. Okay, so we might
as well just go about what it is that we're
going to do right.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Right well, I mean, I certainly doesn't seem to be
slowing you down, and it's certainly not stopping me from
doing this. I mean, somebody has to stand up in
it and make sure that they don't win. It's a
situation where if all you're doing is speaking truth, or
if all you're doing is holding up a mirror to

(10:05):
their absurdity, then that's something that needs to be done.
One of the things that has killed me so much
about the last several years is the political less use
of the terminology of compassion. And yet everything that they
do in the name of compassion is hurtful and harmful

(10:26):
to folks, and it's not even close to it. So
they play word games and then they rely on this intimidation,
and then they rely on the violence that can be
brought forth through manipulated, unbalanced individuals.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
Well, how about the serial deterioration of objective reality. We're
supposed to play along with it, and you're supposed to
play along with it a little more tomorrow than you
did today. And if you exert today's effort tomorrow, you're
just not sufficient enough. And what this is is dialectic Leninism.

(11:02):
Vladimir iliah Lenin had this thing of communist dialectics, and
this is how it works. Tim anything that does not
advance the communist revolution is against the communist revolution and
must be eliminated, must be attacked, must be isolated, must

(11:23):
be imprisoned. That sort of thing they're practicing dialectic Leninism
as taught in our university system. Our university system is
now run by Marxists, almost completely from top to bottom,
side to side, and you and I are paying for it.
The other way that they're using this force is through NGOs,

(11:44):
non government organizations. All of the things that your government
cannot legally do to you, they will contract with an
NGO to do to you. You know, they'll make your
phone company take away your internet account if you say
things that you're not supposed to say. They'll make your

(12:05):
bank cut off your checking account and seize your funds
and hang on to them for a while and then
send them to you with a note telling you that
your account is closed and not explaining to you why.
And it's all because of your political outlook. So they're
using proxies to exert the force that they can't legally

(12:27):
have in government. And then on our side, I'm going
to quote and Culture on something and Coulter said about
twenty years ago brilliantly that the Republicans only hold office
and barely while the Democrats hold power. And what makes
Donald Trump so radically different from all the other Republicans

(12:51):
is that he exudes power, he uses power deftly. When
he was out of power quote unquote between twenty one
in January twenty twenty five, he still held power, and
they still feared him, and he was still able to
marshal the troops. When he calls this the Golden era,

(13:13):
he's paraphrasing met him. I started talking saying this in
twenty twenty three. This is the most electifying, electrifying ear
of American politics since Abraham Lincoln's assassination. Ronald Reagan was
damn good, but the Bush Republicans couldn't get away from

(13:34):
him fast enough. The moment that Ronnie Reagan retired, George H. W.
Bush was talking about a thousand points of Light and
giving hand jobs to the Democrats or whatever in Congress. Okay,
they were always happy to sell out their voters. Mitt
Romney didn't want to be President of the United States.

(13:56):
Mitt Romney wanted to be CEO and then hand it
down to some you know, hand chosen success or something.
Do you realize that Marco Rubio, used to be his acolyte,
had even converted converted to Mormonism. Not that there's anything
wrong with Mormonism if that's your faith. He he cotton
to Mitt Romney so much, and it's at a certain

(14:19):
point he saw what Romney really was and backed off
from the man and reverted to Roman Catholicism, that sort
of thing, and Marco Rubio has grown the hell up,
Look at Marco Rubio. Now nobody steps on Marco Rubio.
The man's like a thorny weed, and he's on our side. Okay,

(14:40):
nobody would ever call Mitt Romney that. You know. Mitt
Romney is the guy who buys and sells shares in
US and doesn't tell us how it's been repackaged. And
you know, it's like a private equity outfit bought the
last mill in town. It's the only job that you
can have. And one day some guy in a suit

(15:03):
that you've never met before comes in and says, well,
I've got really interesting news for everybody. You're all being
laid off. We sold the mill to some outfit in Beijing,
and here's a subway gift card, thank you for your
twenty eight years of loyal service to the company. That's
what a met Romney is. He's half a millimeter different

(15:24):
from Barack, from Baby Lord Hussein o Barack Hussein Obama. Okay,
they might as well be two sides of the same coin,
one that every time you drop it in the machine,
it clunks them and falls out the bottom, and you
never get a Snicker's bar for your trouble, and when
you bet over to try to get your money, it
shocks you or something like that, and then you get

(15:45):
deported to a country you never heard of from your
own country. Okay, that's what we've been dealing with. John
McCain was the single greatest ass set that the New
World Order and the Democrats held in the United States
Senate for thirty two years. You know, God bless his daughter.
I know she loves her father, and I don't blame

(16:05):
her for loving her father, but he sold us all
out over and over and over again, the shit given
political media with Buffer's balls, and say, what a wild
maverick of a man. He was a war hero. Right
in two thousand he ran for president. They loved him.
Two thousand and four, they kept fanning the flames, hoping
he'd run against Bush and show but each Bush a

(16:27):
lesson all this stuff. The very moment that John McCain
was made the nominee of his party, they turned on
him and savaged him, and he had no idea what
had happened to him, and he blamed his running mate
Sarah Palin. Well, let me tell you something. If he
hadn't had Sarah Palin hitched to him as his vice
presidential candidate, John McCain would have won in a forty

(16:50):
eight state landslide. We would have we would have been
naming every post office in kindergarten in this nation after
baby the Lord of Husseino and his wife or something
like that. Yeah, John McCain was as dumb as a
bag of hammers. And it wasn't a lack of bandwidth,
and it wasn't a lack of testicular fortitude. The man

(17:12):
had nuts. Okay, it was arrogance. It was sheer arrogance.
He forgot the reason that he was elected in the
first place. Right. He didn't want to be a senator
the president. He wanted to be an admiral and the
captain of a ship and you know that kind of thing.
But he was so badly damaged from Vietnam that he

(17:33):
never really, you know, came back from that. And it's sad,
you know, the man started out having every ingredient of
a good political leader and went down the toilet in
three easy turns. That's all. That's that's all Nils Gravellius
has to say about that. I'm sure that somebody is
going to be irritated with Maybe maybe they'll send a

(17:54):
tranny over to blow my head off later, who knows, right,
I hope they get Tim. They'll think I'm Tim because
I'm wearing the orange shirt. Let me get my seventy
six baseball cap on. Maybe that'll be enough cover that.
You know, It's like that joke about if you encounter
a big grizzly bear in the woods, you don't have
to run faster than the bear. You just gotta have
to you have to run faster than your hunting buddy, right.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Right, all right, I tell you what, Nils. At some
point I'm waiting for you to tell us how you
really feel. But I'm digging it. Yes, let's try to
circle back around to this ongoing investigation. Though from what

(18:37):
you've seen here, is there anything investigatively that you would
be doing right now and trying to identify this person
of interest beyond what you've seen happen at this point
or do you think this is being done adequately?

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Yes? Okay, So Tim, the Bureau has known the assassin's
name since about four or five o'clock this morning. They
have the rifle. It's DNA off of the rifle. It's
not terribly clear if it's a woman or a man.
It might be a transvestite female to male. They've got

(19:20):
a tentative identification on four Chan, and I'm not going
to mention the name that they've tentatively identified looks pretty
close to me. Let's find out that person's social media
has been scrubbed off of ass book or Facebook or
whatever they're calling it today. All right, it's another transvestite.

(19:46):
These people are intensely sad. Let me put something out.
They get a lot of attention when they say I'm
a woman who's really a man, or I'm a man
who's actually a go go dancer at a bar, they
would I'm not the postman. Okay, So they get a
lot of attention, and then the attention fades and they

(20:06):
have to do something to up the attention. So it's
like a Ponzi scheme in that way. It's an emotional
Ponzi scheme. When you start bombarding a young person with
the foreign hormones, okay, you can make them crazy. And
then one of the characteristics of the psychopath tim is

(20:27):
the need to be treated specially just to feel normal
and that goes to pathological egocentricity. Right, And the way
that Tim treated me on Monday was okay on Monday,
but today is Thursday, Right, Tim isn't treating me well
enough on Thursday. I've invented a new set of pronouns,

(20:48):
and I want Tim to use my pronouns and every
single thing. Otherwise I'm going to throw an absolute fit
and I'm going to report Tim to all of my
friends on Reddit and that sort of thing, and Tim's
going to lose his scholarship, and you know whatever. That's
what we're dealing that's the mentality we're dealing with. This
person who assassinated Charlie Kirk was probably choking on tide

(21:13):
pods ten years ago on YouTube. Okay, do you think
I'm joking? Right? Or maybe maybe they were so deprived
that they got the generic laundry pods from Costco because
their pats wouldn't get them the real thing. Can you
imagine the deprivation of that, the horrible deprivation. These are
middle class kids who have been poisoned by social media,

(21:37):
by high concentrate cannabis, by searchable internet porn. The males
are more vulnerable to this than the females. But the
females are also indulging in searchable internet porn, which is
like human software, anything that short circuits the process of

(21:58):
overcoming the nat objections of your pure group opposites. If
you're a man or a male, the way you mature
is by overcoming the objections of females. If you short
circuit that with prostitutes, pornography, maybe a really hot you know,

(22:22):
eleventh grade history teacher who takes you in her car
behind the gym team. I know it happened to you
several times. Look at you, man, they destroyed you. Look
at you. It short circuits the process of maturity. And
how can you define maturity in a male? Okay, I'm
not a psychiatrist. I'm not Carl Jung or Sigmund Freud,

(22:44):
but I'll tell you this. A man can separate what
he thinks from how he feels and use one to
color the other. You don't want a man who is
devoid of emotion. That's often what autism seems to be,
where it's entirely rational and it's based just on you know,
the needs of right. I can get that from AI,

(23:07):
and AI is one of the problems too. I can
get everything I want from my phone. Here, I've got
this black box that tells me I'm okay. And when
I when I beat up Tim after school, it tells
me because of the number of clicks that I got
of liking the video, that I'm that I won, that
I'm the king. Right. So getting back to the maturity process,

(23:28):
anything that short circuits maturity, where I can't separate what
I think from how I feel and it's all the
same thing, that's a real problem, and it becomes pathology,
all right. Now, a psychopath is created from a normal
young person through a process of random reward. Okay, sometimes

(23:51):
random reward is just getting away with not being beaten
every night. That's that's a version of random reward. And
that's what a had home environment would look like like
if Tim was my father and when I came home
from school in the third grade, Tim beat me, you know,
at random intervals with a leather belt or maybe you know,

(24:13):
a bowling pin or something like that. To not get
beaten is the random reward, and that's how you make
a psychopath through trauma. In this case. Now people have
the black box, right, they're carrying around the idiot box
with them all the time. What if the random reward
comes from my telephone and I could have a really
good home environment like Brian Koberger hat with two parents

(24:37):
who were reasonably normal healthcare professionals, and he still became
a psychopath, didn't he an MDSO psychopath? Like an APEX
level predator psychopath, just from you know, social media and
that sort of thing. We have a real cultural problem

(24:59):
in this country. The FBI is doing a very good
job on this case. This is a sort of thing
that would have been a three month man hunt fifty
years ago. And we're bitching, carping, pissing, and moaning because
here we are, you know, thirty hours later, and we
don't have this creature and irons yet they'll be an

(25:22):
iron soon enough, all right. And the FBI is no
longer led by Elvis Chan and Peter stroke Job and
is on Lisa Page and that minting mendacious fuck with
Andy McCabe. It's led by real men. It's led by
Cash Patel and Danny Bongino and a few other people

(25:47):
we you know, we don't interact with on a daily basis.
The Bureau has turned back into the Bureau for the
most part. Yeah, sure they have a few more hidden
assholes to eject from this system. They all seem to
be tossing themselves out. Like Jim Dennehy who was leading
Southern District of New York, who didn't want to turn

(26:08):
over to ag Bondy all of the Epstein information. He
quit quit the FBI the next day. Can you imagine
how hurt he was? How but hurt Jim Denny he
was eh called himself a marine at one time too. Yeah, shameful, right, So, yeah,
I think the bureaus on top of things, Utah law enforcement,

(26:31):
the Utah State Patrol, they're pretty starchy men and women,
they really are. They have a lot to protect. Utah
is a beautiful state and they don't screw around. Now,
there's some pockets of idiocy in Utah, as you could imagine.
They've got a lot of leftists in Salt Lake who

(26:52):
you know, they don't care about the historical proportions of Utah.
They just want to live off of the fat, you know,
like all the other parasite glass democrats, you know, the
NGO employees and the government employees, and you know, it's
daycare for people with garbage degrees from state funded asshole factories. Tim,

(27:14):
that's what you know. Municipal employment is for seventy percent
of these people are otherwise unemployable. I'm going to go
out and I'm going to get like an eight year
bachelor's degree in transformative pre Columbian homo erotic transvestite poetry.
And it's going to cost me a quarter million dollars

(27:35):
to get this. You know, on paper, it's paper money,
and paper money really doesn't have any value. That's where
the new money theory comes from. You know, Lexi Banana
and Mom Donnie, you know, their ideas of the value
of money come from that, from their experience with handling
your money and my money. And then they'll get some

(27:55):
moron like Brandon in office who will threaten to forget
give all of their loans, that sort of thing, but
to buy their vote and perpetuity by forgiving the loans
for these garbage degrees. Well, what do you pay people
for with these garbage degrees. The way to fix the
education system is to ruthlessly enforce civil rights on the

(28:16):
college campus. So get going back to the beginning of
our discussion, If Tim and Nils can't go to college
without getting assaulted by men and skirts because of their
political views, then there are no civil rights on campus
that needs to be enforced. The other way to fix
it is to drain the money the money train, okay.

(28:38):
And the way that you do that is you make
it so that students who get talked into taking stupid
loans for stupid degrees, for stupid purposes can bankrupt the
debt out and banks no longer have the federal guarantee.
The bank has to make the same sort of lending
decision that GMAC made. Do you think you could go

(28:59):
get yourself a Cadillac El Dorado when you were eighteen
years old and put down, you know, maybe two percent
on the on the price of that Cadillac Eldorado. I
want I want mine to be pink and parlesson with
tuck and roll upholstery. I want every single James Brown
CD preloaded in this effing thing. I want it so

(29:19):
low to the ground that a cockroach can't crawl out
from under it. And I want GMAC to fund all
of it. And if I'm not happy with it two
and a half years later, after I run it under
a garbage truck, I get to just walk away from
the loan, the car and everything else and get another one, right, okay,
So that's what we've been doing as a student lending.
Make it so the students who are strapped with horrendous

(29:42):
student debt can bankrupt it. Let the banks take it
up the ass instead of the other way around. A
little bit, okay, and they'll make better decisions. When Nils
comes in and says, oh, I want a degree in
underwater basket weaving and nude photography, you know of se
your citizens on Mars, and the bank will say, what

(30:04):
did you just say? You know that kind of thing.
If you're going to get a degree in welding, will
consider it. How about you get a degree in mathematics
and engineering, Nils, you seem to be able to do that, okay,
but we're only going to lend you enough money for
two years. You're gonna have to pay for the other
two yourself. That's your down payment. Right. Yeah. It's tough, okay,

(30:25):
but it's better than sitting there ten years afterwards with
two hundred thousand dollars in student debt and you're having
to kiss the ass or some character like Brandon to
get it forgiven. You don't why not be a man
about it, right, even if you're a woman, you could
be a man about it. Lots of women are men
about things now anyway. You've probably noticed it. They're pretty
iron asked, aren't they? All right? And the men are

(30:47):
at the opposite. They're candy ass, they're not men, they're males, okay,
and they have a tendency to recreate themselves with women
or iron I don't know what. It's a whole new
world to him.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
It's amazing, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
It's a bit confusing at times there. You're absolutely right, Yes,
I know what I am.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
Okay, I have a pretty good idea what you are?

Speaker 2 (31:10):
You know, sir? All right, sir.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
What's the latest update on The Last law Man?

Speaker 3 (31:18):
It's coming out in June of twenty twenty six. I'm
really looking forward to having the book out. I'm going
to do a book signing tour. I think where are
you based out of tim I'm out of Tennessee, Tennessee,
Eastern and Western Tennessee.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Man, I'm out here in the East Tennessee, pretty close
to Knoxville.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Oh right, there's a man in Eastern Tennessee named Jeff
Miller at Hillbilly Firearms in Mcminville, and that man is
like the Michelangelo of gall Hill Rifles and vallmet rifles
in the United States. I would love to visit Jeff Miller.

(32:00):
He was also a tank turret mechanic and fifteenth Cavalry
at Fort Benning in the same brigade that I was in. Now,
when this book is out, I'm thinking I might have
to go to eastern Tennessee and say hello to a
few people. My great grandfather was captured I think in
Chattanooga during the Civil War from an Ohio regiment and

(32:23):
spent a year and a half in Confederate prison camp. Right,
But you know, I'd love to see Eastern Tennessee again.
I've been to Nashville, I've been to Franklin. It'd be
grand to get out there. The book is my professional
memoir about chasing down criminals of every type that you
could imagine. As a private operator, I was a Pinkerton agent.

(32:47):
I put myself through police Academy at Riohando. I got
both levels of Police Academy certificate. I took an AOT
Advanced Officer Training Certificate with Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation.
I lived in Iowa for four years. Iowa was fantastic.
But the only criminals in Iowa, Jim, are the political class.
The farmers are pretty honest guys, Right. That surprises you, right.

Speaker 1 (33:12):
Yeah, I was about to say, all right, obviously, we're
gonna have to have you back on again sometime real soon.
It's always a blast happing you on. I appreciate you
more than I can say. Thank you so much for
being with us tonight.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
God speak to make sure I get the correct memoir
again next time, and I'll dress up to the occasion
and I'll try to find an old seventy six baseball
cap or something. I probably have something like their hunting
cap around here somewhere. I know you're surprised that anybody
in Los Angeles would know what hunting is. And it
doesn't it doesn't involve trolling for transvestite prostitutes on Hollywood Boulevard.

(33:51):
All right, keep yourself out of trouble, young man.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
I'll do my best. You do the same, sir. Thank
you for that, all right, And gentlemen, that was Nils
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