Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast. Unjustice your mojo.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Now the age what sixty? He's just going to break
back radio with an attitude. This system that we love
is broken.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two
hours of coming sense that liberty of justice for all
is a minuretic behavior.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
I want to, you can't, and when you do, you
wish you did.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
This is your Daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Yep, it's summertime. The CEOs must fall. Look it's fake.
It's not us. We didn't choose it. Faith did the meme?
I retreat. I look at it. Man, people are too soon.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
You got Louis what was his name?
Speaker 3 (01:02):
MANGIONI over there, you've got Ocean Gates last summer. You
got the Shamu situation in the summer before that, I guess,
And and again. The the Coldplay kiss cam scandal continues
to unfold with a with a strange twist on it
today that I just was made aware of moments ago.
Speaker 4 (01:25):
Really, what's the twist.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
Strange? It's the twist that she she knew, how a
little twist that she did.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
I see what you did.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
That's what made her different? That's uh, so you got
the was it Andy Byron? Is that his name? The
dude astronomer CEO? Who was He's been now forced to
resign from astronomer a DA data analyst company. And then
you've got the same company. It's Kristin Cabot. The the H,
(01:56):
the H that's in the handbook anyway. Guess who has
not been fired?
Speaker 4 (02:05):
Who has not?
Speaker 5 (02:06):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (02:06):
The HR person?
Speaker 3 (02:07):
Oh No, nope, she's still there. She is still there
and she's been on leave. But it's possible she could
end up suing the company.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
You know who got who? You know who did get fired? Though?
The little the little assistant or whoever it was that
bought their tickets to the Coplay concert? Oh?
Speaker 3 (02:31):
Is that person out?
Speaker 4 (02:32):
They fired her and made her sign an NDA apparently
because she was complicit.
Speaker 3 (02:41):
She's like, I was at the girl in the picture.
Speaker 4 (02:43):
The one that was smiling off to the side. Yes, miss,
she thinks it was yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
Because I thought, oh, because she was just all grins
and he.
Speaker 4 (02:51):
Was all grins and happy. She didn't.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
That's a little weird because they were in there, like
they weren't they in a private little box with.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
Other who knows.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
So Kristin Cabot has not been fired because it's what
did she technically? What rule did she break at work?
I mean, technically she was seduced by the CEO of
the company in a power speare, which means her supervisor.
Speaker 4 (03:26):
If they fired her and she.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
Is still murky, they say, According to the New York Post,
her fate at the data science company still murky though
employment lawyers through. Of course, they did employment lawyers through
cold Water on any possible sexual harassment claim or similar claims.
In a real world, big company, you can't just fire
somebody because the headlines are ugly. There are contracts, internal investigations,
(03:54):
legal issues. If HR greenlit what happened with Coldplay and
there is a hoarding paper, trail heads will likely roll.
What does that mean if HR greenlit what happened with Coldplay?
Speaker 4 (04:06):
That's a good question. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
Yeah, she took the job, by the way, only in November,
so if this was makes makes one wonder if in
fact bob. But they wish this story would just go away.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Although the new ceo. The new CEO says the story
has been really good for astronomy.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
Well, it's astronomer so Astronomy. I want to start with
making sure people know how to get what the name
of the company is.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
It's been really good for Astronomer apparently.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Uh huh uh. She was one half of the scandal.
Astronomer later publicly apologized excuse me, publicly confirmed the investigation
of the incident is underway. Both she and Cabet are
married to other people. Now it's possible. As Jeffy said
on What to Chew, the was it to and the
(05:01):
large chewing, the fat cheoing, the wiener chewing, the something,
I don't know what it is. Uh that that podcast
thing he does. Uh? He said. Maybe her husband was
in in the know. Maybe he's like, oh yeah, whatever,
I know what's going on. Pete de Joy, the company's
co founder, I said it's been an unusual and surreal
(05:23):
issue for Astronomer workers. Does make you wonder what happens,
like what what what are they talking about? Because you know,
he you can't just sit openly around and talk about it.
So it's like.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
Do you see, Well they're all whispering, but you know,
the day goes on like of.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Course, while I would never have wished for it to
happen like this, astronomer is now a household name, he said, Yep.
Events in the past few days have received a level
of media attention. A few few companies. The problem is
what do they do? It's a good question. Yes, that's
why I asked it.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
Maybe they do astronomy. Nope, nope, Okay, No, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
Yeah, it's that's that's the problem. It's it's great for
the name astronomer. Eh. I would have picked a better
name for the company. But hey, what do I know?
He added, It's difficult to conceive how she could continue
in her current role. Why why you WHOA? I wouldn't
be saying that, mister ceo, mister new ceo. Yeah, she
may have been very good at her role and she
(06:29):
was harassed by the CEO.
Speaker 4 (06:30):
Must have been very good at something, because that dude's
wife wife wasn't bad looking.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
H He's all right.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Come on, dude, this chick here is kind of fugly.
You've not seen the other pictures of her, evidently not? Yeah,
have you looked them up? Nope?
Speaker 3 (06:53):
Oh I have. Yeah. First thing you do is go
and say, okay, is the is the side piece hotter
than the wife?
Speaker 4 (06:58):
Is she? Really?
Speaker 3 (07:01):
You can make the argument maybe there's more to the
story from her. The founding partner of Whigdor LLP, said,
that's definitely possible about how it came to be that
they're at this concert and they're embracing. It's a short video,
so it's hard to know exactly what's going on.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
Yes, I told Misty, I said, if they had not
moved from the position they were in, yep, chances are
not a damn thing would have been Yep.
Speaker 3 (07:28):
Yep. He'd still have his six figure salary or seven
or whatever it was, and she wouldn't be doing whatever
it is that she's doing now. She'd have to demonstrate,
although he did caution as he if it was consensual
sexual harassment, suit would be a stretch in fact that
(07:50):
Jerry might laugh out of court. Really being embarrassed on
a jumbo tron isn't the same as being harassed at work.
They misunderestimate the power of a shark of an attorney.
She'd have to demonstrate their relationship was unwanted, and I think,
(08:11):
based off of what I've seen, that would be difficult.
Does he not know that the Internet is nothing but
a challenge that now that he said that, now that
he's put it out there. They're probably gonna end up
being sued into oblivion by her. You know, I was her,
(08:34):
I'd be the first thing I've been thinking about, would
it not? You come on, well, and not even the
release of all of these documents about MLK has done anything.
You'd think that that would knock an affair right off
the front page. But nope. We get two hundred and
(08:55):
forty thousand pages of records that have been under our
court impost seals since nineteen seventy seven, when the FBI
first gathered the records and turned them over to the
National Archives and Records Administration. Quarter of a million pages
on what was likely another government hit on a private
(09:17):
citizen in this case. And does that knock the affair? Nope.
I can't even do it because people are just they
want the dramas. They want the drama. Dude, there's no
drama in mil case stuff anymore. I got a text
that one cannot misunderestimate. Oh yeah, watch what happens with astronomer.
(09:40):
You see misunderestimation. In a statement that was released yesterday,
the Martin Luther King's two kids, Martin the third and Bernice,
said their families their father's killing has been a captivating
public curiosity for decades. The pair emphasized the personal nature
of the matter and urge that the files be view
within their full historical context. I don't know what that means,
(10:05):
no idea what that means, but I mean it would
be rough if your dad is you know, was murdered,
obviously and the subject of many conspiracy theories right at
least one of which is probably true. The dump was
(10:25):
coordinated by the Department of Justice, the FBI, the CIA,
the National Archives under Executive Order one forty one seventy six.
It includes details from the FBI's.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
Murkin really murking.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
Every now and then, and it's happening more and more often.
There are flashing red lights that we live in a simulation.
Here's another one, the details from the FBI's Mrcan investigation
short for Murder of King Uh huh, the CIA files
and the Department documents on assassin's James Earl Ray's extradition
(11:04):
from the UK. Did you know that he had to
be extradited from the UK?
Speaker 4 (11:07):
No I.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
Initial reviews by historians and journalists indicate no major bombshells
that rewrite history, as many core facts about the FBI's
efforts to discredit King were already known, and sensitive wiretap
recordings remained sealed until twenty twenty seven.
Speaker 4 (11:25):
Why didn't they get released?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
And what difference is two years going to make? That
would be what fifty yeah, fifty years, sixty years? Yeah,
so sixty years later we're going to get the wire taps.
Several details have emerged as surprising or noteworthy based on
early analyzes, sparking renewed discussions about government overreach, potential conspiracies,
(11:54):
and his personal life. The CIA was involved in the
man hunt for Ray. I don't think that's surprising. The
intensified FBI surveillance tied to King's anti war stance. He did,
he was opposed to the the Vietnam War. No, not
a surprise. Details on King's personal life, he what do
(12:16):
you know who? He was a smoker and he didn't
want kids to know he was a smoker. Do you
know who the guy was that when when King is
laying there on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel dying,
do you know who was reached in and got his
cigarettes and got him out of there so he wouldn't
be found on his body. I've heard this story before,
(12:37):
Jesse Jackson.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Yes, yeah, well he knew he was there. I didn't
know he was the one that reached in and.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
Grabbed his He was the one who reached in and
got the cigarettes. So wouldn't be uh used. And the
other day when I told you about the Hoover building,
about the the the the beginning of the FBI, and
how it's been a complete crap show since day one,
I said, Herbert, who it wasn't her is j Edgar?
Speaker 4 (13:02):
Don't know what?
Speaker 3 (13:02):
And when I said Herbra's like, that's not right. But
j Edgar Hoover, the cross dressing fruit loop. That's when
I was the head of the CIA. Yeah, excuse me,
ahead of the FBI.
Speaker 4 (13:12):
You had said something about Hoover being a cross dresser,
and I said, who was a cross dresser? Yes, I
didn't know that. I didn't know that j Edgar Hoover
was a cross dresser.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
Yep, he was. The dude was a freak. And yet
his name remains on the FBI building in d c h.
The records reiterate that of the FBI's effort to discredit
King with allegations of extramarital affairs, and other private matters
gathered via and this is probably the stuff that his kids,
don't you know? And who would we get it? People
(13:45):
are fallible. All this other information that was gathered by
invasive surveillance of his home and hotel rooms, while not
entirely knew, the dump does include specifics the King's family
views as privacy violations and unfarified, unverified dirt meant to
undermine his legacy. The words that Martin Luther King spoke
(14:07):
can't be undermined here the truth, the truth can't be undermine.
What he said was absolute fact, the way that people
should be judged by the content of their character and
not by the color of their skin. Can't you can't
dirty or sully that because the man was fallible, because
(14:27):
the man had issues, that he who was without sin,
cast the first stone. The new audio and family interviews
were also included. A notable inclusion is the audio file
of law enforcement interview with James excuse me with Jerry Ray.
That was James Earlray's brother, offering fresh insights into the
(14:48):
assassin's background and potential motives. Fascinating thing was that Jerry,
Now I've got his brother's name stuck in my head,
James Earl Ray was in Uh, double check this. I
want to make sure he was at Riverbend Prison, Yeah,
(15:11):
which was about as the crow flies, six miles from
my house in Nashville.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
And I knew that moving when we moved there in
eighty nine. I think I knew that. And it was
one of those again you don't You don't understand and
appreciate certain things about your life until many years later.
But he was right there in Riverbend Maximum Security Prison.
He was transferred there after serving time at the Brushy
(15:41):
Mountain State Penitentiary and the Tennessee State Penitentiary. He spent
the rest of his life at Riverbend, where he died
back in nineteen ninety eight. I remember that. I remember
him dying as well. Things things that you don't pay
any attention to while they're happening, that in later life
you go, huh, ye should have been paying more attention.
(16:02):
Not that it made any difference, but you know, if
you want to be a part of the program today,
the hashtag to use is what I learned today, and
you can tag us in any of your posts over
on the social media that being at real Brad stags
at Real Ron Phillips over in the Rumble chat room.
(16:22):
What he didn't know he was a cross dresser. I
know coffee room, Uh, coffee croom oca. You don't have
all you don't know all the dirt on these people.
That's the best part of the history Known Hoover. Doc
Magneto says Known Hoover was a cross dressing freak for years.
Does it take one to know one? Jody one twenty
(16:44):
one getting ready to get stock for making some sweet
barbecue sauce tomorrow. Not my dog says The cigarettes was
just a fib to cover for Jesse smearing King's blood
on both arms for the cameras. Interesting. Chenzo won twenty five.
I'm so tired of hearing about Jesse Jackson. Growing up
(17:05):
near Chicago, the news always covered him. You won't be
hearing about him much longer. I don't think Jesse Jackson, Yeah,
he doesn't know if it's Tuesday or chocolate right now.
And if somebody missed uranus joke, did they? I see
(17:25):
how mister uranus joke? That's a Cenzo she brings lawsuit
company gets discovery or of email. Oh w Cuncle says
she Brings lawsuit company gets discovery of her emails and texts. However,
being if you're in the HR business, you know well,
and not to say that she did cover the right stuff,
(17:51):
but you would think that she would be smart enough
to know what to keep and what to delete, right,
I mean, you'd think that doesn't mean she necessarily did it.
All Right, So we've got the Martin Luther King thing happen,
We've got all those documents out there being dumped. We've
got the continued Epstein drama that we'll never get to
(18:16):
the bottom of. It'll never happen, I mean, will it.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
Will we ever see anticipate anything earth shattering from the
grand jury transcript if that gets released.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
No, will we ever know a damn thing more than
what we know today? Probably not, which really sucks. And
that's the truth. There's too many entities involved. It's just
not gonna Nothing is going to really change in that
(18:55):
in that sense. Uh, where did he go? We lost
another one? Well, we found out about it yesterday afternoon.
Apparently it happened on was it Sunday?
Speaker 4 (19:09):
Sunday? I thank you in Costa Rica.
Speaker 6 (19:15):
You were at the forefront of the black family that
changed the way America looked at black people.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
It was amazing because no one expected it. You never
think it's going to hit number one.
Speaker 7 (19:28):
I mean, we saw it straight to the top.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
It was a wonderful thing, making history.
Speaker 6 (19:34):
Yet in the moment, Malcolm was reportedly on vacation with
his wife and eight year old daughter in Costa Rica
and accidentally drowned when a rip current dragged him deeper
into the ocean. The police report says onlookers at the
beach tried to help, but Red Cross workers declared him
lifeless and his body was sent to the morgue. His
last public appearance June eleventh at Sirius XM Studios in
(19:57):
New York, What Did I Do Now? Malcolm was best
known for playing Bill Cosby's son, theo Huxtable on all
eight seasons of The Cosby Show.
Speaker 8 (20:06):
When people see this, they don't know they've dealed with
the man.
Speaker 3 (20:10):
How does it feel, this sudden stardom?
Speaker 2 (20:13):
That's great?
Speaker 9 (20:14):
The women of to day having met the Man of tomorrow.
Speaker 6 (20:17):
Et first man a fifteen year old Malcolm in nineteen
eighty five. The show spent five consecutive seasons at number one.
Speaker 9 (20:26):
There's so much criticism about the show in terms of oh, well,
you know, black people don't really live like that. But
then at the same time, I'm getting all of this
fan mail from people who were like, thank you. My
dad is a doctor, my mom is a lawyer. You
know my family, we are the Huxtables. It was just
such a movement where being black was beautiful again.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
Wait a second, where's Bill Gon? Where's Bill Bill Goll?
You know Malcolm Jamal Warner was also on Sneaky Pete, which,
if you haven't watched that, it's a great show.
Speaker 4 (21:07):
He was on like The Resident recently, and I mean.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
Yeah, he played a parole officer in Sneaky pe and uh,
he's the big The line of that characters are you
an eagle or are you a ship bird? Have you
(21:31):
seen Sneaky Pete? It's good?
Speaker 4 (21:35):
What do you watch Sneaky Pete? Didn't that have the
guy that what was his name? Maybe I'm not thinking correctly?
You on drugs again? What's his name? I don't know,
I'm looking for it. Uh.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
At the same time that, well.
Speaker 4 (21:57):
I was thinking somebody different, Sneaky p Giovanni Ribisi, I
was thinking of that.
Speaker 3 (22:01):
Yes, yeah, it's the premise of the show is he
takes over the identity of somebody else that is about
his same age and all of the implications of that
for the family. Margot Martindale's in it. She's fabulous, as
she's always fabulous. And what's her name, Marin Ireland who
I think might have a thyroid issue? Oh maybe when
(22:24):
you see her eyes. But there was a second dude
that the paramedics the lifeguards had to pull out of
the water down there in Costa Rica at the same time. Yeah,
because the other guy's not famous, but he was pulled
out of the water at the Plia Grande Resort in
Costa Rica, just moments after Malcolm Jamal Warner drowned. Costa
(22:45):
Rican first responders say they treated a second person at
the scene. They received reports of a water related incident
at Kohita Lamone at two ten on Sunday. Once they
arrived at the scene, they attended to the two adults
male patience those rip currents. Let me just tell you
(23:05):
if you don't have respect for those you ever been
caught a rip current?
Speaker 4 (23:09):
No I haven't. But that's the thing is here that
unless you've been involved in any of that before, your
brain tells you, well, shit, I'll just swim out of it.
I can handle this, No, but you can't.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
It's tough. It is really tough, and you panic is
what happens. That happened to me. I was in Florida
and one it took it. It just takes you out
and there's not much I mean, it's it's kind of
pointless to try to fight against it because you ain't
gonna win that fight. The best you can hope for
is to be is to float and kind of make
(23:43):
your way back but it and then once, once it
got me, I don't know, probably a couple hundred yards
off shore, there was a kelp bed between me and
the shore.
Speaker 4 (23:54):
I'll just wrap you up in all that mess.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
You ever swim in a kelp bed?
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Nope?
Speaker 3 (23:58):
Yeah, eh, it's worse than having.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
Touched kelp or something with my foot in the ocean
once and it freaked me the hell out.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
It's slimy, it's nasty, and there's you don't I swear
there are monsters in it. There are monsters in kelp beds.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
There are there.
Speaker 3 (24:17):
Are monsters in there, and they're ugly in their mien,
and they have teeth and they will pull you into
the ocean. It's really it's scary, and it sucks about
Malcolm Jamal Warner. It's really too bad. He was a
seemed like a good guy and uh it was only
fifty four years old. That's the part that sucks. The
other guy has not been named. He was rushed to
(24:40):
a local clinic in critical conditions or critical condition, and
I think the other guy may he's in critical so
he did not. The other guy has not succumbed to
uh to it yet, but we'll see, hopefully he will
(25:02):
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Speaker 4 (25:48):
The hell are those muscles called the back of your thigh? Hamstrings? Yeah,
ham strings? Thank you? What the hell?
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Speaker 1 (27:32):
Stupidity is not a competition, and the whole island will
become so unless you're a politician.
Speaker 10 (27:39):
Overly compulated that it will tipple capside.
Speaker 3 (27:51):
I know. You know what might actually knock some of
the CEO stuff off the front page is if we
had some amazing footage, let's say, of a of a
robot doing amazing, amazing things. That might do it. And
if you'd like to see a robot doing amazing amazing things,
(28:14):
here's your opportunity. Take a look at her. How's that?
Speaker 4 (28:29):
Huh? That's pretty amazing?
Speaker 5 (28:31):
Is it not?
Speaker 1 (28:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (28:32):
That's better than the what that doesn't look real?
Speaker 3 (28:42):
What doesn't look real?
Speaker 4 (28:42):
About it? It just doesn't. The way she was moving
just doesn't look real. The first successful bipedal walk of
a humanoid robot, and.
Speaker 3 (28:52):
Believe it, you wouldn't make it a little bit bigger
for you you mean, but do you think she defied
gravity there for a second, Yes, you naysayers, Credit where
(29:13):
credit is due. That is some really good AI animation.
It's not a real robot, at least it doesn't appear
to be a real robot to me either.
Speaker 4 (29:24):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
And you can get some of the without the sound.
You can just watch I see them. I can't. I
can't do the frame forward thing on this. But watch
the dude behind her with his finger just over his phone.
Guy up here, Yeah, he never moves. And dude down
(29:49):
here with the camera isn't even shooting her. He's I
don't know what the hell he's doing. He's not. That
is not real. You have to be careful about what
you think is and isn't real online because you'll get fooled,
because there's a lot of stuff that'll fool you out there. However,
this one is real. This is China's first robot that
(30:15):
can run by itself twenty four to seven. Generally, you
think about robots and you're like, well, there's got to
be a person there because they got it like a
Tesla car can't plug itself in correct?
Speaker 4 (30:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (30:26):
Can it? They can't. Let me just put it this way.
It can't yet.
Speaker 4 (30:34):
It as far as I know, Tesla doesn't have what
do you call it? It's not it's uh you know
how you can set your phone down on the chi charger. Oh,
wireless wireless charging, wireless charging. I don't have wireless charging, really.
Speaker 3 (30:49):
And you're getting me on for for uh uh gluteus maximus.
Speaker 4 (30:55):
What you couldn't think.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
Of wireless charges?
Speaker 4 (30:58):
I could not think of the word wireless. It's early
and I'm old. That's all I got. That's only excuse
that I have. You know that you're right now, I
don't think. I don't think they have.
Speaker 3 (31:11):
And that likely I mean in the future that could
be where you know, the battery you'll park your car
and on the platform underneath and go up and be
able to charge the batteries. I don't know. But right
now this does exist. This is the Walker S two
humanoid robot. And what what this can do is Abyville.
Speaker 4 (31:36):
A little freaky.
Speaker 3 (31:38):
Because it knows when it's getting worn, so it can
go up to its little battery station. It can take
out its drained battery. It can put it into the charger.
(32:03):
Then it can take out the freshly charged battery and
stick it in itself and off on its marriage.
Speaker 4 (32:18):
Wake it up in the morning, get a new fresh
jolt of energy, and off you go.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
See how happy he was.
Speaker 4 (32:27):
How freaky is that that?
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Now robots are going to be able to just up Yep,
if you're running low, don't sweat it. It'll go change
its own battery. It had two bats.
Speaker 4 (32:37):
In the documentary by a centennial man, he plugged himself
in in the basement, you remember that. So he just
had a little outlet it came out.
Speaker 3 (32:45):
That's true, and then that's what that's what could happen
with tesla's too. If they're a little charging thing. At
some point you'll be able to take your You'll pull
into the gag or excuse me, the tesla will pull
itself into the garage and then some little arm will
come over and just open the little door.
Speaker 4 (33:03):
The thing about plugging it in plugging itself in, though,
is it has to remain stationary while it's charging. In
this particular case, he just swapped out a battery and
off he went again. That's actually pretty cool. Means he
was running on multiple batteries right.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Until it comes to try and kill you. It's made
by the Chinese company Ubutek. How tall was that robot?
Speaker 4 (33:29):
I would say just based on looking at it right here,
probably five and a half six feet.
Speaker 3 (33:36):
Five foot three. Really, the little guy only weighs ninety
five pounds used a ninety excuse me, a forty eight
volt lithium battery in a dual battery system. It can
walk for two hours or stand for four hours before
its power runs out. The battery takes ninety minutes to
fully recharge once depleted. It's the most interesting feature they said,
(34:01):
which Ubtec says is a world first, is that instead
of relying on a human operator to remove and recharge
its battery, packing machine can performance tasks entirely on its own.
A robot will swap out its own battery in the
event that one of its batteries runs out of power.
It's also capable of detecting how much power it has
left and decides whether or not it's best to swap
(34:22):
out one of its batteries or charge based on the
priority of its task. So it's designed to operate in
factories in places like that, which.
Speaker 4 (34:36):
Keeps the factory operating twenty four to seven.
Speaker 3 (34:42):
Makes you wonder if companies or if unions like the
UAW think about stuff like this.
Speaker 4 (34:49):
When they're.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
When they're out there negotiating and trying to come up
with a new deal. Because this is yeah, this is
gonna happen. Well, it's not just gonna happen. It's happening,
and it's a little scary, it's a little frightening. Thanks
(35:12):
for all the messages on the on the app, and
if you haven't downloaded the app, you can do that
as well at the Dailymojo dot com. The Daily Mojo
app is free to use, so far get it while
it's free. First one, the taste is free. Who knows
what happens from there? And I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 5 (35:40):
What.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
Don't you know, I don't know whether or not you'll
have to use the app to bid on the instac's
Mini seven s starting on Friday, starting an ending on Friday. Guys,
I think we'll just do it. This is really fly
by the seat of my pants, which I know you
love to do, so why not?
Speaker 4 (36:01):
Why not?
Speaker 3 (36:02):
Why spend time thinking about it when you can just
we can just put it out there and see what sticks.
Speaker 4 (36:09):
But we've got the I think you should write an essay,
I don't know, two page essay on on why you
need the camera.
Speaker 3 (36:20):
So hate essays. I wouldn't do that to somebody. But
we've not only the camera, which is a it's like
a it's like a mini polaroid, really a trippy camera.
They give apparently the and it's not because of the
March of dimes that I found this. I found this
in a at the Goodwill store and I was like, whoa,
that that's a cool camera. That shouldn't be sitting on
(36:42):
the shelf at the Goodwill store. And so it wasn't.
And so it apparently they're used a lot.
Speaker 4 (36:48):
In the in the nick.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
Us the newborn intensive care unit at hospitals for you know,
pictures of babies and things like that. That mark your
dime uses them a lot. And the pictures are about
half the size of a standard Polaroid. It's just cool
old tech that. I mean, it's really neat there. It's
(37:12):
a great camera to use indoors. Wouldn't recommend it for
outdoor use, but you'll not only get the camera, but
you'll also get all of our road trip pictures that
we took at the UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell,
New Mexico and fireworks stand. Yeah, I know that there
(37:32):
is one.
Speaker 4 (37:33):
I don't from the fireworks stand because we took the
member of the UFO pictures at the fireworks stand, but
she's not in them. You and I are in one.
And there's a weird UFO in another one. Okay, there's
a UFO over our heads in another one at the
at the fireworks stand. So you'll be able to try
(37:53):
to figure out what the what the hell that was
and you get a new role of film for it
as well.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
So you can go out and make your own memories
with the fujifilm in stacks Mini seven ass and I.
Speaker 4 (38:06):
Think I think I think we will.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
You'll have should I do what you have to do
it with the app? That would be the smart the
smart promotional thing from a promotional standpoint would be you
got to use the app. I mean, I think that's
that's worth it, right, Yeah, all right, so download the
(38:30):
damned app.
Speaker 4 (38:32):
Stop complaining.
Speaker 3 (38:33):
Download the app because you'll have to be you'll have
to use it to send.
Speaker 4 (38:37):
In well, it'd be sure to turn on notifications too.
We're not we don't. We don't spam you with notifications.
It's usually just once or twice a day.
Speaker 3 (38:46):
So you know, may be some inappropriate photographs maybe, I
mean you can get those two those of the inappropriate
phot those aren't free.
Speaker 4 (38:58):
Those costs as well.
Speaker 3 (39:01):
You think we're going to give you the inappropriate photographs
for nothing, No pale to the no. Download the app
enable notifications and on Friday we'll get the Uh, we'll
get the ball rolling for the for the auction. But
what about the people who listen after the live show.
I don't know. Maybe you'll get up early on Friday.
(39:23):
Maybe you want Maybe if you don't, you want to
win it.
Speaker 4 (39:26):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (39:28):
You're the first to watch this Phil Bell's Morning Up Days.
Speaker 11 (39:30):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo with you
on Morning Up Base. Let's have a conversation about women's basketball.
Back when I attended Boston University, I played in the
pep band, so I played in a lot of women's
college basketball games, and I came to appreciate it. The
women's college game is different from the men's college game,
which itself is different from the NBA game, and I
(39:53):
enjoyed the sport. Now, it's not at the top of
my pantheonum sports to watch, but I enjoyed it, and
I thought when Caitlin Clark came to the WNBA that
it could definitely make that sport something that I could
watch consistently. Unfortunately, Kaitlin Clark has joined the rest of
WNBA culture, which is a weird, thuggish women's culture, and
(40:14):
in the most recent All Star Game, her team went
out to practice in shirts that said pay us what
we're worth. Well, unfortunately for all of them, what they're
worth is less than zero, because since Kitlin Clark has
joined the WNBA in order to fund increase promotion, the
league's losses have ballooned from roughly ten million dollars a
year to over fifty million dollars a year. You see,
(40:37):
the WNBA, while it has the potential to be successful,
does not put out a product that resonates with most people.
And most of the people who are in the WNBA
are also not interesting and relatable. That's the same problem
the NBA is facing. That's why the WNBA is losing
money and the NBA is getting hurt too because it
(40:58):
is subsidizing the law. So if they think entitlement is
going to win the money or games they're sadly mistaken.
The minute that they turn that around, though, the minute
that they become relatable, the minute that their game starts
to be more interesting than their antics, the money will
come in and they will be successful, and it won't
(41:18):
be a big deal to say, Yeah, I'm watching the
WNBA tonight. So what I want you to do is
leave a comment under the show, let us know what
you think about sports and sports culture in America today
and how it relates to politics. What I also want
you to do is download the Daily Mojo smartphone app
and enable notifications. That way will be up to date
(41:39):
on the latest craziness and good stuff coming out of Washington,
d C.
Speaker 3 (41:43):
And you'll know how.
Speaker 4 (41:44):
To share it with others.
Speaker 11 (41:45):
Stay sharp, stay strong, and stay free right here on
the Daily mojor.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
Pill Bell's Morning Update is only on the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 8 (42:00):
The Daily Moto, Nicki Ball, and in spite they keep
it funded Inside News, Laugh and the news that feels
so the Daily.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
What you'd like to say hi to any government agency
monitoring this broadcast.
Speaker 3 (42:22):
You don't want to find it.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
The Dailymojo dot com in.
Speaker 3 (42:39):
A completely unrelated story. Do you know that the uh
James Dean's Portie five point fifty Spider that was known
as Little Bastard. He named it Little Bastard because a
studio head had called James Dean a little bastard at
one point, and so he named the car kind of
as a few to the studio heads, like, hey, look
(42:59):
at me, and he wrecks it. He wrecked the car
back in nineteen fifty five. Wow, it was Wow. I
know it's been how.
Speaker 4 (43:13):
Many years is that sixty seventy eighty, seventy years? Seventy yeah,
seventy wow. Neither one of us are maths scholars. Takes
us a while. So seventy years ago he wrecks the car.
It was impounded, then it toured nationally as part of
a highway safety program. It looks it looks like crap.
Speaker 3 (43:39):
And I say that once you see it, I mean,
it's amazing that. I was gonna say it's amazing anybody
walked away from it, but nobody did. So it's exactly
what it looks like. I mean, it's a little, you know,
two seater and was a really cool little car. It
(44:01):
went missing in nineteen sixty while being transported from Florida
to California. You know, it's never been found.
Speaker 4 (44:10):
So it only toured for five years and then just
five years.
Speaker 3 (44:13):
And then disappeared.
Speaker 4 (44:14):
Wow, where did it go. It's probably at the bottom
of a lake somewhere.
Speaker 3 (44:21):
Because they say it was cursed. Some of the parts,
the main records, they say is missing. Some of the
parts of the car surfaced over the years, including the transaxle,
which was sold at an auction. Maybe that's what aped.
Maybe they did, you know, somebody stripped a hold of
it and parted it out. But apparently the pieces and
(44:48):
parts that get installed in some other cars have not
been friendly to their new owners. In other words, things
have before other people using pieces in parts of the car.
It's it's more of that. It's kind of like the
doll Annabelle. Oh yeah, is it haunted? Was the car cursed?
(45:10):
Although people are there, you can't be demonically possessed by
it if you're just a thing. It has to be
a person, that's all right. Tell that to Dan Rivera,
the paranormal investigator who touched the doll. And then they do,
you know, whick didn't you know what his cause of
death is?
Speaker 4 (45:31):
No?
Speaker 3 (45:32):
And neither do they, and the coroner says his, uh,
autopsy will take sixty to ninety days.
Speaker 4 (45:40):
How is that possible? Why is it?
Speaker 3 (45:43):
Why does a it's.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
Because we're used to seeing it on TV happen in minutes.
Speaker 3 (45:48):
Yeah, okay, Well, I mean, I don't know why it
takes so long.
Speaker 4 (45:54):
I don't either.
Speaker 3 (45:56):
It just it's when they when they talk about maybe
I don't know why did toxicology reports takes a damn long?
Speaker 4 (46:03):
Good question? Is it just is it because the because
they're bad takes I don't know.
Speaker 3 (46:07):
Is that what it is? Or is it the you know,
the the mold takes time to grow or whatever that
you know, if if you're gonna.
Speaker 4 (46:16):
I could ask groc But.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
It's so much more interesting just sitting here and complaining
about it. Uh. It was a year ago today, speaking
of miracles in Milagro, that the woman nobody wanted to
be the candidate for president became the candidate for president.
Speaker 12 (46:34):
In this election, we each face a question what kind
of country do we want to live in? There are
some people who think we should be a country of chaos,
of fear, of hate, but us we choose something different.
Speaker 3 (46:55):
The irony, yeah, of the video.
Speaker 12 (47:00):
It's just we choose freedom, the freedom not just to
get by, but get ahead, the freedom to be saved
from gun violence, the freedom to make decisions about your
(47:22):
own body. We choose a future where no child lives
in poverty, where we can all afford healthcare, where no
one is above the law. We believe in the promise
of America, and we're ready to fight for it. Because
when we fight, we win. So join us. Go to
Kamlharis dot com and let's get to work comm.
Speaker 3 (47:44):
A cable running because win. I don't quit on themselves.
You know what. That's a really good video.
Speaker 4 (47:50):
It is.
Speaker 3 (47:51):
It is Actually, it's a really good thing thinking. I mean,
she was a I mean look from where she came
from in her career and how she got where she got.
She was a breath away, dude. Yeah, how'd she know that,
we mean, got where she got she.
Speaker 4 (48:07):
Was a breath away. That is far too close.
Speaker 3 (48:13):
How that even got that closest is mind boggling, really
really terrifying. One of the big things in the Big
Beautiful Bill was the the would be the excision of
of all of the funding for PBS and NPR, a
(48:38):
corporation for public broadcasting and they on midday edition from KPBS,
which I think is San Diego. They did a kind
of one of their midday shows and the host of
the program had the general manager on, and the general
(48:58):
manager is discussing why, you know, or how it's going
to be difficult for the station to continue without the
money that they receive from the government, and she said
some interesting things. Here is part of that interview the
station manager General Managers Dianna Mackie. She was became the
(49:23):
new general manager of KPBS year Not sure, not that
it matters, but here she is explaining how it's going
to be difficult for public broadcasting stations to make it
on their own, unlike Mary Tyler.
Speaker 7 (49:44):
Morising our funding, but stations across the country are losing
their federal funding. And for small and rural stations, Hold on.
Speaker 3 (49:53):
Do they go to a special school?
Speaker 4 (49:55):
I know they all talk exactly.
Speaker 3 (49:58):
Learn how to speak that way. Yeah, it's just curious.
Speaker 7 (50:03):
It makes up a much larger percentage of their budget
anywhere from forty fifty sixty percent at times. And they're
in communities often where there isn't an audience space of donors,
there isn't a base of sponsors that they can call on.
So it's anticipated that one hundred stations across the country
will go under.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
And she's saying that these stations that are going to
go under don't live in a place where there's anybody
that can give money to them. There's and there's no
there's no there are no clients out there, there's no
businesses that can sponsor the station. They're just it's a
vast wasteland. Who the hell's listening to them? Then, if
there's nobody listening that can help support it, if there
(50:50):
are no businesses around the where are these hundred stations
that are I mean, if they're so good, why don't
people jump in?
Speaker 7 (50:59):
And so when those stations stop paying in to the
national Fund, it means more pressure on stations like KPBS
to pay for PBS and NPR programming as well as
the local services we're providing.
Speaker 3 (51:12):
So that is a problem.
Speaker 7 (51:14):
And initially we are anticipating that there will be some
diminishment of dues from PBS and NPR to help stations out,
but they won't be able to sustain that forever, so
we expect they will likely make cuts as we will.
Speaker 3 (51:30):
What's the m Yeah, I like that.
Speaker 4 (51:32):
That's what that is. That's a PBS thing. Yep, that
in the processing on their microphones, that is all exactly
the same. You can hear all that spit in their mouth.
Speaker 3 (51:47):
Response has been like from the community in reaction to
this news, Well.
Speaker 4 (51:53):
That sounds like SNL to me, quite honestly.
Speaker 3 (51:56):
What is the response from the community. This is great,
this is great. They response from me on.
Speaker 7 (52:03):
That forever, so we expect they will likely make cuts
as we will.
Speaker 3 (52:08):
What's the response been like from the community in reaction
to this news?
Speaker 7 (52:13):
Well, I would call that the silver lining and all
of this, we've had amazing support from the community, many calls, emails,
people even coming to our front door, knocking on the
front door being let in to make a donation at
the reception.
Speaker 3 (52:29):
Des Okay, well, then what's the problem? I mean, people
are knocking down the doors literally to get in there
to give you money. What's the issue? Why did you
need taxpayer money?
Speaker 4 (52:41):
Right?
Speaker 3 (52:42):
Asking for a friend.
Speaker 7 (52:43):
We just participated as a team in the Pride parade
this past Saturday, and as we walked through the parade,
people were screaming and yelling our call letters. They were
bowing to us, so I can't tell you how much
that means.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
Pride Parade. They were screaming their name, screaming their call
letters and bowing to them. Huh. It's weird though, because
PBS and NPR swear they don't have a bias. They're
not biased.
Speaker 4 (53:16):
Oh, yes they are, but you.
Speaker 3 (53:18):
But they're not. They said they aren't. They said they're
not biased, So what's your problem they got bowed down
to at the Pride Parade. Was sure that it was
a bow. I don't know, but to let you know
about as far as the the money thing is concerned, Uh,
(53:42):
the average if you ask AI how much the average
radio station general manager in the United States, how much
they are paid? And again that was Deanna Mackie, who's
the general manager the station in San Diego KPBS. So
(54:03):
the average radio station general manager in the United States,
according to AI, who just goes out there and looks
at a glassdoor and all of those others. Indeed, average
GM radio station, United States sixty three, four hundred and
seventy eight dollars. Not not a ton of money. I
(54:26):
and and this may be in the past twenty years,
it's gone dramatically down. I've known some others to you know,
make more than that. Uh, and there probably are bonuses
for sales, et cetera. Deanna Mackie at KPBS, when she
got hired, gets paid wow, two hundred and ninety thousand dollars,
(54:57):
ten percent more than the mail ex general manager. The way,
the answer to your question is no, No. She was
hired back in June of twenty twenty two, so she's
making almost three hundred thousand dollars when the average general
manager across the country. Let's say that AI screwed that
(55:21):
up and it's really twice that much. It's one hundred
and twenty thousand dollars for the average GM, and you
got a PBS station making almost three hundred thousand dollars.
I don't know. Maybe maybe they restructure inside. Maybe that's
(55:41):
the way to, I don't know, make it more feasible economically.
Maybe it's just you.
Speaker 4 (55:51):
Would think a PBS station general manager would make less
than a standard radio station. Do you think because it's
paid for by the people. You would think donations, right,
you'd think so. But no, that's at least not in
(56:13):
the case of KPBS out in San Diego. I mean,
that's a nice that's a nice chunk of change to
be the general manager of a radio station that doesn't
have to beat the streets, correct, doesn't have to get
out there and shake the bushes and do all that
(56:34):
stuff to try to find sponsors. It's because it's sucking
on the government teat. Let it be known that we
went fifty seven, almost fifty seven minutes into the program
before the word teat was used. That's something of an
accomplishment here at the Daily Mojo, just saying doce five
(56:57):
on the on the XS. What well, wait, we're going
to lose some PBS stations.
Speaker 3 (57:03):
What a shame? I know, right, doctor free range prisoner,
nick U. The end stands for neo natal. Sorry, you're right.
I should have known that. I know somebody who works
at the March of Dimes, But I believe neon natal
is just a fancy way to say newborn, you get
half a pass, thank you.
Speaker 10 (57:23):
Well.
Speaker 3 (57:23):
He is a doctor, although as a dentist dentist student film,
I think I should get three quarters of the past.
Speaker 4 (57:34):
Simply because I mean, you do have some knowledge.
Speaker 3 (57:39):
Yeah, I do have some knowledge, and I think, quite
frankly that just a little professional courtesy from one doctor
to a dentist. It should be worth some more. I
can tell you this. I can talk to you. You
want to talk about moisturization and how it's important throughout
every phase of life, sure from newborns on to old.
Speaker 4 (57:59):
People like us.
Speaker 3 (58:02):
And the fact that if you go to smell mymojo
dot com you'll find the body better, the skin care
for your body that you need to stay healthy, happy
and uh and smelling good. Because let me just tell you,
even if you're happy and healthy and you stink, that's
no boino, people aren't gonna.
Speaker 4 (58:21):
Like you, you know what. And I just.
Speaker 3 (58:26):
I'd just like to smear it all over myself.
Speaker 4 (58:30):
I do.
Speaker 3 (58:30):
There's some you know, when you get to that phase
of life where you can smear stuff on your head,
there's just a freedom in that. There's a freedom. And
then you go up to people and say, I smell
my head. You'd be amazed the looks you get when
you ask people if they want to smell your head same.
I'm assuming yes, Windy day is the preference that I
(58:54):
choose here. It's I mean, it's just it's that good.
It really is that good. Uh, go to uh smell
my mojo dot com. Find the if you and I
would say that these are true to what they I mean,
like the the the The primary smell you get from
Windy Day is pechuli, which I've grown to like over
(59:15):
the years. At first, when I first smell petulia, I
was like, I don't know, maybe it's an age thing too.
Maybe the older you get, the more you like Pachuli.
Is that? I mean, you know what Petulia?
Speaker 4 (59:28):
I don't know. I don't. I mean I was looking
to see if any of my stuff over here head
petuli in it, but I don't think so. Really, Yeah, okay,
you know when you when you smell, when you smell petchulia,
you go, oh yeah that maybe. Yeah. I just don't.
Speaker 3 (59:45):
I don't even know how to describe it. It's like,
oh yeah that it's just good. It's at smell mymojo
dot com and the promo code to use is daily
Mojo and you get fifteen percent off. So ye, you
can factor that in all of your purchases there and
(01:00:07):
thank you for doing so. Breaking in format I am
going to this is not a wow. Okay, this is
not a sponsor of the program, but it should be
a sponsor of the program. This is Mo's so Mo
Mo sows and apparently she has a shop on I
(01:00:32):
probably Etsy, or maybe it's just on YouTube. I don't know,
but she does these shirts and.
Speaker 4 (01:00:38):
I've seen these. They're great.
Speaker 3 (01:00:41):
He does a She does an incredible job. She should
be a sponsor of this program.
Speaker 13 (01:00:46):
Reading how inappropriate my bird shirts are. Honker's is a
four out of ten. Everyone who sees this one laughs,
and I've never noticed anyone getting, like, really offended by it.
Tits is an eight out of ten, which my opinion,
is the perfect amount. Birders automatically think this one is hilarious,
but not everyone gets the joke, and I have to
(01:01:07):
explain it to them.
Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
That being said great.
Speaker 13 (01:01:10):
Tits gets a ten out of ten. I don't have
a scientific explanation for this one, but it does feel correct.
Boobies is a two.
Speaker 12 (01:01:18):
Out of ten.
Speaker 13 (01:01:19):
No one's ever been offended by a blue footed booby,
and if you have, we just shouldn't be friends.
Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
I I Love.
Speaker 13 (01:01:26):
Hummers is a nine. It gets a nine because maybe
thirty percent of people understand the joke, but if more
people did understand it, it would be a twenty. I
don't s but I swallow is one hundred out of
ten maybe a thousand. Can't it be quantified? I cannot
believe that you guys buy this and wear.
Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
It, but I love you for it.
Speaker 13 (01:01:47):
Get your favorite now and use code dirty bird for
ten percent off.
Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
Great.
Speaker 1 (01:01:54):
If you're offended, you are listening, you're aw How good deal, Joe.
Speaker 3 (01:02:05):
I just felt somehow the preceding possible sponsor the program
was appropriate, giving it Tata's Tuesday. Unless it's a girl
talking about it. See, you can't be offended. I mean
the owners of all of the of the boobs out
there fall it's twenty I forgot it's twenty twenty five.
(01:02:27):
Boobs could be owned by just about anybody now right,
pcon PI eighty two. We can watch the same stuff
on YouTube as far as PBA. Yes, that's the other issue.
And you know what, regular commercial television and radio stations
are having the same problems as the people at PBS.
(01:02:47):
The reason that PBS has been able to weather the
storm and pay their general managers three hundred thousand dollars
a year is because they're sucking on the gun from
it teat. Yeah, notice that most Sw's shop didn't have
a teat. She still had to she had the tits
(01:03:09):
and the great tits those are birds, and the boobies
those are birds. And no one's ever been offended by
a blue footed booby. But there's no teat Maybe that's
too literal, and it's possible there's too literal.
Speaker 4 (01:03:28):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:03:31):
W Cuncle says, Tourette's girl needs to do the dirty
birds shirts. Ads. See, I've seen the Tourette's Girl's moan
or not.
Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
She's got a show.
Speaker 3 (01:03:41):
She's not real.
Speaker 4 (01:03:43):
She's real, dude, she's got a show. It's it's it's
crazy to watch.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
She's real. She's got a ship. No, so she's real
just because she has a show.
Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
No, I believe that she's real. I mean either that
or she's really, really, really good at what she does.
Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
Yeah, okay, well that's never happened before. We've never had
somebody really good at what they do.
Speaker 4 (01:04:07):
She's not the only person in the world that has
turetts that does the same thing she does.
Speaker 3 (01:04:13):
No one said that she was.
Speaker 4 (01:04:15):
But you don't think she's real. No, would you stake
your life on it.
Speaker 3 (01:04:22):
I wouldn't stake my life on anything good as not
in this media environment.
Speaker 4 (01:04:29):
And so you didn't make a king.
Speaker 3 (01:04:34):
Whenever there's money involved. Question the motive, the official bird
of love, the swallow. Yes, indeed, Umm, bugs mom, okay,
what's going on with bugs? Mom? Between abortion transgender surgery,
there won't be any babies born. Uh, I don't know
(01:04:54):
what's going on with original babies. Didn't they make a
movie about that car and Hearts and Death, the James
Dean car. They may have. It's been it's been around
for sixty years, so quite possibly. I'm sure there's been
a movie. I'm sure this is.
Speaker 4 (01:05:18):
Going back to.
Speaker 3 (01:05:21):
That over here. Since you said movies, HBO, this is
a this is a cultural touchstone. And the Critical Drinker
do you ever watch his videos Critical drinking?
Speaker 4 (01:05:34):
Only the ones you send me? I haven't gone out.
Speaker 3 (01:05:37):
He does. He's not just a He doesn't just do
essays on YouTube. The Critical Drinker is also an author
of some pretty amazing books. I can't remember what's his
His true identity is Will Jordan, and he is a
(01:06:00):
he's a writer. He has written the Ryan Drake series
of books, and so he's he's he's got legit bona
fides or bona fides. He was talking about cultural touchstones
and he did. His most recent essay was on the
(01:06:24):
different the fact that movies now, I mean, if you
there's no cultural touch point in a movie. He reads
off a number of of movie lines from I'll be
back to you name it, Frankly Scotland, I don't give
a damn. But the point he makes in all of
(01:06:45):
these movies or all of these quotes is that there
hasn't been anything original in the in the last twenty years.
There's been. All we have is rehashed ideas when it
comes to entertainment. The movies that we are all remakes.
Jurassic What is the latest one? The latest Jurassic.
Speaker 4 (01:07:04):
Good question, I don't know. Birth for Pete's sake. Yeah,
Superman is what eighty years old? Yeah, and they've made.
Speaker 3 (01:07:13):
And it's just twenty iteration. Yeah, they've and not that
they haven't been good, they just there's nothing original and
no real original characters. Star Wars they've driven into the
ground and Kathleen Kennedy has destroyed it and it really
is kind of sad and that and maybe that's why
we have the nostalgia for the quote unquote old days.
Speaker 4 (01:07:37):
And Maverick, Yeah, that was nostalgia for the old days. Yeah,
it really was.
Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
They did you ever watch the HBO thing I sent you.
Uh yeah, yeah, the making of.
Speaker 4 (01:08:00):
Of the HBO Feature Presentation entry.
Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
The feature presentation because it is the new one. And
again this I'm trying to figure out the best order
in which to play these. This is the new, this
will take you back, This is from here, This is well,
this is from nineteen ninety nine. This may not take
you take you back that little bit of there's the ah,
(01:08:33):
it's just you.
Speaker 4 (01:08:35):
Vaguely remember this one, right, yeah, but this was what
twenty years ago, twenty five.
Speaker 3 (01:08:40):
Years twenty six years ago?
Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:08:44):
But this company, it's actually a different company. There is
a here. It is a sovereign media. And I don't
know if they're responsible for the new, the new HBO
look or whatever, but they took the new HBO visual
and put it with the nineteen eighty two the original
(01:09:06):
feature presentation music. So it's that the video that you
just saw, but they matched it up with the audio
from forty years ago. And tell me, this doesn't make
a world just a huge world of difference.
Speaker 4 (01:09:20):
I don't know why I did that.
Speaker 3 (01:09:24):
This is forty year old audio married with twenty six
year old video, and it's so much better. Didn't it
seem more epic? Yes, And there's just it gives you
(01:09:49):
goosebumps here at the.
Speaker 4 (01:09:50):
End when it does, it's a little.
Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
Maybe they weren't using an orchestra that's in ninety nine.
Maybe that was the big difference. That just felt so
much bigger.
Speaker 4 (01:10:06):
Than the other one, so much bigger.
Speaker 3 (01:10:08):
And I don't know why.
Speaker 4 (01:10:09):
The nineteen eighty two version is the one that's stuck
in my head because they played that for what ten
twelve years?
Speaker 3 (01:10:17):
Yeah, and they still have a feature presentation every week, Yeah,
or every I guess was it Tuesday and Saturday? Which
are they still linear? Is HBO? Does it still have
like a linear feed? Or can't you just go to
HBO and watch.
Speaker 4 (01:10:33):
You can watch you and you still want to watch
beginning of the movies on HBO or or Max dot com.
It's Max dot com now I think they went back
to HBO Max, but bottom they went to Max dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:10:46):
Yeah, for whatever reason, they keep changing the name. But
the behind the scenes of the original HBO intro, which
one the original I know a second, let me get
(01:11:06):
this right here, this was the one that everybody really remembers.
And again it's this is the this is the forty
year old video and the forty year old audio looks
for whatever reasons, it's timmy on this one.
Speaker 4 (01:11:23):
Yeah, this is the one I remember.
Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
Yeah, and this is all in the days before computer graphics.
So all of that stuff that you see, it's all miniatures,
which is pretty amazing. And then the computer graphics that
(01:12:01):
well what you think your computer graphics like that, But
it's weird how that makes you feel. Yeah, it takes
you back like forty years and it makes you feel
(01:12:23):
like you're, you know, sitting back in those days. The
all of the computer graphics are fascinating. This dude right here,
did the little starbars simple?
Speaker 14 (01:12:35):
You might be surprised when you see it on the
table two pieces of aren't. There's simply placed on top
of one another and offset slowly. It gives you this
this huge blast with dots that move down and out
from the center of the explosion.
Speaker 3 (01:12:50):
I know, right, and then the little the all of
the stuff that goes around the letters, the oh, the
approaching mogo.
Speaker 5 (01:13:02):
So a special effects rig we built to put color
rays into the inside of the chrome oh basically where
it was as a series of fiber optics built with
motors and gears and pulleys so that we can change
the color and also move it around.
Speaker 14 (01:13:15):
Well, you know, you can set up a camera out
on the street at night and as the cars move by,
their headlights and tail lights leave a long streak. It's
essentially the same effect.
Speaker 3 (01:13:27):
I mean that was back when things were I talk
about doing it the heart.
Speaker 4 (01:13:31):
All practical, Yeah, all practically, cameras.
Speaker 3 (01:13:34):
Everything they did was practical.
Speaker 4 (01:13:37):
It was even the city was because it was all miniaturized.
And you can tell nowadays, but the city was just
a miniature city and they built it by hand.
Speaker 3 (01:13:49):
Maybe say it was one hundred feet long.
Speaker 15 (01:13:52):
Made as part of HBO's new on air look and
is one of over sixty visual elements that were combined
to create HBOS program opens. This film is a behind
the scenes and how this new look was achieved.
Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
And then it had this really crappy music which is
done by a guy by the name of Jonathan Siegel,
and it was I think this song was called details.
It was really cheesy. Maybe it's all illusions when HBO
(01:14:41):
decided to create an opening, this is really cool and
again it's a I guess it's the comfort factor of
going back to when you were a kid, and you
would you'd hear that that song the theme song, and
you did. I don't know there was something comforting him, dud.
Speaker 4 (01:15:00):
Dude when if you were watching cable TV, because that's
what it was. When HBO first came out, it was
cable TV. Cable was relatively new. I was probably fifteen, sixteen,
seventeen years old. I knew when I heard that or
saw that on TV, I was going to get to
see some boots, no joke.
Speaker 3 (01:15:22):
Thank you for telling it into Tata's Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (01:15:24):
You know what I'm saying. Yes, yeah, I mean it
was cable TV. You didn't have network sensors at that point.
Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
It's not TV, it's HBO.
Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
It's HBO. Yeah, they should use that as a theme.
Somebody was being naked in this movie you were about
to watch. See Is that weird? That's weird? It is weird.
Speaker 3 (01:15:44):
But you're such a guy.
Speaker 4 (01:15:46):
But I'm a dude.
Speaker 3 (01:15:47):
Back in the day, that old HBO intro meant whatever
was about to be broadcast was probably going to be
some good snizz yep Aduced five said, you guys should
probably get try to get the critical drinker. He's except
(01:16:07):
he's in Scotland.
Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
Oh the time difference thatd kill us or kill him.
Speaker 3 (01:16:12):
It wouldn't kill us and kill him. Yeah, although I'm
willing to give it a shot. He does. He being
a writer and kind of a I guess a cultural
reporter in a sense, you just don't think about. You
don't think about like he like what I said he
was putting forth with the iconic lines in movies, there
(01:16:35):
are none. What line out of a movie recently? Do
you find yourself ever quoting?
Speaker 4 (01:16:42):
There aren't any?
Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
And is it because there's nothing being written that's.
Speaker 4 (01:16:46):
Worth The only thing I can come up with being
I going going, and it's not necessarily iconic. It's just
what I remember from Top Gun Maverick. You know, the
first movie had a lot of iconic lines. I feel
to need knee for speed, blah blah blah. Yeah, and
the new one. The only thing I can think of
is you told me not to think. But you don't remember.
(01:17:11):
You don't remember where that was in the movie, do you?
Speaker 3 (01:17:13):
I don't even remember that from the movie.
Speaker 4 (01:17:15):
Yeah, that's when that's when Maverick gets shot down, and
then uh Goose's son goes back after him, and then
he gets shot down, and then Maverick's running through the
forest and they get to each other and he pushes
him down and he's like, what were you thinking?
Speaker 3 (01:17:29):
He said, you told me not to think. See, that's
the only thing I can remember. That's a that's a
good line, but I don't remember it.
Speaker 4 (01:17:38):
Yeah, don't think just too it's but it kind of sucks.
It's yeah, I mean, what movie what movie lines can
you think of? These days?
Speaker 3 (01:17:49):
There aren't any There aren't any good ones. Yeah, and
that's the problem. And and it used to be the
saying for like TV in the was it the seventies
and eighties back then? And I can't remember who said it,
but it was.
Speaker 4 (01:18:03):
A great quote.
Speaker 3 (01:18:04):
People who were writing writing for television in the seventies
and eighties grew up on radio. And then the next
generation of writers for the shows that came in the
nineties and the odds, they grew up on TV. And
so writing for TV was much different than writing for
(01:18:28):
television or writing for radio. And I think you had more.
You had better, better words and better lines written from
the writers you had to paint a picture. Who had
to think, you know, like we we are such wordsmiths
that we the muscle in the back of your calf,
(01:18:49):
the hamster aside hamstring, right. I mean, we come up
with words that paint a picture that really bring it
all into focus for you. That's what we do here
at the Daily Mojo Wayde Robertson says, I remember staying
up all night long with my buddies waiting for a
(01:19:10):
quick boob shot.
Speaker 4 (01:19:12):
Thank you, thank you. I'll rest my case. Yeah, I
remember me. Literally, you were going to get boobs after
seven pm. I remember that distinctly. What on HBO? On HBO,
they didn't have boobs before h They didn't have boobs.
Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
Before eight pm on HBO.
Speaker 4 (01:19:34):
I don't think so. I think it was after seven pm,
eight pm Eastern. That's when the that's when the more
adultish movies would come on. Was it showtime up back
then too? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
Yeah, some time was a biggie Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:19:52):
Yeah, they were just it was different, dude, I have
to tell you different. My uncle, the one that recently
passed away this last February, him and his wife were
in cable TV in the in the eighties nineties, and they,
I mean they actually put cable TV in all of Dubai,
Saudi Arabia and so when he passed away, his wife
(01:20:17):
decided to give away a lot of their nostalgic stuff
that they've held on to for years. So Misty ended
up with a whole lot of it. Do you know,
do you remember satin jackets? Yes, dude, we have probably
fifty satin jackets with the original HBO logo, the originals,
(01:20:39):
Showtime logo, all of this stuff on the back of them.
They're phenomenal. I don't know I've em where you have them?
We have them, yes, how big I have to look.
I think they've ranged in size from medium to extra large.
Speaker 3 (01:20:58):
I'd certainly buy one and more one their freaking greatness.
Are you gonna sell we have a whole.
Speaker 4 (01:21:03):
Lot of knick knack stuff. When I'm putting my shelves
up behind me here, I'm gonna put some of that
stuff up on the shelves. But uh yeah, no, but
I gave my dog a bone once.
Speaker 3 (01:21:17):
Poor choice of words, but I'm going with it.
Speaker 4 (01:21:21):
Okay, No, but no, satin jackets are awesome. It's just
it's just, yeah, are you selling that?
Speaker 3 (01:21:30):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:21:30):
Yeah? I think Missy's gonna try to sell them. I'll
I'll talk to her about them and see if there's
any that I think, Yeah, it's MTV, the original MTV
Satin jackets. We've got those. It's just nuts. Misty, bring
me one up. If you're listening, grab one. I don't
care which one it is, and bring me one up.
Speaker 3 (01:21:49):
Even if you're not listening, Bring one up.
Speaker 4 (01:21:51):
The Nashville Network, the Nashville Networks satin she says, really, yeah, wow, yeah,
bring one up. Amazing.
Speaker 3 (01:22:01):
Babe, Hey, babe, bring up babe. Euru says for me,
it was Kiss FM with Rick D. S Yes, I
loved Rick D's Bob t Garden skin Amax.
Speaker 4 (01:22:13):
Yeah. If if you were watching Cinemax Overnights, come on, dude,
you were getting we were getting nakedness.
Speaker 3 (01:22:27):
But is that is that part of our cultural raw hit?
Speaker 4 (01:22:32):
It is that?
Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
Is that why you need to go to do uh
distella'smojo dot com and get you some immune protection?
Speaker 4 (01:22:42):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (01:22:42):
Is that?
Speaker 3 (01:22:43):
Is that why you need to head over there right
now and make sure that you have the covida spray
ingestible mouth spray. That chick just cracks me up. But
if you want to get serious about your protection against allergies, VRAI, Okay,
it's viruses, but virus sounds better, and immune protection you
(01:23:04):
can go to Stella's Mojo and get that. Plus, if
you need a source for ivermectin, she is your source.
Or hydroxychloroquin. You know, it's not just for horses anymore,
as we've been told, But if you are looking for
a source for either of those, you can find it
at Stella'smojo dot com. It's a pretty simple thing to
(01:23:26):
remember Stella'smojo dot com and you can find what you
need right there. Stella's moojo dot com. I don't think
there's a promo code. Yeah, there is, mo Daily Mojoe.
I knew there was a promo code. That's what I said,
Daily Mojo promo code, Stella'smojo dot Com.
Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
You're listening to the lunatic fringe of American radio, the
Daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (01:24:01):
I don't think it's uh. I don't think miss is
going to have a hard time selling those if that's
the idea.
Speaker 4 (01:24:07):
Because so I've got some here. If you want to see.
Speaker 3 (01:24:09):
James and Louisiana already, how much for the MTV guy?
You know what James and he was Wait until the
wait until I have some respect for your family here, Oh, man,
these are all new.
Speaker 4 (01:24:24):
Yeah, they're all unused.
Speaker 3 (01:24:26):
Look at this, No kidding, Wait a minute, who's Larry
that was That was my uncle?
Speaker 4 (01:24:35):
That was Missy's uncle.
Speaker 3 (01:24:37):
Do all of them say Larry on it?
Speaker 4 (01:24:38):
No, this one doesn't have anything on the front of it.
There's a movie. Yeah, I'm telling you we have we
have how many? Oh she said fifteen or twenty? So yeah,
she's got She's got denim jackets that have and have
all that stuff on them too.
Speaker 3 (01:24:56):
Thanks how much for an MTV jacket? James and Louisiana
wants to know. Wow. Yeah, night before I met my wife,
Cinemax had a heart a hot, dark haired girl get naked.
My wife is a hot dark haired girl.
Speaker 4 (01:25:10):
That's how that works, right.
Speaker 3 (01:25:13):
It's here is just the critical drinker and his videos.
They may have her. They may have a word or
two here or there, but this is just the beginning.
Speaker 2 (01:25:27):
I'll be back. You're gonna need a bigger boat. May
the force be with you. I'm gonna make him an
offer he can't refuse. Go ahead, make my day. I
love the smell of napalm in the morning. You Adrian,
I did it now when I read out those quotes,
I made a point of not imitating the accent or
the intonations, and I gave you no visual clues whatsoever
(01:25:49):
to help you out. They came from a wide range
of different movies, from different genres, different decades and styles,
so there's no common thread to pick up on that
might help you out. But does any of that matter? Nope,
because I'll bet that pretty much every one of you
could name not just the movie they came from, but
also the actors who said them, and probably picture the
exact scene in your heads. Let's try another one, shall we.
(01:26:11):
Luke Skywalker, Captain Kirk, James Bond, Sarah Connor, Sherlock Holmes,
Rocky Balboa, Bruce Wayne, Marty McFly, Indiana Jones, Forrest Gump,
Hannibal Lecter. The moment I say those names, it instantly
conjures up an image of that person in your mind,
(01:26:31):
the actor that played them, the most iconic moments they
took part in, and even the emotions that the character inspires.
That right there, my friends, is the power of the
cultural footprint.
Speaker 4 (01:26:42):
And He's right.
Speaker 3 (01:26:43):
How many other characters new characters have become iconic in
the last ten years. I can't think of a I
can't think of a pretty single movie yeah that has
created a character, because all a character is is the
(01:27:03):
imagination of the writer putting together a set of personality
traits and of line and of words. That's all it is.
And if there is no such thing as a new
idea in Hollywood, I mean we're if we're living proof
(01:27:25):
of that, it's really sad. Anyway. The Critical Drinker the
name of his new video, why modern movie suck. They're
completely forgettable and they really are original babes as I
used to love watching the Good, the Bad, and the ugly.
Clint was hot back then and badass. Yeah, I keep waiting.
(01:27:48):
It sucks because one day we're going to wake up
and we're going to find out that Clint is no
longer with us because he's what ninety four is up there, dude,
he could live to be one hundred and ten. I mean,
same thing with mel Brooks. Mel Brooks, the same with
Dick van dock. He just turned one hundred. Yeah, I
(01:28:09):
get the feeling Dick van Dyke's not doing too well.
Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
Yeah, dude too. Clint Eastwood is ninety five years old,
will be ninety six in may Or was ninety.
Speaker 3 (01:28:20):
Yeah and it's it's it's sad that I mean, that's
it's part of life. I know, life goes on. It
just sucks, just sucks. This UH was sent to me,
this story, and these these bills are still out there,
(01:28:40):
these dollar bills. I want so badly to have one.
They may be worth one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
What a dollar bill could be worth one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars? Because why did what did Microsoft Copilot
(01:29:01):
just decided to start running on by the other computer?
I did not ask it to see. This is the
problem with AI is that it starts hold on. Let
me turn it off before it starts turning things off
on its own. So these dollar bills that are worth
(01:29:23):
one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, they there were two
batches of dollar bills that were printed, one in twenty
fourteen and the other in twenty sixteen that had duplicate
cereal numbers. Somehow, I don't know how, but they had
duplicate cereal numbers. Over six million misprinted one DEILLI dollar
(01:29:44):
bills are in circulation. The US Bureau of Engraving and
Printing Center request to its DC facility to print print
a batch of dollar bills. In July sixteen, twenty sixteen,
the exact same request was sent to the Fort Worth facility.
Now this is going to come as a complete and
total shock to many of you, so you may want
(01:30:06):
to sit down. But this was a government miscommunication.
Speaker 4 (01:30:10):
No, no, it was. I know it. It's it cannot happen.
Speaker 3 (01:30:15):
I know, I know, but just try have a shot,
do whatever it takes to get past that. But the
miscommunication resulted in dollar bills being printed with duplicate serial numbers,
technically counterfeiting their currency. Typically, every bill in circulation has
(01:30:35):
a unique serial number by which to identify it. Neither
misprint was caught. This is again you got to be
a shock. But neither misprint was caught by the US
Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Speaker 4 (01:30:46):
Can you imagine getting busted for having a misprinted bill
that you didn't have any clue was misprinted?
Speaker 3 (01:30:54):
But how would they ever?
Speaker 4 (01:30:55):
How did they my question, how once it's in circulation,
I mean, records is the only thing they could go by.
Once it's in circulation, they're screwed. They'll never get that
bill back unless they've got every bank in America looking
for it.
Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
Is there a machine that can read I'm sure there is.
That's a stupid question. There's got to be a machine
that reads the serial numbers on bills when they go in,
they scan them, and yeah, neither misprint caught by the
US Bureau of Engraving and Printing. In total, there are
six point four million pairs of dollar bills with matching
(01:31:34):
serial numbers. And they say, while that seems like a lot,
there are billions of dollars in total circulation, and to
date only nine pairs have been matched. Wow. Yeah, so
the air would be the odds.
Speaker 4 (01:31:54):
Do you think of you ever coming across two dollar
bills that had the same serial number yourself?
Speaker 3 (01:32:01):
About about one in six point four billion. But it
could happen, right, I mean it could happened nine times.
Speaker 4 (01:32:11):
Isn't that what you said? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:32:13):
Nine times? Is it concentration? Right?
Speaker 4 (01:32:16):
That's the game?
Speaker 3 (01:32:18):
Yes, Yeah, You pick two things and you try to
match them up. So this is like a massive game
of concentration. According to a YouTube video by silver Picker,
the error went unnoticed until a banknote collector found an
anomaly in the Bureau of Engraving in printings public documents. Wow,
(01:32:42):
this again, is going to shock you when I tell
you that the bureau didn't want to admit the mistake.
The collector filed a Freedom of information actor request more details.
The government then admitted the error and the existence of
the six point four million pairs of bills with matching
(01:33:05):
serial numbers. The series date located near the photograph of
George Washington must read series twenty thirteen. The bill must
have a B Federal Reserve seal above the serial number.
Speaker 4 (01:33:22):
Isn't that what's in the image there? It is what's
in the image. Yeah, but no, I'm just looking.
Speaker 3 (01:33:27):
I don't give a crap about you.
Speaker 4 (01:33:28):
I was looking for my dollar, looking for your dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:33:31):
Yes, because this is like, this has got to be
a gimme. And the serial number must end with a
star and fall between B and a bunch of zeros
in A one and then two hundred and fifty thousand
or B three million, two hundred thousand, one and nine million,
(01:33:56):
six hundred thousand. That's a pretty look at this. That's
a pretty wide range of numbers. I mean, you've got Yeah,
there's a lot of chances to win in this government lottery.
See if you're lucky enough to stumble across one of
the dollar bills in you're at least you're a step
(01:34:18):
clars see, and that's just it. You can you don't
have to find both. You just have to find one
of them, one.
Speaker 4 (01:34:25):
Of them, and then you'll know that you've got to
duplicate out there somewhere.
Speaker 3 (01:34:29):
And somebody else is there. I would imagine that there
you can submit your serial number to Project twenty thirteen
B and see if there's a match. In the current database.
There are thirty six thousand serial numbers there TETA, So
you don't have to find both. You just have to
find one. You're welcome and when you find that one,
(01:34:56):
let me know. Because of course, since we told you
about it, we get half. That's a don't we an
how it works?
Speaker 4 (01:35:05):
Yeah? Yeah, I thought so.
Speaker 3 (01:35:07):
Yeah. We'll check in with Dan Andrews coming up next
on The Daily Mojo, where.
Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
Political correctness comes to die The Daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (01:35:35):
Sorry, I was looking, still looking for I can't find
my dollars number one, number two. I did see where
they were calling some Fords, but that's not unusual. Sorry
to you if you happen to own a Ford.
Speaker 4 (01:35:54):
He's the managing editor at CBN News, the host of
the Quick.
Speaker 6 (01:35:58):
Stop podcast, and the moral center of the Daily Mojo
radio program.
Speaker 4 (01:36:03):
He is Dan Andros.
Speaker 3 (01:36:07):
Once again, Sorry Dan, I'm busy. I'm looking for somebody.
Speaker 4 (01:36:11):
Did Dan check his dollar bills? Have you checked your dollars?
Speaker 5 (01:36:14):
Well?
Speaker 16 (01:36:14):
This is all I can think of when I'm watching
that was. You know the problem for me is that
I never carry cash anymore ever me so me either.
Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
I'd have to be like the guy Rriiot.
Speaker 16 (01:36:28):
Yes, well there's that, but I just i the card
like I won't go anywhere that doesn't. Let me just
swipe the card like it's it's actually.
Speaker 3 (01:36:37):
It used to be.
Speaker 16 (01:36:38):
I remember back in my day when it was more
annoying for somebody to pull out the card right and
they'd be it'd be like, oh, you brow your eyes.
Speaker 3 (01:36:46):
They have to do the card. They got to do this.
Speaker 16 (01:36:47):
Now someone pulls out a twenty and you're like, oh,
come on, dude, you're gonna make this person behind the
counter try to.
Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
Count, Like, come on, that is fun to watch that happen, though, Yeah,
to watch I actually my favorite one, can I tell
you my favorite one of those scenarios was this years ago.
Speaker 16 (01:37:06):
I was at a grocery store in Richmond, Virginia, and
I asked. I asked. There was a young guy, high
school kid or something behind the counter of the deli
and I asked for three quarters of a pound of
turkey or something like that. He was his mind was
blown by three quarters of a pound, like he could
not figure it out. He had no I was like, point,
(01:37:28):
He's like, he's like going on the machine. And I
could tell it took a minute because like he was
kind of like he puts some on there, and then
he'd like look at me, and it would be at like,
you know, point three eight. I'm like, no, you gotta
keep going, you know, and he puts some more on
and look at me, and I'm like listen.
Speaker 3 (01:37:42):
I finally said, point, you're going for points?
Speaker 14 (01:37:49):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:37:50):
Oh man? It was you just get a poll? Why'd
you just want three quarters of a pound? Why do
you have to do that to the kid? I don't know.
Speaker 16 (01:37:56):
I don't know, I think who knows, I don't know.
I was that customer.
Speaker 3 (01:38:01):
Would be I guess you know would be fun is
go in and go in and now ask for like
five eights of a pound. Oh I need I need
five eights of a pound of your best ground.
Speaker 16 (01:38:14):
Three sixteens, guys, three sixteens, go ahead, just uh, and
you better be exact because this is important stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:38:24):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:38:25):
I'm I'm gonna Indiana Jones it.
Speaker 16 (01:38:26):
You know, I have to take the idol off and
put my three sixteenths of a pound of turkey on there,
as are going to six out of the walls.
Speaker 3 (01:38:36):
Of a pound of turkey, of roast beef, and eleven
sixteenths now. This is the important one. You gotta get
this one right because from my mother in law, she
needs eleven sixteenths of a pound duck whatever.
Speaker 16 (01:38:52):
Yeah, yeah, thinly sliced, thinly sliced. Let's go need be
able to see thin as you can get it. Yeah, No,
but I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:39:02):
I don't.
Speaker 16 (01:39:02):
I don't carry cash anymore at all. It's just, uh,
I don't like doing it at all. It just seems
cumbersome and uh, it seems just like a paint.
Speaker 3 (01:39:12):
So I'm not winning that be You're gonna You're gonna
get the little chip installed in your wrist, aren't you
where you can just across the.
Speaker 16 (01:39:20):
Little Yeah, I mean, well, I've not done the Apple wallet.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
I don't do that.
Speaker 16 (01:39:25):
I do my two main things is I do like
I do like a couple like the paypals and the
venmos and like that sort of thing, and then just
my card, you knowes my card.
Speaker 3 (01:39:36):
The card though, when you when you see the little
the thing with the reader on the wave to slide
it in, you just touch it to it. Yeah, It's
like that is so magic. How does it do that?
Speaker 4 (01:39:50):
You want to see my wife doing that?
Speaker 1 (01:39:51):
I know.
Speaker 4 (01:39:52):
I'm like, honey, just tap your card. I don't. I
don't know how to do that. I'm like, I tap
the card.
Speaker 3 (01:39:57):
You know, She's right. Well, she's right.
Speaker 4 (01:40:00):
You don't tap the card. You have to lay the card,
just hold it, Okay, Yeah, you're not actually tapping. Well.
Speaker 16 (01:40:08):
The thing that gets me I tap with this, yeah okay,
and somebody's gonna like grab your arm someday and just
be like bam, like put it right on the thing.
Speaker 3 (01:40:17):
Right.
Speaker 16 (01:40:20):
The thing that gets me, though, and I look like
a total moron on occasion, is that, like all of
the tap things are slightly different, so they're not exactly
the same. Right, so one might be on the bottom left,
and so like I'll have bought something, I'll go to
the store buy something.
Speaker 3 (01:40:35):
It's a the bottom left.
Speaker 16 (01:40:36):
Now I get to the next store, so I'm just
without thinking, I'm like, I'm standing there holding it on
the bottom left, and the person behind the counter is
just like, really, you idiot. There's a big, giant, little
Wi Fi sign on the top right, and I'm just
holding it.
Speaker 3 (01:40:48):
Now, this doesn't work, this stupid machine. That's the modern
day equivalent of Star Trek four when Scotty picks up
the mouse and goes computer, you know, just just use
the mouse, all right, computer, I know, computer, you know.
So it's the same thing. We don't know where to
(01:41:11):
hold the little magic card on the magic box or
why can't they make the whole box a reader.
Speaker 16 (01:41:19):
I'm not have you guys had any like financial experts
on like, I'm sure there are rabbit holes on this
on YouTube. I haven't looked yet, but like, what's the
cash like deal? Because like at some point, like it's
just it's going I hardly see anyone, and it's just
so weird that all of our money, like it's not
in a physical like it's got to be backed up
(01:41:40):
somewhere right, Like, but.
Speaker 4 (01:41:41):
Yeah, we have stores in this town that say no
cash carding, Carden card only, which is.
Speaker 16 (01:41:47):
Which is dangerous a get out it is it is.
Speaker 3 (01:41:51):
It is like because the hacking.
Speaker 16 (01:41:52):
I mean if you guys watched like the hacking, like
the people that have hacked, Like I'm fascinated by these
bitcoin like and crypt like thefts, Like, uh there's just
some insane stuff going on with like people like yeah,
that's well, but they're like kidnapping people that they know
have lots of crypto and they're like give me your password,
(01:42:13):
and you know, like you haven't seen these There was
one and there was one crypto guy. Oh yeah, they're
like pulling up in white vans, like you know, they'll
like take family members of like uh wow, you know,
like crypto kings and stuff, people that are like bitcoin
billionaires or whatever, and uh yeah like that. There's been
several of them, and there's been one case where there
(01:42:34):
was like one guy who's like he was like torturing
someone in like the Upper West Side or something like that.
But he was already like a rich crypto guy and
he I don't know it was some competitor or something.
I gotta go back and look, but like he tortured
a guy. You're like, look at this big let's see
bitcoin crypto torture?
Speaker 3 (01:42:54):
Was it Michael Valentino, Tia Frosto Carturin. I don't remember
all the names, but he was kidnapped. Crypto kidnapping. Yeah.
They forced one dude to smoke crack cocaine. What yeah?
Speaker 16 (01:43:11):
He I'm telling you there's wild stuff out there that's
going on.
Speaker 3 (01:43:15):
Like why you got if you've got crypto, man, don't
tell anyone. I don't know. They're called wrench attacks. Uh,
there's a what the latest stayed of wrench attacks, which
also include crypto kidnappings, combining high tech high tech cyber
theft with old fashioned thuggery. They've been taking place in
(01:43:37):
several countries around the world. On May thirty Wow. On
May thirty first of this year, twenty six people were
charged for several attempted kidnappings of a top figure in
France's cryptocurrency world. It was the culmination of police investigation.
Eighteen people have been placed in pre trial detention. So
(01:43:58):
what and they've been taking place uh in Paris, uh
and other places around the world. That's crazy.
Speaker 16 (01:44:07):
Yeah, Well, because if you think about it, there's not
a lot of like what do you do if like
someone takes your It's just so like new that like people,
you know, it's like it's like Robin and Train out
in the wild wild West, Like what.
Speaker 3 (01:44:19):
Are you gonna do?
Speaker 16 (01:44:19):
Like I got the license plate of that horse, Like
I mean you know.
Speaker 3 (01:44:26):
Wait, wait horses had license plates. I don't remember that. Yeah,
weird right there on the butt how they fastened them
on super gloop. Of course, that's that's wild. I did
not know about that. Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:44:41):
So, but that's the future in which we live, well
and think about. I mean, if you and like this
is obviously thuggery, right with the kidnappings, but like if
you're a sophisticated hacker and you find like a password
or something and you figure it out and you just
because there there's been some of the those too, like
where people have stolen millions and millions of dollars just
(01:45:04):
through online stuff, and like what are you gonna do?
Speaker 3 (01:45:07):
Like you don't know who it is.
Speaker 16 (01:45:08):
You know they're if they're good at covering their tracks,
like I mean, well, good luck, your.
Speaker 3 (01:45:13):
Money's just disappeared. The government's been trying to get their
greedy pause into crypto too. With out in California, they're
trying to pass legislation that if your crypto wallet goes
untouched for like three years that the state gets it.
Speaker 16 (01:45:30):
Oh no, no, no, I no, that's the whole point
of it is, so you can have it in there
and you just let it grow and you just don't
need to do anything with it.
Speaker 3 (01:45:39):
Like, yeah, that's that's so bad. No, the guy you're
thinking of. In May of this year, an Italian crypto
investor was allegedly kidnapped and tortured for seventeen days in
a New York townhouse. Yeah for his Ah, yeah that's
the one. Yeah.
Speaker 16 (01:45:59):
I mean that's like Jack Bauer kind of stuff. You know,
it's like, give me a crypto.
Speaker 3 (01:46:04):
How do they even know that these guys have crypto?
That's the weird thing.
Speaker 16 (01:46:08):
I mean, those guys, I think they might have been
competitors or something.
Speaker 3 (01:46:11):
I don't know like that.
Speaker 16 (01:46:12):
Because but yeah, I think I think it's like people
in the news, like it's like a CEO of some
company and like of like these crypto companies usually and
then they'll like kidnap their daughters or something, or you know,
kidnap them and yeah, that's really crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:46:27):
Documentary taken. I am a man with very special skills. Right,
did you did you see this is completely off topic,
but did you see where Liam Neeson is now dating
Pamela Anderson.
Speaker 4 (01:46:52):
Done?
Speaker 3 (01:46:55):
It's like has Liam Neeson found love? It's like he
and pam Anderson have become I mean that was not
I mean, were close. You know what I mean, I
know that's I mean, no sense whatsoever.
Speaker 16 (01:47:10):
But aslan Aslyn goes off and dates the White Witch,
I mean, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
It's I mean, it's everything is so weird anymore? Have
you guys?
Speaker 16 (01:47:22):
It cannot I'm sorry where we're gonna go. I was
gonna bring up the story because uh well, I mean,
I'm sure you've talked about it, and maybe you've beaten
into death, but I mean you have you guys talked
about this, the cold play thing, cold place situation.
Speaker 3 (01:47:38):
That's what I was looking for, right right then we
talked about this morning, how nothing is kicking it out
of the news cycle. I was amazing. I was looking
for when you said that.
Speaker 16 (01:47:49):
Really well, we were just I mean, same wavelength. I
don't I don't know why. I mean, what the I
don't know why Liam Neeson And that made me think
of that these guys, But this story.
Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
Some wild stuff. You know, like it's just that guy's
eyes right there. That is the last time he was happy.
Speaker 16 (01:48:09):
Oh man, that's the life sucking and listen, like you're
doing this like you deserve to get caught, right, Like
it's just I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:48:15):
This is why people are like, oh, but lives are
at stake.
Speaker 16 (01:48:17):
It's like, yeah, I feel bad for the other spouses
that got hurt, but like I.
Speaker 3 (01:48:23):
Do not feel bad for you, Like this is a
good thing that this guy.
Speaker 16 (01:48:26):
Yeah, unless they knew that whatever, but they they clearly
were not supposed to be doing that judging by their action.
My favorite and then the funniest thing is that it's
just spurred on like this whole cottage movement of like everyone,
have you seen the Philly Fanatic?
Speaker 3 (01:48:40):
Have you seen the Philly fanatic one? Yeah? Yeah, it's
my favorite one.
Speaker 16 (01:48:43):
Because we were talking about, you know, because I lived
near Philadelphia and we've gone to the Phillies games a
few times, and like I love the fanatic and like
apparently it's one guy that does the fanatic by the way,
he's been doing it for like thirty some years, and
he's just so funny, Like it's I think it's just.
Speaker 4 (01:49:01):
He's got the girlfriend.
Speaker 16 (01:49:08):
Man, I just love it because he's doing in the
little dance and like I'm looking at he's doing a
little dance like that.
Speaker 4 (01:49:15):
I was so happy.
Speaker 3 (01:49:19):
If they had great, If they had, nobody would have
ever known this thing existed. Yep, it would not even
have existed. And you know they're both thinking that too.
Speaker 4 (01:49:33):
If I had just not said, not react, if I
had not reacted, just waved at the camera and moved on.
Speaker 3 (01:49:40):
Right, I mean I just kind of laughed. There was
a chance, but youddy would have seen it went. Wasn't
that Bob and Kristen or what's his name? Andy?
Speaker 4 (01:49:50):
That was Indian Kristen.
Speaker 16 (01:49:52):
Well but all right, all right, listen, I mean I'm
not trying to listen. This is not I am not
your get out of an affair being caught hotline. This
is not what I'm doing here. But like, let's just
I mean replay the situation. You're the guy, right, and
like you're sitting there and you're canoodling, like maybe just
throw your hands up and.
Speaker 3 (01:50:11):
Be like, oh look at that or on.
Speaker 16 (01:50:14):
Like maybe stop doing the bad thing, like and like
not I mean you instantly.
Speaker 3 (01:50:19):
I mean, this is.
Speaker 16 (01:50:20):
Akin to getting pulled over by a cop and being
like there's nothing in my trunk. Oops, like you just
what are you doing? Like you can't you're on the camera,
like you can't get off the camera now, Like it's just.
Speaker 3 (01:50:38):
I mean, and Chris Martin was Chris Martin.
Speaker 16 (01:50:40):
I mean, let's not under rate like I'm not like
the hugest Coldplay fan in the world, but like.
Speaker 3 (01:50:48):
I don't hate on them.
Speaker 16 (01:50:49):
It's just I mean, look at a cold Play I mean,
not like a couple of songs. It's fine whatever, but
like I mean, I'm not I'm not gonna go and
I'm not gonna go with a bunch of good yeah no,
I mean like they're obviously they're talented, but whatever, it's
just not my I like a couple of the songs,
but I'm not going to a concert and crying at
the concert. Okay, I'm just just not happening. No, But
(01:51:10):
you got to give Chris Martin. You got to give
Chris Martin props for his response, Like in real time,
he diagnoses exactly what's going on and calls them out,
Like I mean, that is that's not easy to do
up there, Like you know, when things are happening in
real time to quickly understand this scenario and be like, oh,
(01:51:30):
they're either having an affair or they're the shyest people
in the world.
Speaker 3 (01:51:33):
Great line, absolutely great line. And then like the next.
Speaker 16 (01:51:36):
Day they come back and they're doing another show there,
I guess, and like he he did like a warning
to the car. He's like, now we're doing a kiss cam,
and I think I don't know exactly what he said,
but he basically, you know, so like if you're having
an affair, like.
Speaker 3 (01:51:52):
Don't you know, try to get on the kiss to
you know whatever? What was it?
Speaker 4 (01:51:57):
What did they like the kiss cam?
Speaker 3 (01:51:59):
Was that a thing before? For I mean, is that
like a Coldplay concert thing that we always at the
Coldplay concert we always do the kiss cam. And if
if that's the case, then I'm sorry you they were stupid.
You don't yeah, you don't show up. I mean at
a concert close ups of couples.
Speaker 4 (01:52:21):
They had been doing it at NBA games and all
this other stuff for years, Okay, right right, yea, yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:52:26):
So you go to another thing and you see the
big screen up there with people being from the audience,
and you're going when you stop canoodling, yeah, yeah, maybe, yeah,
just thinking maybe you don't. You try to avoid it.
You sit where they can't, you can't see a camera,
the camera can't see you.
Speaker 16 (01:52:45):
But again again, don't know. Again, let's let's rewind it.
Just don't have an affair, Like, don't do that, Like
that's probably the better thing. Like if you don't want
to be in that situation at the coldplay, just don't
have an affair. It's like it's just a much better
way to go. I will say too, like are there
jokes going around about this because she's the HR person
(01:53:06):
and he was the CEO, and like she's not just
the HR. She she names herself that her job title
was like chief people officer, which makes me want to
just bag because it's like, oh, we know what HR is, Lady, Like,
don't try to make you sound like you're one of us,
because you're the people. I'm the chief people officer. I
(01:53:28):
love people, Like, oh, stop it. You're gonna fire me
if I don't. If I do something you don't like,
you're gonna call me in and you're gonna You're not
the people person, You're gonna be the chopping people person.
Speaker 3 (01:53:39):
If we're not making the bottom line right, Like if
we're and now it's it's uh. There's a piece over
at MSNBC. The coldplate kiss cam backlash has officially gone
too far. But our collective desire to hurt people we
know nothing about is ultimately instructive.
Speaker 16 (01:53:57):
I'm sorry we are having I mean, not in the case.
I agree, I agree with that in a lot of cases,
but not this one.
Speaker 3 (01:54:04):
Not this one. Like it's doing something you shouldn't have
been doing.
Speaker 16 (01:54:08):
You wouldn't you got your hands taught in the cookie jar.
And I'm sorry, but the internet is free. You not
only did you get caught, but it was just comical
the way it was, like the freeze frames of his
eyes like like right behind her head, like I mean,
it's just all perfect, it's perfect, and then he idiotically
dives out of the camera like that's gonna do anything,
(01:54:29):
like we can't pause it five seconds before. Like again, listen,
ladies and gentlemen, I think this story gives you hope.
It gives you hope that an absolute moron like this
guy can be the CEO of a company and be
wildly successful from the business side of life. If you
(01:54:50):
can be that dumb but then still be that successful,
we can all do it.
Speaker 3 (01:54:56):
We can all. This is a hopeful message for everyone.
It Yeah, it goes to judgment, and I mean, let
he who is without sin cast the first stone. I agree,
we've all done things. We've all done things we hadn't done.
Speaker 4 (01:55:10):
But when you.
Speaker 3 (01:55:11):
See somebody doing stupid things that you go way, you
should have thought this one through. And apparently Ron said
that the the the person at the office who got
them the tickets.
Speaker 4 (01:55:23):
Who bought the tickets to the coplat concert got fired
for them and made that doesn't seem too fair complicit.
Speaker 16 (01:55:34):
But boss asking me to lock down some Cold Play tickets,
what are you supposed to say?
Speaker 3 (01:55:40):
No? Right? Yeah, so there's I mean, if we knew
like I mean, yeah, that's yeah. But yeah, lessons and
let it be a lesson to people who were thinking
about doing something they shouldn't have been, because I'm sure
there are you know what, this has probably saved a
lot of marriages when you stop and think about it,
(01:56:01):
because I'm sure the number of number of people who
know about this now and have rethought an affair that
they were having and went, wait a minute, I don't
want to lose everything I got. And and maybe they
were thinking about getting out of the relationship to begin with.
But this went, oh, this is my okay, you know what,
it's not you, it's me. I don't want to get caught.
I don't want to ruin your life. Let's call this
(01:56:23):
thing off. So this probably end up saving a lot
of marriages when you stop and think about it. Maybe
there's your silver lining. Absolutely, there's your silver whining.
Speaker 16 (01:56:31):
You're you know, you might not be wrong there, you
might not be wrong there. I think that's a very
fair point. He squirrel finds an acorn every now and then.
What's on the quicks Now? Watch guy today? Now watch
somebody who think they're being smart. They'll be like, hey,
you know, they'll go on and do a show like
we've got Johnny here, who all he was in the
(01:56:52):
midst of an affair but decided to call it off,
and now he's saying how it's saved his marriage.
Speaker 3 (01:56:57):
And then his wife's like, what you were doing?
Speaker 8 (01:56:59):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:57:01):
But I stopped again? Let it be a lesson? What's uh?
What's today on the Uh? Well, there's your problem.
Speaker 16 (01:57:11):
Man. We talked about the Colbert the Colbert thing, because
that is yep, that is something else to behold that
they're shocked, shocked and surprised that having Stacy Abrams and
Bernie Sanders on every week is not working out.
Speaker 3 (01:57:25):
Yeah, and they're losing.
Speaker 16 (01:57:28):
I mean, ah, gosh, I know we're way late, but man,
just the way those we talked all about how those
things operate and how they waste money and how like
how do you how does the show cost one hundred
million dollars today in twenty twenty five, Like, that's just
insane anyway, So the stuff about the in and out,
how they're getting out of California, the CEO is and yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:57:46):
And more about Small Warner podcast. You can find it
wherever you get your podcast, but primarily at CBN dot com.
So at Dan andros on the right and always have
a good cy for the conversation that as they say, hey,
is that Wait a minutes, let's go. You're doing you're
(01:58:07):
doing what.
Speaker 5 (01:58:10):
That?
Speaker 3 (01:58:10):
Right? There is two hours of audio. Delicious is known
as the Daily Mojo for Today Tuesday, the twenty second
day of July. It's t to Tuesday, the year of
our Lord, twenty twenty five. Let's find out if anybody
learned a damn thing during the course of the program.
You and guru in the Rumble chat room says, they're
now calling it the Coldplay cam. Now, yeah, no, they
(01:58:35):
did not change They didn't change the name, did they.
Speaker 1 (01:58:39):
Dude?
Speaker 4 (01:58:39):
You see all the AI generated kiss cam images have
come out.
Speaker 3 (01:58:45):
Bill and Monica, and there's one of you and me
out there.
Speaker 4 (01:58:49):
I'm sure there is.
Speaker 3 (01:58:51):
It's you know what love is love. But again, it
may have it probably did save some marriages. Maybe people going,
wait a minute, I just this is a bad so
something looking out of it somewhere right, Missy thirteen, if
you're having an affair hit the floor right, it's maybe
(01:59:12):
they wanted to get caught, she says, because how stupid
can you be to take that? That's what blows my
mind is that you're trying to keep this on the
DL and you're out there at a Coldplay concert with
thousands of people.
Speaker 4 (01:59:27):
They never saw him, never thought they would be on camera, guaranteed,
never thought.
Speaker 3 (01:59:33):
Yep, look you do, doctor free range prisoner real Bradstag's
watch the movie Den of Thieves for the answer about
a machine that reads serial numbers. Really, so there is one, goodness, gracious,
look at that. The time is true. It's all dipping
rot By yeah, zipping right on by. It's just like
a zipper. Remember, we the people must hang together, otherwise
we shall surely hang separately. Ask the kiss Can folks
(01:59:56):
six emper tyrannus, Resist stupid, and good night, Doc Thompson
wherever you are, Love you, yash.
Speaker 1 (02:00:02):
Listen at the Dailymojo dot com m