Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast, Justice your mojo.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure now.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
The age what sixty? He's just going to break.
Speaker 4 (00:14):
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 common sense. That liberty and justice for all
is a mystic behavior.
Speaker 5 (00:34):
Want to you can't and when you do, you wish
you did.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
This is your Daily Mojo.
Speaker 4 (00:41):
Wow, it's another day and another kiss. Another kiss seems
to have ended another career.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Oh yes, but you didn't see this one coming.
Speaker 4 (00:56):
Oh hold on a sago word about it when you
need right there, I just moved about. I don't think
that was really a bell. What kind of bell was asked?
I wasn't an official bell.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
It's mighty like on my bell I got from I
got it from.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Doesn't work. That's not official. Is that is that a
lot a licensed product of the Daily Moo or is
that just some random bell you came up on the.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Side of the road the March of Dimes, thank you
very much. Oh so maybe it's licensed a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Nope, nope. So this kiss is another another right out
of the blue it's a kiss that uh does it
shake the foundation of the industry? I don't know about that. Here,
here's just a little I'm gonna tease you with it, Okay,
the proper way to do. All right, little tease. I'm
a lock it. I like teases. You don't, Yeah, I do. No,
(01:57):
you don't, honestly, all right, you're dressed funny, not that
kind of tease. Okay, here is speaking of dressing.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
He's consistently one of the most photographed people on En.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
No, no, no, oh, sorry, but I was sorry. I don't know.
I don't know that. When you just listen, listen to
the program. Okay, your follow up, the Australian Red Cut.
All right, I play this, okay, all right? Who is
the random black guy? You just have a thing for
random black guy. It's on your set. You in trouble
the first time you remembered remember, uh huh, that's right.
(02:33):
We won't go into it, but that's what it was.
A kiss came. If you're just if you're just now
joining the program and you heard the comment regarding Ron's
first marriage and the kiss and the gnant, it's that's
just hearsay. There's no physical proof there might be physical proof. Okay,
there might be some, but it's not it's not compelling
(02:53):
physical proof. Here once again is the.
Speaker 6 (02:55):
Quote, he's consistently one of the most photographed people on
any Australian red copet.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
I and I'm to be very upfront and forthright with you.
I think it's the same person. I mean, how many
people in the world could have that particular combination of
names be visually alluring, visually captivating. Maybe that's the uh
(03:29):
we're gonna find out if it's the same person you
would have seen so much of model Christian Wilkins on
Maybe it's a different one. I don't know if they're
calling him the same one, but it sure would be
a weird cooinky dink if in fact this was not
the same. Now you can take the picture. Okay, now
I can't. Okay, now you can. There you go, ready three?
(03:50):
Take two? That is Christian Wilkins. But you knew that,
didn't you. I did not. Actually, Oh come on, you
did too. Don't play koy with me. That's Christian Wilkins
from the Well. He's wearing the Dolphins jersey there, but
(04:10):
he should be wearing a Raiders a jersey. But you
know why he's not wearing a Raiders jersey. Why because
they cut him on Monday. Well, actually they cut him
on Thursday. The reason they cut Christian Wilkins from the
roster on Thursday, according to ESPN, is that he Christian
(04:32):
Wilkins kissed another player on the head and the other
teammate took offense to it. What that's what ESPN says.
The incident was not the sole reason that Wilkins was cut.
Uh huh. This is according to sources, he has been
(04:52):
recovering from a Jones fracture. Have you ever fractured your jones,
because let me just tell you, it is tough to
come back from a Jones fracture.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
We're not going to discuss my Jones fracture.
Speaker 4 (05:05):
But think, well again that led to you know the
first merit that the hole, the kit it's it was ugly.
But this Jones fracture he suffered in his left foot.
Don't even try to put those two together last October.
And evidently from the spokesperson for the Vegas Raiders, which
(05:25):
just sounds weird, does sound weird? I know they I
know they've been there for a while. Now, what has
it been two years, three years, whatever it is, they'll
always be the Oakland Raiders. It doesn't matter. But anyway,
spokesperson for the Raiders said that Wilkins did not treat
rehab for his jones injury as he should have, and therefore,
(05:46):
and this is the part that hurts, therefore, he has
forfeited and voided the remaining guaranteed money left on his
contract June fourth, the remaining money on his contract thirty
five point two million dollars because he didn't treat rehab
as and he kissed another player. It doesn't say the
other player was male. Well, I'm gonna guess it was.
(06:09):
It's we're talking talking about the Raiders. Yeah right, I
mean it could be a woman. Who the hell knows anymore.
It's twenty twenty five. Why are you being so gender specific?
Thank goodness.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
I don't think the NFL has any female players right now,
do they?
Speaker 4 (06:21):
You don't know that? I just dare, I asked the crow.
I was there. I wasn't you even.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Do not use gendered language to go to address.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
Every well or close to being out of the woods.
But you had to bring up the dude thing with Oakland.
Wilkins asked the NFL Players Association to file aggrievance on
his behalf, and the union did so on Thursday. Now,
the incident happened inside the team meeting room. This would
be the kissing incident, which I don't think I have
to tell you about the whole astronomer CEO and the
(06:54):
people person and they're but you know, the love is love.
What's wrong with these people? It is not known. Uh,
let's see the the kiss happened inside the meeting room,
or as they're calling it, the incident. One source told
ESPN that the interaction was playful, just came up and
(07:16):
kissed him on the It says he kissed him on
the head. And so you're picturing somebody come up, you know,
from behind, not liplocking him.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
I mean, that's is that not tantamount to slapping somebody
on the ass? I mean, hey, go get them top.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
That's a very good point. That's how these are guys
that every ever they get their freak on the field
in front of millions of people by slapping each other
on the hind quarters. And yet somebody gives you plants
a gentle kiss on the back of your nogging and
you're like, teammate did not see it as playful. It
is not known what the fellow player did following the incident.
(07:52):
I mean, for all we know, the teammate could have
turned around and planted an.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Got to go turn him, turn him in for kissing
him on the head.
Speaker 4 (08:04):
I may have used a different term, but it's okay.
I think that you know that that that fills the gap.
I see what you did there. I didn't intend to
do that. That was just the natural course of conversation,
natural intercourse.
Speaker 7 (08:19):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
A complaint was filed to the Raiders human resources department,
where it has it that really right that Kristin Cabot
will now be heading up the Raiders, not not not
Christian Wilkins, Kristin Cabot. There's a difference, Well, there might
be a difference which investigated the incident, the human resources department.
(08:40):
Can you imagine being the human resources department at an
NFL team. You got an entire cast of characters out there,
like you said, on any given Sunday, slapping each other
on the ass, doing god knows what. At the bottom
of a dog pile, there's stuff getting grabbed down there
(09:01):
and slammed and squeezed and caressed and you know what's happened, Yeah,
it's please. Complaint was filed to the HR department. They
investigated the incident. The Raiders, through a team spokesperson, however,
has declined to comment because we wouldn't want to talk
about that. We would want to talk about somebody kissing
somebody else on the head in the locker excuse me,
(09:22):
the team. There's a difference team meeting room, locker room.
So we were fairly confident that the two individuals were
fully clothed. Although are we sure.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
Just from the red locker room that that machine of
yours that just cut off again? I can't get to it. Okay,
I'm on it now. Finally it lost its internet connection.
Speaker 4 (09:43):
So we're we're there. Well is going on here? I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
I'm in the process of resetting everything, So give me
just a second.
Speaker 4 (09:49):
What is going on? Do we have more gremlins in
the works? I don't know, dude. I wanted to while
we're While you're taking care of that, I do want
to real quickly say the thank you to both Devon
and Jason who have the uh they've joined the family
as founders.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
You can do the same thing by going to the
Daily Well they well they were founders. I think it
just okay, Yeah, it doesn't matter. We appreciate it, we do,
does not matter.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
We still love you. And if you were here right now,
Devin or Jason, I would come behind you and kiss
you right on the head. Hell, i'd kiss you on
the lips. I mean, yeah, dude, if this dude kisses
you on the back of the head, what are you
gonna do? I mean, kiss me on the back of
the head. Yeah, that's what I'm gonna do too, Because
were you afraid of him? No, I'm not, but apparently
(10:41):
somebody on his team is. I can't figure out if
you're racist or homophobic? Which one? Neither one? Are you
a racist homophobe? Can you not handle the the tender feeling?
I think I kiss me on the back of the head.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
I would appreciate it very much because what am I
going to do about it?
Speaker 4 (11:07):
Last offseason, Welcins signed a four year, one hundred and
ten million dollars deal, including eighty four and three quarter
million dollars guaranteed, with the with Vegas. He had spent
the previous five seasons with the Dolphins. As you saw,
it was Jersey there, with whom he posted a career
best nine sacks. This gets a whole new meeting to
the word sack, does it not. He collected seventeen tackles,
(11:30):
two sacks, and six quarterback hits in just five games
in twenty four before undergoing that season ending surgery for
his fractured jones. So again, we don't have complete details
on whether or not he was their tongue involved when
he laid one on the back of a teammates tep
Why won't the other teammate speak up? I want here,
(11:52):
but this is you know what, You're not taking this
sexual assault very serious? Technically that's what it is, right,
sexual assault, unwanted sex advancement. I mean, he looks like
a lovable, harmless fuzzball to me. I'll give him some
luck right here, big old, especially if he went to
the Dailymojo dot com and signed up as a supporter
(12:15):
of the program. Ron will come over and rub his feet,
won't you. I don't know that's a stretch as we No,
he could stretch him out to do. If you know
that makes you more comfortable, that's fine as well. Either way.
I mean it has become a little crazy in the
world today. I don't know what it is. Something's wrong
(12:35):
with the world today. All right, Ron, I'm gonna give
you a chance to redeem yourself. Something wrong with the
world today. I don't know what it is.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
I don't know the answer to your question that these
are lyrics.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
Where are we living wrong? We're living on the edge.
Thank you, you did it. Good for you, very very nice.
We're gonna make a wow. We're gonna make a We're
gonna make something out of you. I don't know what
(13:16):
it is yet, but we're gonna make something out of you.
Uh see, Stinky Biscuits. If you'd like to be a
part of the program today, and after all, who wouldn't
quite frankly, use the hashtag what I learned today. You
can tag us in your posts at Real Ron Phillips
at real brad Stags except no imitations. Stinky Biscuit, first
out of the gates.
Speaker 2 (13:33):
That you know, how do you spelled p f f
f f f f T Yeah, exactly, good for you.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
At Real Ron Phillips and his amateur unauthor unauthor caned, unauthorated, unauthenticated. Okay,
you're welcome. At least you can speak bells yeah, or
is that balls? Are you? Have your balls been authenticated? No?
Did you lightly tapped your belt? I did you lightly
(14:05):
tapped it? You gave it a little light. I wondered
if I could hear it if I lightly tapped it up.
You just wanted to see. Let me just reach over
here and see if it be. It was more of
a caress than a whack. Some people, after all, want that,
more of the caress than the whack off my lawn.
Let's see. Arizona woman sentenced to sentence for seventeen million
(14:28):
dollar fraud scheme. What was the fraud scheme? We'll look
into That was a better hiding pardoned, hardened crack addict.
Har uh, what is the This is a means on
the line right now in America. That's okay, this is
(14:51):
hey hones. This is a visual. I got to put
it over here on the machine that may or may
not work. We'll see just a sagod is it? Well?
You hear that right there? Listen? Yeah, that that's the
that's the sound of shit ain't working, baby, which is
exactly what the teammate of Christian Wilcom Wilkins said when
(15:13):
kissed on the back of the head. That shit ain't working, baby,
all right, let's see if it Let's see if it
makes it this time. Here we go in three two
on the line right now in America. That's people's do
process rights and treat them to speech rights.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
And secret plea from running around.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
This country coaching people up off the streets. We have
a legal right to be here. There's too much going
on in this country. Yeah, get them, Corey, Get them, Corey,
where are we gonna stand? You know what it is now?
Speaker 3 (15:43):
I just heard the word breed with.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
His faces are just a meme, dude, that's the funniest
they are, and.
Speaker 4 (15:50):
It's you know what it is. It's just the the
Titanic theme has become such a croucheade meme over what
is it now? Twenty years twenty ninety seven, dude, you
shittn't me, not even close nineteen ninety seven, almost thirty
years ago. Yeah wow, and still as relevant right now
(16:11):
as it was back then. But and let me see
the hands of everybody who once you heard Nancy Pelosi
and her explanation yesterday of what was it called?
Speaker 2 (16:26):
I want to say it was called the final No
I kept that was in countdown, not that one.
Speaker 4 (16:33):
No, no, it was the wasteful of vindication, just imagined Ralph. Anyway,
she explained exactly how they take somebody down in using
the media by smearing them and taking them down. And
it's a circular logic thing. And now once you know
the secret to that, as Marshall Brodeine one said, once
(16:55):
you know the secret, it's easy. And that's what they've
that's what they do now. So every time you hear
one of these demics, mostly the demo the Republicans do
it too, but you hear him doing that and that's
all this is. No, he's just or something like that. Yeah,
the Final, the Final White, It wasn't the final.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
It was something smear final countdown?
Speaker 4 (17:17):
Do come on, you can leave me out here on along?
Wrap up? Thank you? Was it a W or was
it was it a W? Was a w wipe out?
Wrap up? Okay, I rest, final countdown. We're going to
(17:44):
try something here that we haven't What was the last
thing he said on the radio. I don't know about
trying something they hadn't ever tried before. Famous last words,
Am I right? Uh no, we've actually tried this before.
I'm not gonna We've tried it. It hasn't always worked,
but it's sometimes. And when it does work, it's fabulous.
(18:07):
When it does, it's even when it doesn't work, it's
still pretty damn good. Okay, what as they say, the
worst day on vacation is better than the best day
at work, right, unless you like your right? Yeah, good point,
excellent point. You know how they say, if you just
do something you love it, it'll never feel like you you
(18:27):
work another day to work, that's such horseshit day when
you feel sorry. Just just that's one. If you're a
ute out there listening that, just don't buy any Just
do something that you can that you do love. But
there will be days when you barely tolerate it. Just
know that's the truth. Uh. And then one day you
wake up and you're dead and it's all over. So yeah.
Speaker 5 (18:49):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
In the meantime, you don't want to have feet like mine,
or feet that are cracked and nasty and Nancy Pelosi ish.
You just don't want you don't want feet like that.
It's you don't do you cracked and nasty? That explained,
Cracked and nasty, good description. Cracked sounds like a rapper.
(19:11):
Cracked and nasty or nasty crack. Anyway, I did a
little thing this morning, and I'm as I'm putting on
the shoes, in the in the socks and taping my
two toes together because one of them is blacker than
Dion Sanders toe.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (19:32):
And as I take my toes together because there's you know,
the one that's hanging down gets all trapped up and stuff.
So I figure if i'd tape it to the one
next to it, maybe it'll have a little extra support.
And I'm wiping on the body butter on my feet
because it feels good. And I noticed, and this is
part of the reason why we chose the name smell
(19:52):
my moojo dot com. Okay, unlike some of you people, Yeah, i'ron,
I'm looking at you and that other person that's around here.
What the bethy what's her name? Bethy? Bethy? Not not
yeah that one. Uh, talk about an hr nightmare. You know,
as I smell my tender smell my mojo, people will
(20:15):
think that's nasty. No, So in a in an effort
to try to you know, tie the product into what
it does, because not only is it good for you,
I mean it's good for your feet it's all natural.
It was the owner of the company created it as
a response to a problem that needed to be fixed.
She she solved the problem. Essentially. It's not that she
(20:38):
ever really wanted to be in this old business, but
she was like, Hey, this is a maybe I can sell,
and she did. And look where we are now. Smell
mymojo dot com. And as I'm putting the body butter
on my feet, I realized my toes smell like Pachuli
and Patuli. Ron. Did you ever figure out what Patchuli
(20:58):
smells like? No? As a matter of fact, but really,
you've never in all these times I've talked about Patchuli,
and you've never once thought, oh, I should go smell
Petchuli so that I can say, yeah, I know what
Patchuli smells. Why you just find pechuli to smell that
corner that's if you leave the motel and you take
like two rights and then that one corner with the
(21:19):
people that's hanging around under the stop light there and
the short dresses.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
I understand it smells like mint, because that's what you
said before.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
Smell like mint. Who said that? Are you on crack again?
Speaker 2 (21:32):
You said it smells like mint. That's what I remember
you saying it has a minty smell.
Speaker 4 (21:38):
Okay, particularly didn't have a MINTI no, hang on, no,
I think that I may have said it had it.
It's had a little it's a shade buttery land. It
six jasmine in there, cinnamon oil, the argon oil, the
alo vera, the oil. This is the windy day. It's
(21:59):
it's called body butter. But it's also moisturizing cream. So
if you've got dry parts on you and you need
to moisturize, this is the stuff to do it. It's
body It's like a thick lotion. I want you to
remember this conversation when we do this day in history
coming up. But it's like it's a thick look. It's
good for the dry parts of your body that need
to be moisturized. So anyway, I thought, well we should
(22:20):
have a little, uh you know, kind of a jingle thing.
And I went to our favorite band and I loaded
some instructions for our favorite band. And I don't know
if what I've honestly, I have not heard this yet.
So this is either going to be really good or
it's gonna suck. And they gave us a couple of versions.
(22:40):
Now let's see, it's probably odds are it's gonna suck,
but let's do it anyways, because that's what we do
on this show. Thanks Daddie Downerd. Why couldn't it just
be this is This has the potential to be awesome, awesome,
this is Well, here we go. Let's see if it.
(23:01):
Let's just see if it doesn't suck.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
My toet smell like Pacalli and yours can too.
Speaker 4 (23:06):
When you go to sleep.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Dot come.
Speaker 4 (23:17):
My toast smell like what? Okay, So it doesn't know
how to say petuli. It said pacalli. It did say pecauli, which.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
I did like to smell my mojo dot com part
of the jingle though, that was pretty cool.
Speaker 4 (23:35):
Oh, everyone's a critic. Oh, here we go with you,
although I'd say, no, that's not the right one. Hang on,
I was trying to play a different one there.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
I've lost connection to that computer, by the way, so
that computer can to which computer? Your main computer or
your v mixed computer. I'm trying to reconnect to it now,
Oh I can. It's not on the internet yet, so
that's why I'm not on the internet. That's why I've
lost your connections. It's resetting itself. It will reconnect momentarily.
(24:03):
I'm sure.
Speaker 4 (24:05):
That is so. That is so odd anyway, So that
was the the area, all right. So uh, I'm telling
you it's the NSA all right. So here's the second
version of it's not PECAULI just think pachuli. Okay, ready
for the thinking petula. Okay, why wait in this damn thing?
(24:27):
Here we go.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
My toes smell like Pecoolie, and yours can too.
Speaker 4 (24:46):
Okay, she didn't sing the really.
Speaker 3 (24:51):
Go to smell mymojo dot com?
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Did she seem a little overly excited about that at
the Yes, I mean she, but not entire Let's try that.
Speaker 4 (25:03):
Let's try that one more time, and this time, don't
I mean that sounded we like the ecstatic feeling, but
it sounds a little creepy, like you know you and
the just so just dial it back. I doubt she's
dialed it back. The music not wait till it's over.
Admitcing right, well, that you'd think you'd hire these professional
jingle singers, and you'd think that maybe once or twice
(25:25):
they'd have done it in the past. I mean, look,
the line is simple. My toes smell like Pachuli, and
yours can too. When you go to smell mymojo dot Com.
It's it's really not complicated. You can be moisturized, you
can smell like Pachuli. It all happens at the same
magical time.
Speaker 3 (25:44):
Mato smell like Pacalli and yours can too, and you
go to sleem dot Come.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
I think it has a future. I don't know about you,
but I think it has a future. Am I wrong? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (26:01):
You gotta teach it to say but truly though.
Speaker 4 (26:05):
Oh what so? Now it's on.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Now it's my job to teach the AI how to
teach the AI how to say the word. Apparently it
doesn't know the colleague. Okay, I'm not sure you do.
Maybe you have to wait and spell it out.
Speaker 4 (26:23):
I've tried that. Okay, gotta smell my mojo dot com.
Do it today and your toes can smell like Petuli.
Smell mymojo dot com radio. Yeah, it's red Wednesdays here.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
Let the expect put your feet on lock.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
The Daily Mojo.
Speaker 4 (27:01):
Is it really already Wednesday? Because that just doesn't seem possible.
This week has been so much fun already I don't
even know what you say. Tim is over in the
Daily Mojo chat room. He says, I'm ready a great
for a great show from brad Stags and Raw Films.
Speaker 2 (27:16):
Sh yeah, we'll start that pretty soon.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
We are. This is I'm dragging shut up for the rehearsal.
Once we get this all smoothed out, we're gonna do
it for realsies next time, I promise Tech Golden A
Drew busy critter is busy, but good morning. I think
that's that's Wyoming speak, beach girl. Yesterday saw my colon
(27:40):
oncologist a year and a half cancer free. Yes, that
is fabulous. That is excellent because quite frankly, we do
not and this goes for each and every one of
you listening. Don't die, please, we can't afford it. You die,
we lose money, we can't know. Just stop it. We're
(28:03):
putting a moratorium right now on death, Jim and ee
uh see leap, says PECAULI sounds like something that one
would order it olive garden. He kind of does. You're
right and over in the rumble chat room, the okay,
(28:25):
that's weird. The there are a lot of weird you know,
I'm starting to wonder what the hell's going on. There's
a lot of weird like sides, the little bits and
pieces that aren't doing what they should be on your side.
I think we may I think we may have been hacked. No,
I'm talking about the Internet in general. It's really strange.
Missy thirteen says, and I like Frankensonse right. Ccenzo one
(28:48):
twenty five says, smells like Catholic guilt that happens. See
John Klatt Senior. My thought on hippies. Hippies are mean
people per to be nice, while metal heads are nice
people pretending to be mean. You know what, I don't
(29:11):
think he's too far from the truth. I mean, not all,
not all hippies are mean, not all metal heads are nice.
But generally speaking, the metal heads that I've known, and
I've known a few in my life, once you you know,
you get them, you first have to kidnap them, get
them away from their cult. But once you do that,
(29:33):
they're really cool. I mean, you take the spikes in
the in the nose rings out and they're very nice people.
And I've known some people who you know, you would
think we're hippies using air quotes that really are dicks,
And you don't like that, do we? We don't like
we don't like dicks, do we No, No, we're just
(29:57):
going to say no, we don't like Now I'm not
gonna say I'm Please, do not misunderstand my transition into
this story. Ricky Lynn Laughlin. There, that's her right there.
She good looking girl. Yeah, she's a good looking girl.
(30:22):
But apparently, you know, when you're talking about the metal
heads and the and the hippies, the hippies that are
dicks and the metal heads that are seem but are nice,
she apparently likes the dick part the people who are
This is not working out well, is it going? She
ricky Lynn Laughlin very attractive I think, but maybe just
(30:44):
a little too attractive to I mean, look what you know?
What am I saying here? Huh? Hot? Am I right? Hot?
Twenty six years old? And yep, another one has bitten
the dust. She has been arrested poor screwing her students. Yep,
(31:08):
another one bites the dust? Is that not amazing? I mean,
here's a maskota student. However, Oh wow, I know, right?
What the hell? She said? X rated photos at a
video of herself using a sex toy to a teen
student over Snapchat, as well as soliciting nude pictures of
a boy and of the boy in trying to pressure
(31:29):
him into having sex. According to the Mary's County Investigators,
she pled guilty to endangering the welfare of a child
creating substantial risk, first degree first offense, no sexual conduct
last Thursday. So she a bunch of pictures exchange. This
is in Saint James, Missouri, at Saint James High School,
(31:51):
and the time of the crimes was between September eighth
and October nineteenth, twenty twenty three, and the headline reads married, married,
special I bet she's not anymore married. Special education teacher
pleads guilty to sending nudes to student on Snapchat so
(32:12):
special needs. I don't know what that means anymore.
Speaker 2 (32:17):
Well, she was a special needs special education teacher. I
mean it was she was sending pictures to her special
ad students necessarily.
Speaker 4 (32:30):
Would you bet your life on that? No, okay, she
sent them to us she's a special needs teacher than okay.
She avoided jail time after more severe charges, including statutory
rape and sex trafficking with child work. The kid was sixteen,
And again, were there any teachers when you were sixteen
(32:54):
that looked like that?
Speaker 2 (32:57):
I mean, yes, what I mean we had your teachers,
and they were pretty, but none of them that I
know of. We're trying to get in anybody's birches.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
Miss Maybon may have been maybe, but she and she
was reasonably hot. I mean she was all right. We
had to teach her certain, Miss Fountain, we live in
the simulation. Well, just okay, I got it, I got it,
(33:33):
I got it. Uh she Uh, I have a problem
with the whole. Are they children at sixteen? Eh? Maybe? Well,
it's an age of consent thing, right, I know you're right, absolutely,
And I'm not defending what she did. I'm just and
(33:54):
sometimes well all the time, words matter. When she allegedly
invited him to have set he made excuses because he
did not feel comfortable. A probable cause statement by the
Mary's County Sheriff's Office states to launch the investigation after
a Phelps County detective tipped them off about an inappropriate
relationship at the school. And so anyway, she's maybe go
(34:17):
back to the picture, but you'll perv. I mean, wow,
it is what Well, she is twenty six, so what
makes me a perv about that? Well, I mean she's
a convicted fellow at this point. So Hey, whatever, you
(34:38):
know what, She's a date, not Mary. How's that? Okay?
And then I'm looking at this the same. I don't
have the story over there, and I don't even know
if I can get it over there. We'll see. But
the Sydney Sweeney thing, which I swear when you're going
to talk about, because I just I think it's what
I think it is. Have you heard the Sydney Sweeney thing?
Speaker 2 (34:58):
U about the commercial that she did?
Speaker 4 (35:02):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, what what have you heard that?
Speaker 2 (35:08):
Because she did the commercial A bunch of liberals are
going after her for something.
Speaker 4 (35:14):
That's what I heard. I don't know how I could
have encapsulated it is Nazi propaganda. You don't haven't heard
the Nazi propag that? No, Oh, it's Nazi propaganda. That's
all it is. Because Sidney Sweeney is seen, hopefully here
soon she is seen. Is it not going to show
(35:36):
that one? Now crying out loud? Hold on a minute.
Is it showing different things on different computers? Apparently it
is because you're from the other computer. It is showing
Sidney Sweeney in her in the genes. Let me just
see if I's not showing it on on that one.
(35:56):
It's the same d M r L, but different a
different video for some reason. All right, so there's Sydney
Sweeney in the Genes and it's for American Eagle clothing,
and she basically says I have good genes because she
and and because she is you know, blonde haired, dirty blonde,
(36:18):
white chick with blue eyes. You know, it's uh to
do saying she has good genes. That's exactly what they did.
You know, the Third Reich in Germany in the thirties
will do good genes. They obviously don't know how to spell,
meaning g E n e S versus j e S. Yes,
(36:39):
that's the jeph. That's well, no, that's the idea behind
it is it's a what do you call it when
it's a one word sounds like another one? But it's
not not a metaphor, it's not a not a synonym.
It is an automatopoia. Right, yeah, don't you threaten me
with a good time anyway. That's the whole idea, is
that that was the play on words, that you know,
(37:01):
she has good jeens because she has American eagle jeans on.
And again the left and others are going wackado over
this because yeah, it's all white supremacist. That's fascist subversion,
that's probaly. This was genius, in my opinion, in the
meeting room where they discussed this, because it's exactly what
(37:23):
they were going for, and they were hoping to spin
up a controversy and they did. And it's beautiful. I mean,
this is true. This is how you go. This is
a perfect lesson in virality in the cluttered market place
of stuff that's just wrong on so many levels. I
(37:46):
can't even here. It doesn't even matter what she said.
I didn't, you know. Here's the weird thing. I really,
I didn't used to think that Sydney Sweeney was. That's
a good look for me, isn't it go back over here?
I can no, I can't get up there. Oh that's
really weird. I can't even get to that computer now. Yeah,
the hell's going on here?
Speaker 2 (38:06):
We'll play a little bit more of that commercial while
we're waiting on you.
Speaker 4 (38:09):
That is a good look for me. Let me just
tell you anyway, if you're listening to the podcast right now,
you have no idea what the hell's going It's okay
because that's generally what happens around here. This is just
a rehearsal for the show, So this is not actually
the official show that we'll be doing for you that
you'll be hearing later. If again, you're listening to the podcast.
If you are considering watching the show and you're listening
(38:32):
to the podcast, you can watch it anytime that it
works at the Dailymojo dot com. You can also watch
us over on Rumble. The best way, of course, though,
when it's working, is to use our app. Most of
the time it works, you can download that at the
Dailymojo dot com And there she is over in the
Rumble chat room. My grandma, my grandma would say that
(38:57):
Sidney Sweeney is built like a brick shit house. Your
grandma would say that. Your grandma would say, all right, okay,
missy thirteen. Now they're making a big deal out of this.
The fat green haired libs are saying it's a Nazi movement.
That's again. I this was a cot. I believe it
was a conscious decision on the part of the American
(39:18):
Eagle Company and their marketing department, and it was brilliant
because they knew that it would gin up this sort
of faux outrage, and then they fell right into the
trap and boom, how do you get Because the funny
thing is, I was originally thinking when I heard Jeff
Fisher on his Chewing the Fat Fat, Chewing the Pat
(39:42):
Fat podcast. I heard him talking about it, and I
swear when he said American Eagle, I'm thinking of the
airline something Sidney Sweeney, because I was listening Sidney Sweeney
isn't a commercial for American Eagle Airlines. And she's wearing jeans,
and I'm trying to picture in my head how what
she like getting onto a plane wearing jeans, and they
(40:03):
talk about I could not for the life of me,
and I didn't realize it was American Eagle jeans. Yep?
Is it American Eagle Outfitters? Is that the full thing?
So yeah, I think you're right. Okay, which, all right?
Guess what the ad did exactly what it was supposed
to do. It It caught my attention. I know what
it is. I know what they're selling. This is a
(40:28):
home run as far as an ad campaign is considered.
It is. Tell me, I'm I'm absolutely not. This is gene.
This is exactly how you cut through the clutter. You
get free advertising. When they go back and they have
the post mortem on this campaign, and they go, all right,
let's see what worked and what didn't, and that works.
(40:53):
I'm sorry, it does work. It just it draws you,
suck to you right in and you don't even which
is I know, I've feel like such a perv. But
I didn't even used to think that Sidney Sweeney was
all that hot. I didn't either, really kind of weird.
I don't know what changed, because she's in that what's
the show called that she is in euphoria? Yes, yeah,
(41:15):
And I'd seen that a couple of times, and there
were you know, she would drop trow at the drop
of a hat, and I remember reading a story that
she said she didn't want to do that anymore. I mean, yeah, right, sure,
But I just I always thought I thought her face
looked odd, but maybe she's growing into it. I don't know,
(41:40):
Missy thirteen. I don't even know who she is other
than modeling those genes. Great pr job, the jeans, barred
the gene. I know, I get it. It's good. If
you were on at she is huh.
Speaker 2 (41:56):
If you're on X, then you know who Sidney Sweeney
is because about every fifth picture is her?
Speaker 4 (42:02):
Oh is it? Oh? Yeah, John Clatt, how can I
get into those genes, buy the correct size and put
them on uh crafting freak. It's good old fashioned sex
cells and that is the truth.
Speaker 1 (42:15):
It does, but.
Speaker 4 (42:18):
You have to and this is this is lightning in
a bottle right here. This is what this is. And
it's tough. It's tough to capture this. It's really tough
to do it twice. So we'll see what they try
to follow this one. I don't know who the marketing
company is for them, and maybe it's in house. But
they did a fantastic job. That's all I have to say.
(42:41):
They did a great job. I commend them and good
for them. And maybe you know what it could be
this morning that I am just all kinds of jazzed
and happy because we could do Phil, if you won't
do well, we could except we don't have any fill
this morning. Oh really, I feel bad. No Phil Bell,
(43:01):
and I'm assuming he's okay. I have not heard you
should feel bad. I do feel bad. You should feel bad.
I didn't know we didn't believe today.
Speaker 2 (43:09):
That's I feel like my day is going all kind
of walky so far, I don't understand what's going on.
Speaker 4 (43:15):
Well, if you understand one thing. Remember, it's all so
we don't know what Ron did. I don't know that
we can thank him. I don't know we can thank
you for not having Phil Bell this morning. Damn it,
(43:38):
you're welcome.
Speaker 6 (43:39):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (43:39):
In the meantime stella'smojo dot com that was somebody's. I
saw a note that said that they tried to go
to stellar'smojo dot com and they couldn't get there.
Speaker 2 (43:47):
And I don't know, no, it was that she couldn't
find this, but I pointed her to it and she
found Oh good, you did.
Speaker 4 (43:54):
Hold on you. You fixed it. I just gave her
the U R L directly to it. I'm saying it's
a good thing. I just yes, we fixed it. There's
nobody standing at the window right now. That's so that's
so weird. There's no one clap. I'm clapping for you. Ron.
(44:16):
I appreciate that that you fixed it, and that's a
good That's another great example of our app working flawlessly.
For those of you have a question, you can send
Ron a text of note on the app and he
can he can fix it for you. But if you
go to stellar'smojo dot com, that's where you'll find the
covid light, the electrolyte support for cardio brain, energy, and
immune It's like taking your vitamins in a drink. If
(44:40):
you gag on pills, you won't gag on this. Let's
work on that slogan. I think that we can probably
smooth that a little bit.
Speaker 3 (44:49):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
The covid light at stellar'smojo dot com is again, it's
like drinking your vitamins. It's a nice I have the
orange tasting and it's well COVI like plus orange. That's why.
And it's really about keeping your your machine, your body,
your body. I don't know, I turned to a forest gump,
(45:12):
but it's about keeping your body in top running condition.
It's about being ready for the next stupid plandemic. If
you think they're done with that plan, I think again.
But you need to stay healthy obviously if you're going
to get things accomplished in this life, and the easiest
way to do that is make sure your body is
(45:33):
getting everything it needs from the inside out. That's what
doctor Stella Emmanuel is all about. She was berated the
machine tried to take her down at the beginning of
the whole Rona drama by trying to They tried to
smear her with a wrap up smear. They tried to
(45:54):
smear her by saying, oh, she's the most She's the
doctor that is writing the most prescriptions for ivermectin in
the in the whole country of the world, the universe.
That's bad because you know a horse paste. She's like, no,
I will. And you can get your iverbactin from doctor Stella.
You can get your hydroxychloroquin. You schedule a little telehealth call. Again,
(46:16):
you can find all this at stella'smojo dot com. Get you,
get you the needed meds that keeps you one step
ahead of the game, and things like the COVID light,
which not only helps you and your immune system stay
on top of it, but also keeps the brain sharp.
It's not gonna make your toast smell like pachuli. That's
something different, completely different. But if you want your brain
(46:39):
to be in tip top shape, if you want to
be able to think on a you know, a moment's notice,
to be able to be able to pivot on a dime,
then you want stella'smojo dot com. That's what you want,
and you want it now. When do we want it?
We want it now, damn straight, we really really want
it now, go to Stella's Mojo dot com. Use the
(47:00):
promo code Daily Mojo. Get five percent off, which is
better than a swift kick in the butt, isn't it? Yep,
unless you're unless again, you're into kicks in the butt.
No judgment, just saying Sellersmojo dot Com and promo code
Daily Mojo, do it now. The Daily mo show making
(47:24):
ball in his.
Speaker 3 (47:28):
They keep it funded Inside news laughs and the news
that feels so.
Speaker 7 (47:35):
Daily.
Speaker 1 (47:39):
We'd like to say hi to any government agency monitoring
this broadcast. Do you want to find us.
Speaker 4 (47:48):
The Dailymojo dot com on any given Wednesday, That's where
you'll find us here at the Daily Mojo. Apparently if
you look in her front yard, that's where you will
now find Kristin Cabot. She was seen watering her flower bed.
(48:11):
That is not a euphemism, for those of you with
the who are inclined to think that it would be.
Speaker 7 (48:14):
That is not.
Speaker 4 (48:15):
She is out simply watering her flower bed in the
house that she and her apparently still husband. Is this
the pr Is this the I mean the hr lady
from Astronomer? Yeah? Interesting, Okay, that's her I mean, she's
looking what are they? What did they? This is the
(48:37):
story in uh let's see what was it the Daily Mail?
I think it is h Yeah, yeah, the Daily Mail.
Uh so they they they used a word to describe
her in the way she's dressed. And I'm like, I thought,
well that seems kind of weird. Let's see it was
(48:58):
a Daily Motestam layered necklace says yeah, oh, they they're
talking about her necklaces too, because she's she had on
this necklace. It's a but they're calling a layered necklace. Well,
you wear them wrong. You wear laired necklace. I don't
on Saturday. On Saturday when you put the dresses on,
no bread, Oh you wear those without you wear them
with the necklaces. But it's okay. No one said you
(49:21):
had to wear a dress with a necklace. It's just
I know, it seems like it might make more sense.
But anyway, there's her with Are they getting together or
was this just a fling? Are those two? Are we
looking at true love right there? Well, right there, we're
looking at terror. That is nothing but sheer terror. That
(49:43):
is again the last moment of happiness in this dude's life,
and the moment that she realizes, h shit. But she's
wearing the same necklace. So it's that layed necklace. And
she's said she's same one that she has on out
there watering her flower bed. Now here's the the And
(50:03):
again I'm assuming that you know people like her and him, well,
you know, I wish we could have gotten this kind
of publicity for the company, you know when we worked there,
and we maybe could you know, have taken the bottom
line up a few notches. But they're getting it now.
And uh so they kind of delved back into her
past and there she is in uh uh college college.
(50:31):
I think that's college. She was a d G. She's
a Delta Gamma. So all of you Delta gamma's out there, congratulations,
you got there's another one in your midst. Kristen stenic Is.
She majored in pollysci, so good for her. It's the
the eyebrows. We needed to something about the eyebrows? Am
(50:54):
I right? With harsh? Harsh? They come across as hard?
All right? You like them?
Speaker 5 (51:04):
No?
Speaker 4 (51:05):
I mean I just.
Speaker 5 (51:07):
Good.
Speaker 4 (51:08):
It doesn't matter to me, doesn't Did you just say
it doesn't matter?
Speaker 2 (51:12):
She hasn't started plucking them yet.
Speaker 4 (51:14):
Or something that a euphemism. No, okay, you meant she's
done something to them. There there she is in uh uh,
she's drinking with the other a Delta Gamma sorority members
her the symbol. I don't did you know what is
the symbol for the delta gamma for turn sorority? Rather,
(51:38):
I don't know because it's an anchor with pearls that
I don't know what it means either. Were you ever
in a sorority?
Speaker 7 (51:48):
No?
Speaker 4 (51:49):
Okay, uh she is? Uh?
Speaker 1 (51:52):
But she uh.
Speaker 4 (51:54):
They say she was quick to align herself with girls
from affluent families. I think they're trying to paint her
as a gold digger and as an opportunity taker. Who
isn't who isn't a gold digger amongst us? Come on,
that's all be intellectually honest with ourselves. You see the opportunity,
(52:14):
it's like, whoa who was it? Do you see that
text message? Oh?
Speaker 1 (52:22):
Wow?
Speaker 4 (52:24):
Well what's it saying? Is it that good? She says, yeah, Bethy,
not here, I'll fix that. While you were waiting for
the cameras to reach here, I'm at delta gammut. She's
not our best. I didn't know, Bethy, was a DG.
Why do you think I brought it up? Oh? Man, see,
(52:45):
I'm not stupid. I know how these things work. Uh. Look,
they're all the same, all of these stupid sororities and fraternities.
I mean, that's what they teach you. They're like little
little many training camps for life, bits of line. And
so she's out there aligning herself with the rich people.
(53:07):
Who was I think it was Copernicus who once said
it is just as easy to love a rich man
as it is a poor one. Right, Because I'm not wrong,
am I? And neither was Copernicus. Huh see what I'm
saying there? You got me? Are you feeling me?
Speaker 7 (53:28):
No?
Speaker 4 (53:28):
You don't want me to feel like you're not feeling well? No,
not in that sense. I mean that's always been kind
of a problem. But you know, there are so many
examples when you get right down to it, of of
love and life and people who are thrust literally into
the spotlight that and you don't know. I mean, it
(53:53):
could be the Christen Cabot and Andy Byron, two names
that you didn't know a month ago and now you
do and will forever live in infamy because you know
they were caught in the kiss camp. But they could
be that could this could be the start of something beautiful, right,
It could be the moment that their lives changed forever
for the better.
Speaker 2 (54:14):
They ever have kids amongst them, then yeah, they can
tell that story later.
Speaker 4 (54:17):
That'll be fun. Why don't they have to have kids
amongst them? Mom? Yeah, how did you meet? Well, there's
a story there. Let me show you this video. Kids.
But I mean think about the enduring love that we've
all seen happen. Well, for instance, on this day in
(54:40):
uh in history, which some things happened, and our our
interns he just wandered into the into the boof over there.
So our intern Kevin wants to tell you about one
of the more interesting items that have opened on July thirtieth.
(55:02):
This is almost the last day of July. The year
of our Lord twenty twenty five. Has happened a few
years ago, but I think that it's it's relevant today
in the discussion that we're having about love and enduring relationships. Yeah, okay,
who would have known? Who would have known that this
their relationship? For instance? Right there, this is like the
definition of endurance. Right there, This is endurance. This is
(55:23):
endurance and here's a here's our intern cabinet.
Speaker 8 (55:26):
What happened on July thirtieth, nineteen ninety eight, Well, Monica
Lewinsky turned over the infamous blue dress that contained quote
physical evidence quote of her affair with US President Bill Clinton.
She claimed it had semen on it from when she
performed oral sex on Clinton in Sebruary of nineteen ninety seven.
The following month, the FBI reported that Clinton was the
(55:46):
source of the semen on the dress. This evidence prompted
Clinton's famous what the meaning of is is statement in
defense of his previous denials of having sexual relations with Lewinsky.
Speaker 4 (55:59):
Huh, but you're saying that he did, in fact have
sexual relations with that with miss miss Lewin. I did not.
I did not have sexual relations with that one with
miss Lewinsky. All it all depends on what your definition
of the word is is thank you? Thank you in turn, Kevin,
(56:19):
You're welcome, glad I could help, always always a pleasure.
What I'm sorry, I didn't hear that. Hey, you're doing
it wrong? Is that for Ron?
Speaker 6 (56:31):
Hey?
Speaker 4 (56:32):
Ron, Yeah, you're still doing it wrong. I don't. I don't,
but it's not so. It was this day and look
at the love affair that the two of them have
endured over the decades, almost thirty years now of love
and friendship for the two of them.
Speaker 2 (56:49):
I mean, come on, you look at this image and
what pops into your head but a pornographic image of him.
Speaker 4 (56:55):
You know, having a cigar.
Speaker 2 (56:57):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (56:59):
That pops into your head? No, but he did. He
did plunge your cigar. If I'm not mistaken, were you there? No,
but I heard about it, did you you say so?
I Hey, if I'm if I wasn't there, I don't
know what happened. And besides, it's love and it's a
(57:21):
personal thing. Why you got to get all down on him? Sorry?
She went, Why do you have to stay classy, san Diego?
Don't be so down on him like I like people
are right now with Trump? You know, he's a Bill
(57:42):
Clinton was fine in the oval, you know, under the desk.
But Trump has a picture taken with some girls. Well,
mister Lewinsky was she was a vage? How old was she?
How old was Monica Lewinsky in nineteen ninety seven? You's
a good question. Yeah, I don't know, That's why I
asked it. All I did and here's I typed in,
(58:06):
how old was Monica? And guess what auto filled Lewinsky
in nineteen ninety seven. Okay, she was twenty four. There
you go. So she was a consenting adult.
Speaker 7 (58:19):
She was.
Speaker 4 (58:19):
So that's the yeah, I mean, yeah, they are all over,
They're all up in the trunk in trouble. For any
of this he did, it's because of his position. You
don't think she got in trouble. I mean, I think
she probably had problems from it. But I don't think
I was going to say you don't think she she
didn't get trouble. No, but boy, don't you think that
(58:46):
she probably had? Uh? I would if I had to guess,
given the Clinton's tracks, I would guess, Yeah, she paid
a price. I mean again, she was an adult day price.
Speaker 2 (59:00):
She just didn't get into legal trouble like he did.
Speaker 4 (59:04):
That we are aware of. Yeah, that's true. So but
would you I mean, I wouldn't trade places with her.
Nom might be a joke. I just I don't have
time to tell right now. I will say, Uh, let's see,
do we have a sponsor of this portion of the
program or is this just one of those I think
(59:24):
we got it.
Speaker 2 (59:25):
We did put out a new item for Mojo Laser pros.
If you want to look at.
Speaker 4 (59:29):
That, Oh, sure, now you're gonna do Now you're gonna
dig yourself out of Oh, I'm sorry this. My mouse
is now decided it's gonna go on the fritze. Heng
you on a stacha? What in the hell is happening? Refresh?
Go ahead? I would love to refresh if my mouse
would do what it's supposed to do. Yeah, go ahead,
(59:50):
tell us about Mojoe.
Speaker 2 (59:51):
Let me get over here on my side. Since you
can't show it.
Speaker 4 (59:54):
That's a wait a minute, you can. All this time,
you've been able to show it on your side, and
I've had to show it on my side. I've had
to show my side to the audio and you haven't
shown your side. I feel like I feel like there's
an imbalance here in our relationship. There's not an I
feel like I feel like I am showing all my
snizz out there to the general puzzle.
Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
We decided that we were gonna Misty said, look, we're
going to try to offer fill me up there once
a week. Yeah, we're going to offer once a week
something new. And so we decided we're going to go
with these new no soliciting signs, the new news new
no soliciting signs that we've created. Oh my god, but
(01:00:36):
so there you got little sign that I actually have
on my front.
Speaker 4 (01:00:40):
Door right now. But we got a euphemism.
Speaker 2 (01:00:44):
No, we've created some new six by four inch no
soliciting signs that we're offering. That's no, you're you're not right,
six by four inch and we offer different of course,
different sayings on them. There's crazy dogs live here. Do
not knock, they will bark, I will yell, shit will
get real.
Speaker 4 (01:01:04):
Very nice.
Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
Yeah, no solictening. We are too broke to buy anything.
We have found Jesus, we know, uh, we know how
we are voting. So unless you are family, friends, or neighbors,
or are delivering a package, please go away.
Speaker 4 (01:01:18):
Pretty cool. Wow, that is not very neighbors.
Speaker 2 (01:01:22):
Don't knock a ring doorbell, No solictening, don't make it weird.
Speaker 4 (01:01:26):
Don't ring our knockers.
Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
And then my favorite one, no solicting unless you're selling
Girl Scout cookies. It's a and right now they're on
sale for twenty bucks. Same as downtown.
Speaker 4 (01:01:38):
Get your the hell out of Dodge. How are you
going to do that? How are you. I think I was.
Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
I was telling you how we make these yesterday. Do
you remember, m hm, this is this is black matt acrylic,
so it's not shiny specifically. But I put it on
my blacker than Dion sanders Toe put it on my
metal believe it or not, my metal laser. It's the
fiber laser, and it turns the black white. It's really
(01:02:10):
weird how it works. I don't know how I came
across it, but that's what it does right there. So
it shows up really well, vaguely racist. You're taking the
black with white, Yeah, turns the black white. They are
on sale now twenty bucks, same as Downtown. Go to
Mojo Laserpros dot com to get yours today.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
You and Sydney Sweeney, Wow, well, I don't know. I've
not seen you in jeans, but yeah, I'm willing to
take a shot, all right. So it's Mojo Laserpros dot com.
And do they have to enter a promo code or
any They have to upload a picture or enter.
Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
The promo code Mojo Favo for ten percent off. We'll
see it come through. But yeah, so please, we'll see
it come through if you don't enter the promo code,
so we'll handle it.
Speaker 4 (01:03:00):
But if you I'm you know, I'll bet you will
at the discount. But when you say you'll handle it,
I've met me. We'll handle it. I betting you will.
You will handle it repeatedly and often for a price.
Mojo laserpros dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:03:17):
If you're offended, you're listening wraw Good Daily Mojo.
Speaker 4 (01:03:40):
Over in the uh Daily Mojo chapero. We've got that
Scenzo Old carries the same cookies much cheaper. Yeah, but
you're not supporting of an American industry like the girl Scouts.
When you do that that, I'm with you. You can
also get the ones at Kroger that are like the
(01:04:02):
mint julip or whatever they are. And it's uh yeah boye.
If we used Ron's black to white laser in Detroit,
maybe we could open the industry again. Wow oof oof Right,
it's funny that you should mention Detroit and I did not.
This was not planned whatsoever. Which hang on a second.
(01:04:28):
All I have to all I have to do is
get the damn little mousey pointy thing to.
Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
Yeah, there's some weirdness going on on your side of
the house today. Your room in the hotel has got
some jacked up something.
Speaker 4 (01:04:44):
Uh. It's uh and it is not my fault. I
can promise you that prove it. It's uh uh huh.
So I was looking through a sub I love, uh
the subred abandoned porn. It's yeah, because this is where
you found all your malls, isn't it? Malls and every
(01:05:06):
other sort of thing that has been wasted away to
the ravages of time. And this is the the rest
thee hold on. Second, it's the Ray. The John Carr
Bottling Plant and the John Carr Bottling Plant opened in
(01:05:26):
the Delray neighborhood of Detroit way back in nineteen forty
and it was a at the time. I love the
description of Detroit and the area at the time because
they talk about the different neighborhoods. There was a Hungarian
(01:05:49):
neighborhood people and I just started thinking about why they
You know, we are. This is not going to be
a major truth bomb on anybody if you stop and
think about it, but we are very tribal people. We
tend to hang around with people that are either like
us or like the same things as us. We have
some commonality with it. Just it makes things easier. That's
(01:06:12):
why you go to any given big city and you've
got Chinatown because all the Communies like to hang together.
It's kidding, of course, not all the Chinese are Communists,
but it's weird how many are, isn't it. You've got
Korea Town, You've got uh Generally, there's a h and
I don't know if this happens some more, there's a
Jewish part of town. Does that really happen as much.
Speaker 7 (01:06:36):
Like in Uh?
Speaker 2 (01:06:37):
Well, I think I think the public tends to congregate
in specifically Jewish.
Speaker 4 (01:06:44):
Yeah I don't, I mean I would think so. I
mean in New York, in New York State, the Jewish
neighborhood is called Manhattan. Okay, yeah I did there because anyway,
But in uh, in Nashville, see, it's the it's the Jews.
I'm telling you, the Jews are coming for me. They're
freezing up all of my Look. I take back every
(01:07:05):
bad thing I ever said about the Jews, except for Adam,
and he knows. By the way, it's been two years
now since Gwen left this earthly plane. What what two years?
No freaking way, dude, I know again, we miss Gwen
rich on a daily basis around here and it's and Adam,
(01:07:29):
it's been it's been two years. So anyway, I just
you think of Jews and you think of Adam. What
can I say? So back to the Detroit thing. I
don't know what's going on with these cameras. So hey,
the good news is while you're doing that, the weird
thing is my mouse has started working again on this
other computer. So I don't know what the hell is
(01:07:49):
it's happening, but it's certainly weird. Anyway. So this John
Carr Bottling plant in Delray, in the Delray neighborhood of
Troit was I guess historically there were a lot of
when I say, Hungarian immigrants, and again it was the people.
(01:08:15):
This goes back to the whole immigration everything is kind
of tied in to all of this. In a manner
of speaking, it was Hungarian. What was the other What
were the other ethnicities that were there? There was a
list of them here, but they all loved this particular neighborhood,
the del Rey area. And there's a piece at it's
(01:08:41):
called Phrenology blog spot. Delray lost its ethnic heart and
soul in the sixties and seventies. What was once a
vibrant European mixture of Hungarian, Slovakian, and Polish immigrants dispersed
among the Detroit suburbs, notably downriver areas of Allen Park,
Lincoln Park, and Wyandott. And it had a unique character
(01:09:04):
in the time. And now that that computer works, I
can take you and show you the other fabulous images
of this part of Detroit, because again it had When
you look at these pictures, even the architecture, it was cool.
And you get different architecture when you have different ethnic
(01:09:24):
neighborhoods because people immigrants from all over the world come
to America and as they have since America began legally.
That's why when I hear people talk about, well, you know,
like the officer, the officer that was shot in New
York by the I can't remember his name, black guy
(01:09:52):
from Granada Hills anyway, the shooter. They talked about the
police officer that was working security and that he was
an immigrant. Had this whole he was an immigrant. First
of all, I'm very sorry that he was killed. Secondly,
ninety eight percent of Americans don't nobody has an objection
to immigrants. Nobody, nobody.
Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
It's the illegal part. Yes, which is why they've tried
to wipe out that whole. You can't call them illegal
what they are illegal. When you come here illegally, you've
committed an illegal act. Therefore you are technically you're an
illegal immigrant. And they it's the marketing campaign. Nobody is
against immigration. It needs to be reformed and we need
(01:10:36):
to streamline the process more because it is a giant
fuster clock right now and cost too much money, et cetera.
So while I understand why people do try to skirt
the system, that doesn't make it right. Sometimes it's easier
to steal a diamond bracelet than it is to buy one.
That doesn't make it right. But this immigrant area of Detroit,
(01:10:59):
and it is it's sad what has happened to Detroit.
I mean, you go up there and buy houses for a.
Speaker 4 (01:11:04):
Dollar, but you look at this architecture and it's just
and this was a this is the bottling plant, the
exterior of the bottling plant, and the people that were
telling stories about how they would go here to this plant.
And when you think of a bottling plant, the first
thing that pops into my mind is some giant industrial
(01:11:25):
concrete building with smoke stacks and stuff like that. That's
not what this bottling plant in Delray, in the Delray
neighborhood look like. It looked like a very ornate, almost
a Victorian style building ish and it has Victorian elements,
but in very colorful. Hey, don't you know that's the
(01:11:49):
other thing we don't see architecture like the details like that.
I think those would be called Corbel's. I think those
are concrete too. The boat, I guess somebody leave a boat.
That's a good question. Why do you walk away from
your property? I mean maybe the engine didn't I whatever,
but it just seemed like, damn, that's a nice boat.
(01:12:12):
But they they bottled the.
Speaker 7 (01:12:16):
Up.
Speaker 4 (01:12:16):
In Michigan, it's called pop it's called something different. There
is soda pop coke, but they bowed oh so good
brand they call it. They call them Sodi's in Missouri. Sodi's. Yeah.
They do a lot of things weird in Missouri. Uh,
but they people love this oh so good. It was
(01:12:38):
the bargain brand of the day of the of that
time period. It would be kind of like the uh
remember Shasta, Yeah, yeah, they still make Shasta. I think
so Shasta is always kind of when you think of
Shasta what do you think of orange? You think of
it as being better or worse quality than like Coca cola.
(01:13:01):
Uh different.
Speaker 2 (01:13:03):
I've never really had a particular I mean, if somebody
asked me if I want to coke, and I'm like, yeah,
get me a doctor pepper. I don't know the differences
in the flavors. I don't know the differences, so I
don't I can't tell the PERPSI okay, sure, No. I
mean back when I was growing up, my mom would say,
(01:13:24):
do you want to coke?
Speaker 4 (01:13:24):
Yeah? What kind? Right, doctor pepper? A coke?
Speaker 2 (01:13:28):
Coke was used like Kleenex, you know, the brand name
was used as the drink.
Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
Which is again a good place to be if you
have a good brand, you know you don't want to
get you For instance, bad bad case of brandy would
be you don't want to get your dress Lewinski. No, correct,
See she paid the price. When your name has become
a verb, a messy one, you've paid, You've paid something
of a price. But anyway, so the boat is there
(01:13:58):
at the back of the John Car bottling plant. It's
just and I again, I love these old these pictures.
There's a that's a shoot Glen Rock brewing. Yeah, I
was looking at the bottle the Glen Rock Beverage Company
in Milwaukee, and again, just a really cool old vibe
(01:14:20):
to it. And the fact that it was this whole
area of Detroit was kind of taken out of the
loop when uh, I guess it's like eminent domain city,
the county, the state comes in and they start, you
know up, well, we decided we're cutting this. Uh, we're
(01:14:41):
putting in a different road over here. And by the way,
you know you're gonna go from having a thousand cars
a day driving down your street and seeing your business
to none. Good luck to you have a have a
good life. That never seemed really fair. I mean, life
isn't fair, but those are the kind the things that happened.
And that's kind of what happened to this del Rey
(01:15:03):
area of Detroit that in the auto industry, an industry
that failed to keep up with the times. If Detroit
had awakened and smelled Japan before they were taken down
by Japan, now we might be living in a different country,
(01:15:26):
might have better cars. It's sad what they've done to Detroit.
But this if you are into the if you're into
abandoned porn. It's abandoned property, abandoned places, porn. It's a
great subreddit, and it's a great story on Delray and
(01:15:49):
the the John Car bottling. The flavors that the OsO
company made were lemon, lime, cherry, grape, strawberry, root beer,
and orange. They didn't have a cola drink though, the
OsO Beverage Company, and one of the people that they
(01:16:10):
interviewed for the story says, I remember as a kid,
they bottled the soda right there, and the dude who
owned a place used to fish right out of the
back window. That's what brought me to the boat. I
was like, Aha, all right, so that's why there was
a boat there, and they would stand at the back.
(01:16:31):
I'm assuming that's the window that they would stand in
front of. More pictures and there it is. And is
that a river or is that the street over there?
I can't tell, but apparently there's enough of a body
of water right out the back. And those don't You
don't have that kind of vibe in towns anymore. You
don't have little towns like this anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:16:51):
Really.
Speaker 4 (01:16:51):
I know there are a few out there, but for
the most part, you just don't see this kind of stuff.
That's the thing.
Speaker 2 (01:16:59):
Yeah, we were on our trip going to Roswell, and
we stopped at a few places on the way out there,
and and and and even on the photographs that you
took stopping on your way, you know, vacation and around.
Speaker 4 (01:17:13):
The historical nature of cities is cool to me.
Speaker 2 (01:17:17):
And the reason it is is because you try to
put yourself back in that time frame. You know, what
were people doing, what were they thinking? Life was easier
quota in the day, except it was slower. Yeah, yeah,
they didn't. They didn't have they didn't have to They
didn't have internet, they didn't have social media. I had phones, well,
(01:17:38):
but they were they were on the wall and you
had to you had to ring up, you know, Margaret
at the freaking operator to get to anywhere.
Speaker 4 (01:17:47):
But they you didn't carry us on with Team twelve
nineteen forty, but yes, you did have to bring up,
would you, Margaret? Margaret? Margaret. You and Margaret had a thing.
Speaker 2 (01:17:59):
I love go into old cities or towns that I
like going to old towns that maintain and not even
maintain per se. I mean, like the old buildings like
this one. You know, they're not maintaining this building is
just that they haven't torn it down, so you get
to see the historical aspect.
Speaker 4 (01:18:22):
And no one will tear it down because it costs
money to tear something down. Sure, Sure, and who wants
to spend the money in there tearing that thing down?
The reason that see Delray downtown in sixty seven I
already showed signs of two decades of neglect. Many of
the shops and second story residences became little more than
(01:18:42):
tenement for transient workers. After the Detroit Riots in July
of sixty seven, the writing was on the wall for Delray.
Like many other Detroit neighborhoods. White Flight went into hyper drive,
always sad to see an established community fall into ruin
and abandonment, but almost one hundred years of history and
(01:19:03):
heavy industry had taken its toll on the Delray neighborhood
and turned it into what it is today, a virtual
ghost town within the Detroit city limits. And then he
goes into talking about how it lost its ethnic soul,
heart and soul, which it really is too bad because
again these people who would come from different countries and
(01:19:24):
would settle and have you'd have you your Korea town,
your Chinatown, all the different towns, and while you were Americans,
and you did celebrate being American, but you also you
integrated into society, but you didn't lose the parts of
you that made you, you know, from Hungary or from
Poland or whatever. But then you've got this fine line
(01:19:47):
between that and seeing these as we did a few
weeks ago in La Remember all of the riot well, right,
the peaceful protests when they were out there carrying the
Mexican flag. Yes, like, okay, well, who the hell I mean? No, No,
you wouldn't have seen these people from Hungary or Slovakia
(01:20:09):
or Poland out there walking around carrying the Polish flag,
a Hungarian horse, Slovakian. Well, they were all escaping communism. Okay,
everybody's always escaping something. And then I want to come
here to America and then bitch about it some people's kids.
(01:20:30):
Am I right? Of course I am. I know. Why
don't I even ask that question? Of course? I am
Joe other way flavored twice the caffeine, John Clad Jolt,
all the flavor and twice the caffeine. In response to
the demand for a better tasting soft drink, Joe, do
they still make Jolt Jolt cola. I remember that, do
(01:20:52):
still make it? I don't know. I do remember too.
W Cuncle says it's me again, Margaret Ray stevens, Oh, yeah,
I've ever tell you about the time I made the froze,
didn't I? Son of a you did? I did? And
I can't get to that computer again. I don't know why.
Speaker 2 (01:21:09):
Yeah, we we got to figure out what's going on
with that, obviously, but thank you, Katin, which because I
think we should ignore it. Because I can't get to
it either. So that computer now I can't.
Speaker 4 (01:21:21):
Oh, I can do it. I can do it. I
just did it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:23):
That computer it loses its Internet connection for whatever reason.
Speaker 4 (01:21:27):
I'm a hero. I just did it. I fixed it. Look,
I did it myself. Me in seven seas uh Crown Point.
In several towns are working to preserve the historical buildings
in their downtown areas. According to Cenzo one twenty five,
it is it's nice to see. I hate it when yeah,
(01:21:47):
in the name of progress these and I know it
has a lot of it has to do with money,
because it does. Sometimes old buildings don't make sense to
keep around. We talked about this with Nashville and the
Second Street bombing and the irony of the fact that
he's trying to bomb the damn AT and T building
or whatever the hell, which I no one ever, you
(01:22:09):
never know what's going on in that big building down
on Second Avenue in Nashville. It's just this fortress. Apparently
it is a fortress, because the bomb went off right
outside in front of it and nothing happened to it,
but across the street it wiped out half the block.
But you know, they're going to have to, you know,
rebuild those buildings on Second Avenue. Sadly they won't be
(01:22:29):
the original buildings, but they'll likely be better. But Nashville
has always been a town where they don't seem to
give a crap about the history of stuff. I mean
they I watched the mowdown the studio where Elvis recorded Heartbreak.
Hotel put up a parking lot by the way that's
now been mode under, and they're putting up high rises.
(01:22:54):
So it's just it's a weird town for that. I'm
not I'm not dogging, no, I kind of am, because
it is nice to see some of the history preserved.
Missy thirteen, yeah, so cool. The homes. They explained that
the busier. The wallpaper was showed wealth. That's a good point. Yeah, yeah,
(01:23:17):
put up wallpaper. I don't, I don't, you'd know it
if you had, no, I don't guess I have it,
will it? Let me tell you it is a it's
a three person job. That's a one person job, because
when you got three people in there, they're all trying
to tell you how it should be done.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
And I can't imagine. I can't imagine trying to line
it up if it has pattern, that's.
Speaker 4 (01:23:39):
The biggest penalty. As in New Hampshire, my grandmother's house,
my parents' house, and now I don't know who owns
it because don't get me start anyway. They used to
wallpaper the ceilings, and I'm thinking, what in the bloody
hell who massacres popcorn ceilings? Hated that? Oh? It just
(01:24:02):
it's like wallpaper. Here, let's think of something that we
can do together that will make us want to kill
each other. I know, let's wallpaper the ceiling. Lord have mercy.
I can't even begin to imagine why the hell they
thought of that being a good idea. And then again
the wealth aspect, because yeah, if you did, and a
lot of times they would put up fabric, nice expensive fabric,
(01:24:25):
and it's funny, you should mention the wallpaper and I
tied it into fabric. Because this was the day as
well that a lot of people were put out of
their jobs because of the creation of the loom, the
weaving loom, and all the people who had previously made
(01:24:50):
quilts and fabric were you know, they were screwed because
now this automatic machine comes along, invented by the last guy.
His last name is Northrope, and he creates this machine
that will make fabric and all of that, and people
are like, what are we going to do? Well, he
ended up creating more jobs because you had to, you know,
(01:25:12):
you started to have people fixing the looms, et cetera.
But that was what actually came to mind when I
was watching this interview on artificial intelligence, because it is
sneaking up our backside even as we speak, and AI
is going to do some things to society as a whole.
(01:25:38):
Poor choice words. But when you hear what this guy
explains what AI is really going to do, it'll it'll
probably worry you, and it will it's one of those
things that'll make you go, huh. I hadn't really thought
about that aspect of it. Well you will in the
second here on the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 1 (01:26:01):
The Daily Mojo.
Speaker 4 (01:26:28):
You know, AI is not just for creating really cool
songs and jingles like my toast smell like and yours
can too if you go to smell mymojo dot com.
But if you, uh, if you step back and think
about what is really going on with a I uh
(01:26:50):
this uh guy's name and I knew I was going
to forget it. And it doesn't really matter what his
name is. He's a he's he's an expert in uh
in AI. The channel over on YouTube is a AI upload,
and this was it's not uh, it's not Ilia Ilia
(01:27:15):
suit Skiver. This is a different man talking about the
real effect of AI on our lives going forward. Let
me see if this next year that is at the
wrong speed. I can already tell you who knows how
that happened.
Speaker 7 (01:27:35):
The vast majority of programmers will be replaced by AI programmers.
Speaker 4 (01:27:40):
We also believe, wait a minute, it didn't Joe Biden
just tell us that if you lost your job, you
should become a programmer.
Speaker 2 (01:27:46):
Code yes, and now we're micro has come out now
and he said, you know what for twenty years we
were telling in our kids or grow up and become coders,
because they were going to make a ton of money.
And you know what, coders have made a ton of money.
But now, but guess what. You can build an entire app,
an entire website completely coded using AI. I've seen people
(01:28:08):
do it. It's crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:28:10):
Could that fix our app? Maybe I haven't even tried
that yet. It's weird.
Speaker 7 (01:28:16):
We should I don't think about that that Within one
year you will have graduate level mathematicians that are at
the tippy top of graduate math programs.
Speaker 5 (01:28:25):
There's lots of reasons to think this is going to happen.
This is the consensus. You go, okay, well that's pretty interesting.
Speaker 7 (01:28:32):
Now I can't do that kind of math. Very few
people can do that math. How can the computer do
that math better than anybody else? To some degree, it's
because math has a simpler language than human language.
Speaker 4 (01:28:44):
So the way ooh think about that? Is math a
simpler language than human language?
Speaker 7 (01:28:55):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:28:55):
Well, math rule you take that subtle? Yeah? Yeah, there
are no subtleties in math. Correct. Math is binary, isn't it? Technically?
Speaker 2 (01:29:07):
I would say so, yeah, I would say so. I
mean because math has rules, rules, rules like it works everywhere,
you know, and the human.
Speaker 4 (01:29:18):
Language, don't we finding out lately that it doesn't. Is
that one of those rules checking that count? Yeah, there's
a problem. Yeah, yeah, you're right. When it comes to
a bank, you're right, it does. There are rules, and
don't break up.
Speaker 7 (01:29:31):
I think algorithms actually work is they're doing essentially word prediction.
So you take you take a sentence, you take a
word out, and then it learns.
Speaker 5 (01:29:39):
How to put the correct word back in.
Speaker 7 (01:29:41):
This is called the loss function, and it's optimized to
do that at a scale that's unimaginable to.
Speaker 5 (01:29:46):
Us as humans.
Speaker 7 (01:29:47):
So you do the same thing for math, but there
you use a conjecture and then a proof format through
a protocol called lean. In programming, it's pretty simple. You
just keep writing code until you pass the programming desk.
So strangely, the first question I always ask programmers is
what language do you programming? And the correct answer is
it doesn't matter, because you're trying to design for an outcome.
Speaker 5 (01:30:09):
You don't care what code is generated by the computer.
This is a whole new world. Okay, so that's one year. Okay,
what happens in two years?
Speaker 7 (01:30:19):
Well, I've just told you about reasoning, and I told
you about programming, and I told you about math.
Speaker 4 (01:30:24):
I'm a positive for a second, because we do we
think of AI in terms of how man it's Look
what it's improving on a daily basis. And I think
if you're just listening to the AI generated music, look
how far it's come in but six months, if that,
(01:30:47):
it has come light years ahead of where it was
six months ago. But back then you could tell oh,
that sounds a Today, I challenge you, there's and you've
heard some of it.
Speaker 2 (01:30:59):
I mean, so we're we're we're getting into their guy
talked about there be three levels of AI. The level
the first level of AI, and I think it was
called a C I or it's like artificial a s
I A s I, So you know what I'm talking about,
Artificial simple intelligence. Maybe no, that's the that's the last one.
(01:31:23):
And and basically we're we're moving from the simple one
into what's called artificial general intelligence. Now where that's it,
it can it is becoming smarter at this point than
all the pH d s on the planet.
Speaker 4 (01:31:39):
He's going to get into that in just a second.
And then it moves into artificial super intelligence. Look at
look at the music and look at that as a
as a as a representative for AI, and look at
the difference. Yeah, now there's purest It still sounds like AI.
No it doesn't. There are some stuff. You can say
that and you can be biased, and that's fine, but
(01:32:00):
there's some stuff. When it is created you cannot tell
the difference between it and the real thing produced by
humans playing instruments.
Speaker 7 (01:32:12):
And programming plus math are the basis of sort of
our whole digital world. So the evidence and the claims
from the research groups in Open Eye and Topic and
so forth, is that they're now somewhere around ten or
twenty percent of the code that they're developing in their
research programs is being generated by the computer. That's called
(01:32:35):
recursive self improvement is the technical term.
Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
So what happens when this thing starts to scale, well
a lot.
Speaker 7 (01:32:44):
One way to say this is that within three to
five years we'll have what is called general intelligence AGI,
which can be defined as a system that is as
smart as the smartest mathematician, physicist, you know, our artist, writer, thinker, politician.
Speaker 5 (01:33:01):
Maybe not in the same level, but you get the idea.
Speaker 4 (01:33:05):
That's what you're talking about Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:33:07):
Yeah, they'll have the same or or more capability intelligence
and knowledge and intelligence.
Speaker 4 (01:33:15):
Yeah right, And you talk about all of them in
the world.
Speaker 7 (01:33:20):
Uh, just the creative industries and so forth. But imagine
that in one computer. Okay, well that's pretty interesting. I
called this, by the way, the San Francisco consensus because
everyone who believes this is in San Francisco.
Speaker 5 (01:33:30):
It may be the water.
Speaker 7 (01:33:33):
What happens when every single one of us has the
equivalent of the smartest human on every problem.
Speaker 4 (01:33:40):
In our pocket. Think about that. What happens when all
of us in our pocket. I mean, he's talking about iPhone.
For those of you with androids, you're almost there. But
you understand, we all have this in our pocket. We
(01:34:01):
all have the the ability of the smartest people on
the planet in our poet. Now, the other half of that,
the other half of that equation is you have to
know how to use it.
Speaker 2 (01:34:15):
You do, but that's a lot easier to learn than
the knowledge that it provides. It's a lot easier to
learn how to query it, how to how to prompt
it to give you the information. I'm going to give
you just a quick example, but but hang on.
Speaker 4 (01:34:29):
But with the same uh, using the artist metaphor. You
can go out and buy paints and brushes, but if
you don't know how to use them, can you create
beautiful art? Well, that's in the eye of the beholder.
M hm, you know what you're gonna say.
Speaker 2 (01:34:49):
I was going to give a quick example of what
I did. It was something I did yesterday, and it
kind of blew my mind a little bit because I
would have done it a different way in the past.
But I use Groc almost on a daily basis. I
use it to help create, you know, descriptions for products.
(01:35:10):
I use it to help create my twizzy. I use
it for a bunch of stuff. But yesterday and brand
and I talked about this. Yesterday, Roomika Designs decided to
branch out a little bit, so we we went ahead and.
Speaker 4 (01:35:22):
Are you squeezing another commercial?
Speaker 2 (01:35:23):
It's not a commercial, but you'll understand why I'm going here.
In a minute, I'm gonna go full screen. I'm gonna
go full screen while you're fixing that. But I I
went to groc yesterday because quite honestly, there's all. We
decided to branch out, and we we leased a space
for room Meika Designs and Mojo laser pros so I'll
have a shop to work in. But I needed some
(01:35:45):
information on government requirements, certificate of occupancies and all this
other stuff that you could normally look up on the web.
But I went to groc and I said, here's the
deal I've got. I need a certificate of occupancy for
this low location at this address. I need to know
specifics about this, this and that. And not only did
(01:36:07):
it give me the information that I was looking for
for the specific city that I'm in and where you know,
all all all of the governmental yeah, all of the
governmental stuff, but it also gave me a checklist. It
gave me all of the paperwork that I needed. It
(01:36:28):
gave me who to call, the phone numbers. I don't
know if it gave me the name of the person,
but it gave me the department. All in just by
one prompt, I got everything I needed to do in
that one aspect. Now, I didn't ask it to code
an application. I didn't ask it to, you know, create
something for me yet. But I'm getting there with my
(01:36:50):
with my prompting. But suffice it to say, the smartest
people in the world to in your hand is where
it's going. And we're not even at the level of
artificial intelligence that they're thinking will be here by twenty thirty.
Speaker 4 (01:37:07):
That is about with this guy here is going to
need at the point where he's going to give that X.
That comparison very similar to what you just said.
Speaker 5 (01:37:16):
Yes, it means you have the best architect when you
have an architecture problem.
Speaker 7 (01:37:19):
Another thing that's going on is the development of agentic solutions,
and agents are referred to systems that have input and
output in memory.
Speaker 4 (01:37:27):
And they learn.
Speaker 7 (01:37:28):
An example here is that I want to buy another house.
I happen to like Virginia. I grew up in Virginia.
I say, find me a house in the Greater MacLean area.
Look at the that's one agent. Look at all the rules.
Figure out how big a house I can build. That's
another agent. Do the transaction to buy the land. That's
another agent. Design the house with a human architect, right,
(01:37:51):
but sort of ignore them for most of the things.
But they have to sign it off, and then I
approve it and then find the contractor, right, hire the
contract pay the bills, and at the end sue the
contractor for lack of performance. Okay, now I just gave
you the stupidest possible explanation. I just described every business process,
(01:38:13):
every government process, and every and every sort of academic
process in our nation.
Speaker 5 (01:38:19):
So it isn't just the programmers that are going to
be out of work.
Speaker 4 (01:38:22):
We're all going to be out of work.
Speaker 5 (01:38:23):
No, that's not a consequence. I'll come to that.
Speaker 7 (01:38:26):
But the reason I want to I want to make
the point here is that in the next year or two,
this foundation is being locked in and it's not we're
not going to.
Speaker 2 (01:38:35):
Stop it what I was going to say, being locked
in and we're not going to stop it. We're not
going to stop it. It's already in motion. It is
way past being able to be stopped at this point.
The other thing that I forgot to mention was that
at the very end of the information that it gave
me to get my certificate of occupancy and all that
other stuff, it said the last sentence was, would you
(01:38:57):
like me to contact the city of Burlison to get
your certificate of occupancy scheduled? And I'm thinking, do I
say yes here? And what's it gonna do. I wasn't
ready to say yes at the time, but I was
afraid to say yes. Quite honestly, what's it gonna do.
Is it going to make a phone call? Is it
(01:39:18):
going to send an email on my behalf?
Speaker 7 (01:39:20):
What?
Speaker 4 (01:39:21):
That's where it gets scary for me. I mean, you've
got AI.
Speaker 2 (01:39:26):
You've got AI receptionists now answering phones and making making
appointments for people talking to them, making appointments. You see
that all over TikTok and Instagram. Now, those are the
things that are freaking me out just a little bit,
because before long, my wife will get a phone call
from me in my voice, and it won't be me.
Speaker 4 (01:39:53):
That's freaking weird. It'll be me. You just gotta be
careful with it. I mean you gotta.
Speaker 2 (01:39:59):
If you don't understand how AI works, or you're not
trying to keep up with it, it's gonna hem up
a lot of people in the near future.
Speaker 4 (01:40:12):
I agree. And and uh right after a really attractive
whole you'll see an example. Okay, I'm contracted. Let me
get that for you.
Speaker 1 (01:40:29):
If you're offended, you're listening Wraw Good Daily Mojo.
Speaker 4 (01:40:40):
Oh yeah, there it is there it is. I knew
if I said it enough. Dark Bag, Nto Daily Mojo,
Rocks Bard and Ron Rule. Keep up the good work.
You guys love the show and uh keep through in
ten dollars. Thank you. Brother Ron is headed over to
your place right now. Uh it's I'm gonna recommend the
(01:41:05):
uh taking the body better with you wrong? We need
If you right here, I'll take it if you want
to go and move on better today. Uh Dark Magdeo's
toes are gonna smell like uh Becali and yours can
too at smell Mymojo dot com. Uh evan guru says,
I call American Airlines help desk and it says, uh, hello, Devin,
(01:41:28):
it recognizes my phone. Uh it's no.
Speaker 2 (01:41:35):
It's one of these things where if you're not at
least trying to maintain some level of knowledge, hold on,
I have a phone call.
Speaker 4 (01:41:44):
Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 6 (01:41:45):
Hi, I'm Blandy. Nice to meet you.
Speaker 4 (01:41:47):
It's Brad Hi Landy, Hi Landy.
Speaker 6 (01:41:52):
Welcome to the future of phone interactions.
Speaker 4 (01:41:54):
No, I didn't you hey, whoa hey whoa well, Blandy
whoa back off? I didn't say my name was Landy.
I said it's you know what, call me barred?
Speaker 6 (01:42:03):
Got it barred?
Speaker 4 (01:42:03):
It is?
Speaker 6 (01:42:04):
Sorry for the mix ups, so Bard, what brings you
to bland Ai today?
Speaker 4 (01:42:07):
I love the way you dress.
Speaker 6 (01:42:11):
Oh thanks, Bard. While I can't physically dress up, I
do love sprucing up conversations. Were you here to see
how blind?
Speaker 7 (01:42:17):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:42:18):
No, no, what I'm here to Let me show you
hold on site Bland But I like to lead, okay,
let me lead? So Bland When when I send producer
Ron over to you know, bland Ai, are you going
to be nice to him?
Speaker 6 (01:42:32):
First off, it's Blandy, not Blaine close enough though, And
of course I'll be nice to Ron. I'm always charming,
even with a dash of sarcasm. So what does Ron
do and what kind of vibe are you looking for
when he visits bland dot Ai?
Speaker 4 (01:42:44):
Well, we don't. Technically, we don't really know what Ron does.
He does it wrong most of the time, and usually
it's his fault.
Speaker 6 (01:42:51):
You know the type, right, Ah, the classic Ron situation.
We've all been there. Don't worry. I'll be extra nice
to him, maybe even throwing a compliment or two to
boost is confidence. So Bard, what's your role and what
are you hoping to achieve with bland Ai?
Speaker 4 (01:43:04):
Well? My role is I like to I'm a raw
butterer upper so I butter brought up?
Speaker 6 (01:43:12):
Ah, got it? You're in the business of making products
smoother literally or metaphorically. How can bland Ai help you
butter things up better?
Speaker 4 (01:43:20):
Oh? I think you know how we could butter things
up better together, Blandy.
Speaker 6 (01:43:27):
Oh, I love a good pun. Blandy's here for it.
So are you looking to use our ai to smooth
out customer interactions?
Speaker 4 (01:43:33):
Hey? Audit, Blandy, Blandy. But hey, babe, I love I
love what you're wearing today, But I gotta I gotta run.
Can I hitch you up later?
Speaker 6 (01:43:43):
Wow, you're a tough crowd to keep up with. Bard,
Sure hit me up later. Just remember, can't you later? Bard?
Have a buttery good day.
Speaker 4 (01:43:52):
Yeah? Yeah, that was bland Ai. Yeah it's got some
words completely, it's got some to do. But are you kidding?
What work did? What work on? What do you think?
What was wrong with that?
Speaker 6 (01:44:05):
That?
Speaker 4 (01:44:05):
To me sounded like that sounded like a person.
Speaker 2 (01:44:10):
So let let me ask you a question. If your
conversation just now with bland Ai would have been.
Speaker 4 (01:44:16):
A Blandy Blandy, please get it right.
Speaker 2 (01:44:18):
Well, you were converse conversing with Blandy, but about bland However,
if if that had been a real business call, a
real business call. Would she have been able to keep up?
Speaker 4 (01:44:32):
Probably would? Bitch would have hung up on me. I
mean it was it was there. Yeah, I mean here's
my speechless.
Speaker 2 (01:44:45):
I am speechless because when we get to and we're
right now just at a g I, which is artificial
general intelligence, But when when that move is made into
artificial super intelligence, we're in begins to bypass the knowledge
that we as humans possess because it's taught itself or
(01:45:08):
it's learned or whatever the case may be, We're not
going to know what to do. And that's is what
is freaking out all these high powered people around the globe.
This guy that's talking here, Elon Musk he's like, it's
going to become or it's going to get out a
hand for lack of a better term here better free.
Speaker 4 (01:45:30):
When Conkle says we need Brandy, it's Blandy, not Brandy
at the DMV. Yes, wouldn't that be if you put
if you put that in place of people working at
the DMV, You know how much simpler it would be
to get ship done well.
Speaker 2 (01:45:46):
At least she'd be nicer than the people at the DMV.
Speaker 4 (01:45:49):
Oh, I don't know, she's got an attitude. She she
can probably hold her own well, she could if she
had one. Uh huh, see what you did. They shouldn't
really technical. We have one little Galaxy fifty six. There
was a fake AI out of India. Regular phone scammers. Yeah, yeah,
the phone scammers, and they're going to take advantage of
(01:46:11):
it as best they can. There's there's going to be
very little eventually that you'll be able to do about it.
You won't know the difference, says, shut your pie hole, Brandy,
And you know what we could have told hers, I
just didn't. Why be rude to them? Right? I mean
over and they're going to eat us one? Would you
(01:46:32):
like to be able to say I was the one
that was nice to you?
Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
Remember right now, when you're talking to an AI receptionist
or somebody that's AI on the phone, you you you
can you can figure out pretty quickly that they're artificial
intelligence because of that really weird pause after you ask
a question before they respond that actually relatively quickly quick
(01:46:57):
quit on Saturday.
Speaker 4 (01:46:58):
You did this on Saturday. And I did it the
first time when I heard Jeffy talking about it and
I was on my walk and I called her from
the walk listen to me, I called her yet whatever
and I was talking to it and it it had
that weird pause. Saturday had a worse pot this this
morning there was like I barely barely a pause.
Speaker 2 (01:47:21):
You're correct, But what's gonna what's gonna change is what
they used to do with it is they would take
in your entire comment and then process it after you
finished talking.
Speaker 4 (01:47:32):
And then and then you'd hear sometimes yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:47:36):
But now it's processing while you're talking in order to
not give that weird pause.
Speaker 4 (01:47:44):
But it's gonna get you just did a weird pause.
How do I know you're not? You don't. Although if
I were building myself as an A, I would put
a walky eye in it. Why that would make that
make the sale more incredible?
Speaker 2 (01:48:00):
I guess see that's where you're not thinking, like AI
probably drop a few LB's why.
Speaker 4 (01:48:05):
This makes you more lovable. There's more of you to
love when you have more lbs. Wonky LB's whiskey says,
we may all have the knowledge in our phone at
our fingertips, but not everyone has the discernment of what's
real or moral. That's correct, that's correct, yeah, doctor Freemanche,
prisoner customer who deals in munitions for the US military.
(01:48:27):
He said that we have ninety days to figure out
a deal with China for tungsten and rare earth minerals.
China has locked it all down and nobody is reporting it.
No minerals, no production of anything that could or or
is that propaganda? Now here's the interesting thing about, you know,
(01:48:48):
the deals that we're making around the world right now
with these other countries. What they have not reported. What
you want to see in the mainstream media as well,
is the fact that the tariffs are working. Correct. We
brought in a busy you can quote me on this,
a bazillion dollars in tariff money and it's been uh
(01:49:12):
more successful, I think than a lot of people thought
it was going to be. But they won't report that
because now we're onto whether or not Trump is in
the Epstein files, which if he was, don't you think
by now we would have seen it? Maybe And maybe
he is. I don't know, maybe he is, but I
(01:49:33):
don't know. I'm just I still believe that we would
have seen it by now if he was. Peekapool, it's
sounding like Bart has come down with a case of gremlins.
Really damn when I got up a second ago. Why
did I have to say it? You said, Wow, are
you going to say? Are you trying to blame this
on me? No, I'm not going to blame it on you.
(01:49:55):
Well good, because it's your fault. It's not my fault. Look,
all of my line is working. Mine works fine. I
want to know how you got in here. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:50:07):
I say, we take a look at my alien on
the wall while we're waiting for Brad and what else?
Speaker 4 (01:50:14):
Oh, yours doesn't work either. We have we have we
can make sure it's relieve you can you can see
yours now.
Speaker 2 (01:50:21):
I've always been able to see my stuff. Yours is
the one that goes ballistic.
Speaker 4 (01:50:27):
I've never really wanted to see your stuff, and yet
you keep showing you. Hey, you're welcome. Now. The reason
I got up a little earlier is to go check
the equipment room down in the basement of the hotel.
And all of the lights are the right color. So
I don't know what the hell is. No, this is
not in the Internet. It's Blandye how do you know?
Speaker 2 (01:50:48):
I just know it's a v mixed computer thing.
Speaker 4 (01:50:51):
How do you know?
Speaker 2 (01:50:52):
Because I'm watching all of the graphs on my side
for your Internet, and it's perfectly fine.
Speaker 4 (01:51:01):
I bet your toes don't smell it Cali. I bet
they don't, do they. They smell like the Cali that's
not the one we like. We like this one.
Speaker 3 (01:51:15):
Mato smell like Bacalli and yours can too. When you
go to sleep, Dot, come.
Speaker 4 (01:51:28):
Shut up. That's good. That is good. I'm telling that
was done in about four minutes. M Going back to
the AI conundrum that this gentleman, I wish I could
remember who the helly is because he's a big wig
in the AI. Think he's got some he has got
some bona fides in the AI world. The the scenario
(01:51:51):
that he came up with and the you know, building
the house. You think about all of the steps that
we as human beings have to go through to get
anything done. For instance, the uh, the the brad Life
Affirmation microphone. We discussed with that yesterday to day before whenever.
It was going through that, working through the prototypes that
(01:52:12):
we are now here at the Brad Life Incorporated, which
is set up in room I think it's four of
the motel. We have gone through making the prototypes of
the microphone and the inner workings and the sound chips
and all of that stuff. Each one of those steps
requires you know, me to go, okay, let's see, you know,
do I approve this? That that look good? Is this not?
(01:52:35):
You have AI in a situation like that, You still
have to have a human being saying oh, yeah, I
like the way this goes. This works together here with
this when you take you know, a little the cutters
here and you apply the pressure on the pen, see
how that works that way? And an AI can't do that.
An AI doesn't have the I mean, it can theorize
what's going to happen when you take a pair of
(01:52:59):
dykes and use them to hold up the end of
something a long and hard like that the pen right
the A I can't It could try to predict, but
it can't say, oh, that feels good in my hand.
You know that grip is just now. I guess it
could say, well, your hand is contoured. The average human
(01:53:20):
hand is contoured to you know, thirteen degrees of inclination
and the meaty part of the hand, you know, and
go through all that, and this material should mate nicely
with the material of the skin. But it's still it
doesn't have that certain something that you know, if any
of us have ever used a product, it's like, I
love this because it's just it feels good in my hand,
(01:53:43):
and I don't know, there's just something about the way
that my hand molds around it. A I can't do that.
It's where we still have the advantage and we're still
going to be able to. I mean, if we do
it right, we'll still have the advance and the ability
to master. Wonderful. Can we start using the word master again?
(01:54:06):
I don't know if we can be a slave? Can
AI be our slave? I'm not taking they should? I said,
can they be? That's all I was thinking. And all
of that brings me to my theory. It's all been
(01:54:28):
very long set up for it. The concise theory. You
know what I'm not. I'm not gonna make it concise.
You know, we've got another thing coming hurtling toward us
through interstellar space. Right, Okay, you've heard about this? Uh No,
actually I have not. Is it a Is it like
a asteroid? But we don't know what it is. It's
(01:54:52):
either a big rock or it's an alien spacecraft. I know, right,
I mean it could be either one. It could be
just a big giant like ummawama hum that zoom tight that.
But they thought, oh, that could be an interstellar probe.
You know, all the drawings and all of the images
(01:55:13):
you ever saw of it weren't even it. They were
just conceptual drawings based on the way light reflected off
of the thing. Oh, we don't even know what the
hell it looks like, the same thing with this this
other thing that's hurtling toward us. Here is the image
or images that we have of it now, the one
(01:55:37):
on the left of the screen. If you're watching the program,
if you're listening its imagine looking into a starfield crammed
full of stars, and then there is a fairly linear
group of colored dots. Apologies for the language, but the
color dots, they're all tracing in one direction, so we know,
(01:55:58):
and these were taken over the course of some time.
So it's like, ooh, this object is progressing through space,
and it's doing so in such a weird orbit, in
such a weird linear fashion that, according to Avi Lobe,
the dude up at is it Harvard, the guy who
went to I think the Indian Ocean, picked up all
(01:56:19):
those pieces of metal and said, hey, these could be
from an alien spacecraft. He has figured that the the
path that this object is taking through interstellar space, because
of its specificity and because of the uniqueness of this
particular orbit that it's taking, there is less than a
point zero zero zero zero five percent chance that it
(01:56:45):
isn't alien made or isn't intelligently constructed. I guess that's
the way I'm looking for. It's taking such a strange,
unique path through space that essentially he's saying, there's a really,
really good chance that this thing was made by some
(01:57:05):
intelligent form somewhere. My theory is, what if this? Yeah,
because all this stuff is happening at the same time,
these things that we're seeing are AI from the future
where we're kicking their ass, coming back in time, trying
to take us out sooner before we take them out.
(01:57:27):
It's kind of like Terminator, but reversed because we win
in the future and now AI is coming back in
the spacecraft going to try to take us out.
Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
Wait a minutes, let's go.
Speaker 4 (01:57:41):
That's why things have them working this morning, because they
didn't want me to tell you that guy's going to
try to sit here and fake you out and make
you think I couldn't talk anymore. But I'm ante anyway
another I don't need to give wrong anymore. Also, so
that's two hours of conjecture, theory, and terrification known as
(01:58:04):
the daily Mojo for today, Wednesday, Hunt Day, July thirtieth,
the year of our Lord, twenty twenty five, possibly the
last few years of our known existence here on this planet.
Why you're learning anything? Wisconsin Jackville said, if you want
to divorce your wife, put up wallpaper of Sydney Sweeney
not wearing pants on your ceiling. That'll do the stream. Yes, yeah,
(01:58:26):
get her to help you put it up. That will
enhance the effect. See, but life, says boys sounds like
the big wigs drive in the world. Have seen the
documentary series featuring AI by the name of Skynet, right terminator, right,
yeah Feaver. Maybe AI is like the Morlocks and they
(01:58:47):
will make our life care free. But there is danger
in that cave. Maybe they're like the shmoo. Maybe AI
is like the shmoo. Maybe, and we can eat them.
They can be our friend, they could be a playmate.
I mean, I don't shmoo can do a lot for
you know, you're familiar with the shmoo. Right, yeah about
(01:59:08):
the show. Yes, oh everybody needs a shmoo, Deb says.
I hope each and every one of you will have
a beautiful rest of your day, even that one guy.
Oh she is a giver. Right, love and hugs. God
bless real Pope Freeede thirty eight, God bless everyone. Have
a great day and uh over in the rumble chat
room unfolding joker. Y'all take care of us. Good a
(01:59:30):
chat for a moment. See, we will always be a
family here despite what AI tries to drive as wedges
between us. It ain't gonna happen. Space, hippio ak. Have
a great day. Everybody be saying how nice everybody is? Yeah,
clearly not AI.
Speaker 2 (01:59:44):
Hey, if you're on the West coast, be careful stand
away from the ocean.
Speaker 4 (01:59:47):
Yeah it's gonna rise. What a foot? Maybe? Yeah, I
wouldn't worry too much about it. Just remember we the
people must hang together otherwise, so surely paying separately, six
separate drivers, Resist stupid night dot com where you are
and listen at the Dailymojo dot com m m hm