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August 4, 2025 120 mins
August 4, 2025

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"Ep 080425: Space Invaders | The Daily MoJo"

The content begins with light-hearted affirmations and discussions about identity, transitioning into a game about characters from WKRP. It introduces a newly discovered stick insect species, sparking reactions about nature's wonders. The conversation shifts to media challenges, ethical cloning, and advancements in AI technology. Skepticism about UFO sightings in Scotland and the influence of media on public perception are examined, blending serious topics with humor.

Phil Bell's Morning Update - Let's talk about Sydney Sweeney's butt:  HERE


Ron Phillips Wonky Perspective On Life - And her jeans : HERE


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast, Unjustice your mojo.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure now
the age what sixty. He's just going to break back
radio with an attitude. This system that we love is broken.
I know that, do not comply. Welcome to another two

(00:28):
hours of common sense. That liberty of justice for all
is a mint and the euretic behavior. Want to you can't,
and when you do, you wish you did. This is
your Daily Mojo for Monday, the fourth day of August,
the year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five. And I
don't know why this one. I don't know why this

(00:49):
one hurts more than than others did not. We've had
a lot here lately, We've had a lot of icons
leave this Mortal Earth playing. But Paul, whatever reason it
is this one today, well that actually happened yesterday. This
is a toughie. You probably know.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Where's Jennifer Marlowe yelling for some steamy one night stand
of undrivable passion way hotel room?

Speaker 2 (01:19):
You know what I mean? I sure.

Speaker 4 (01:22):
You're not like that, are you? No?

Speaker 2 (01:26):
I don't know. There's a mister Wayne r.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
Co here to see you.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
Oh yeah, fine, I said him away. All right, I'll
tell him you're dad. I'm not as old as I look. Really,
are you any richer than you looked? No, I'm sorry.
He'll be in conference aul afternoon. Thank you for calling.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
Well, Hello, I'm Norris Breeze.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
Oh mister Breesy, we've been expecting you.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Would you sit down? We have all kinds of cheers.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
There's one over there, and there's another one over there.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
And the no that she played Ditzy. She played Ditzie
really well, and she played she made being a gold
digger look like fun. Lonnie Anderson was seventy nine years old.
She was going to be eighty in two days. I

(02:40):
think she's going to be eighty tomorrow. To have a seat,
I'll be with you in a second. Didn't quite make it, too,
but did. I thought this would be a good time,
as good a time as any to play Dead or
Alive with w k RP. Oh wow, because a lot.
And I know how good you are.

Speaker 3 (03:02):
No, I'm not, Yeah you are.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
Yes you are. Come on, you're really good at the
Dead or Alive game. Gary Sandy, who played Andy Travis,
the program director on w k RP Dead or Alive.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
I'm gonna say dead, Chuck.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Gary Sandy is alive.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
He is alive.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Gordon Jump who played the Big Guy, he's dead. Arthur Carlson,
he is dead. Frank Bonner, who played Herb Tarlic.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
He's got to be dead, right you think he do?

Speaker 2 (03:40):
You think he's dead?

Speaker 3 (03:40):
I think he's dead.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Final answer. He's the dark headed one, right. Hey, he's
the guy that yeah, that always hit on on. Yeah.
I'm gonna say dead. You're gonna say dead. Yeah, you're right,
Herb Tarlic, Richard Sanders, let's get yet not heard Tarlet,
less Nessman, less less Ness Man, ed more news and

(04:04):
less Nessman.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
He's dead?

Speaker 2 (04:06):
You think he is dead?

Speaker 3 (04:10):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Less Nessman is still alive. He is eighty four years old.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
Wait a minute, he is only four years older than
Lonnie Anderson. At the time, he looked much older than
her he did. Wow, Howard Hessman. Doctor Johnny Fever dead
or alive? I think he's still alive?

Speaker 2 (04:30):
Right. Johnny Fever died in twenty twenty two twenty two.
Jan Smithers, she played Bailey Quarters Bailey Still she was
the You think she's still alive? I think so? You sure?

Speaker 3 (04:46):
No, you're not. I'm not sure yet. But I think
her alive, alive, She's alive.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
She's seventy six. Venus fly Trap, Tim Reid, black guy,
This is your guy. This is your guy. You like
the black music, He's your guy. On WKRP Venus fly
Trap dead or Alive Dead. Tim Reid played Venus fly

(05:16):
Trap is eighty years old. He just turned eighty in December,
so he's technically eighty and a half. They're dropping like flies.
For whatever reason, though, Lonnie Anderson, I don't know why
that hits harder than most. Maybe it was because you

(05:36):
looked at her as a sex symbol. Of course, now
she was the thing of fantasy. Look at the bright side.
She and Bert are together again. Yeah, she was with
Burt Reynolds for a while, right, Yeah. I didn't end well. Yeah,
didn't end well at all. Didn't end with though that
was not a good one. As a matter of fact,

(05:57):
I'm guessing they're probably an up as it ends of
the road paved with gold right now as we speak,
Well that would be something with't hey, guess what your uh,
your ex wife is back? Where is she? I want
to be at the other end of the of the runway.
Welcome to the Daily mojo for today. It is Monday, indeed,

(06:19):
and there's uh we do you know what? We do
have some uh, we we have some good news. We
just haven't gotten to it yet. There is a brand
new let's see if I can find it here. There
is a brand new uh. And if you are squirmy,
you may not want to uh. Now, this is not
as bad as the some people objected to the spider

(06:43):
story we had last week.

Speaker 3 (06:45):
Really, they just they hate spiders that bad.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
They didn't want to hear They didn't want to see
the spiders crawling all over and eating the mother's spide.
I don't know why they were so freaked out about it,
but they did not like the mother spider getting eaten
by the baby spiders. They just, for whatever reason, that
seemed to bother some people. So if you were bothered
by that, you're probably not gonna like this. This is
actually a new record. This is uh, this is science,

(07:14):
so you should be involved. This should be exciting to
you because they have now found a new species. You
know what, you know what a stick bug is?

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Right like the praying mantis.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Stick bug? No, no, no, a stick bug. It looks
like a stick praying mantis.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
Does too.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
No, it looks like a praying mantis. No, a stick
bug looks it looks just like a stick.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
Okay, gotcha, go ahead.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
You've never seen one.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
Probably I've probably seen one, but it looked like a stick,
so I didn't think of anything else about it.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
A stick bug.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
There, Okay, there's a stick bug.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
It looks just like a stick.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Damn, that's big. Holy cow.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
But when these are on a tree or something, you don't.

Speaker 3 (07:59):
That's what I'm saying. I've probably seen one, just didn't
know it.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
They're they're freakingly. They don't hurt you, but they just
they look like they look like a stick. But this
new one, this new one doesn't just look like a stick.
It looks like something out of a freaking nightmare. Animals
that you do like that?

Speaker 6 (08:17):
I am a bit unsure of.

Speaker 7 (08:18):
Like crasses of stick insect found in Queensland's wet tropics
is making international headlines for its monstrous size.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
It's an eke insect.

Speaker 6 (08:31):
The forty centimeter long critic named Acrophilla alta wazy and
just sh I have a golf ball and the man
who helped identify this species and Junct Professor Angus Emmett
joins us. Now good to.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
See fan canoles that looked like the spitter from a
Jurassic Park. Can you imagine coming across that thing and
you would that one would not go unnoticed if either.

Speaker 3 (08:56):
Stack on your head or say face or something.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Jeez, it's the wings that much. It's the wings that
get you. I've never seen. Well, that's that's why it's
a new species. The stick insect is whatever the hell
they called it from the Latin whatever. But that thing is,
Oh well.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Tell me they don't buy it for traveling to Australia
in the near future.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
See that's the thing about the outback. The comments Australia.
Why am I not surprised? Uh, if just one more
way to die in Australia, I wouldn't be surprised if
they found a dinosaur up in the tropics of North Queensland.
Someday it's beautiful and harmless.

Speaker 3 (09:42):
Really harmless. If that thing lands on you, it's not
going to be harmless.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
No, because you're going to hurt yourself badly. Just beautiful.
They don't hurt you, and they're so amazing. Somebody says,
imagine strolling through nature, marveling at God's beautiful creations and
how it all fits together in wondrous harmony. And out
of nowhere, this freakish giant stick thing lands on your face,
clinging on for life and flapping its devil wings from hell.

(10:11):
Ah call a effing priest. I don't think this is
be died by mortal means. I think I'd literally just
die of fright on this spot. The only sound I
make a quiet e as I'm frozen forever in a
pose of pure terror. Yeah. I don't like it. Keep
it in odds, please, Yeah, that was no.

Speaker 8 (10:29):
No.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
And I don't mind snakes. I don't really mind too
many bugs as long as they don't stink. Is tho
stink or or sting you? Those are the two things
I have opposition too. I don't want to smell them,
and I don't want to feel their teeth or their stinger.
Like Jason Buttrell over the weekend got stung by a wasp.
Did you see the picture?

Speaker 3 (10:51):
I did not.

Speaker 9 (10:51):
No.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
Does.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
He got shung on the hand and he swollen. It's
the first time, he said. I asked him. I said,
did it hurt bad? He said no, just felt like
a right wasps thing. But this one swole up, so
he probably may have been one of the radioactive.

Speaker 3 (11:05):
Wasps anaphylactic and anaphylaxis or radioactivity. Yeah, could be.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
I mean they could have flown all the way in
from was it North Carolina where they found the radioactive
wasp nest. If Jason Butchell starts having superpowers, then we'll know. Okay,
one never knows. It had something to look forward to. You
would like to share in your stories of hold on

(11:34):
was to chat gpt oh clones and robots. Yeah, somebody
was already out there sharing a story on clones and robots.
If you want to be a part of the program,
you use the hashtag what I learned today. You can
tag us in your posts on the social media at
real Brad stags at Real ron Phillips Slightly Venomous cart
says yeat damn it now Longie too. Also, she was

(11:56):
seventy nine nine. Damn I'm getting old, I know. And
maybe that's what it is. Maybe it's just and these
things happen.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
You have that more recent picture of her, right what
was You still have that up, Lonnie Anderson, because she
was still a very pretty woman. I mean, age didn't
really jack her too bad.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
Let's see what did happen to that one?

Speaker 3 (12:21):
You had it there a second ago?

Speaker 2 (12:23):
I know, there it is, there it is? Yeah, yeah,
she was all right, she.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
That's probably not her real hair. I'm just saying, we.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
Don't think no, okay. And they haven't said what she
died of yet either. Oh yeah, I don't know, yeah,
but that she was in the hospital for an extended
stay and that's all they would say. So who knows
what it was, but rest in peace. Lonnie Anderson's seventy

(12:55):
seventy nine, that's the weird thing. Seventy nine years old
and maybe again and that I think that's what What
does it is? You realize? Man of I started eighties
were yeah, forty freaking years exactly.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
And how many times when somebody dies like Hulk Hogan
or Lonnie Anderson or these people that have passed away recently,
do you go, Okay, well that's seventy nine. I'm sixty.
That's oh that's nineteen years.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
Wow, yep, yep. Um. Let's see Jolly Jake lovel Over
and the Rumble Tam says that movie mimic about the
giant bugs. The kid called mister Funny Shoes I'm not
familiar with that.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
I remember the Moviemy, but I don't remember mister funny shoes.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Mister funny shoes. Who yesh no, nope, nop nop nop, nope, nope, nope, nope.
We don't like that one.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
Shoesh All right, now you got me?

Speaker 2 (13:56):
That's the uh, that's the original the original movie costume
for mister there's mister mister funny shoes right there. H
ain't nothing funny about him. I remember the movie Mimic too,
I don't. I don't remember seeing it. This is the

(14:20):
New Death. He's called a death leaper in a coat,
mister funny, mister funny shoes, and it's not funny. Uh
uh yeah, Missy thirteen says, wasn't she the on w
k R P Incent.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Yes, really that was the whole video we played it really,
come on wuk.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Not my dog says cause hospital. Yeah, that's just as
she'd been in there for. They didn't say hell, but
they said she had been in there for an extended stay.
H James, Louisiana. That's over here in the CSRA by me.
Oh the nuclear wasps. Yeah, I would scream and cry

(15:06):
and peel at the same time, said crafting Freak if
one of the either the nuclear wasp or the wandering
stick bug happened to get you, and there's probably not
a damn thing that anything from a Stella's Mojo would
do for you. Probably not trying to think that there's
anything that you could take to prepare, let's say, for

(15:31):
getting flapped in the face by a giant wing from
a stick bug. I mean about all you could hope
to do is be prepared being the best physical shape
of your life, because you're gonna have to run in
case something like if if it's a nuclear wasp or

(15:52):
a bug that is that you're gonna have to be
able to run fast and run far. And you can't
do that if you are not in good shape. And
the best way to make sure just take all your vitamins,
do everything you can to support your immune system so
that you don't catch any of the funk that's going
around at any time of the year. And you can

(16:12):
find a lot of these things will keep you healthy
over at stella'smojo dot com. I have not yet taken
my covidte today. I need to do that. The thing
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It's you're drinking your vitamins. If you don't like taking pills,

(16:33):
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It's the Covilte plus Orange. You can find that over

(16:55):
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(17:16):
you will find that this might be your better bet.
And you don't have to gag every morning on the
vitamins that is, I mean you may have to gag
at work, you may have to do a lot of
other gagging, but you will not have to gag at
your vitamins. Not my dog says that a fireplace shovel

(17:37):
will fix that bug. Yeah, it would, or perhaps a
stun gun or a really one of those one of
the insect bugs appers bugs appers.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
Can you imagine what a bug zapper would do to
the giant stick bug?

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Probably not a lot, it's too big.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
I he might just brush it off.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
Then I returned to my original plan, which is you
better be in damn good shape and you better be
able to because he's gonna be pissed once he hits
your bug zapper and then comes after you. See, you're
gonna have to be able to run twice as fast
as you normally would to outrun that damn the stick bug,
the giant stickbug. Go to stella'smojo dot com stellasmojo dot com,

(18:26):
remember the promo code Daily Mojo and save some money.
At the same time, get yourself in good shape, be
prepared for anything, and just in case the giant flying
stick bug comes at your face, which anything's possible. Stellusmojo
dot com Radio. You would you know it, Salvador Dolly

(19:24):
if it hit you in the head. I mean but
what if it had a signature in the corner, would
you know what Salvador signature looks like? Probably not. I'm
just not an art guy. I don't what kind of

(19:45):
guy are you?

Speaker 3 (19:45):
I mean, I mean, I don't know. I don't do
I don't do.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
Art like that. I guess.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
I just I don't have an eye for it.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
If you saw that, if you saw that, you don't.
But that's but this is see, this would be right
up your eye because this is kind of a wonky
piece of art right here. If you saw that piece
of art.

Speaker 9 (20:06):
In a.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
In a you know, just an antique mall or something,
would you think anything of it?

Speaker 3 (20:13):
I would think it looks like a wookie at the bottom.

Speaker 2 (20:16):
I thought the same damn thing.

Speaker 3 (20:20):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
I thought that that was why art to me, that
looks like art is in the eye of the b
I guess. So, I guess this was painted in nineteen
sixty I want to say sixty six. He Salvador Dali

(20:41):
was And the what this is is I'll describe the
the subject matter. This is one of the scenes from
one thousand and one Nights, the Arabian Nights story. It
is the uh, let's see this is aca is. When

(21:03):
I saw it, I went, no, I don't. I don't
see that either. Uh, it is a monk with a
turban on. It's a it's a a monk with a turban. Yeah,
like you I see, I see a wookie wearing a turban.

Speaker 3 (21:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
When you say turbine, I say, okay, I see that,
but I don't. And when I say monk, I didn't
mean monk. I meant the sultan. Sorry. I know sultan
and monks sound a lot of like. But even if
you said it was a crown prince, I would still say, well,
unless he's a wookie, I don't know what you're talking about.
But it's a sultan wearing a large bejeweled turban. And no,

(21:44):
it's a that is Chewbacca wearing a turban smoking it
is Yeah, something's coming out of his mouth. And there's
a giant ice cube in front of him too, and
there's a bottle of there's some fobby yeah that's uh,
and the keptle of diamonds. That's art.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
Okay, Well it is art.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
I mean it's it's watercolor and it's felt pen. And
so this guy, uh, he's an art dealer. He goes
to an auction and he ended up buying it for
one hundred and fifty pounds, which is what a couple
hundred bucks. Yeah, I don't know what the current exchange rate.

(22:28):
But it was a it was a clearinghouse, uh sale
in in England, and he saw from a distance, I
guess he saw the signature of Dolly and he was like, well,
I know that the Dolly. Should he have said something
because I wouldn't have. I would not have either, I
don't think. I mean, he's the signature that's you figured

(22:53):
they they'd know it was it Dollie, that they could
have looked at it themselves and seen the damn signature, right, Yeah,
Well he does a little of research, he said. I
couldn't believe it. I was looking at he said, I
placed a bit on the spur of the moment. He
was pretty sure that he had found a Dolly original.
Turned out to be correct. That painting is expected to

(23:15):
bring about forty thousand dollars at auction, not from me,
but someone will pay up to forty grand at auction
for that that he paid a couple one hundred dollars
for Now. The backstory on the DOLLI Salvador Dolly had
this fascination with one thousand and one Nights, and he

(23:36):
was going to do like five hundred illustrations based on
the book. He only ended up doing like one hundred,
and then he kind of gave up because he probably
got bored. Half of those one hundred went to a
couple who commissioned them, and they stayed in that family's
private collection until twenty fourteen and they were published for

(23:56):
the first time. The other half, the other fifty, they
were never published, and they are believed to either be
damaged or lost. But here's the kicker. So he researches.
The guy who paid a couple hundred bucks for this,
researches the painting finds out oh wait, this was also

(24:17):
sold at another Sotheby's auction in the nineteen nineties and
was previously identified as a Dolly. So how the hell,
as the I started to say, how does that fall
out of the track of keeping Well, somebody, yeah, solid,

(24:38):
you think would like have a picture or.

Speaker 3 (24:41):
It be hanging in an art you know, gallery somewhere.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Yep, yep, So let's see the But the it's been
authenticated by Dolly expert Nicholas Desharn preferres. It's twenty six
to forty thousand dollars auctioned off by Cheffins, So apparently

(25:04):
the one big auction house had it, knew what it
was for whatever. For whatever reason, either no one cared
or no one did their research and they sold it
for two hundred bucks. Good grief. The other bidder when
the guy bit one hundred and fifty pounds dropped eyes,
I know that's too rich for my blood.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Had no idea what he was looking at.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
None jo to him it was a two hundred dollars
water color, but it was not a wasn't a two
hundred and ten dollars water color. Wow, I wouldn't know that.
I'm like you, I wouldn't know that if it jumped
out and bit me. Wouldn't have the slightest idea. This
is a pretty big day in terms of kind of

(25:49):
what we do here on the Daily Mojo. This was
the day in nineteen eighty seven that the fairness doctrine
was overturned. I didn't realize the fairness doctrune went all
the way through most of the eighties, and the fairness
doctrine for those of you who are who don't know.

(26:09):
Was the requirement by the FCC for a radio or
a broadcaster in general, a TV or that if you
presented one side of an argument on the political spectrum,
you had to present the You had to give offer. Yes,
they had to offer it up to somebody to come
in and discuss the This dates back though, and I

(26:30):
didn't realize this dates back to the forties. And the
reason the reason that the fairness doctrum even came into
being in the first place was because there were only
how many networks?

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Four right, four major, three major, ABC and NBC.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
That was it, and they were concerned that they had
a monopoly audience and that they the networks would end
up controlling. Remember this is the SEC had it concerned
that the three networks would end up being biased and
trying to set the public agenda. You don't say that
would never I can't imagine them. Why would they think

(27:13):
that that could never happen.

Speaker 3 (27:14):
I would have thought PBS was in there, because the
PBS was around at that time, but I guess it
wasn't one of the ones that did a whole lot
of politics.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
At the time. Let's see when was PBS founded. No,
it wasn't founded until nineteen sixty nine.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
No, I thought you said through the eighties it was
the fairness doctrine. That's what I was thinking of when
you oh no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
When it was created the Fairness Doctrine in nineteen forty nine,
there were only the three networks. It was nineteen eighty
seven when they decided that it was based on how
did they phrase it? It was based on the world
in the late forties, and it was even taken to

(28:04):
the Supreme Court in the late sixties. The Supreme Court
ruled in favor of the favor of the Fairness Doctrine
and said that you know, we don't want you know,
we don't want these broadcasters coming out and setting an
agenda and basically hogging the conversation, not letting the other
side in. But to twenty less than twenty years later,

(28:31):
they decided to screw it. FCC did now Congress at
the time when the FCC decided to dump the Fairness Doctrine,
Congress was ready to codify it, and it actually did
go through. See what was it. It was the Fairness

(28:53):
in Broadcasting Act of nineteen eighty seven, and so Congress
was ready to make this the law of the land.
But guess what happened. Reagan vetoed it and Congress is like, well,
we don't have enough votes to overturn the veto. Interesting,

(29:15):
So I remember.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
Back in Reagan would veto that. Why why I mean.

Speaker 2 (29:25):
Smart, I mean I don't think it's necessary. And we've
seen the attempts at because generally talk radio well, and
especially at the time it was conservative, and there were
there had been attempts at uh progressive or left wing
or liberal radio, and it never made it. America tried

(29:48):
and sucked and they could not well. And and PBS
and and NPR are great examples of when you have
that far left of bias. Unless you're getting government assistants,
how do you stay in business? By the way, can't afford.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
To keep them in business by themselves.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
No, And because it's yeah, they are a minority, they
are allowed minority. How much did Big Bird Big Bird
earnings twenty four This is a big number. But let's
see you No, I didn't earn it. How much did

(30:33):
Big Bird?

Speaker 3 (30:34):
Well, youre talking about the person.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
No, No, all of the now, all of the all
of the characters, all of the merchandising for all of
the all of the all of the Sesame Street puppets
and all of the rest of it. They have made
a killing and they're still they're still continuing to make. Oh,
do you know how much Carrol Spinney, Holy Canolis. Do

(30:59):
you know how much Carrol spin made per year? Uh huh
for doing Big Bird and Oscar No. Three hundred thousand
dollars a year? Wow? Wow, I was. That's kind of
surprising to me too. A puppeteers Sesame Street Workshop typically

(31:22):
earned between sixty six and one hundred and nine thousand
dollars annual average of eighty five grand for all.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
The puppeteers, is what you're saying, Uh.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
Huh, not bad. That's not a bad little gig.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
Not if you can get it.

Speaker 2 (31:39):
Big Bird foods Now, there was a number that came
out regarding all of the merchandising for PBS and that
they were getting from Big Bird and the other characters,
and it was a sizeable chunk, which begs the question,
why can't they Why can't they exist on that money?

(32:01):
Why do they need tax money? Yeah, and the in
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting has gone all right, screw it,
We're done. They're folding. They're folding up their tents, shutting
the doors. And so why can't why can't they make
it on their own? Why can't the PBS stations? Why

(32:22):
can't the NPR stations? Why can't them as a network
may stand on their own two feet make it on
their own? Are there not enough businesses to support that?
Do they not have enough people that will donate? Is
I thought donations to NPR are through the roof? If
they and do they appear any more biased than ABC, NBC,

(32:46):
and CBS. I don't think they do. I mean they
all seem to be equally biased to the left. Fox
News the notable exception, even them, EMM. Fox News seems
to kind of blow with wind. Yeah, yeah, you know,
and and again, capitalism is brutal. If they figured that

(33:11):
they could, if if Fox News thought that they could
make more money and have more advertising, if they sided
with Joe Biden, they would side with Joe Biden. If
they think that they can make more money and have
more cachet and more sway by siding with Trump, they'll
side with Trump. But back to the fairness doctrine. It

(33:36):
it was opposed by members of Congress who said the
FCC had tried to flout the will of the Congress,
and again, in light of the Supreme Court decision, they
said that the decision was wrongheaded, misguided, and illogical. I
was a lot. Well, you were alive too at this time.
I'm trying to remember if I remember when it happened.

(34:01):
I don't remember it being maybe I just wasn't paying attention.
I don't remember it being like a really heated argument.
Do you.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
I don't remember it at all. Actually, this was eighty seven,
you said.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
Eighty seven. Oh, I remember when it got overturned because rush,
Let's see, he had just gone on the air. He
had not made it. I don't think he was syndicated yet.
Let's see, when did he get syndicated. He was syndicated.

(34:39):
I think it was eighty eight. Yeah, it was August
eighty eight. I remember hearing him the first time, which
would have been it was nineteen eighty eight, I believe,
and he was on WABC in New York. And I
remember the wife at the time who looking back, and

(35:02):
it wasn't too long after that I realized, wow, she's
a wacky liberal. It could have been, because my first
clue should have been when she went to Washington, d C.
To march in one of the Pita rally.

Speaker 3 (35:15):
Sorry, I'm having to do that because your cameras are dead.
Your your main camera's dead. Yeah, to me, weird. It's
you think you fix something? That's this one right by
the way?

Speaker 2 (35:30):
Dad dead? Dad? Are you gonna fix it? I can't.

Speaker 3 (35:33):
It's because the camera itself is dead.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
The connection to it doesn't look dead. That's uncomfortable, isn't it.
I'm looking at it right over there, doesn't appear dead
all right?

Speaker 9 (35:51):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (35:52):
In any event, Uh, the lumball was syndicated in eighty eight.
These fairness doctrine goes out in eighty and that pretty much.
And I'm sorting to wonder if the two were connected
the conspiratorial brain. If if the people who uh who
was Limbaugh's broadcast partner, the guy who financed him, I

(36:19):
don't know who would know his I don't know why
I thought you'd know. The guy who would know is
Phil Bell. But he's not here with us live today. However,
he is here with us on Memory X. And here's
how I can tell.

Speaker 10 (36:39):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo with your
Morning Up to stay. I'm not here to tell you
to buy Stanley jeans. I'm not going to tell you
that these are the most comfortable jeans that I've ever worn,
and I'm certainly not going to tell you that my
Stanley jeans make my butt look amazing. But if you
decide to buy Stanley jeans, I want you to know

(36:59):
that Phil Bell has great genes. Look, you have been
watching The Daily Mojo long enough to know that there
was absolutely no way that we were going to ignore
Sidney Sweeney, an incredibly beautiful young lady wearing great looking
jeans in a commercial that triggers the left. And we're
not just covering it because we're red blooded American males

(37:22):
who love seeing it, although that helps, We're covering this
for a simple reason. This is a return to something
that truly made America great in the past, and that
was our advertising being aspirational rather than commercials telling us
that you're okay the way you are. Commercials in the

(37:42):
past guided us to try to reach for new heights,
and reaching for new heights is what made America great
in the first place. After all, what if we had said, hey,
we're okay where we are. We're not going to go
to the Moon, or we're okay where we are. We're
not going to put people on trains and get them
across the country faster. Well, there wouldn't be very much
of the United States in the first place. So this

(38:05):
is a great return to the growth that America can
be proud of. And I am very excited to see
Sidney Sweeney, American Eagle, and hopefully a wide variety of
other advertisers going back to this great aspirational approach, and
that will make our society strong once again. So what
I want you to do is leave a comment under

(38:27):
the show, let us know what you think, and let
us know what you think of my great genes. What
I also want you to do is download the Daily
Mojo smartphone app and enable notifications. That way will be
up to date on the latest craziness and good stuff
coming out of Washington, d C. And you'll know how
to share it with others. Stay sharp, stay strong, and
stay free right here on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (38:48):
Phil Bell's morning Update is only on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 5 (39:04):
Your Daily Sunrise Creeping like a beef through the Flins
Coffee brewing black as a Monday, riding red and run
left loud on the air daily Mojo week in us everywhere,
back at it again like we never let shake ag

(39:27):
in off the weekend kitchen off, bread with the Better
and the Munsey and a Monday song red and run
mind keeping.

Speaker 4 (39:38):
Us strong.

Speaker 2 (39:40):
Radio with an attitude dmx dmo brond on the Access.
There aren't many in conservative media who ship with the money,

(40:00):
I mean times to excuse me? Are many like a
certain host from a certain place who rubbed cheetos all
over his face. I know that. I assume he goes
on to say, I assume Reagan veto the a fairness
doctrine because it was bad for freedom. People should be
able to choose what they broadcast and what they listened to,

(40:23):
not the government, however, the government. And that's where you
get into the whole sticky situation of the We as
the public owned the airwaves, and the government gets to
lease those airwaves to companies. See, technically we are the government.
See it doesn't really all work out that well because we,

(40:43):
the people who should be the government, don't have as
strong ahold on the government as we should because we
took our off the ball. And he says Russia achieved
syndication because the fairness doctrine was dead, which makes me
wonder if the if the two weren't connected, in other words,

(41:07):
where there's strings pulled behind the scenes that allowed that
to happen, Which that's a stupid question.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
Of course there were I think there were strengths being
pulled all the time.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
Yeah, yeah, there always will be Uh, there will always
be strings, and there will always be people to pull
the strings. And money will always be the fuel that
pulls the strings being pulled by the people.

Speaker 3 (41:31):
And so where's all the money coming from for the
last decade, Because it's all going to the left side.
I mean, it's it's you you get, you get the
you get, you get the major networks they're drawing money
from somewhere to lean left.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
Uh, well, they're funded by the machine, the government, and
that's where.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
They're Kamala Harris supposed George Sorows and yeah they I
thought we'd be rid of him soon, but apparently not.

Speaker 2 (42:11):
Well, his son is stepping in your shoes. So it's
the next generation. However, there are some people out there
that are still I guess it's I don't know if
this was good to be revealed or bad to be revealed,
but apparently and Phil Bell was talking about Sidney Sweeney. Yeah, Sidney,

(42:33):
this could go either way. But here's Trump being asked
about Sidney Sweeney for Republican that who was.

Speaker 10 (42:44):
Very hot.

Speaker 2 (42:45):
He's a registered Republican. Oh now, I love her? D
Is that right?

Speaker 8 (42:50):
As Sidney, sweet, you'd be surprised at how many people
are Republicans. That's what I wouldn't have known. But I'm
glad you told me that. If Sydney Sweeney is a
registered Republican, I think her head is fantastic.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Okay, I keep talking. I can't think he was gonna
say her ass is fantastic.

Speaker 3 (43:09):
And I'm surprised he didn't slip up and say that.

Speaker 11 (43:13):
But.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
It doesn't matter. We all heard her, so yeah, is
uh yeah? Is that good for her career or bad
for her career? Though?

Speaker 3 (43:22):
I feel like it's probably gonna be bad for her
career now that he said that, and that's unfortunate.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
Yep, yeah, yep, that is gonna suck for her. But
which uh?

Speaker 9 (43:36):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (43:36):
Who was it that sent this? Because this was genius?

Speaker 9 (43:40):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (43:40):
Was it from the Instagram? Now it wasn't a gone
Where did I put it? If you haven't downloaded The
Daily Mojo app. Yet do so at your earliest convenience. Damn,
Where did I find that? Who sent that to me?

Speaker 3 (43:55):
What they said?

Speaker 2 (43:56):
I put it over here? It was a Was it
an Instagram?

Speaker 9 (43:59):
No?

Speaker 2 (44:00):
It was Shoot. It was so good too. It was
about how a woman. It was about a man's feelings
and apologizing when I find it. When I find it,
I'll play it. You'll laugh. It's funny. But in the meantime,
download the Daily Mojo app at the Dailymojo dot com

(44:21):
and turn on the notifications. That way, we can let
you know when we're doing something special or different or
when the show starts. And we let you know on
Saturday that Saturday Morning Live was happening, and sent a
link afterward to the podcast version of it, so you
can check that out. And we do that each and
every Saturday. Hence Saturday Morning and little Phil Bell on

(44:43):
with you this weekend. I saw Phil was there. He
was discussing trains. He was discussed because there's a big
merger of the Southern Pacific. Was at the Southern Pacific
and the Norfolk Is it the Norfolk train merger? Who
the hell is there's two big train train companies merging

(45:03):
train merger. It's the Union Pacific in Norfolk Southern. They
are merging in an eighty five billion dollars deal that
would create the first continental trans continental railroad in the
United States, which is kind of weird. I didn't realize
we didn't already have a trans continental railroad. But none
of the none of the companies were trans continental. In

(45:27):
other words, we had tracks laid, but they there was
not one company that owned all of them. Now there's
a company that owns the track front.

Speaker 3 (45:36):
You know, I've never been east to west interested in
trains before Phil Bell. Quite honestly, it was just a
one of those inconveniences when you're driving down the road
and you get stopped by the track. But you realize
that we have a lot more tracks and trains running
in this country than almost any other form of transportation

(45:58):
because of the amount of that they have to carry
to all parts of the US.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
Have you ever ridden one?

Speaker 3 (46:06):
I've been on a few. Yeah, nothing, I've never been
on like Amtrak. I have it to travel. I mean,
I've been on just trains here.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
Ironically, the one dinner train that I did go on.
We God, this has been one hundred years ago. We
were having dinner, and then the trade fields and then
the train stopped and we were stopped for like two hours.
Turns out the train that hit a car at an
intersection killed somebody. Oh wow, trains and I go way back, wow,

(46:39):
way back. Uh let's see.

Speaker 9 (46:42):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
But the according to Financial Times, this whole thing is
going to be awfully expensive. US rail customers urging regulators
to block the Union Pacific Norfolk Southern deal. It's going
to raise prices and cut services. Doesn't everything it's it's
it's like a monopoly, right, I mean they're buying. I

(47:03):
mean that's a polismus brutal.

Speaker 3 (47:05):
It's a pretty big organization at that point.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
Jolly Jake Lovel says, I can't talk Epstein if Sweeney
story gets dragged out, now, can you? Right? Missy says
I can't believe how long this story has been going
on for the Sidney Sweeney thing.

Speaker 3 (47:27):
Yeah, it's gone in the news for a week.

Speaker 2 (47:30):
Are they trying to get that to knock the Epstein
thing off? I don't think the Epstein thing is going away.

Speaker 3 (47:42):
I don't think so either. But you could do Sidney
Sweeney all day long and there's still people out there
talking about Epstein and when she's out of the news cycle,
Epstein will be right back in it.

Speaker 2 (47:53):
Wouldn't you be tired if you did that? Though? What
if you did Sidney Sweeney all day long? I mean,
wouldn't it be just exhausting to talk about her all? Oh? Yes, yeah,
day long? What'd you think I meant?

Speaker 3 (48:10):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (48:11):
You talked Walbat Mommy, Big Mike's jeans make your ass
look great? Oh? I think he's just talking to Phil,
not me. And then there is the story of the
ex NASA engineer. His name is Richard ben Durck. He
was the well is the CEO of a company called

(48:33):
Field Propulsion Technologies, and he is a former propulsion engineer
for NASA and Lockheed Martin. And he was on a
podcast in December of twenty twenty four. It was the
episode of I Guess. The podcast itself is called Ecosystems Futures. Ooh,

(49:00):
listen to the latest episode of Ecosystems Futures. Then that
sound like a Then that sound like a fun one
as it really it doesn't to me. But in this interview.
It was a two hour and forty three minute podcast

(49:20):
and the title of this particular podcast was beyond conventional physics,
extended electro dynamics, lattice confinement, fusion, zero point energy, and
advanced propulsion. Surprised this deadn't caught on more in the
mainstream audience, because, I mean, who doesn't want to sit

(49:41):
and listen to three hours of that? Right? In the interview,
he describes a covert effort by the United States government
and private research groups to study advanced materials allegedly recovered
from unidentified flying objects. He claimed that many of these
mysterious objects were not simply crash debris, but part of

(50:04):
what he suspects is a vast invisible sensor network scattered
around the world. Huh. I'm gonna play some of this,
and it's the way that they discuss it is how

(50:27):
do I put this? It's just so it's so matter
of fact and mundane that you have to kind of
remind yourself, Wait, what are they they're talking about UFO stuff,
because it's really kind of it. Really, as I listened
to it a couple of times, I'm like, wait a second,
how are they Anyway, let's dip into it.

Speaker 9 (50:49):
It's if you talk about motives or you bring up
the point of well, maybe the.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
Owner I'll find something interesting to put on the screen
because it's there's no video to.

Speaker 9 (50:59):
This audors of this technology, whoever they they don't want
this scene. So that's definitely a view that's possible. Another
view is this feels a lot like controlled technology release.
Like you just like all these amazing engineers and scientists
and business people keep seeing this stuff and they when

(51:20):
it shows you wow, like how brought up on another
podcast the bending of light or even the orb light behaviors.
Just it's different from how we expect some of these
you've seen similar things than are that behaves differently, So
it's almost like a show and tell of like wow,
and then you present this technology or this phenomenon and

(51:41):
see how can these can you figure it out? Like
as an individual, as a group of scientific peers. So
I kind of feel like there's a lot of this
that is being made visible by whoever's making it visible.
And certainly humans are sharing information more than they had been.
But so there's a range of possible. It's also possible

(52:03):
that some want to share, some don't want to share.
I mean, that's definitely something we see from humans. So
if there's off planet then it's possible there's a diversity
there as well. But you spoke of so many really
interesting things, and you spoke about reverse engineering these technologies
with NGOs, the reverse engineering programs, something's definitely been coming

(52:25):
out from a number of sources uncertain and it has
been for years, but just now more recently those congressional testimonies,
multiple congressional hearings where people are saying under oath that
they've been involved informal reverse engineering programs.

Speaker 2 (52:41):
And I don't mean by NGOs.

Speaker 9 (52:43):
It's a time when certain elements of these things are
definitely being discussed. More so, had shared with us kind
of some of his what's on the left hand side
of the page, So in terms of what we should
we be looking at that maybe entities say we want
you to see this, we don't want you to see this,
but the things that engineers and business people and physicists

(53:04):
need to know kind of that low level strangeness, high
level strangeness me what's on that side that's shareable on
the left handed sheet of paper, and respect that there
are things that maybe you can share, maybe you can't,
But is there anything you would add to what Hell shared?
And you shared the cloaking, which Hell's also spoken to

(53:25):
Cloaking Research and another podcast.

Speaker 2 (53:27):
But are there others that you would share. No, it's
so I've kind of limited.

Speaker 4 (53:32):
But you know, one thing I did notice is looking
at some of these materials is they were smart materials.
Like one of the things is when these materials you'd
be looking at them and you try and reverse engineer them,
that they would turn to dust.

Speaker 2 (53:45):
And then so and they would do it within a
minute or two.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
And then so you could take the dust and then
send it off and get the isotropic analysis done on them,
and they did.

Speaker 2 (53:53):
They were extraterrestrial.

Speaker 4 (53:56):
But these materials, I mean, we're looking at something that's
hundreds of years out about it. So when you look
under a microscope on a electron microscope, you're looking at
something that's composed of very small particles that seem to
be communicating with one another. So those are the things
that I've been involved in that that we can talk about.
But you know, I think that's one of the reasons

(54:17):
why extraterrestrial materials are not really available to most people
is because most of them are set to disintegrate if
they get in the wrong hand.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
That's really interesting. What you should. The way they say
this is just so, yeah, we've studied these things, but
they disintegrate when you when you start to look at
them under a magnoscope, you start to start looking at
and then they just turn into dust. That's why they're
not available to most of most NGOs or private companies

(54:47):
to investigate, because they just disappear. But this guy is
in the in the field of field propulsion technologies. The
people that are in this discussion group are all like
top tier dudes and women. How put off is EarthTech International,

(55:09):
Larry Forsley, Global Energy Corporation, and Space as another company,
Morning Bird Space. They're they're talking about this stuff like
it's eh. And yesterday we had toast for breakfast and
we had coffee to it and and oh yeah, and
then Richard brought in the material that was from planet

(55:30):
Zorg and we all looked at that and it was
strange because it would just disintegrate once we would start,
you know, applying the electron microscope to it, because after,
you know, after we discovered that it was cloaking itself.
And that's essentially what he goes He goes on to say,
these the biggest pieces of what they found these little

(55:51):
slivers of metal, it could reconfigure and camouflage itself depending
on its surroundings. It would cloak itself and try to
blend into the environment, and that's how we could tell
it that it was extraterrestrial. It would change shape. Now,

(56:11):
critics say he didn't offer any physical evidence to support that, Well,
that would be difficult. If it turns to dust. Here's
the dust, which is convenient, right, it is very convenient.
But one would wonder why do you why do you
go on beyond conventional physics, extended electro dynamics, lattice confinement, fusion,

(56:38):
zero point energy, and advanced propulsion. And this particular episode
of a podcast that no one's ever heard, the ecosystem
the Excuse Me, The Ecosystemic Futures podcast, and at hour
two minute nine discuss this. It seems if you were

(57:03):
trying to if you're trying to put missin and disinformation
out there for the general public to consume, wouldn't you
try to go more Main Street Today show or you know,
Rogan something like that. But in this case, it's just
these are a bunch of scientific goopers sitting around talking
about this stuff. His comments reignited online speculation about UFO disclosure,

(57:27):
some users calling it calling twenty twenty four the year
the disclosure really happened. Pentagon continues to deny these objects,
he says are part of a global monitoring system, and
he says that these extraterrestrials who've been dropping these in

(57:49):
different parts of the world are trying to influence human society.
The slivers of metal that reconfigure themselves and camouflage themselves
or depending upon their environment, have all sorts of functions.
He said that it really implies that maybe the group
is manipulating our species. Then this is what he said

(58:14):
in the podcast. Later. Since that podcast, he and the
other guests, including UFO researchers how put Off and former
NASA advisor doctor Anna Brady Estevez, have continued to share
details of humanity's attempt to reverse engineer alien technology.

Speaker 3 (58:28):
Can they not take a picture of these things before
they disintegrate so that we can look at them?

Speaker 2 (58:34):
Well, if they're looking, you would think, do you think
they could? He added it was still possible to acquire
these cloaked devices scattered around the world, but his access
had been cut off by the groups he was working
with after he chose to go public with what he
knew in twenty twenty four. He had originally been recruited

(58:56):
by the US Department of Defense and the Air Force
to work on classified pros aimed at analyzing systems from
crast UFOs sounds like a boblas Our type, but he
noted that these technologies weren't being used were not being
used by the government. Instead, it was non governmental organizations
and goos that were studying most of the recovered alien technology.

(59:21):
Is that's you know, one theory as to where we
got microwave ovens was alien or did we get microwave
ovens alien tech? What do you mean? I mean, I'm
as likely to believe that.

Speaker 3 (59:42):
I mean, you can ask groc who invented microwave ovens
and it'll give you a name. I'm sure, but Percy Spencer.
Percy Spencer sounds like an alien.

Speaker 2 (59:51):
Percy Spencer he developed the first microwave oven while he
was working at Raytheon Corporation. Isn't that weird? Wraitheon? Wait? Wait,
wasn't Raytheon. Let me let me see if it's right
before I of course say it. Raytheon didn't Wraitheon have some. Apparently,

(01:00:20):
while the Roswell incident and Raytheon now artiacts are both
associated with military aerospace technology, there is no credible or
official evidence connecting the two in relation to the alleged
UFO crash in nineteen forty seven. My question was going
to be, it wasn't Raytheon one of the companies involved
out there, but maybe they maybe they weren't or maybe

(01:00:43):
well they were founded in nineteen twenty two, major defense
contractor known for their contributions to radar systems, missile technology,
aerospace advancements. Ben of Court, Well, wait a second.

Speaker 3 (01:00:59):
Man, did you just say that Raytheon is one hundred
year old company? Wow?

Speaker 2 (01:01:04):
One hundred and three. I know right, It's been around forever.
The Senators was a recent Department of Justice settlement involving
Raytheon for providing false information during contract negotiations. Why does
everything seem conspiratorial now?

Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
Because it is?

Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
What do you mean?

Speaker 3 (01:01:26):
Because it is?

Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
Now? There's that in essence, The connection between Raytheon and
Roswell appears to be a largely speculatative, like stemming from
a likely stemming from Raytheon's reputation in advanced aerospace and
defense technology and the lingering mysteries surrounding Roswell, why did
somebody from Raytheon's they invented the microwave oas so technology

(01:01:51):
everybody has in their kitchen now came from an aerospace company?

Speaker 9 (01:01:55):
Why not?

Speaker 2 (01:01:58):
Right? Yeah? Makes it much sense? Is anything else? Isn't it? Now?
There's no word on whether see that when you get
into like CBD, there's no doubt it came from Earth.
It's not extraterrestrial in nature. It comes from a plant
right here on Earth, planet Earth.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
Damn it. Sorry, I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
That's a good look for me.

Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
That camera stuck now too, I don't know what's going on.
Oh it's fixed now, it's fixed. Now that's weird.

Speaker 2 (01:02:31):
What are you doing to it?

Speaker 3 (01:02:32):
I'm not doing anything to it?

Speaker 2 (01:02:35):
But there it is.

Speaker 3 (01:02:36):
Okay, it's working.

Speaker 9 (01:02:37):
It was.

Speaker 2 (01:02:37):
Everything was fine until I started talking to you. Nope,
see and there it goes again.

Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
What is going on to I'm not doing anything. I'm
switching to it. That's a good picture though. Look at that.
There it is. You're back continue while you can't think?
Oh no, it froze again. Yeah, all right, I'm going
back to this one. Sorry, I don't know why that

(01:03:04):
camera it's I don't know. I have some ideas, but
we can discuss it later.

Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
I think it's aliens. Anyway, if you go to get
Mojo CBD dot com, it is the connection to Patriots
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Where did I put it? I panicked there for just
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(01:03:37):
it was, yeah, because I stayed up. I stayed up
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was a you know, you probably saw if you follow
me on the X huge huge party at the Desert
air Pool. Even though it looked strangely like Phil Bell,
that was kind of weird, but uh yeah, you stay up.

(01:04:00):
You know, you end up partying in the pool with
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(01:04:22):
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(01:04:42):
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(01:05:05):
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(01:05:27):
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(01:05:48):
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(01:06:11):
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Speaker 9 (01:06:12):
Right?

Speaker 2 (01:06:12):
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Speaker 5 (01:06:32):
Every at the top of the hour, a FI.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Four from the Daily Mojo, Daily but Daily Mojo, but
Daily Mojo Radio with an attitude. Thank you to Squish

(01:07:09):
Brandon for us tweeting this out that yesterday it was
someone who had bey who had been having a little
discussion with chat GPT regarding clones and robots and probably

(01:07:30):
aliens too, and my comment was this, and this is
what the chat basically ended up saying. He was asking
questions regarding, you know, do the elites use human clones
or robots? And chat GPT responded with yes, yes, do

(01:07:51):
they use robots that are indistinguishable from humans? Yes? Where
do they clone humans? Underground? Where do they make the
robots that are indistinguishable from humans? Black sites? Who is
creating the clones? The military? The United States military partially,

(01:08:13):
and goes on to say, uh, you know, other militaries
around the world, corporations, Why are they creating human clones?
Come on, that's an easy one. Control? How are they
using these clones to control influence?

Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
Why has chat GBT just given one word answers? That's weird?

Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
Are the are these clones usually famous? Is there setting
you can say that you want to? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:08:46):
Maybe the problem was just give me one word, you know, give.

Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
Me god be I didn't see it could pop. Yeah,
But my my point is, I mean, it's confirming everything
we've already all fought right that there are Well, let's
start with the clones. If we cloned Dolly the Sheep,
that's a second time Dolly has come up today, two

(01:09:10):
different dollies. But if we've cloned Dolly the Sheep in
the nineties, what makes anybody think that we haven't cloned humans?

Speaker 3 (01:09:21):
True, that's true.

Speaker 2 (01:09:23):
Why given the capitalist nature and everything we've seen about
the people who are in charge, who run stuff, who
have the money, why would we think they didn't clone
a human when they have all the equipment set up
to clone a sheep.

Speaker 3 (01:09:41):
Just because it's illegal, it doesn't mean it wouldn't be done.
That's a fact.

Speaker 2 (01:09:46):
Look at ai.

Speaker 3 (01:09:47):
I watched the documentary Replicas last night with Keanu Reeves
where they clone humans his family. Actually, yep, it was
pretty good. But the that you know that happen, that's happening,
it has to be happening, especially and especially wouldn't it

(01:10:07):
be correct, especially from a military standpoint for soldiers. That's
that's where in my mind that it has that that
if it's going to be happening, that's where it's going
to be happening.

Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
The clone army. Yeah, why wouldn't you have a clone army?
Why wouldn't you create Well, because it's illegal, yep, that's
why you wouldn't do it. Or is chat GPT simply
because all chat GPT does, like Grock, is search. It's

(01:10:39):
it's a it's a super search. It just dives deep
so you don't have to It looks at stuff. It
looks at a bazillion web pages in five minutes that
would take you days, weeks, years to look at, compiles
the information.

Speaker 3 (01:10:54):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:10:54):
A lot of times with GROC, it'll say, well, there's
no credible evidence that X, Y and z, But.

Speaker 3 (01:11:01):
Yeah, it usually gives itself an out right in most cases.
But it basically has indexed the entire Internet and it
continues that indexing all the time. That's how it's so fast.

Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
Yeah, and so that's how I found the location. Within
that particular podcast where he talked about the extraterrestrial monitoring devices,
the Slivers of Metal. I said, hey, Groc, find it.
Find it in the podcast where he talks about this,

(01:11:34):
and Groc went out there and did all the legwork. Yeah,
it really is kind of like a drug. It gets
really addictive really quickly.

Speaker 3 (01:11:43):
And then you find out about the new browser coming
out called Perplexity comment and then you go, okay, now
things are getting scary.

Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
What's it going to do?

Speaker 3 (01:11:54):
It does all. It's an AI based web browser that
allows you to ask it questions and it will take
you to you say, find me a video that talks
about such and such, and then take me to that
time code in that video. Boof it pops it right up?

Speaker 2 (01:12:16):
Won't GROC do that?

Speaker 1 (01:12:18):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:12:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:12:19):
Except Grock's not a web browser. This is a web browser.
Oh okay, it's like a It's like a It's called
Perplexity Comet and it is not cheap to use right now.
I just learned about it on Saturday.

Speaker 2 (01:12:34):
Who makes it?

Speaker 3 (01:12:35):
Perplexity The name of the company is Perplexity Ah comic browser.

Speaker 2 (01:12:44):
But with like Chad GPT? Who owns chat gpt? Is
that Google? Google?

Speaker 3 (01:12:51):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (01:12:52):
Who what is Google's AI? Uho?

Speaker 3 (01:12:57):
No, well Gemini, Gemini is Gemini, but Vio is the video.

Speaker 2 (01:13:02):
Video portion of it, which the the vo portion of
Gemini of Google is not worth the investment at this point.
It is not worth the money to try to create videos.
They are what did I what was the number? I read?

(01:13:24):
Two hundred dollars per second or something crazy. That the
that they're even their internal people are having to pay
for the creation of video. It's it's ungodly expensive. It's
just it takes up so much of their I guess
the memory. Yeah, and uh. And that's why if you

(01:13:45):
buy the even the pro plan for Google AI, it
only lets you create like three eight second videos a day.
And even if it screws it up, even if it
doesn't do it right, it's still yeah, you can only
still do two today, but you screw that on doesn't matter.
You can only do two more yep. Call call the

(01:14:05):
helpline and complain. What's the helpline? Man, We don't have one.
You'll figure it out. Google it. But it's it's so
expensive that it's it's it's not really worth Uh, it's
not really worth the investment. But is is? Chad Gpt
just read just regurgitating back what we all think.

Speaker 3 (01:14:28):
See, that's my that's my worry. And here's why I
worry that because I'm gonna I'm gonna take you down
a path real quick. I thought when I first got
into ghost hunting, remember you and I went to the
Haunted Hill House and everything like that, and I thought,
you know what I'm gonna I'm gonna get into this
ghost hunting and UFOs and stuff because I want to know.

(01:14:50):
There are enough people out there talking about this stuff
that I want to know. I want to physically understand
it and and see it and and and go through it.
Do you know, to this day, not one physical thing
has happened at all for me from a UFO standpoint,
from a ghost hunting standpoint, nothing. And then I got
to thinking, do we have a mass craziness going on

(01:15:18):
in this world that so many people talk about UFOs
and aliens and stuff like that? Is it mass hysteria
that's making these people say what they're saying, or do
they truly believe that UFOs exist, that aliens exist, that
clones exist? Or is it something mass? And it boggles

(01:15:42):
my mass psychosis? Yeah, it boggles my mind that people
will get on the air talk about this. Jeremy Jed
what's his name, Jeremy Corbel, people like him, David Grush
will stand in front of Congress and talk about these

(01:16:02):
things as if it's real. And I don't know that
it's real because I haven't physically seen it. So I'm
in that same boat with you.

Speaker 2 (01:16:09):
They're former intelligence.

Speaker 3 (01:16:11):
I don't give a ship.

Speaker 2 (01:16:12):
You can't trust them, that's what I can't trust them.
Okay maybe not in intelligence. You can't trust them. Why
how that's that's that was their job is to but right?
Spread What was his name, Billy?

Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
What minor is? That was his name?

Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Billy?

Speaker 3 (01:16:29):
What was his name?

Speaker 9 (01:16:30):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
The one with the Billy Billy Meyer Meyer, Billy Meyer.
Was he to be trusted?

Speaker 2 (01:16:41):
Was he to be trusted? He had at least he
brought pictures?

Speaker 9 (01:16:45):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
But were they real?

Speaker 2 (01:16:46):
See?

Speaker 3 (01:16:47):
That's the thing. Until I can physically see it for myself,
I'm skeptical, and I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
I've want physically seen something myself, and I'm still skeptical.
You'd be skeptical even if you saw something.

Speaker 3 (01:16:58):
And I got to thinking about this a lot when
we were at the UFO Museum, because we were we
were talking to people with PhDs, Dude, who were saying,
this stuff is going on, it's happening. I've seen it,
I've researched it. Is it because it's just not readily available.

Speaker 2 (01:17:17):
I met an alien with three fingers and was three
feet tall, you'd still be skeptical, Yes, I get that,
you'd still not be completely convinced. It just wouldn't.

Speaker 3 (01:17:29):
Is there that mass psychosis going on?

Speaker 2 (01:17:31):
Is there is? Are there people?

Speaker 9 (01:17:34):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:17:34):
Because not everybody believes it.

Speaker 3 (01:17:36):
Alien abductions. You listen to their stories, they're similar but
not similar, which which lends credence to it a little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:17:45):
The woman in New York who was abducted out of
her apartment that the two cops wanted out the damn
window and the ambassador saw it. And I mean, how
much more proof do you need? How many more witnesses
do you need? And okay, let's say she did get abducted. Now,

(01:18:07):
what what do you do?

Speaker 3 (01:18:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:18:14):
Eats the hell out of me.

Speaker 3 (01:18:15):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:18:17):
You just keep going, You keep putting one foot in
front of the other. And are you sucking on pay
the mortgage? What is that?

Speaker 3 (01:18:26):
It's pretty much what that little thing in your hand
that you're sucking on?

Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
Black huh uh. Mass psychosis or mass psychogenic illness refers
the rapid spread of physical symptoms or unusual behaviors within
a group, often triggered by psychological factors like stress or
shared beliefs. It's not a recognized psychiatric diagnosis, but rather
a phenomenon where a group experiences similar symptoms, sometimes even

(01:18:56):
physical ailments without a clear organic cause, often associated with
the term mass hysteria. Now, mass hysteria did happen? When
was it?

Speaker 3 (01:19:08):
War of the World's Uh yeah, when they started broadcasting
that absolutely, that was understandable. But that was UNDERSTANDAB mean, yeah, have.

Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
Some weird stuff going on the radio.

Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
But now is I mean, are we at the point
in disclosure?

Speaker 2 (01:19:25):
Now?

Speaker 3 (01:19:26):
Where are are we?

Speaker 2 (01:19:28):
I'm sorry?

Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
Are we not yet at the point of disclosure where
they can finally just put something out that is for
the best word I can come up with, definitive that
the public can go, Okay, damn it, we knew it. Now,
let's move on. We're obviously not there yet, but look

(01:19:50):
for for for a decade now, we've talked about, oh,
this is going to get me in trouble. For the
for the last decade, we've talked about people men who
think they're women, transgender, We talked about transgenderism as a
sickness right, as a as a what's it called gender

(01:20:10):
gender dysphoria? Do we not have UFO dysphoria in this country?
And would it not be would it not be UFO
dysphoria unless something definitive hit the hit the airwaves and
we all figured it out, and then we all went, oh, Now,

(01:20:32):
I understand why you.

Speaker 2 (01:20:33):
Say dysphoria, dysphoria technically being a state of unease or
generalized dissatisfaction with life.

Speaker 3 (01:20:41):
Okay, maybe not the word dysphoria, but you understand what
I'm saying. There are there are people who there are
men who think there are women, women who think there
are men, and people who think there are UFOs. It
all falls under the same thing for me until I
see it with my own eyes, and I think, but

(01:21:04):
people are making bookoop money off of saying that they've
seen UFOs.

Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
Some people are. I mean, yeah, we saw and we
met some of them at the well. We don't know
how much money they were making, but they were selling
stuff and they based on their experiences with either an
alien entity or a machine. But is that a predominance
of people, know, I don't think there's not that many

(01:21:35):
of those out there, that there's not that many people
making a living off of it. Whereas the transgender movement,
I think you see a lot of people out there
involved a lot more people are involved in the transgender movement,
I would say, than in the UFO. And you don't
see even if they're not organ you don't see that

(01:22:00):
many protests for UFO rights. You see him for transgender rights.

Speaker 3 (01:22:06):
Without a doubt.

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
It's more.

Speaker 3 (01:22:08):
It's more. Yeah, it's more mainstream. It has become more
mainstream because I can physically see a man trying to
be a woman, right, I can physically see it. So
now it's it is, it's it's real. So we call
it gendernice for you.

Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
But we but we see pictures of things that are
you you bet your life on that picture. I wouldn't
bet my life on anything at this point.

Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
You could bet your life that that's a dude dressed
like a woman.

Speaker 2 (01:22:41):
I wouldn't even do that.

Speaker 3 (01:22:43):
Really, Okay, so we don't understand what I mean. That's
more real quite honestly, then.

Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
Uh real, Pope three thirty eight says brad Ron have
ignored us all that. Now, now I just say something
relevant and we'll jump in there. With these large language
models regurgitate whatever they see the most articles about. That's
it they It doesn't know truth. It just repeats what
it sees the most on the interweb on a given subject.

(01:23:11):
According to fake so Yes, real Pope says, I had
an alien demon experience, and trust me wrong. You don't
want evidence. I don't want it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:22):
It's not that I don't want an alien demon experience.
I don't quite Maybe it's not that I do want it.
It's I don't want it. But show me a UFO
in the sky that I can see with my own eyes.

Speaker 2 (01:23:39):
I mean, you believe that we went to the moon,
but you've never men to the moon.

Speaker 3 (01:23:43):
You're correct, you're correct, You're correct. I've only seen photos
of the moon.

Speaker 2 (01:23:46):
Believe what you believe, what you choose to believe, right,
But people.

Speaker 3 (01:23:50):
Are seeing diamond shaped items in the sky.

Speaker 2 (01:23:54):
Uh, what was this?

Speaker 3 (01:23:55):
What was Wasn't there a mild wide UFO over Stephenville
at some point in Texas?

Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
Gosh, when was that? That was a while back Stephenville.
But then there was the same thing in Phoenix, Arizona.

Speaker 3 (01:24:08):
I've never seen anything that large in the sky period.
Show me something like that, give me something to hang,
you know, to hang on to. That then makes me
want to research it for the rest of my life. Hell,
I've never seen Bigfoot either, But people swear to it's
out there.

Speaker 2 (01:24:29):
Get the Stephen Greer app and it'll teach you to
summon UFOs for a small feet, says fakeso oh, a
small have that that's the ceve ive app.

Speaker 3 (01:24:38):
It doesn't it doesn't work like it's.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Yeah, it's I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
It might.

Speaker 3 (01:24:45):
I know I sound like a complete skeptic, and I
am to some extent. But the difference is is I'm
like you, I want to believe it period.

Speaker 2 (01:24:54):
Well you should be skeptical because otherwise you'll believe anything. Yeah.
I don't know what the hell they are either, And
I've seen stuff and I have no I don't know
if it's interdimensional, if it's an alien, if it's the
government with some top secret machine that they're flying around Hell.

Speaker 3 (01:25:13):
I've got to get down to see the marshal lights
I've seen. I haven't seen those either, and those aren't
specifically UFOs, but those are some kind of weirdness going on, right,
it's an Yes, it's an unknown. There's a lot of
there's a lot of ghost lights around Hell. They are
they're ones.

Speaker 2 (01:25:29):
Uh. I was gonna say, is it closer it's Arkansas only, Yeah,
it's closer. There's a ghost light in Arkansas somewhere. Wade
Robertson says the Stephenville one was a trip chased by
F sixteen's. What year was that, because I remember that
one Stephenville, Steve mill Ufo was two thousand and eight. Yeah.

(01:25:58):
Numerous residents claimed to have see large, silent, intensely bright
object in the sky, over three hundred witnesses. But again,
you don't know what it was. It was just it
was a big thing in the sky. Seeing that the
object was described as hovering and having lights, incident gained
national attention. Investigated by some, including Robert Powell, and the
used FAA radar data. They described the object as hovering

(01:26:22):
with lights. Some noted it's unusual silence compared to military
aircraft like F sixteen's, which are frequently seen in the area.
I'll forget though, the Stealth Fighter is pretty quiet too,
so it could be it could simply be military aircraft.
That's the thing about it. You never know.

Speaker 3 (01:26:42):
You never know.

Speaker 2 (01:26:42):
And once when the damn, I mean, the government just
continues to lie and or let me throw a wrench
into the or maybe they're not lying, maybe they're not
Maybe they're not lying. Maybe they don't know anything. Maybe
they haven't captured anything. I find out hard to believe.

(01:27:06):
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Speaker 3 (01:27:21):
I put a little bit on this morning, right before
the show, Yes on light body Butter.

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(01:28:12):
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code Daily Mojo, which will give you fifteen percent off
at smellmmojo dot com. You're listening to the lunatic fringe
of American radio. The Daily Mojo. James in Louisiana says,

(01:28:45):
don't forget. I'm sure our government is experimenting with drone swarming.
That wouldn't surprise me either. Nope, And what if you've
never seen a drone show before? They are They're amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:29:02):
I saw my first one at Roswell and quite honestly,
it wasn't a large one, but it was cool. I mean,
but the software that runs those could be what people
are sawing. Uh see, Yeah, it could be. Could be
because you don't hear them, not unless you don't remember
hearing them. Yeah, did you hear them? I didn't. I

(01:29:23):
didn't remember hearing. No, there was too much noise and
music going on.

Speaker 2 (01:29:26):
Yep. So hell, these these these mile wide UFOs could
be a series of drones, could be anything. I don't know,
I really don't. I've seen what the Chinese can do
with drones for displays. Imagine what the military can do. Yes,

(01:29:48):
and that's just it. It's but by the same token.
James also says, I believe aliens are demons, Okay, but
maybe they aren't. That's the thing when you have people
like the guy this, Richard Richard Benduric with Field Propulsion

(01:30:09):
Technologies on the Beyond Conventional Physics the Ecosystemic Futures podcast,
Good grief. I mean, if they could name something any
better to make me not want to listen to it,
that they've done a fabulous job with it right there,
because I would not have the slightest inclination to want

(01:30:31):
to listen to any of that not buried the way
it is. I mean, zero point energy on its own. Yeah,
that's that's cool. But the way they slop all this
stuff together. But maybe Richard ben Duric is a misinformation specialist.
Maybe he's out there just planting seeds of confusion. I mean,

(01:30:54):
there's something to all this stuff that we're seeing. There's
something to it some way, shape or I just don't
know what it is, is, no idea what it is,
and we may never know. That's the sad part about it.
Uh see, Oh the eye eyes? You know what you

(01:31:20):
haven't seen? Have you ever seen an eye? An? I?

Speaker 3 (01:31:23):
I huh, I've seen an at at.

Speaker 2 (01:31:28):
Oh these are I don't know what eyes. Oh wait
until you see an eye.

Speaker 3 (01:31:34):
I only have one good.

Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
Oh, come on, both of your eyes are good. One
just a little different. That's all this is.

Speaker 11 (01:31:46):
Uh, this is an e They are one of the
strangest looking animals in the world and is the world's
largest nocturnal primate. It has black fur and large eyes,
and its fingers are incredibly long. In fact, there also
known as the long fingered leamer. They look as a
nocturnal and orborew animal that spends most of its time

(01:32:07):
high in the trees to find food. The II uses
its long, thin middle finger to tap on tree trunks
and listens to the acoustics to find hollow areas where
grubs might be living. And if there's an insect inside,
we'll make a small hole with its incredibly sharp teeth
to gnaw its way, and we'll use its super long
and skinny finger to reach the prey and pull it out.

Speaker 3 (01:32:30):
Another thing that sets them up.

Speaker 2 (01:32:32):
Maybe that's what we're seeing. Maybe those are the aliens. Okay,
maybe an overgrown eye is an alien? They are I
think they're only found a negative dem Okay, what is
up with Matagascar. Is that not where the weirdest stuff lives.
Everything weird lives in Madagascar, And that's These eyes are
a the ears of a bat. They have rodent light teeth,

(01:32:56):
they never their teeth never stop growing, and they have
a bushy tail longer than its body. But I think
the thing that really caught my eye about these I
see what you did there, You're welcome.

Speaker 8 (01:33:11):
Uh the.

Speaker 2 (01:33:13):
See if I put the right one over here, the
you noticed it had the super dy duper long middle finger.
Talked about them and being able to tap on the
tree and.

Speaker 3 (01:33:25):
To reach down and grab the gruach.

Speaker 2 (01:33:27):
Down in there. But and and then I thought about
the people who if you ever pulled up at a
stoplight and there's somebody next to you and you know
they're they're picking their nose and it's like they don't
realize anybody's watching them, and it's like they're just going
to town, and you're like, man, he's got to be

(01:33:47):
reaching the back of his brain.

Speaker 3 (01:33:49):
Yeah, yeah, right, yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:33:55):
The eye eyes do that. And they've captured it. Two
years ago. They captured it recording. They recorded it picking
its nose for the very first time. And here's the video.

Speaker 3 (01:34:14):
Okay, that is nasty excuses.

Speaker 2 (01:34:19):
Do you want to hear? Do you want to hear?
What it does?

Speaker 10 (01:34:29):
It?

Speaker 2 (01:34:31):
They have extra long, bony middle fingers they hold on
a second. They They also found the lemurs use their
elongated fingers for nose picking. A twenty twenty two paper
published in the Journal of Zoology, researchers described how they
reached through their noses to the back of their throat

(01:34:54):
and then lick off the gathered bucus. The team noted
the lemurs maybe a tracted to the mixture because of
the texture, crunchiness, and saltiness of the mucus, which may
also prevent bacteria from sticking to their teeth. So there's
a reason they do it because it helps their.

Speaker 3 (01:35:13):
Dogs eat their own ship too. But we don't know
what that is yet.

Speaker 2 (01:35:17):
What they do they know what that is. That's it's
like a mineral.

Speaker 3 (01:35:22):
Deficiency of some sort, right, But there's just gross, dude.

Speaker 2 (01:35:28):
Absolutely. I worked at a Kawasaki dealership. We had a
nasty German shepherd that guarded the back area at night
that he would do mad. It was like you didn't
want to you if you were a thief and you
saw this dog turn around in a big steaming pile.
And I mean, all you'd have to do is just

(01:35:49):
he wouldn't have to break the skin on you. Nope,
you'd get you'd dive a bacterial or in faction if
he breathed on you. The but these eyes are also
an omen of death, and they some believe that if
it points its middle finger at you, it's a death sentence.

(01:36:09):
You see, you didn't know anything about an eye when
you get up this morning, and now you know more
about eye eyes than you ever possibly wanted to.

Speaker 3 (01:36:16):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
And if it scratches you with that middle finger, oh
my gosh, you don't know where that middle finger has been, Brad.
Except we do know where that middle finger has been.
They didn't know that they They thought that they were extinct,
but they are not. They found them. We discovered them
in the in the nineteen fifties in Madagascar. They're still

(01:36:38):
in danger though, they but they're cute. I mean, except
for the whole pick in their nose, to the back
of their yeah, the back of their their brain. I mean,
that's quite a talent right there. Ohly, their face, only
a mother could love. Yep At the other into the

(01:37:00):
spectrum is Sidney Sweeney.

Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
Though, fact fact, Yeah, I talk about her in my
twizzy this week. So uh, let's just I mean, look,
it's Sydney Sweeney, for Pete's sake. So here's today's Twizzy.

Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
The way I see it, this is Ron's wonky perspective
on life.

Speaker 3 (01:37:20):
So Sidney Sweeney, America's sweetheart with a smile that could
sell ice to penguins, stars in an American Eagle campaign
with the tagline Sidney Sweeney has great genes. Cute right,
it's a pun j E A N S G E
N E s.

Speaker 2 (01:37:35):
Get it.

Speaker 3 (01:37:36):
She's blonde, blue eyed, and rocking denim like it's her job,
because well it is. But oh no, the Internet's outrage
machine had to crank into overdrive. Apparently this ad is
promoting eugenics and Nazi propaganda. Yes you heard that right.
A jeens commercial is now a dog whistle for white supremacy.
Give me a damn break. The perpetually offended TikTok brigade

(01:37:58):
clutch their pearls scream that a white actress talking about
jeans is some coded hate speech. Meanwhile, they're sipping oat
milk lattes and canceling anything that moves. Look, I'm all
for calling out nonsense, but this this is like accusing
a puppy of tax evasion. It's a stretch so long
it could span the Grand Canyon. Sydney's out here selling genes,

(01:38:19):
not manifestos.

Speaker 2 (01:38:20):
Hey, let's be real.

Speaker 3 (01:38:21):
American Eagle's been inclusive for years, with diverse models and
even a Denim hajab. But sure, let's pretend they're suddenly
the Third Reich because of a dad joke punt. On
the flip side, the Rights having a field day crowning
Sidney the queen of anti woke advertising. They're like, take that,
cancel culture, and honestly, I'm digging it. The woke police

(01:38:43):
are so busy policing wordplay they forgot how to laugh.
Pierce Morgan called them out for labeling everything Nazi adjacent,
and even Stephen Colbert, hardly a MAGA fan, said this
outrage is overblown. When Colbert's the voice of reason, you know,
the lefts lost the plot and get the While the
X platform is melting down, American Eagle stocks by ten percent,

(01:39:05):
Meme stock traders are eating this up, laughing all the
way to the bank. Sydney silence pure genius. She's out
here posting about her dog and manicures, letting the keyboard
warriors scream into the void, and the AD's charitable angle
proceeds to a crisis hotline ignored because who needs facts
when you've got a narrative. So to the cancel crowd,

(01:39:27):
maybe just chill a bit. It's a genes ad, not
a conspiracy. Sidney Sweeney is just doing her job, looking
fabulous and probably giggling at this mess. Let's save the
outrage for something that matters, like Whylow Rise. Jens are back.
That's the real crime here. I'm Ron Phillips, and that's
the way I see it.

Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
The way I see it is only on the Daily
Mojo dot com where political correctness comes to die. Daily Mojo.

(01:40:06):
You know, I noticed we don't see much from Pickled
Squirrel on the on the Access morning. You know why
she's on vacation. Oh she is in Scotland. Oh he's
over there searching for the lockness monster. But there is
a village in Scotland that is it's called it's called
bonnie Bridge, near Foulkirk. It has had more UFO sidings.

(01:40:28):
Let's see, more than three hundred reports of unexplained activity
have been recorded, making one of the United Kingdom's most
active areas for supposed other worldly encounters. And what's around
there is there is there a big air base there.
That is that why they're seeing a bunch of UFOs
in that in that part of sicot be it could
be because I don't I haven't seen one.

Speaker 3 (01:40:49):
I mean, I hate that. UFO sidings are just happen stance.
You happen to be in the right place at the
right time, as opposed to, hey, go here, you're going
to get to see a UFO at some point point.
I mean, that still happenstance. But go here, here's where
we see them. Well, then you go out there every
night for like six months and you don't see anything.
In the minute you leave, poof, there's one. Oh damn it.

Speaker 2 (01:41:13):
You weren't supposed to see it?

Speaker 3 (01:41:15):
That why?

Speaker 2 (01:41:17):
Why that's not your destiny?

Speaker 3 (01:41:19):
Whatever?

Speaker 2 (01:41:19):
Dude? What or it's just not part of your simulation? Okay,
you ever think about that? Okay, all right, it might
not be part of your simulation.

Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
Open to that conversation.

Speaker 2 (01:41:32):
The this thing has been for whatever reason, I cannot
it will not let me, It will not let me
show you this town. And I don't know why. Every
time I try to copy and paste it over there,
it will not do it. It'll do any other story,
but it won't do this one. That is so weird

(01:41:55):
the UH. At the time of the Bondi Bridge sightings
back in nineteen ninety two, one of the local council
people took it upon himself to gather accounts from residents.
By the end of that year, he had documented over
two hundred separate incidents involving unusual lights, shapes, and aerial
objects in bonnie Bridge. Reports varied widely. In one case,

(01:42:16):
a driver described a formation of lights in a cross
shape hovering above a road before changing into a triangle,
and another a family claimed to have seen a bright
circle of light land in the nearby field. Crop circles.
Look at them. There's your evidence now you seeing crop circles.
That's not evidence. But what is it? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:42:41):
I mean, how are they created? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:42:44):
That's just it. That's evidence. You don't know. What is
it evidence of? Is it an other worldly phenomenon? Is
it an electromagnetic It would be evidence if I could
being made video of one being made you've not seen that.

Speaker 3 (01:43:05):
Yeah, I've seen it. I don't believe.

Speaker 2 (01:43:07):
Okay, so you've seen one being made. Now, it's me like, I.

Speaker 3 (01:43:12):
Want to see one being made, not on video. I
want to see a UFO. I want to see an alien.
I want to see a crop circle being made with
my own eyes, just the I don't know if this
is it or not. I don't think that's it. It's
a long it's a long shot video. It's it's like

(01:43:34):
they're standing on a hill somewhere. Oh maybe this is yeah, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:43:39):
That's right, that's it. This is the only footage I've
ever seen of UFOs creating. And they look like orbs
to me. But is that legit? I mean it's it's

(01:44:02):
it's pretty freaky looking. I mean it looks I don't know. Yeah,
that's fascinating video. Although and this was done. When was
this done? H it's been years. This is a month ago,
but it's it's.

Speaker 3 (01:44:25):
Yeah, this was years ago that somebody.

Speaker 2 (01:44:27):
Yeah, uh, what year was that? Well seconds, I can't
remember what year. But it's been a long time. It's
been a number of years. And I would say it's AI,
but we didn't have AI back then. I didn't freeze up?
Did I or did I know? Because it's frozen on

(01:44:51):
I'm looking at me enough.

Speaker 3 (01:44:52):
No, you're not frozen up on my safe.

Speaker 2 (01:44:55):
Why is it whenever we talk about UFOs, I freeze.
I don't know. I'm starting to think the NSA will
get something to say about it. Yeah, that's it's very
very odd. But it's even if you had hard fast
evidence of it. Would that make a difference. What would
you do?

Speaker 3 (01:45:15):
It's a good question.

Speaker 2 (01:45:16):
You wouldn't do anything differently because there's nothing to do differently,
because even if you found the only reason that you
would do anything differently is if UFOs came out and said,
we're lowering the mortgage rates. We decided we are going
to get involved in the economy of the United States,
and we as these organs have decided y'all are paying
too much for your mortgages and we're slashing them all

(01:45:38):
to one percent. Yeah, and then you'd be like, yeah,
we love his organs. They're out here, They're going to
slash our mortgage rates. This is fabulous. Of course, then
would what would happen is, you know, Trump would have
a relationship with these organs, and then everybody half the
country would hate Zorgians, and the other half would love

(01:45:59):
the Zorganans. We're never going to get past that. We can't.
We can't get past the stupid stuff, much less get
past the really deep, i.

Speaker 3 (01:46:10):
Mean obvious, strange stuff. The creation of nuclear weapons has
brought the UFOs or the aliens to Earth to try.

Speaker 2 (01:46:20):
To that's what they say this, But that's one they're.

Speaker 3 (01:46:24):
You guys are going to kill yourselves. We're here to help.

Speaker 2 (01:46:29):
Maybe maybe that maybe not not worried so much about
us killing ourselves as we are about you know, contaminating
this part of the galaxy for the next possibly four
thousand years, if that would ever happen. And see, that's
that's the other thing. We were also trained in the
seventies and the sixties and the fifties to worry about

(01:46:51):
the nuclear threat from the the Red scare that they
were gonna blood. Do you really think we ever, uh,
we're we're that close to each other blowing each other up.
Aside from when we had our discussion on Friday with
retired lieutenant retired Colonel Rob Mayniz, you know, were we

(01:47:13):
ever that close to blowing each other up? Maybe on accident,
but not ever, not ever, because somebody was going, you
know what, screw them, let's hit the button. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:47:24):
I mean all countries are going to say their nuclear
weapons are for defensive only, but that implies an offensive attack, right.

Speaker 2 (01:47:34):
Peace through strength. That was Reagan's hole piece. Through strength,
walks off turn, carry a big stick. You're not going
to blow me up if you think I can blow
you up too, because then neither one of us are
going to be around. That's it's going to prison and
beating the shit out of the biggest, strongest guy there,

(01:47:54):
because then nobody wants to aff with you in theory. Well,
wouldn't that suck if that theory doesn't work out well
for you. You go and you beat the biggest, baddest
guy in the prison, and then everybody just keeps coming
at you and then they just can't damn it. That's
not supposed to happen that way. You're not supposed to
start efving with me. I mean, it's we can't get

(01:48:15):
past the little stuff. We cannot get past. And I
say we because I think that it's we end up
falling for the again. The propaganda that we're told about
everything from UFOs to Trump, and it's all it all
comes from the same place. It all comes from media outlets.

(01:48:39):
It all comes from the machine in control. Money is control,
but the higher ups, the government entities, that's where all
of this stuff comes from, makes us more manageable. That's
the big story. Of big political story on Friday was

(01:48:59):
the firing of what was their name, Euro of Labor Statistics?
What was her name? Trump fired her on Friday? How
was her name? Doctor Erica? I knew I was going
to say mac and Farter, and that's not it. It's

(01:49:21):
macin tarfer, macin tarfer, which sounds so much like mac
and farter as well. It's a simulation.

Speaker 3 (01:49:32):
This is what they do.

Speaker 2 (01:49:32):
In a simulation, they make they make words sound like
that so you sound silly when you say them. That
fired her because he said she's rigging the numbers coming
out of the BLS, the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Yeah,
over a million, which by over a million March was
it March twenty twenty four? Right, they had to they

(01:49:56):
downsize them by a one hundred and eighteen Yeah, eight
hundreds of March twenty twenty four. The revised figures for
that year were eight hundred and eighteen thousand fewer jobs
created than what they reported. That's a big miss. That's

(01:50:21):
a huge miss. And that was prior to the election
to try to make it again look like it was.
You know, Biden was doing a smash up, bang up
job right in office, creating all these jobs. We all
knew that, you know. And what was the what was

(01:50:42):
the the rallying call for Biden during the election, It was,
He's created more jobs than any of the last three
presidents combined. Well, the problem is that, okay, he didn't
create all those jobs. Number two, how many jobs did
we lose because of the scandemic, and then you're counting
all those as jobs that have been created. Don't think

(01:51:03):
that's the way that works.

Speaker 3 (01:51:05):
It is if you're in politics. Apparently that's just it all.

Speaker 9 (01:51:09):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:51:09):
Ninety nine point eight percent of all statistics are made up? Yep?
And so is he right? Was she fudging the numbers?
Was she making shit up on the spot? Wouldn't surprise me.
Wouldn't surprise me, because again, the machine hates him and
they will do just about anything they can. The jobs

(01:51:32):
report that came out on Friday, see if you believe
and this is a newsweek the US labor market slowed
sharply over the past three months, according to new data
released on Friday, amid ongoing concerns over President Donald Trump's
tariff policies. Remember initially it was that, oh, it's just
going to raise the price on everything. Now now it's man,

(01:51:56):
prices are going up and jobs are just their jobs
are going away. It's horrible. There is a front page
story on CNN's front page that what to do if
how to deal I think the I can't remember the

(01:52:17):
exact headline. It was what what to do? How to
handle your finances? The first thing to do is deal
with your emotions. And one of the first lines out
of it was the first line is in it even
though it seems like it's a parent that prices are
going up and jobs are going away, here's what you
can do. So they've taken I mean, they take all

(01:52:38):
of this information. They immediately weave it into the ecosystem
that is is politics and is so is is is information?
Like the jobs report? Is that important? I mean, do
you listen to the jobs report on when it comes out,
on on the fridays that it comes out. No, are
you waiting by the the edge of your seat for them,

(01:53:01):
you're not, but mortgage companies are and other businesses are
that will and can have an effect on the economy.
So if the numbers are really good, then they make
decisions that that could end up, you know, being positive
or have a positive effect for you know, your wallet. Yeah,

(01:53:22):
even though it's not sexy. The only time it gets
sexy is when you go to Kroger and you're going,
holy crap, I got four baskets and groceries for thirty
dollars as opposed to oh, I got three bags for
one hundred. So that's the only time it gets really sexy.
But they use this, the machine uses these numbers. Is
as soon as they come out to make decisions. Yeah,

(01:53:44):
I get that to make decisions, and so they do.
When when she when this doctor macinfarter might as well
be her name. Now you know if she's up there
fudging the numbers, which it somebody wou fudging them, And
she's been in charge of the numbers for the past
however many years, right, so if she wasn't fudging the numbers,

(01:54:07):
who was fudging the numbers? I mean the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Have you seen their building? It's that building
that we walked by. Ina, Oh, yeah, it's beautiful. How
much it's like, Wow, how do you guys afford to wait?
We bought that for you bought that for you? That's right?
I mean, I mean, I hate to be the one
to tell you, but you don't deserve such a nice

(01:54:29):
building if you can't get the numbers right on it.

Speaker 3 (01:54:31):
That was And that was the building that was directly
across the street from the sidewalk with the mounted tents.

Speaker 2 (01:54:38):
Yes, all the homeless people with the with somehow they
had found impact drivers and were able to drive into
the concrete these eyebolts.

Speaker 3 (01:54:49):
Yep, to hold their tents in place.

Speaker 2 (01:54:50):
How does that happen?

Speaker 3 (01:54:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:54:53):
Who came along and drilled into the concrete for them?
I mean?

Speaker 3 (01:54:58):
Was that at that point? It became a permanent structure
right there on the damn sidewalk.

Speaker 2 (01:55:03):
It was cool. It was amazing to see. I mean,
and that could be just a sign that again, capitalism
is a wonderful thing. Somebody came through with an impact driver. Hey,
you want me to, I can help state here in
the high winds your tent. Yeah, how much money you got?
How much boos you got? And and made a trade.

(01:55:26):
But when yeah, when you start putting your tent, when
you start anchoring it to the damn sidewalk, you got it.
Credit where credit is due. I was impressed. But that
building where the Bureau of Labor statistics is, I mean,
it's just it's unbelievable. And why is it unbelievable Because

(01:55:47):
there's money in the Bureau of Labor Because that information
that comes out of them is valuable to business and
is valuable to the people who have a lot to
do with the money industry.

Speaker 3 (01:55:59):
It's valuable. And therefore, but their decisions based on those
let's say faulty statistics are what calls the problems.

Speaker 2 (01:56:08):
Yep. So yeah, you got to get her the hell
out of there or find if it wasn't her. But
I'm pretty sure that was like her job description is
to come up with those numbers. So she either sucked
at it and needed to be replaced, or she was
doing it intentionally one of the two right, or or

(01:56:30):
everybody that was giving her the numbers was wrong. So
but you know, they they're trying to say, well, he's
just firing her because the economy is not yet. That's no,
that's not TDS is still strong in a lot of people,
and they're generally the ones who are also saying that,
you know, NPR and PBS shouldn't be defunded.

Speaker 3 (01:56:53):
Yep, please.

Speaker 2 (01:56:58):
Yeah, wait a minutes less go. It's a strange, strange
world that we live in, is it not? It is,
and we've just proven it with two hours of audio
deliciousness and strangeness from UFOs to job reports here on
the Daily Mojo for today Monday, right Monday. Good grief,

(01:57:19):
it's August to fourth already. Yeah, phew, Wow, I missed
an ex wife's birthday. I just realized that. What a shame.
A year of our Lord twenty twenty five. Let's find
out if anybody in the sound of our voices learned
a damn thing. We'll start over here now that this
computer works, We'll start over here on the ex pink
a pool as you're shmeering on the body, butter, do

(01:57:41):
you ever think what if this was invented by aliens
and I'm just tenderizing and marinating myself to be harvested later.
Don't think that hasn't crossed my mind. But if you
know what the old saying, they can't eat me. And
even if they do. I don't have to taste good. Well,
maybe I want to taste good. Yeah, maybe I want

(01:58:02):
to be the best human meat. Thank you they've ever
put in their alien mouths. Damn straight life says boys.
Maybe Madagascar is really the original garden of eating Eden,
and that's why there's such diversity there. Remember Lucy, the
oldest female skeleton came from Africa right next door. That's true.

(01:58:25):
I'm still thinking about the middle finger of the II
sho deuce five. And when exactly are we going to
talk about the scourge of puppy tax evasion. I mean,
if we were able to put al capone away right
right right right right over in the Daily Mojo chat room,

(01:58:48):
let's see here where we got real Pope Previe to
thirty eight. The ten most terrifying words in the English
language were from the intergalactic government, and we're here to help.
That is the truth. You don't want the intergalactic government. No,
you know, if you see them on your that's worse
than sixty minutes showing up at your front door. Depth

(01:59:09):
tread By says that happy Monday, God bless you all,
loving hugs, Happy Monday. She is way too nice for
this way this place. She's way way too nice. Ewo
and Guru over in the rumble chat room. Well, the
Dems did hire a lot of fudge packers. Is there
fudge being packed at the uh let's see wonderful Kamala

(01:59:30):
hair Stronger's the comedy fudge pack Maybe there has been
a lot of fudge being packed in I know there
has been a lot of fudge being packed in Uranus. Nice.
We just drove through there was it last year? Yeah,
it's it's amazing. It's an amazing If you've never been
a fudge factory in Uranus, it is an amazing place
to be. Oh, I'm not familiar with it. Yeah, that
is very good fudge. As for the rest of you,

(01:59:52):
remember that we the people have tanging the other otherwise
we shall surely hang separately. Six separate trenders, Resist Stupid
in night doot conference wherever you are so watch and
listen at the Dailymojo dot com.

Speaker 10 (02:00:04):
Mmmmmmm
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