Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
The basis will be Rye bread Mother's idea. The simmer
flame keeps the water boiling gently while the cheese is melting,
so that Sally can go on to weather Town.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
We interrupt this program for a special news bullet.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
Thank god it's again my mojo.
Speaker 5 (00:48):
Yes, I don't care about to.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
Adjust your mojo.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
No set.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Mojo radio with an attitude. This is your Daily Mojoe
Freedom Mony edition.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
So if you're a fan of Star Wars, A New
Hope is coming out to theaters to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary.
Speaker 6 (01:37):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
But then I'm not waiting that. Which one is star
Which one is Star Wars A New Hope?
Speaker 6 (01:43):
The very first one, the very first thing. What episode
Star Wars Episode four, Episode four?
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Yeah, you don't know which one it was either. I
think it was Star Wars. Star Wars. It's not going
to be out until twenty twenty seven, but that will
be fifty years. Time flies and you're having fun. And
they have not yet said which one it'll be. Disney
has not been firm which version it will be, whether
it is going to be the crapped up version with
(02:13):
all of the George Lucas put stuff in because you
know he wanted to put stuff in. He did. All
he did was the version complete with film grain and
scratches and everything else. April thirtieth, twenty twenty seven, it
will be released, let's see, and then it will run
(02:39):
through the official Star Star Wars Day holiday on May
the fourth, Thank you. This will be the Planet White
event too, so international Star Wars fans will not miss out.
But they they don't know which it will be, whether
it will be the sucky version or the upgrad good
(03:01):
version or just the original. What's wrong with putting the
original version out there? That hit the theaters May twenty fifth,
nineteen seventy seven.
Speaker 6 (03:12):
Do you remember that? Do you remember going to see
that when it came out?
Speaker 1 (03:16):
No?
Speaker 4 (03:16):
I wasn't a big Star Wars fan.
Speaker 6 (03:19):
Let's see what else?
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Seven?
Speaker 4 (03:20):
I knew it, you know what? I knew it was out,
but not until Star Trek.
Speaker 6 (03:24):
So so Star Wars was the number one money maker
in nineteen seventy seven. Here's trivia for you, since you
hit me with it all the time. What was the
number two money maker in nineteen seventy seven?
Speaker 4 (03:37):
Had James Bond movie?
Speaker 6 (03:38):
Nope, I'll sing you a little tune right Saturday Night
fever Nope, what east bounding? Down loaded up in trucking? Really,
Smoky in the Band, it was number two, that you.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
That was what I was going to say. I love
the Goodbye Girl.
Speaker 6 (03:59):
Yeah, see was in it?
Speaker 4 (04:01):
Smoky in the Band, nineteen seventy seven, number two.
Speaker 6 (04:04):
Isn't that crazy? Fifty freaking they had years. They wrote
that movie in five days. I did a little research
the last couple of days, because I watched it a
couple of days ago. I was like, it was number three.
That's what was the third most popular? Nobody gives a shit?
Speaker 4 (04:18):
I don't know, yes they do. What was it was
a It was a better movie, I think in some
ways than Star Wars those Encounters of the Third kind.
Really really that was number three. I would have thought
Superman was in there somewhere. But when was that was that?
Seventy seven? Christopher Reeve Superman? Let's see, it was Star Wars,
(04:43):
Smoking the Band, Close Encounter, Saturday Night, fever Bridge too far?
Speaker 6 (04:51):
I was Superman that had seventy seven or seventy eight.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
I wasn't in the top ten of seventy seven. Interesting,
it must have been. It must have been later. Yeah,
time flies and you're having fun. It was seventy eight, okay,
number two movie right after what other movie?
Speaker 6 (05:11):
And seventy eight. Who the hell knows.
Speaker 4 (05:16):
It's the word.
Speaker 6 (05:21):
I don't know the word.
Speaker 4 (05:22):
It's the word. Oh, there's only one word. That's the
word thank you. There's only one word. I had to go,
do you do that one more time? Make it gayer?
Speaker 6 (05:35):
I had to go back to I had to go
back to my lyrics. It's the word.
Speaker 4 (05:40):
Florida Man in Alabama's Bridge Too Far had a ton
of a list actors playing soldiers and Dark Magneto Grease
Superman was seventy eight, so yeah, they all knew. I
just didn't want to cheat by looking over there. Missy
thirteen was five years old, and what seventy seven?
Speaker 6 (05:57):
I was eleven? I was eleven years in seventy seven. Yeah,
I was thirteen. That's because you're old billy badass, is
what I was.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
I've been saving this for you because, uh, you just
the other day were like, wait a second, we I
all I want to do is I want to see
I want to see crop circles being made. That's all
I want to see.
Speaker 6 (06:21):
That's exactly what I want to see, all right with
my own eye, and you ask me sooner with my own.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Here is a new video of a crop circle. Okay,
we'll look with your own eyes. You're very specialized IDEO
right here.
Speaker 7 (06:32):
To third phase of moon. You've got the cousin brothers,
Blake and Brent, and we're looking at something incredible in
this episode. We've got a lot of UFO videos. Just
in a crop circle forms right before our eyes with
no explanation.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
Look at this, here you go, all me.
Speaker 6 (06:52):
You shall receive that almost looks like a down draft
of something, doesn't.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
It's like a helicopter.
Speaker 6 (06:59):
That's crazy.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
Now there is a somebody pointed out that there is
a there's a small object that hits the ground just
before the circle starts. Stuff is this? Who knows? This
could be AI? Could be absolute whatever, Everything looks like
it's AI. Now there isn't any we look like we're AI.
(07:21):
So just but see this.
Speaker 6 (07:24):
This crop circle goes from the middle out and most
crop circles are circular. The stalks of the corner the
wheat go around like a clock in the crop circle.
They don't go from the center out.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
Huh.
Speaker 6 (07:41):
Look, it's That's why I say it looks like a downdraft.
This crop circle is formed from the middle with everything
falling out towards the edge of the circle. See where
a UFO created crop circle is circular. Like the hands
of a clock go around the clock. You see how
(08:01):
everything's going out from the middle like a downdraft of
some sort, like a micro burst.
Speaker 4 (08:07):
They're they're bending right.
Speaker 6 (08:09):
There, right, but they're bending towards the outside of the circle.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
You know, I'm right. I'm not going to admit it,
of course not. Why would I admit that if you
feel good?
Speaker 6 (08:26):
Because I suck.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
Isolate that audio. I did not say it. For the record,
I didn't say it, all right, So the they're the
this thing and who knows actually if it's whatever somebody
in the comments said, but there they noticed this thing
hitting the ground, And I don't know, I mean, because
I'll look at all the other crap in the air. Yeah, bugs,
is that bus right there?
Speaker 6 (08:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (08:50):
Yeah, there's so there's something. So was it a micro
meteor that hit? And I guess something that size, if
it came from out space, would if it hit the
ground doing eight thousand miles an hour, probably would do
that right, it.
Speaker 6 (09:06):
Would, but you'd think you'd seem like a bigger hole
in the middle.
Speaker 4 (09:10):
You always want to see a bigger hole, don't you.
That's the story of your life. Give me a bigger hole.
Speaker 6 (09:18):
I'll get my other one and bring it up. I'm sorry, I.
Speaker 4 (09:22):
Just just turn in the man card now, and let's
just call it even any notoriety, any recognition you got
from being right about the circle going outward is wiped
out because of that whatever the hell that sounds with.
Speaker 6 (09:35):
That to the side. So I'm not like banging.
Speaker 4 (09:38):
On it and ask Misty if you can have your
balls back, would you. I've got to wait exactly. They're
gonna smell like perfume when you put them back in. Now, Okay,
you're right, though, it goes outward from the center. So's
if this is in fact a real well, it is
(09:59):
a cross up and it is a circle, so it's
technically a crop, sir.
Speaker 6 (10:03):
Technically yes, but it almost looks like either a like
a like a we call those a down drop circle. No,
like a wind sheer down down draft downbursts.
Speaker 4 (10:15):
But in such a like a tiny roburst microburst.
Speaker 6 (10:18):
Yeah, yeah, I can't explain it. But if something does
hit the ground, you would think.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
Damn it. I was hoping you could well, I was
hoping you could tell us what the hell was going
on here? Now what am I going to do for
the rest of them? I'm sad.
Speaker 6 (10:38):
Now, good thing, I have boxes to open I do yes,
and and and speaking of space, well you can you
can open that anytime you're.
Speaker 4 (10:47):
Ready, anytime, anytime? Can we do it after we talked
to Phil Bell? Absolutely? Can we talk? Can we do
it before the end of the program, after we talked
to Phil Bell, before the end of the program. Okay, well,
it's a way to sucker these people who are listening
into listening until the end of the program.
Speaker 6 (11:06):
I sent and I shook it, and does it still
say open on air on the top? Because I was.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
Afraid that's weird because they erased it.
Speaker 6 (11:17):
They erased it on the tape.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
They erased it where. Yeah, they erased where it said
open on air.
Speaker 6 (11:21):
It air, Oh there it is, Yeah, it's there.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (11:28):
I was afraid that the stuff on the tape would
come off, but.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
No, no, it's so it's there. And then also u
uh Dawn Dawn don Dawn Dawn Dawn's birthday is it
a birthday box? Love Dawn's Dawn's box. You know, I
wanted so all the way from Vermont, not too far
(11:55):
from the car. Eh, So we'll open that before the
end of the program. This is the crop circle is
from a third phase of Moon. I've seen some of
these guys videos. I mean, they're they're interesting, and so
I don't even know what they didn't even watch the
rest of their video to see what they said about this,
(12:16):
But apparently I don't say much about it.
Speaker 7 (12:18):
At first, I thought we're looking at ai, but after
closer inspection, we deem what we're looking at legitimate in
our opinion, this.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Is insane, which means nothing. Upon closer inspection, we deem
what we're looking at as legitimate in our opinion. In
our opinion, okay, sure footage.
Speaker 7 (12:45):
Look at this multi layer in effect as the crops
basically disintegrate in a perfect circle.
Speaker 4 (12:52):
But let's see if they bring up the fact that
it's not in the trigger close up here in the
traditional sense of it talked and.
Speaker 7 (13:00):
Starts from the middle and works its way out in
a perfect circumference.
Speaker 4 (13:04):
Is this how these natural crop circles are they? Is
this how they're made. That's what we're asking.
Speaker 6 (13:10):
You know what, something does appear to hit the ground
right there, and that might be that might be a
h impact crater of some sort, because that does, I mean,
it obliterates into the program. Come on, dude, I just didn't.
It didn't look like it was a crater though, but
it obliterates whatever is right there in that what I
(13:30):
would say ten feet.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
Because it's hard to tell scale. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (13:37):
Yeah, I'm looking at the stalks of corn or whatever
that is. But whatever grown, Yeah, that's.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
A baby, good question. I mean, if they're full grown,
that damn thing is huge.
Speaker 6 (13:50):
Whatever hits right there for that, for that first ten
feet blows it all out. But you don't see any
dirt piled up anywhere. That's that's my deal.
Speaker 4 (14:00):
And it's hard to because you don't. It's black and white,
it's nighttime.
Speaker 6 (14:05):
And who's got a not vision camera on their cornfield? Right?
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Why are they staring at the cornfield? See typical crop
circle direction? Do they go clockwise or counterclockwise?
Speaker 6 (14:25):
I think they go counter I think.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
Uh apparently they can go either way clockwise and counterclockwise
according to the AI machine. Anyway, but magnetic fields UFOs
blah blah. It's worth noting some sources mentioned instance of
crop circles appearing in near ancient monuments or may who knows.
(14:52):
This may be next to Stonehenge. Yeah, could be Florida
man in Alabama. Excuse me, we set it up dark
magneto a crop sphincter, right, they leave it to them.
They see butttholes and everything. Look, and Florida man in
Alabama says, speaking of sphincters, where's Doc Kitty. That's an
excellent question. He was in here a little earlier. Maybe
(15:13):
he's gotten it out of his system.
Speaker 6 (15:14):
Look, when your video starts, when your video tititle starts
with this video is breaking the internet. There's something else
that's hyperbole.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
Although how many views have they received off of this thing?
Not that many, really, sixty three hundred and ten and
third Phase of Moon has eight hundred and eighteen thousand subscribers,
But the comments are interesting. Right before it occurs, there's
a small object impacting the ground. The crop circle phenomenon
(15:48):
is known for its intricate patterns. This has to be
something else. Looks like the blast radius of an impact,
considering we can see something drop before it hits. I
don't know what the replies are to that. Yeah, looks
like a tiny version of what happened in Tunguska. That's yeah.
Although we aren't really sure exactly what happened, we can
(16:09):
speculate making me think fake because there's no reason for
a camera to be there.
Speaker 8 (16:15):
You know.
Speaker 6 (16:15):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (16:16):
We humans are more alike than we like to admit,
because we all typically end up coming to the same.
Speaker 6 (16:22):
Not only that, we always try to gammer in their crops,
debunk it in any way we can.
Speaker 4 (16:27):
Well, you should now that you have to now, I mean,
I want to believe, but they all try to fool us.
They try to make us look silly, and we don't
need any help looking silly. Silly. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (16:39):
Do they talk about having researched it like the next
morning to see if there was an impact or anything.
They probably don't. And if they don't, then it's just
a BS claim.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
Damn it, and we're not gonna take it anymore. We
are pissed.
Speaker 6 (16:55):
I want to see a photo of it in the daytime.
Speaker 4 (16:59):
Nice to have a camera in the right spot in
this large crop. Okay, then somebody says, are you able
to slow down the video. Notice there's also white objects flow.
Are you able to eat? Okay? You can slow down
the video yourself, dude.
Speaker 6 (17:19):
And the white objects in the video are bugs or
leaves or the bugs detritus?
Speaker 4 (17:27):
Or is it detritus?
Speaker 6 (17:28):
Detritus?
Speaker 4 (17:30):
Is it detritus? That's what I've heard. But you know
I'm never right. So let's see. Uh, let's see. Survey
says detritus ding ding ding the health See that's what the
hell does she know?
Speaker 6 (17:49):
That's what that beilts for ding ding ding.
Speaker 4 (17:51):
You've already lost credibility detritis.
Speaker 5 (17:56):
Detritis.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
All right.
Speaker 4 (17:58):
So anyway, there's your there's your crop circle formation video.
Speaker 6 (18:04):
I'm gonna put that one. Send that to me. I'm
gonna put it right up next to my bigfoot foot
print video.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
You found out. You finally saw that one.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
I saw it, Yes, thank you.
Speaker 4 (18:17):
I found it just for you.
Speaker 6 (18:18):
It's like bigfoot stomped on the ground right there, didn't
put another foot down and didn't go anywhere.
Speaker 4 (18:24):
Well the other foot was he No, he was coming
around that corner so fast that he kind of went
off the sidewalk, hit the grass right there, killed it,
and then kept running on down the side.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
Right.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Okay, that's that's that was fairly obvious to me. Of
course I had to dodge the illegals mowing the grass
to get to it, but took my own life into
my hand. Uh not my dog. Did they say cousin brothers?
Is this Arkansas? Wow? Yeah? Are they the cousin brother
You want to be involved in the if you have
(18:56):
anything to if you have nothing to contribute, Hell, we
never have any to contribute, and we're here every day,
So jump on in. And uh if you want to
talk about CBD, let's do that too. Okay, a douche canoe?
Is she still living in your head? Some people just
piss me off. You can use a hashtag what I
(19:19):
learned today? You can bird is the word. You're right,
John Klattuh, you can tag us in your posts at
real brad Stags, at Real Ron Phillips. And did want
to hear of this? And I just happened to come
across this yesterday and thought, wow, I'd never really thought
about the size of Robin's package. Are you okay? No?
(19:43):
Are you?
Speaker 6 (19:43):
We're talking about Batman and Robin?
Speaker 4 (19:45):
Right?
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (19:46):
Huh okay, remember Burt Ward was Robin? Yeah, And uh
so there's Robin. Yep, I did not realize this, nor
did I really hadn't ever th thought about it. But
there was a subreddit. Subreddit is called a damn that's
(20:09):
interesting or comedy bang bang take your pick.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
Uh the.
Speaker 4 (20:15):
Let's see do we have? No the headline isn't over there?
The headline?
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (20:19):
From this Burt Ward Robin from the sixties Batman TV show,
claimed that his penis was so big the ABC prescribed
him penis shrinking pills. No way, no way. It made
me look made you look to it, didn't it? It did, guys.
(20:41):
I mean there's there's nowhere. I mean you can see
it right there. Come on, we're all adults here. This
isn't it. Stop giggling, and Ron, don't grab a screenshot.
I'll just send it to you so you have it later.
But uh he and this was in his book. Apparently
I don't read enough. He not only said that the
studio was concerned because the spandex left nothing to the imagination,
(21:07):
but they and I'm like, wait, how do you what's
a penish shrinking pill?
Speaker 6 (21:16):
Saltpeter it is, I think so potassium octree?
Speaker 4 (21:22):
Yeah, what's it do that makes it smaller? Just out
of curiosity. I don't know, huh. Anyway, so the studio, yeah,
they made and I'm thinking, wait a second, you're an
actor on TV. In the studio says, we have to
make the size of your man part smaller. So here
take these drugs. No, it was the first time he
(21:46):
had ever auditioned for a part number one. He was
happy to get the part. He loved doing it. And
I mean, I guess maybe when and it's the nineteen
sixties and you're happy to have a job. So they're like,
all right, we got to shrink you down. Okay, fine,
It just seemed a little odd to me. He'd be
(22:10):
dark Night, says now, he'd be lucky if he could
find it now, because he did kind of pull a Brando,
a Marlon Brando and thank you James and Louisiana. How
does Ron know that so quickly off the top of
his head.
Speaker 6 (22:27):
What the saltpeter comment? Yes, yeah, we used to talk
about it in the military. Every basic trainee thinks that
the food has saltpeter in it, so it keeps him
from wanting to have sex with somebody else.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Well that's wait a minute, that's that's different than trying
to make it smaller, and we'll just that that just
keeps you from.
Speaker 6 (22:48):
We used to talk about it shriveling you up.
Speaker 4 (22:50):
That's why it's just from right. Jody Won twenty one
says Saltpeter was right there on the tip of his
Uh not my picture of Hillary should work. I was
thinking Nancy Pelosi. But yeah, either way, either way. But
he he said in his book that not only did
they want to shrink him down, but that Adam West
(23:12):
actually had to stuff his crotch because they had the
opposite problem.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
Wow, right, Hollywood is a weird place. I don't know
what to do that, but it's just a strange, strange place.
And this is one of those things that you thought, well,
I never thought I'd be reading that headline anywhere, but
in fact we did. Now, would you if you had
a job where they said, hey, you've got to make
it smaller?
Speaker 6 (23:36):
Would you do it if I was being paid for it? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (23:41):
Really? You have no problem taking drugs to make it
less impressive?
Speaker 6 (23:49):
Yeah, dude, I could go take a cold shower and
be good for the next two hours.
Speaker 4 (23:55):
I would Huh.
Speaker 6 (23:58):
Then again, that woman's running around the set. We might
have a problem.
Speaker 4 (24:05):
Yeh yeah, Stinky Biscuit says, I think Bert confused the
word ego for a penis. What do you think he was?
Speaker 6 (24:14):
I read a story the other day about one of
the Cat Women actresses. I can't not Julie Numar and
not the black one.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
It was the other one, uh you know, not the
black one who played cat Eartha Kit Lee Meryweather and
Julie Newmar.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
Lee Merweather wrote a story and it was in the news.
It was on Fox News literally about a week ago,
even four or five days ago about and she she
discussed in either one of her books or on podcast
or something how Bert Ward was her most favorite person
on the set. Well, we know what now, he.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
Speaks very highly of it. Maybe that's it.
Speaker 6 (24:56):
She didn't mention that in the story, but yeah, she
talked about how he he was the he was the
perfect sidekick to Adam West. He was it was, it
was perfect.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
Adam West from everything I've read, was a nice guy too.
Speaker 6 (25:11):
Yeah, and they said they were friends. She's nice to
be around.
Speaker 4 (25:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (25:14):
Bert Ward and Adam West were friends until Adam West.
Speaker 4 (25:17):
To the to the point where Adam Burt Ward was
so enamored of Adam West that it got on Adam
West nerves at one because he just yeah.
Speaker 6 (25:30):
I mean it's like me and I'm so enamored with
you that I get on your dat nerves.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
And I have to and you have to constantly take
those pills, which is you know, I think you're a
giver and I like that about it. I like that
about you. Anne Hathaway was the last last what she.
Speaker 6 (25:51):
Was the last Catwoman? Yeah? Yeah, but no, I'm talking
about the old Adam West.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
Series, right, the original which was it was only on
for three years. Yeah, yeah, I was surprised. I thought
it was on the line and Barry too, they went, yeah,
she played.
Speaker 6 (26:06):
They went through three cat Women in three years.
Speaker 4 (26:11):
I wonder why that was and what a catwoman?
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Though?
Speaker 4 (26:16):
Wait a second, is this the one that now got released?
Speaker 6 (26:21):
No, I've seen that one.
Speaker 4 (26:22):
That one was Michelle Girl. Yeah, back Girl is the
one that never got released. Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman was
Oh Michelle Pfeifer p piff for uh.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
Yeah, she was.
Speaker 4 (26:39):
Yeah, that's close to the gimp mask close close, which
I'm still trying to figure out why the gimp mask
thing was there. Over in the Daily Mojo chat room,
was but it's fakes of morning Pecan twenty is twenty bucks.
Sure is new meaning to the boy wonder, says Hobo Joe.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Right.
Speaker 4 (27:01):
Things you never things you never knew you didn't know.
Things you can bring up around the old company water cooler.
Remember the days when you could discuss things like this
at work and not get sued. Hey, did you hear
the Did you hear the one about Robin schmingis? See,
(27:22):
if you're throwing words like that, no one will know
what you're talking about. Halle halle Berry better Batwoman? Better Batwoman? Catwoman? Okay,
halle Berry was pretty good, but Michelle Pfeiffer. I met
Adam West once, got his autograph. Such a nice guy.
Isn't that nice when you meet somebody and they.
Speaker 6 (27:43):
Are and they're reasonable? Yeah? Right, they are a good
human being because not a no, they deal with complete shit.
Speaker 4 (27:53):
There is a series on YouTube now by I think
the account is oh toy o t o y. I'm
not sure that stands for, but it's the Roddenberry series
of videos about the original star Trek and Uh. There's
an interview with oh what is his name? He was
(28:15):
the director of two He was the director of two
and then also six, What the hell is his name?
Come on, Ron, I don't know directed Star Trek to Nick? Nick?
Speaker 1 (28:29):
Is it?
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Nick? I'm trying to do this without googling. I'm working
on my memory. Recall, damn it. Uh Star Trek two
director was I was right? Nick? Nick Meyer?
Speaker 5 (28:45):
Nick?
Speaker 4 (28:46):
Anyways, a great interview with Nicholas Meyer on YouTube, and
he's talking about directing Star Trek two, which was arguably
the the best Star Trek out of the series.
Speaker 6 (29:01):
Don't ask me, I never saw it.
Speaker 4 (29:04):
Yeah, I just you know. Star Trek two is up there.
Star Trek six was good, but excuse me. Star Trek
four was good, but Star Trek two I think was
the It was probably the best in the series. The
Wrath of Khan and if if you like the behind
the scenes stuff, if it's just really a good it's
a good look. Sorry.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
Yeah, okay, because in about ten since ever said no
it was started talking about Bert Ward, all you were
thinking about is holes.
Speaker 4 (29:35):
That's not true. That's not true. It's okay. It's a
safe space. We don't care what you will ridicule you,
but we don't really we're not going to judge you. Yeah,
we will. This portion of the program brought to you
by smelling my mojo dot com. They're very proud of
that fact too. Smell my mojo dot com. My feet
right now. Smell like a windy day, that's all. And
(29:58):
so get yours now, get your body butter at smellmimojo
dot com. Use the promo code daily Mojo save was it?
Go there now and uh and get your body butter
do it. Slather some on Burt Ward if you want
to smell mymojo dot com.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
Thank god, it's Friday.
Speaker 4 (30:26):
Where the white women at the Daily Mojo? Is that right?
Florida man in Alabama. Brad learned so much from this chat.
Speaker 9 (30:34):
Do I.
Speaker 4 (30:36):
The halle Berrycatwoman movie stunk on ice? Yeah? Yeah, and
he did. Nick Meyer also directed Time after Time, which
was a fabulous movie if you've not seen it. That
was Christopher reed and I can't remember the woman, but
it was a time travel movie. It was a love story.
Speaker 6 (30:55):
Oh somewhere in time, that's what the movie was. Christopher Reeve.
Speaker 4 (31:01):
Oh that's right, that's right somewhere. But he also say
Time after Time it was a song by Cindy Lapper.
But it's also a movie based on Jack the ripper.
Oh okay, yeah, wait is that Hold on a second,
Am I getting somewhere somewhere right?
Speaker 6 (31:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (31:27):
That was not the Iron Maiden song. I hate it
when AI tries to tell you what you're thinking of. Uh,
Somewhere in time was the Yeah, it was the Christopher
Reeve that one was directed. I was not directed. I
stand corrected. Time after Time was the one he directed.
(31:47):
Not Somewhere in Time. Time after Time is the HG.
Wells not the Christopher Reeve story. Speaking of time, however,
it was nineteen ninety seven when David White decided he
was going to go fishing, and he was going to
go fishing whether or not. His buddies went with him,
(32:12):
and he was let's see Utah Utah. He was had
this boat out there and he was going to be
fishing with some dudes. They rented a hotel room nearby.
His buddies were like, you know what, we can make it,
and David White said, well, you know, if it, I'm
(32:34):
going fishing anyway. And I think it was the next
day they found David White's boat just floating out there
on the water by itself. Wow, nobody aboard. They found
a shoe and a hat also floating near near the boat.
(32:55):
So they figured, all right that he probably fell into
the water and he is no moss. There were no
witnesses at the time. And then this is what again,
twenty eight years ago. So last week some people were
(33:15):
out there at the lake and they found a boot
a shoe next to the lake, and a piece of
a person's foot was in the shoe.
Speaker 6 (33:25):
Oh oh, oh oh was it?
Speaker 4 (33:30):
What would you expect them to find in a shoe
something different than a foot? Nothing.
Speaker 6 (33:33):
I thought they just found a shoe. But you're talking
about they found the whole damn foot.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
The whole foot. But they found it was something of
a bone. Probably after twenty eight years, it's just going
to be maybe a toe. I don't know if there
was enough toe to make a drink with. Wow, you
know what I'm talking about? Yeah, that you know about
the toe drinks. I don't.
Speaker 6 (33:58):
I'd rather not, I think.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
But what is he said? Yeah, like you knew what
the toe drinks were.
Speaker 6 (34:05):
No, I don't know what a toe drink is. I
know what people are drinking.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
There's a there's this trend of people drinking these drinks
with a severed toe in them. That's come with you
on that. I'm like, why would you want to drink
a drink with a toe in it? But back to
but I digress. So David White again twenty eight years ago,
(34:29):
goes missing last week, earlier this year, whatever it was.
They find this boot. They find a shoe with the
foot pieces of foot in it. They sent it off
to the forensics lab and it comes back with a
ninety nine point nine percent certainty that the DNA samples
were related to David White's original DNA and it is
(34:51):
in fact David White's boot and foot. Wow. So twenty
eight years later they figured out, all right, he's uh, yep,
he's dead. They searched for him forever back then, and
I don't know, maybe he was just too but he sunk.
The bodies were supposed to float, I think not.
Speaker 6 (35:12):
I mean, initially they sink, but then they do float.
Speaker 4 (35:15):
But yeah, I would have thought so too, But apparently
this one stayed, stayed sunk, and uh, he.
Speaker 6 (35:23):
Got wrapped in the anchor. He was trying to anchor
so he could fish in one spot and he got
wrapped in the and he threw it overboard and it
yanked his ass off and it held him down. See
I'm an investigator.
Speaker 4 (35:37):
Probably right, You're probably right, because that would also explain
why so he was probably held down.
Speaker 6 (35:42):
There and then it finally just ate his foot off.
Speaker 4 (35:45):
And right, yeah, or what part of Yeah. In any event,
they found his foot and now at least the family
knows it was he was d I mean didn't twenty
eight years you didn't know whether or not or what
(36:05):
happened to him. And you're like, what did he get
abducted by aliens? Was he eating with them? Nope, well
he still may have been eaten, but at least they know.
And then there is a in that same year, June
of nineteen ninety seven, a man by the name of.
Speaker 6 (36:22):
If you just read just read it off the license
there Ray, Yeah, yeah, you gotta read from right.
Speaker 4 (36:29):
Remember then Nasir he was He was traveling on horseback
with his brother through Kohistan in June of nineteen ninety seven.
And let me just tell you, if you've not been
to Kohistan in June, it is amaze balls. So they're
(36:51):
riding on horseback, they're galloping like having a big time,
and they hear gunfire and they're like, oh, the gunfire.
This is not good. Although they probably did not say
it like that because they're not from around these parts,
so it's probably more of the Dirkaderca, Dirkaderkamujadin Dirkaderca. And
(37:12):
they get off their horses and they run into a cave.
This is on the snow capped mountains of the of
Lady Valley. He runs into the cave and he never
comes out.
Speaker 6 (37:25):
Oh he got eat.
Speaker 4 (37:26):
They launched an extensive search that was led by his
brother Kathae Rudden. No trace of desira udin hey, look
who's back was ever found. And then this past year,
within the past six months or so, a glacier is
(37:49):
coming down the side of the mountain and guess who
pops out of the glacier? Oh snap, yep. So twenty
eight years later, this man.
Speaker 6 (37:59):
Is he's probably he's probably in hole, right, I mean.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
He is yep, he is perfectly preserved. Yeah, yeah, looks
just like he did.
Speaker 6 (38:10):
All those people in Mount Everest are the same way.
Speaker 4 (38:17):
Yeah, I mean yes, Like what was his name? Purple,
yellow shoes, yellow boots, yeah yeah, yeah, is he yellow boots?
Speaker 6 (38:24):
Whatever?
Speaker 4 (38:25):
Have you met? Have you met my cat? He's uh,
he's back, but yeah, yellow boots up on Mount Everest,
which is is Everest anymore? Is that even a? Yes,
it is an accomplishment, but really every year now yeah, yeah,
(38:46):
now it's I mean you have to dodge people, like
living people to get up to me.
Speaker 6 (38:50):
There's like a whole camp on the summit of of
right something.
Speaker 4 (38:55):
It's crazy Everest, It's crazy. But this guy was preserved
in the glacier. Uh, and he is now back out.
And once I guess, once you pop out of the glacier,
you that's pretty much when the the decomposition starts to
kick in. And and then really kind of I would
(39:16):
imagine probably you want to get you want to get
them in the dirt as soon as you possibly can.
But twenty eight years later, we have the uh, we
have the the endings of stories that were a mystery
up until now. It's Becompieiti too. You're right, Dot Kitty, Uh,
it's and.
Speaker 6 (39:36):
He's going to give it another shot. He's going to
he forgives you, He's going to give it another shot.
Speaker 4 (39:42):
I did, however, I think I figured out why he
was so badly trying to get our attention the other day.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
Why you want to know why?
Speaker 4 (39:55):
Yes, I didn't think you were going to add but
I thought you were just gonna know what I'm gonna
tell you, Okay, next to the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
Songs, Burning down on this nine to five grind clocks
sticking slow like it's messing with my mind.
Speaker 4 (40:24):
Boots got before, feel the waiter the day, but bad
whistle's gone blowing. I'm on my way.
Speaker 5 (40:33):
Almost Friday.
Speaker 1 (40:34):
I can taste the night.
Speaker 4 (40:36):
Cold beer in my hands.
Speaker 5 (40:38):
Starts shining, Bride, got.
Speaker 4 (40:41):
A fire in my chest, in my head almost fried.
Speaker 5 (40:48):
So you don't want to find.
Speaker 4 (40:54):
The Dailymojo dot com. You know, it's ironic that the
lyrics of that song are feeling so alive, and yet
we've been talking about death for the past few minutes
and we're not done yet with the death thing because
and before we get into it, let me just let's
go ahead and introduce our our next guest, who was
(41:16):
really more.
Speaker 5 (41:16):
Fun Freedom Friday. Oh it's Freedom Friday, Phil Bell.
Speaker 6 (41:24):
He got the freedom in his mojo Phibill.
Speaker 5 (41:31):
We're walking like an Egyptian today. Here we go.
Speaker 4 (41:35):
Nice. Nice, That is a that's about a twenty eight
year old reference too. Yeah, so I know if you
were watching the other morning when the cat took over
the program and would not stop jumping up here on
the desk, and it was everywhere, but he just wanted something.
We weren't sure what it was. But I did discover
(41:56):
that there were and they may have been twins. There
was one of them in the uh in the eBay room,
a rabbit, and then there was another one out in
the shop. And it's fine because you can, yeah, you
can smell them before you see them, especially if they've
been there for a little while. Yeah. So anyway, I
missed out on good some rabbit stew twice because I
(42:19):
don't think you're supposed to eat them after they've been
laying there for a while.
Speaker 5 (42:22):
Right, Yes, these were dead rabbits.
Speaker 10 (42:26):
They weren't just oh okay, yeah they were yeah, right,
which again is good news when.
Speaker 4 (42:39):
Yes, okay, yes, yeah, that's exactly what it was. So
he was I should have known. I just I I
didn't listen in the right language. But they that's why
cats are great in the apocalypse, because they will bring
you food, yes, each and every day. All right, so, uh, god,
is it's a good thing. I'm not allergic to cat here?
Speaker 5 (43:01):
Hold on, can we talk about star trek for a.
Speaker 4 (43:03):
Second, just briefly.
Speaker 8 (43:06):
Absolutely, this a little bit, a little bit of an
obscure reference. But Gene Roddenberry's wife, Majel Barrett, she was
the voice of the computer in the next generation, but
she was also the voice of the Southern Pacific Railroad's
defect detectors. So the trains go by, they have these
electronic detectors to see if the wheels are getting too
(43:27):
hot or whatnot. Well, her voice was on there saying
things like mile post whatever, no defects or one defect Yeah,
oh that's cool.
Speaker 4 (43:38):
How long ago was that? Obviously before she died more.
Speaker 8 (43:41):
Than more than twenty plus years ago, because sp Southern
Pacific went away nineteen ninety six and this was like
late eighties, early nineties in that time.
Speaker 4 (43:51):
No kidding, how did you? How did you come across
that piece of information.
Speaker 8 (43:55):
It's just one of the random things kind of floating
out in rail enthusiast lore. Except apparently it was not
lore that that was law being Data's brother on the
next generation.
Speaker 5 (44:07):
But yeah, but apparently it was true.
Speaker 4 (44:11):
Uh is did you did you use the word hot
box detectors?
Speaker 8 (44:16):
Yeah, that's the Yeah, I said detectors. But yeah, it
is hot box detector. I always get a kick out
of that when I hear people, oh, we want a
hot box, and I said, sounds like a derailment is
about to happen.
Speaker 5 (44:28):
And I guess, in a way, that's what does happen.
Speaker 4 (44:31):
It's ron. The reason I asked that is because it
came up on the search hot box detector, which always
makes me think of Hank Hill on King of the
Hill when when Bobby comes in, you're hot boxing it, Son,
stop hot boxing it. Uh, but I do, I was,
I don't know if this is a.
Speaker 11 (44:49):
So let's take a look at the different pieces of
hardware and use here exactly what that is. First, are
these hot box or hot bearing detectors so called hot
boxes referred overheated journal boxes used on older rolling stock.
Speaker 4 (45:02):
Well, see, a hot box sounds much better than overheated
what did he call it? Overheated journal box?
Speaker 5 (45:09):
Overheated journal box.
Speaker 8 (45:10):
Yeah, so that's what they used to call it, because yeah, yeah,
you had to put cotton in dipped in oil which
they called waste in there when you had what's called
friction bearings to keep it lubricated, and of course that
would wear away and you couldn't always tell, so they
created these to tell if that was overheating. Because of
(45:31):
it overheats, the metal can melt and then the train
would derail. And that's bad, right, Yeah, Yeah, that tends
to get you in a little bit of trouble, and
if you're me, it gets you thrown out of the
future Vice President's office. But that's another story for another time.
Speaker 6 (45:47):
I got to hear that story one day.
Speaker 4 (45:49):
You're not gonna believe this, but I look down and
there's a trailer for King of the Hill now on
this If this ship is not listening to me, I
would be stunned. Yes, because wow, that's uh so all right.
The first piece that you sent me this morning, which
is this is makes a really good point. It's over
(46:10):
at zero Hedge. The original article was Jacob Hornberger over
at the Future of Freedom Foundation, which I hear they
have hot boxes over there, and it's the title of
the article is how to make America Great Again? And
let me just read the first paragraph because I've found
this fascinating. Donald Trump and his supporters were certain that
(46:32):
by restoring him to the presidency, they could make America
great again. They are going to be as sorely disappointed
at the end of Trump's term in office, as they
were after his first term in office. Trump will not
make America great again. Using that as a launching point,
what did what's your take on this? You agree or
disagree with the basis of this piece.
Speaker 8 (46:55):
Well, you can see what hat I'm wearing, right, So
of course we all know who's side on on. But
the article is one hundred percent correct. And well, I
shouldn't say one hundred percent correct. It's correct in that
assertion because as you read on, you'll also see that
speaking of hot boxes, they want to make every drug legal. However,
what they are saying in this paragraph that President Trump
(47:16):
won't make America great again is right on. And that's
because this is a little bit of a different thing.
But I wanted to point it out. We the people
have got to be involved and make sure that it happens.
A lot of the things that they discuss the article,
which is changing the way the school system works, getting
rid of the national security state, all of that. That
is going to be something that we the people have
(47:38):
to push relentlessly for. And we can't just hope that
one man is going to solve all of the problems.
Speaker 4 (47:45):
Amen, And that's the second paragraph. The problem, however, is
not Donald Trump. The fact is that no one can
make America great again, at least not if America maintains
the same political and economic systems that have characterized our
nation for almost one hundred years. It is those systems
that constitute an insurmountable obstacle to making America great again,
no matter who is elected president. And yeah, I mean
(48:08):
that's he nails it right there. We have a lot.
There are a lot of problems in this country and
it's the systems that are in place that are really
there are stumbling blocks.
Speaker 5 (48:23):
Yes, they are what's making America not so great.
Speaker 8 (48:27):
And a good example what they talk about is the
redistribution of wealth that goes on. The article talks about
how many people believe if whatever assistance program gets cut off,
that they are going to be people dying in the streets.
And how often do we hear that same line, Oh
people are going to die in the streets. Oh Medicare
is being cut. Oh we're not going to know what
(48:48):
to do. Medicaid is being cut. How am I going
to live? I had a Facebook friend who does yoga
classes and I didn't you know, didn't know her that well,
but she was a waitress at a bar used to
go to. She does yoga classes, and she's on Medicaid
in part for health insurance, and seem to believe that, well,
if this gets cut, I'm not going to be able
(49:08):
to get my Medicaid and therefore I have no health insurance.
Speaker 5 (49:11):
And I pointed out, hey.
Speaker 8 (49:12):
Wait a second, No, all you have to do is
work eighty hours per month. Wait, I'm sorry, work or
volunteer eighty hours per month. So you can even go
volunteer for a Kamala Harris presidential campaign eighty hours per
month and you would qualify for medicaid. But no, no, no,
They believe this stuff is going to absolutely kill them
(49:34):
when it's not. But the reality is what we're doing
is having so much of our wealth and opportunity confiscated
from us in the first place that it's virtually impossible
to afford anything. And that is one of the big things. Again,
we can't rely on President Trump to solve the problem.
We can push him, we can stand with him, and
we should, but we have got to do it ourselves.
(49:54):
And getting away from the idea of depending on government
is a great first step.
Speaker 4 (50:00):
It's and the problems with the medical system, the medical industry.
I mean, they're it's going to take decades itself to
to to get rid of those problems. The whole thing
is screwed up. It's insurance is not being used for
what it was originally intended to be. It's it's crazy
(50:21):
expensive to get anything fixed on you at I mean,
it doesn't matter what it is. And yeah, and it's uh.
And then the insurance because of the the way the
government has completely effed up the insurance industry and the
fact that you know, if if insurance is involved, they
(50:44):
can they can charge eight thousand dollars a month for
a prescription.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (50:49):
And and and the insurance company will pay it, and
you obviously you can't. That's not sustainable by any means exactly.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (50:59):
And then the let's not forget liability.
Speaker 8 (51:02):
That is a big part of the whole insurance conundrum
in the first place. Why should anybody be able to
just sue you under the table just because Look, there's
plenty of things that happen. I'm not happy with my
treatment over most notably my HEMI truck as we were
talking about the other day. But you shouldn't be able
to sue the company under the table and then create
all of these just obnoxious price distortions that come about
(51:25):
again because of government FIAT. By the way, I know
I can't compete with with Doc Kenny. I know I can't,
So I'm just babbling at this point.
Speaker 4 (51:36):
Well, I know there's no more rabbits out there, so
I don't. We're gonna try this one more time. We'll
see how long that lasts. Uh, what's it gonna take?
Is there, ironically, is there a magic pill that could
fix the medical system? What's it going to take to
(51:57):
actually make things tolerable again in terms of medicine. And
I mean there's a huge trust factor now that we
don't that we don't have because of the pharmaceutical companies
and the whole scamdemic. I mean, it's if you had
to put on your look into your crystal ball. How
(52:20):
many decades do you think it's going to be before
we get that even halfway right?
Speaker 5 (52:25):
I think it's about three or four.
Speaker 8 (52:27):
And I think it is going to start with us
being responsible about how we use healthcare. Ask yourself a
question every time, do I need health care for it?
Speaker 4 (52:37):
Now?
Speaker 8 (52:38):
If something is painful and it's hurting, and you don't
know what it is and you don't know how to
solve the problem. Yeah, that's a reason to use healthcare.
If you're sneezing, you don't need to use healthcare. You
can probably go by yourself some tile and all or
niquil or whatever it is. You know, it's being sensible
like that. Another good example, just you know an I
(53:00):
can come up with. Years ago, I was working for
a bank and I had a coworker say, oh my gosh,
you need to get the health insurance because you need
to get this and get that and get the other
related to my eyeglass. And I said, well, my glasses
are fine. I don't need to do anything. I can
see Aokay, what do I need to do this work?
Speaker 1 (53:18):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (53:18):
No, get the insurance. They're offering it again. Why are
you spending money that you don't need to. I'm not
professing to be a healthcare professional, but I can certainly say,
if it works, why do you need to spend money
on it? And why do you need to contract with
somebody to pay them a lot of money to spend
money on it?
Speaker 5 (53:36):
When it works?
Speaker 4 (53:38):
This is one of the Capitalism is good, Capitalism is brutal.
This we played earlier in the week because it was
the I think it was the fiftieth anniversary of this commercial.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
If you're one of the many people who take the
prescription drug motion, you should ask your physicianal pharmacist about Rufin.
They will tell you that both Motoring four hundred milligram
tablets and Roofen four hundred milligram tablets are different brand
names for the same drug, ibuprofen. There is only one
important difference. Rufen can cost you considerably less.
Speaker 4 (54:14):
That is the first pharmaceutical ad ever aired. Wow, it
was first. I'm convinced now even more that we are
in a simulation when the first drug out there that
is marketed to the consumer sounds like a roofie, but
I mean a little crazy. Yeah, it's the first thing
(54:39):
you think of Rufin. Oh, that's a roofie. But that
was the first time that they had started marketing to
the consumer as opposed to doctors. And it was because
it was the name of the pharmaceutical company it was,
dude at the beginning was Boots Pharmaceuticals.
Speaker 5 (54:55):
Yeah, part of Walgreens.
Speaker 4 (54:57):
Now, oh, I didn't know that all right. Uh so
they hired a new marketing person, and the marketing person
the question they asked this woman was or the woman
asked them who are you marketing to? And they said doctor?
She said why not the public TETA and there you go,
(55:18):
which was the start of people, especially hypochondriacs, hearing Oh God,
I think I have that. That's why I never look
up symptoms, because I will have every I've got more
diseases than a hooker on Second Avenue. But it's you know,
you start having these. I took your secondary was the
(55:41):
seconds before I saw the grin, But yeah, you start.
Speaker 5 (55:44):
I haven't been the Second Avenue weight. We just want
to say.
Speaker 1 (55:47):
That just.
Speaker 4 (55:50):
It's gotten so expensive down there. But you know, people
start when you market to this proof marketing works if
you've got this condition or that cannition. I mean, listen
to the Pfizer commercials. Now, there's one playing around here.
That's the I just took a COVID to the positive
and blah blah blah, And it sounds like she has
(56:12):
a cold first of all. But I didn't even realize
it was COVID season. Apparently it is, because I know
somebody who now right now, has COVID and it's like
a cold, right, But they're freaked out. But this is
what happened when they started marketing the drugs to the
consumer and try to turn that, try to put that
(56:34):
back in the cage. Does that ever happen?
Speaker 8 (56:38):
Well, you know, I'm not necessarily actually I don't a't
necessarily I'm not against marketing drugs the consumer because I
think there's a lot of value that comes from you
having some ability to influence your healthcare because you can say,
you know, it's a lot easier to go in and say, well, hey,
you know what I have? You know this problem? I
heard about this on the whatever commercial?
Speaker 5 (57:00):
Is this for me?
Speaker 4 (57:01):
Now?
Speaker 8 (57:01):
You know, your doctor should be the one to say, look, Phil,
I don't think you have you know whatever, so you
don't need that. Here's some tests and whatnot that we
should do. But again, the big problems come from number one.
Like you said earlier, insurance is a big problem. All
that they have to go through, And keep in mind,
(57:21):
most of that is paper pushing, right, people pushing paper
from one place to the other. We're sending emails from
one place to the other, and they are getting paid
and they have to get paid, and they're not super wealthy,
they're just getting paid, and there's a lot of them.
And then the next thing that comes from that again
is a liability. Gee, well Phil came in and he
was really worried does he have does.
Speaker 5 (57:40):
He need viagra?
Speaker 4 (57:42):
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (57:42):
Maybe I should, you know, prescribe it so that the
next time he goes second Avenue he doesn't sue me
for non performance. Okay, we'll go ahead and do it.
And then well it turns out he really didn't need it. Yeah,
so it's it's again, it's a liability. The first step,
like I said, is to again take control of our
own health care and be able to say when we
don't need something, and most of the time I would
(58:03):
guess it. Unless you really know that you've been diagnosed
with a problem, you probably don't need something. But secondly,
it's also to take the time to go to the
doctor when you go and have frank conversations with them
about what's going on, as opposed to well, somebody told
me that I needed this.
Speaker 4 (58:20):
Well and again, just to show the professionalism of this program,
ron just bring that image back up again, because who
knew that there was a drug to take care of
that problem right there. I had no idea, and I
didn't I don't think anybody had any idea. Nor will
you ever look at Batman and Robin again.
Speaker 8 (58:39):
Well you're killing it. I'm a big Batman fan, but
a lot less.
Speaker 1 (58:44):
So now.
Speaker 4 (58:49):
You know, when they talked about packaging Robin, I just
didn't know that's what they meant the next or one
of the things here. Sometimes I cracked myself up, and
this seems like a no brainer because this was I
remember when it was the twenty twenty census, and now
(59:10):
and the senses is back in the news because of
Texas and the redistricting, and I actually, you know what
I have. I have a question about that, but because
of time constraints, here hang on a second, I have
to I have to create a hole and then I'm
going to ask you that question, which DM will be
(59:31):
very interested in hearing the answer to. Next here on
the Daily Mojo, use the hashtag what I learned today.
So but Daily Mojo, I don't know what drug she
was taking, but I might want some of it, just
saying over in the uh next a DM, we are correctly,
(59:59):
we are correctly the redistribution of wealth. So why is
it okay to distribute? But I have no idea what
this twat says. I think DM maybe drinking, but I'm
not sure. Wisconsin Jackal, Next time the wife goes off
(01:00:19):
on me, I'm calling her an overheated journal box. Thank you,
good luck with that, I think, right, yeah, send you
know what, You're going to end up with a hospital
bill for that, but just you know, just keep that
in mind. And there was an oh this the This
also ties in with our discussion here before we get
(01:00:40):
onto the census. This headline over in a People magazine
Hiker was built sixteen thousand dollars after he walked past
a warning sign and had to be rescued by a helicopter.
See this is part of what would fix the whole
drug company thing, the insurance problem here in this country.
(01:01:02):
Phil Bell rejoins us this happened in the Dolomites. Where
are the Dolomites Italy? Yeah? It is Italian? How did
I know that? An element? Right?
Speaker 5 (01:01:16):
Or Dolomites?
Speaker 4 (01:01:18):
Where the Dolomites are something fictional in a movie. It
could be either one quite frankly, it could be a
round of ammunition. But in this case, I think it's mountains.
The sixty year old hiker had to be rescued by
helicopter in the Italian Dolomites on August first, after he
continued past signs warning of closed trails and good. I mean,
(01:01:41):
if you're going to wander off the trail and you're
going to get yourself in a precarious situation, you have
to call in you know, nine one one, get them
to get you out. Why should the rest of us
foot the bill? Again, this is in Italy, but they
sent him the bill for what it cost to rescue him.
(01:02:02):
And if that sort of thing happened here, which that
goes to tort reform and all the rest the you know,
the the frivolous lawsuits in this country. You know, if
you if you launch a frivolous lawsuit and you lose,
as you should, if it's frivolous, shouldn't you be handed
the bill for the money that you know was was
(01:02:24):
spent trying to defend it. But absolutely.
Speaker 5 (01:02:30):
Well, and in some cases I think it does.
Speaker 8 (01:02:32):
You know, judges will sometimes say if somebody's been really
blatantly abusing the system, like hey, wait a minute, you
know what this is ridiculous here will assess that. You know,
these court costs and whatnot, and sometimes attorney's fees on
the person who brought the suit. But you remind me
of something I've said for a long time, because there
was a few I think it was in the Bush
administration earlier Obama, there were these people would go hiking
(01:02:56):
in places like Iran. You know Americans who would go
hiking in Iran. I don't know why you do that,
but they did. And then the US government have to
find some way to get them back, you know, trade
prisoners or do something because these random people did it.
And I said, look, if I ever get elected president,
we are not going to come get you.
Speaker 5 (01:03:14):
If you go to someplace.
Speaker 8 (01:03:15):
And we tell you as a hell hole, and you
go there anyway you're stuck, don't call us, don't do
any of that. And if by chance we happen to
pick you up, we are sending you the bill because
there is absolutely no way people should be billed for
that kind of insanity.
Speaker 4 (01:03:31):
Right, And what it ends up becoming is a marketing
gimmick for whatever political party and or candidate is running
at the tyes. Look, look how American and apple pie
I'm going to rescue these What was the dude's name
in the WNBA that we went and rescued.
Speaker 5 (01:03:49):
Oh, Britney Griner. Yeah, that's it, Britney Griner.
Speaker 8 (01:03:53):
That and bo Bergdahl is the other one.
Speaker 4 (01:03:56):
Oh that's right. Yeah, that was Obama, right.
Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
Yeah, yeah, because he was actually a trader.
Speaker 8 (01:04:02):
He had gone over to be part of some foreign
military and then things didn't quite work out from there,
and then he decided, well, please bail me out, and
Obama did and made a big deal about it.
Speaker 5 (01:04:13):
But we found out later exactly what happened.
Speaker 4 (01:04:17):
Yeah, so that can be a problem, all right. So
back here closer to home, the census thing in and
Trump wants a new census that excludes the illegals, and
which yeah, I don't know why that's even why that's
even an argument or or people would have a problem
(01:04:40):
with it. But before you get your take on it,
the Texas thing with the redistricting, why are they doing
it now? Do you have a problem with it? Is
it legal? Some people are really just out of their
minds that we're doing it right now, mostly Democrats, but
some on our side like, yeah, that's not fair. We
(01:05:00):
shouldn't be doing that because that's just going to piss
them off, and then they're going to retaliate, which spoiler elate.
They're going to retaliate anyway, whether or not we did
anything that was questionable. But what's the skinny on it?
Speaker 8 (01:05:13):
Well, first of all, is it legal? It absolutely is.
New York did this. I think it was two years ago.
New York at one point accepted a map that was
drawn and apparently legally. Then somebody managed to go to
a court and get it overturned, and so New York
ignored I think they ignored an independent redistricting or did
something like that commission, and then they imposed the map
(01:05:36):
that they have now and they are threatening to again
redistrict even further if Texas does what it does.
Speaker 5 (01:05:42):
So is it legal? It absolutely is.
Speaker 8 (01:05:44):
Do the circumstances align based on the New York example,
the text example, not entirely, but it is possible now
that's number one.
Speaker 5 (01:05:52):
Number two. Should it be done?
Speaker 8 (01:05:53):
Absolutely, Look, you've got to realize, and this is one
thing that a lot of leftists out there may not
want here, but they have been among the most aggressive
in terms of drawing the maps so that they favor
the Democrat Party more than anything else. A great example
is what they did in Maryland at one point, back
when I worked at the Maryland GOP in the early
(01:06:14):
twenty tens. They redistricted and they had a list of
congressional districts so insane that five of them crossed a
bridge just so that that way they would all be contiguous.
There was nobody who, of course, lived on the bridge.
Maybe a couple of Democrats who lived under the bridge,
but nothing, you know, just the bridge, so that they
(01:06:35):
could make them contiguous and screw as many Republicans out
of congressional seats potential congressional seats, I should say, as possible,
and a good example, the state would roughly be something like,
I think five Democrats and three Republicans if it was
excuse me, weighted on the strength of the voting power
of the parties, maybe even four and four at times.
(01:06:57):
But it is seven and one. So if you're going
to tell me that's fair, then it's not at all
unfair for Texas to say, hey, wait a minute, let's
go ahead and redraw this and do exactly what they're doing.
Just because we're doing at a different time doesn't make
it any different.
Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
Well, and DM is and I would love to again,
I've said it numerous times. I would love to live
in the Star Trek universe where everybody gets along and
we all play by the rules until the board come
along with the Klingons and and then you know, we're
all banded together. And that's but we don't and likely
never will. And so you know, to be scared that
(01:07:34):
the other side, the Democrats in this case, are going
to retaliate because we took the opportunity to redistrict to
try to gain some power in the federal government. They're
going to quote unquote retaliate whether or not we do this.
So it's not like I get what DM saying is that,
(01:07:54):
you know, why are we poking the bear. It doesn't
matter whether we poke the bear or not to do
what they're going to do. And we need to take
an advantage when we have it to try to at
least get ahead a little bit before they pull their
next shenanigans. And so two wrongs don't make a right.
I get that too. But you can can do one
(01:08:18):
or two things, in my opinion, and maybe I'm wrong,
you can either play to win or you can play
by the rules and lose.
Speaker 8 (01:08:29):
Is that whoa am I off base? Well, here's what
I would say. First of all, it's not this you
know so much too. Wrongs don't make it right, because
what is the wrong here? The way we do it
in most states is a partisan process to start with.
Whichever party is in charge at the time gets to
draw up their way.
Speaker 5 (01:08:48):
Now.
Speaker 8 (01:08:48):
The important thing to remember, though, is it's not a
guarantee that your party is always going to succeed. One
of the things I like to remind people in Virginia,
you know, a few years ago again and they had
a lot of people were complaining about the district So
we don't like the districts, we don't like the districts
at the state level. Well, the districts they didn't like
at the state level had been drawn by Republicans, and
(01:09:09):
then Republicans lost a bunch of seats and we're not
in charge. So it's no guarantee that you're going to win,
because it always means that candidates have to come out
sell themselves to the public, sell their ideas to the public,
and the public has to be engaged enough to care
about what's going on. So it doesn't really matter the
composition of the districts in that respect. But the second
thing is because it's a partisan process. Since that's what
(01:09:32):
you do, what is the harm in actually using the
process that you're allowed. This is what Democrats will say
every time they get in charge and they say, Okay,
well we're going to pass this bill year, or we're
going to make that mask mandate there and so on.
Speaker 5 (01:09:44):
We're allowed to do this.
Speaker 8 (01:09:45):
These are the powers that are allotted to us as
elected officials. We're going to use them even if you
don't like the outcome. Well, what's the difference should Republicans say, Okay,
well we actually won't do that, we won't try to
find ways to promote our agenda. If they do that,
they would be derelict in their duty, just like the
Democrats would be. So I don't see that as being
a raw. Now I've said this and no one agrees
(01:10:08):
with me. I think districts should be permanent. They should
be drawn based on political boundaries, so county lines and
state lines and natural boundaries like mountain ranges and so on,
and they shouldn't change because today and time, we have
the ability to communicate with our representatives in ways they
did not when they created arbitrary district sizes. And so
(01:10:29):
if I'm in a district to two million people and
it's a swing district, I'll be listened to way more
than the district I'm currently in of seven hundred thousand,
where the majority of them are Democrats, and they'll just say, Phil,
we don't care what you have to say.
Speaker 4 (01:10:41):
Right, all right, So I wouldn't that far off. I
just I get wanting to try to do the right thing.
I understand that, but that is that is not the
reality of where we are, I don't think. But and
it's and are we ever all going to agree?
Speaker 5 (01:11:00):
Nope.
Speaker 4 (01:11:01):
As our good friend Robert Labella the o g bah
bah blah blahlah.
Speaker 6 (01:11:05):
I love the bah blah blah.
Speaker 4 (01:11:07):
Oh I God, I catch you napping there. Nope, but
I didn't good for you, he said, you know, we
don't agree. Oh.
Speaker 8 (01:11:18):
I just wanted to say, be careful about that star
Trek universe because seven of nine, you remember her, he
loved seven of nine here it was actually her husband
at the time, because he tried to take her to
a sex club and this ended up in the divorce.
Speaker 5 (01:11:35):
His getting booted out of that race is what got us.
Speaker 8 (01:11:38):
Senator Barack Obama in the first place, So you say,
you know, yeah, yeah, I think I can't remember what
his name was, but I think it was Jack Ryan
or something like that. Yeah, he was married to Jerry Ryan.
They had some marital issues. He tried to take her
to a sex club. She didn't like it. This gets
written down in all the divorce proceedings, which is sealed.
(01:12:00):
Then it gets unsealed by somebody who we think had
something to do with Barack Obama. This ends with him
leaving the race when he was favored, and Barack Obama wins,
and we all know what happens after that.
Speaker 4 (01:12:13):
This is a strangely worded headline here from People magazine.
But Jerry Ryan's I had and grabbed that. If you
adre Jerry Ryan sex claims dog ex husband, what a
dog has to do with it? But this is two
thousand and four, so twenty one years ago. Boston publican
star trek Voyage actress Jerry Ryan, the former wife of
(01:12:35):
Illinois Republican Senate candidate Jack Ryan, nice on the name
recognition there recall, claimed in divorce documents filed in California
that he pressured her to perform sex acts in clubs
while others watched that she angered him by refusing according
to published reports.
Speaker 8 (01:12:52):
Wow, now again all that was sealed, it mysteriously got unsealed.
Speaker 4 (01:12:59):
And then yeah, huh, it's almost like someone used that
as a political cudgel. Imagine that. Yeah, it's weird, all right.
So and then kind of tied this whole thing together
with the because really that's how we got to where
we are with the whole redistricting thing. The census back
(01:13:22):
and I remember this in twenty twenty because and I'm
not admitting anything here on the air because this is
an entertainment program. But what if I didn't complete the
census that year out of protest? Not that I didn't,
but I may have, but I may not have. But
you don't know because I may be lying or I'm
lying now somebody So h huh, I said, somebody knows.
(01:13:46):
God knows, yes, But wouldn't it be nice if we
had a census of actually, I don't know citizens of
the United States that are over here legally. I mean,
why is this even controversial?
Speaker 5 (01:14:05):
Well, it goes back to two things.
Speaker 8 (01:14:07):
First of all, I always like to remind people keep
in mind, even in the early stages of the Republic.
Democrats like to bring people in for cheap labor and
then count them as citizens so they can prop up
their congressional strength.
Speaker 5 (01:14:21):
Hah.
Speaker 8 (01:14:21):
They were doing it back in the seventeen hundreds, and
now they're doing it again today.
Speaker 5 (01:14:26):
So that's one of the big things to remember.
Speaker 8 (01:14:28):
A lot of the reasons why you look over and
you say, but aren't all these people moving out of California.
Speaker 5 (01:14:32):
Aren't all these people leaving New York and New Jersey?
Speaker 8 (01:14:35):
But yet they have not just congressional districts, so they
get a very very easy ability to have a strong
voice in Congress, but they also get electoral votes they
probably should not have, so therefore more influence in the
presidential election as well. That's one of the reasons why
they're screaming about us removing illegal aliens. They want them
(01:14:56):
to be here, but the Constitution says that it must
be the persons that are counted when there is a census. Now,
that's what led to the Three Fitths compromise, because they said, well,
look at all these slaves we got here their person
so that means we've got more population than you. The
Southern Democrats are pointing at the people in the North
because the Republican Party hadn't been invented yet, and that's
(01:15:18):
when they came to the three Fiths compromise to solve that.
Now that was actually undone in the fourteenth Amendment. However,
there still is some question as to whether you could
say these people who are illegally here, not green card
holders or legal permanent residents and so forth, but people
who are legally here are not persons who should be counted.
(01:15:40):
And you got to ask, well, why should they be
counted any more than someone who flies in for a
couple of weeks happens to be doing a business deal. Uh,
that's a person. Let me count them and then leaves,
so they shouldn't be counted. But that's what's controversial.
Speaker 4 (01:15:55):
And the last census was let's see, it was what's
three hundred, and they say three thirty or was it
three seven thirty? Yeah, number three thirty I thought it was.
But you could be right, Yeah, Well, here's my thing.
I think if I've just tossed this number out there
(01:16:16):
with nothing real to back it up, but by the
time you factor in all of the illegals and the
people who weren't uh, necessarily counted, I think we'd probably
have closer to four hundred million people in this country.
It wouldn't surprise me. I mean the number of people
that come across that we heard coming across the border
(01:16:40):
for the last I mean there were millions each year,
and so is seventy million. By the way, it's three
thirty one four forty nine to eighty one. That's the
official twenty twenty census number. But do you think four
hundred millions way out of line?
Speaker 5 (01:16:59):
No, not at all. And that goes to another thing.
Speaker 8 (01:17:03):
Why we always hear these estimates of well, there's X
number of illegal aliens in the country.
Speaker 5 (01:17:08):
And I say, how do you know how many illegal
aliens are in the country?
Speaker 8 (01:17:11):
Because they don't exactly check in and say, Hi, I'm
here legally, sorry, illegally. Let me just just go on
to make some avocado toast. Now, No, no, no, they
don't know. And I would not be surprised if that
wasn't a realistic number. And one other thing too, keep
in mind the pressure that this is putting on things
like housing prices. Because I've always wondered, if the birth
(01:17:34):
rates are going down, but they're building a lot more housing,
why do all these people need housing, that's right, because
they're coming here illegally and they need to be housed.
Speaker 4 (01:17:44):
Yeah, it's it's kind of crazy. Original Babe says. After
I realized the government lies and intrusion, I refused and
refused the job they offered me in twenty twenty. Who
are the census job? Since this job?
Speaker 1 (01:17:57):
So?
Speaker 4 (01:17:58):
How much do you get paid to work the census?
Speaker 5 (01:18:03):
That's a great question.
Speaker 4 (01:18:05):
How much? What does it say the and what do
you know about these rebates they're sending out the tariff rebates?
You know anything about that?
Speaker 5 (01:18:16):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:18:16):
I didn't.
Speaker 5 (01:18:17):
I could I get a tariff rebate? All right?
Speaker 4 (01:18:19):
I saw some headline that they were going to be
sending money to US Americans because of the tariff income.
Now I don't know if that's true, but.
Speaker 8 (01:18:32):
I know that's been discussed because early in the year
a lot of people said, well, wait a minutef we're
gonna have tariffs, so then just give us money back,
and I know Speaker Johnson said no, you know, we've
got debt to pay down. And I was actually one
of the people saying, wait a minute, that's insane because
I didn't ask them to take out the debt so
they could go, you know, promote gay Sesame Street and
(01:18:55):
foreign countries, or give money the Corporation for public broadcasting
when we are spending all this money to do broadcasting
and they're not paying us.
Speaker 5 (01:19:05):
But I haven't heard.
Speaker 8 (01:19:06):
Anything solid about having actual rebate checks for the tarors.
Speaker 4 (01:19:11):
All right, it's introduced to mary blah blah blah. Yeah,
I saw a headline somewhere and that thought it said
something about that. But the amount the pay for census
work varies, but on average, census workers in the United
States earn about eighteen dollars and seventy three cents per hour.
That's not bad, is it. Well, except I stop and
(01:19:33):
I think, okay, wait a minute, what do you do.
You're knocking on people's doors and you have to talk
to people. Yeah, I think it be.
Speaker 8 (01:19:42):
A fun job actually, because if it's anything like knocking
on doors for political candidates, and you're not going to
get the yelling at you because you're a partisan, and
you're probably gonna end up with a bunch of funny
stories like oh, this beautiful woman came to the door
and she was completely naked.
Speaker 5 (01:19:58):
You know, it's get stories like.
Speaker 12 (01:20:00):
I square to you I was gonna bring that up myself.
Speaker 4 (01:20:05):
Dear Penthouse. I never thought i'd be writing you this letter.
But as a census worker, I knocked on a lot
of doors until one day she.
Speaker 6 (01:20:12):
Dropped the right.
Speaker 4 (01:20:15):
She asked me if I could help fix her plumbing. Ma'am,
I'm not a plumber. That's all right. My pipes aren't broken. Wow,
the hell is wrong with us? But again, eighteen dollars
and seventy three cents an hour not bad. So the
bottom line and the question we started this whole thing
off with, was you know, how long is it going
(01:20:35):
to take till America is great again? It is not
a destination, it's a journey, and it's right. I don't know.
I have a feeling I'll be well. I know I'll
be room temperature long before it actually happens, long before
somebody gets up one day and goes, you know, America
is great again? But couldn't you argue that it already
is great because we have the ability to at least
(01:20:57):
try to turn things around.
Speaker 5 (01:21:00):
Well, that's a great argument. I agree with that. I
think that's a very good thing to say.
Speaker 8 (01:21:05):
But I also agree, and I want to emphasize and
this is important. It will never ever be you know,
the work will never be done. And the minute we
start to think it's done, which is what we did,
by the way, after World War Two, that's where a
lot of the problems start because then it makes it
very easy for you to rely on who's in power,
what's in power, and suddenly you're not in power.
Speaker 5 (01:21:27):
So the way we make it great.
Speaker 8 (01:21:30):
Lentless drive to ensure that we freedom remains and the
totalitarianism stays away.
Speaker 4 (01:21:37):
Right, it's a never ending job, much like the never
ending story the All American Talk Show, which I've been
seeing some of your shorts that you and Nikoli have
been doing very nice. Thank you. You have a goal
like each one doing a minimum of two or three
a day. What are you doing there on the shorts, Well, we're.
Speaker 8 (01:21:59):
Trying to alternate doing a couple per week so that
that way nobody gets tired of either one of us.
They'll definitely get tired of me far earlier, but you know,
try to alternate and let people know, hey, look the
show is coming up, and also get to know everybody.
We'll Phill thinks as Nikoli thinks that, but I also
want them to get to know us as people, because
(01:22:19):
that's one of the cool things about the podcasting medium
is that you can have a closer relationship than a
lot of the Hollywood craziness. You know, those those people, unless,
of course, you go into one of P Diddy's parties.
So we're trying to put a few of those out
there each week.
Speaker 4 (01:22:34):
And you want people to know that you're not just
a piece of meat that you are, there is a person,
there is a man inside of that skin suit, that
you are not just something to be gawcked.
Speaker 8 (01:22:46):
At, unless unless you're big gretch, in which case you
feel free to gauk at me as much as you want.
Speaker 4 (01:22:53):
God all right, big wretch, all you want. And Dark
Magneto says, we'd never get tired of and his big
mic and that's all. That's a nice thing to say.
Thank you, and then thank you all things trains. Of course,
you'll be out doing some training exercises this week, thank you.
Speaker 8 (01:23:11):
Yes, So I will be out this weekend taking some
photos and video. But I got two good pieces of news.
First of all, our twenty twenty sixth calendar is coming out.
It will be ready at the end of this month,
and it's like nothing you've ever seen. And second, if
you're in the northern Virginia area, we will be at
the Greenberg's Train and Toy Show next next Saturday and
(01:23:33):
Sunday in Chantilly, So come by see us. We'll be
broadcasting live from there and it's gonna be awesome.
Speaker 6 (01:23:39):
Oh nice, very nice.
Speaker 4 (01:23:41):
You know. I used to I used to have a
friend named Virginia. We called her virgin for short, but
not for long. Ladies and gentlemen, Phil Bell on Daily Mojo,
more of whatever the hell's we do here? Coming up
next to right right here.
Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
Stupidity is not a competition.
Speaker 10 (01:24:07):
I've now been in fifty unless you're a politician.
Speaker 5 (01:24:12):
Seven states, I think one left to go.
Speaker 4 (01:24:15):
Daily Jo John Clap says, when the senses taker came
to our house, I told her how many people live there.
Then she started asking about wages and weapons in the
house and other stuff that I forgot. I had to
ask her to leave. See that's the problem.
Speaker 6 (01:24:33):
Yeah, they get noticed.
Speaker 4 (01:24:37):
When the doctor started doing that too, pissed me off.
Hey does your do your parents make you wear your
seat belt? And what's that? What the hell does this
have to do with physical for the kid? No, shut up,
don't ask your mommy don't have any guns and bite me?
Shut up? Moving on? It was it original? He says,
(01:25:00):
a bit of a got Not only was it ten?
How many dollars an hour? Original?
Speaker 1 (01:25:08):
Baby?
Speaker 4 (01:25:08):
I work for the census twenty twenty ten. They do
nothing if you don't fill them out twenty twenty. I
refused to filling out note, saying where's it? She mentioned
how much she was making anyway, it came out to
like forty five cents a mile.
Speaker 6 (01:25:24):
Wow, it doesn't find worth it to me.
Speaker 4 (01:25:29):
Well, no, no, no, it's plus the hourly wage, but
she said, and most of the time we were sitting
around doing nothing. It's just a waste of taxpayers money.
It does seem like there would be a better way
to do it than knocking on the door. But why
didn't we just have technolo? Why don't we just develop
technology that they can use from a drone to go
(01:25:51):
over and just count the people in your house. Wouldn't
that be simpler?
Speaker 6 (01:25:54):
Or just give them like the Nielsen raiding button in
the house? How many in the done you just.
Speaker 4 (01:26:02):
They just have a drone that flies over and counts
the warm bodies in the house. Can obviously can can
differentiate between like animals but humans. So they and then
see and then with the little implant in the risk
that tells whether or not you are legal in that country,
then they can say, WHOA, hang on right here at
this place, there are three legals and two illegals. So
(01:26:25):
not only are you getting the accurate account of the
number of people, but you can also send ice to
that location to pick up the illegals at this Yeah,
how much money are we going to save if we
do that? Tell me I'm wrong, because I'm not. You're
not okay? Thank you? You know, God, that was not
that tough a problem to solve. I don't know why
(01:26:45):
in the hell everyone's freaking out over it all. You know,
Rock Hudson was gay? Yes, you say that like you
knew that from experience.
Speaker 6 (01:26:56):
Wasn't he the beginning of AIDS, Wasn't that? Wouldn't Rock
huts in the big name at the very beginning of
the aides.
Speaker 4 (01:27:03):
He was the person who yes when he was the
first well known individual that had age. Yeah, I remember
when he came out of the he was walking out
of an airplane like a seven forty seven. He's walking
out of something. It was a doorway anyway, he's walking
(01:27:24):
either at an apartment or something, and he walked out
it kind of on the landing and you're like, oh, whoa,
what the hell happened to him? Yeah, because he looked
like shit on a cracker. And that was when, yeah,
the whole the whole aids thing. And then it was like,
whoa rock Hutson's been doing what? Because it was kind
(01:27:45):
of a you know, the public didn't know, but everybody
in Hollywood know. I guess everybody in the industry knew.
But there is a uh, you know who Mami van
Doren is. No, of course you don't because you're under
one hundred years old. But maybe Van Doren was like
the Hubba Hubba of like what the forties and fifties.
(01:28:11):
And she is ninety four. She's still around right now,
ninety four years old. She is being honored with the
Legacy Award at the annual Senec Sensicon Film Festival. And
let's see, they're going to play her nineteen fifty nine film, Guns,
Girls and Gangsters. She's filming a new documentary about her life,
(01:28:37):
and she has a book coming out later this year
in which she talks about the life that she lived
in Hollywood. When she was working, she got under contract
at Universal Studios, and so back then, what they would
do to get some publicity for the up and comers
(01:28:58):
was they would set them up on dates with established stars,
and one of them was Rock Hudson. She says, I
got a call from a publicity department, which is correct
me if I'm wrong. Is that not what we now
call sex trafficking? Uh?
Speaker 6 (01:29:17):
Yeah, I mean it could be. I mean at the
same time, they're trying to keep Rock Hudson straight.
Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
So no, I don't think they were trying to keep
him well. They were, Yeah, they were trying to kids straight.
Speaker 6 (01:29:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:29:29):
Uh And she said, uh, he said the girl called
me said, hey, you've got a date with rockheads. She said,
don't worry. You don't have to anything worry about. He doesn't,
he doesn't go that way. And maybe Van Doren's like,
guess what he came on to me in my book.
I told about having having on a I thought, she said,
(01:29:53):
a Christmas skirt, and I don't like a picture with
a tree skirt. I told about having on a crimins skirt. Okay,
what's a criminal skirt?
Speaker 6 (01:30:05):
I don't know spell it. I'm gonna look it up.
Speaker 4 (01:30:07):
C R I M M I N s a criminal
skirt and him getting very passionate and rolling on the
kitchen floor. Huh oh, so.
Speaker 6 (01:30:20):
It's kind of a it's kind of a it's a
long below the knee skirt. Well, there's some that are shorter,
but they're very uh yeah, they're very flashy kind of
a material like a pencil skirt. No, no, it's just
got it's got a it's got a pretty loud print
on it.
Speaker 4 (01:30:40):
Ah, look at that. There we go, So that's a
criminal skirt. Yeah, okay, don't you kind of when I
said pencil skirt and you're like, no, no, I know
what kind of frightening that we both knew what a
pencil skirt was.
Speaker 6 (01:30:54):
Yeah, a pencil skirt leaves very little to the imagination.
Speaker 4 (01:30:58):
Doesn't it? Though? How old Rock Hudson was when he died,
Uh no, fifty nine.
Speaker 6 (01:31:08):
Oh he looked older.
Speaker 4 (01:31:10):
I just looked at a picture.
Speaker 6 (01:31:11):
Yeah, he got he looked like he was about eighty.
Speaker 4 (01:31:14):
Yeah. That was the shocker. Is that what AIDS could
do to you? And and now was it even HIV
that led to AIDS? A question about that whole fauci thing.
He was nineteen eighty five when he died from complications
(01:31:37):
made me Van door And says, we all knew he
was gay, but it never made any difference to us.
Right here is a you gotta love old Hollywood. Here's
a picture of Bob Prebel, Preble and Rock Hudson talking
to a woman outside the North Hollywood home that they shared.
(01:31:58):
There was his roommates hanging out, you know, bachelor pad is.
But she went on to write about her encounter with
Rock Hudson in her nineteen eighty seven memoir, but she's
written a couple of books, Mame ven Dorin. She told
Indy Wire that one actor she didn't want anything to
do to get involved with was Gig Young. Who's Gig Young?
(01:32:23):
I don't know remember that name. I kind of remember
that name, but Gig Young was a he was a
Hollywood star at the time. There is Gig Young with
his wife Kim, and they tried to I guess maybe
Vean Doora was on a movie with him, and he's
(01:32:43):
hitting on her and she's like, no, I don't want
to don't want anything to do with you, And so
she didn't go out with him, and she said, I
just I could tell something was not right. One got
really upset with her for not going out with him,
and then he married that chick Kim, and then he
shot her and killed her and killed himself. Yep, murder suicide. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:33:06):
Oh so I was married to Elizabeth Montgomery at one point.
Speaker 4 (01:33:10):
Really yeah. Wow, she was hot back in the day,
Elizabeth back in well before she died. And then there's
a mami even I mean ninety four years old, that
is that's something. This is her just to make it
that long and this is uh, this is twelve years
(01:33:33):
ago there, but to make it to ninety four you
can get aids from the shocker. Wade Robertson said, I
don't know how women sit in a pencil skirt ewan guru.
That's all right. I know women do some crazy stuff
to look attractive, don't don't they? I mean the high heel.
(01:33:54):
You ever tried to walk in high heels? I know?
Oh I have it is. Let me just tell you
that is a special skill set that is dangerous as
what that is because you I mean, hey, you got
to watch if you like walking on a deck deck
(01:34:15):
to make sure through right you don't get or if
walking on anything soft you know why you can't obviously
walk on the sand, but then it's a balancing can
and then you're you're walking on the balls of your feet,
which screws up your feet. Hell, if I was a woman,
I wouldn't do it. Then you have to wear all
the underwear that's not comfortable just to look good make.
Speaker 6 (01:34:36):
You a woman?
Speaker 4 (01:34:38):
Is that why? I pretty much knew. I I'm not sure
I would have gone with that term. But okay, he
did not. He knew I would never leave the house.
I would just why leave the house? I have these
right here at home exactly. Speaking of skills.
Speaker 6 (01:35:00):
Love this dude, Really, I do not like that kind
of like. I just like you.
Speaker 4 (01:35:05):
I just like his So your homophobe is what you're saying, aid, No,
would you sit next to him in a darkened room?
Speaker 1 (01:35:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:35:14):
Yeah, so you're a cradle Robert. Oh my god, just okay,
it's Mark Robert. Come on, he's a cool engineer, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:35:23):
Whatever, Look, I'm not judging you much. Uh this the
uh because the the what's it called the ladder? The
rope ladder thing that you climb at the at the carnival.
At the carnival, and all you got to do is
get up there and touch a little bell or whatever
it is. And it looks so easy, and I've had
(01:35:45):
to you know, it's been explained before, but he does
a really good job of explaining. If you want to
beat it, it is beatable, but you have to be
really good.
Speaker 9 (01:35:52):
This carnival game is like to take all your money
unless you know the science behind the scam. Carnivals make
most of their money by tricking you into over as
chances of winning, and no game plays into your ego
more than the ladder game because the first glance, you
think that game is no different than crossing a rope bridge,
which is pretty easy, but the tiny difference.
Speaker 13 (01:36:09):
Right there changes everything. Let's pretend this is you and
this green dot here is your center of mask. Now,
if you draw an imaginary line connecting the different support points,
that creates an area. As long as your dot stays
within that area, it's impossible to fall off. But as
soon as your center of mask dot is even a
little bit outside that area.
Speaker 4 (01:36:26):
It's game over.
Speaker 13 (01:36:26):
The dirty ciger behind the ladder game is that instead
of attaching at two points, it converges to one, which
reduces the area of support down to a line, so
instead of crossing a bridge, you're effectively crawling over a
tight rope.
Speaker 4 (01:36:38):
But the goodness is this is the.
Speaker 13 (01:36:39):
One carnival game that's all skilled. Once you master keeping
your center of mass out above that line, you can
win every time and clean the mat. Unfortunately, the carnival
owners already know this MAT's right. You haven't bankrupt by
the time you're eighty three.
Speaker 4 (01:36:52):
Have you ever tried to do that that game?
Speaker 6 (01:36:54):
No, to climb that rope ladder? No, I've not done that.
Speaker 4 (01:36:58):
I've done it once. And you get about because they
the people who do it, the what they call him,
the car conies and the carts car they're skilled. Well
they've done it a bazillion times, which is a lot.
And they but if you can do that, if you
can get up there, see, but you have everybody staring
at you. So you got that pressure, very similar pressure
(01:37:20):
that we doing this program in there if we it's
tough to sit. It looks easy, but it's tough to
sit everybody staring at you waiting for you to screw up.
My grin does and and and and to be able
to go on and and complete the task and it's
tough to do. And I remember getting about halfway up
(01:37:42):
the ladder and thinking, oh, I got this, And then
of course you don't realize that the guy at the
bottom has it. He's got his hand on it so
that you're not falling over, and then he takes his
hand off, and you're you're gone going But it it.
It looks so simple. And then the one, the the
basketball one, which even if it wasn't deformed, I couldn't
(01:38:04):
do it because that, hoot, the broadside of a.
Speaker 6 (01:38:05):
Bar probably a sixteenth of an inch bigger than that basketball.
Speaker 4 (01:38:09):
Well, what they do if you and that's why you
can't get to the side of it. Instead of being round,
it's elongated, so it looks like it's round from your perspective,
but it's not. It's damn near impossible unless you just
swish right in. James and Louisiana said Brad is too
lazy to be a woman.
Speaker 6 (01:38:32):
Clock Towers crub says, if Brad was a woman, she
would be a Democrat.
Speaker 4 (01:38:39):
What I why why would I be a democrat? Was
a woman? Mitt? I don't know why, Missy thirteen. I
used to wear high stiletto heels every day and dress
to the nines. Now, it's all about comfort. F that.
If you haven't seen Missy thirteen on the Facebook giving
(01:39:01):
a little speech at her daughter's wedding, you should. She
gets up there when she's all new, she's all New
York and stuff, and she gets all, you know, into
a fields and stuff. She feels he's about the fields.
Very nice speech, very nice, very nice speech. If you
become a when you become a grandma, it's required to
buy polyester flow prints and I'm talking about pants now. Yeah,
(01:39:28):
everybody go to watch Missy thirteen's Facebook. Why are you embarrassed?
Missy thirteen? You should not be embarrassed. You got up there,
you did it good. You're up there, and she's got
the best accent. It's really it's classy, some classy shit
right there. It's very heartfelt speech, very nice, very nice speech.
All Right, we've got some boxes to open. We'll do
(01:39:49):
that coming up. And don't forget if you have the
opportunity at some point today tomorrow if you have not.
I don't think that I injured anything, but I did
put some of this on my knee because I was
standing there in the in the lobby of the motel
(01:40:10):
and I. I was just standing there and I felt
something in my knee. I'm like, ah, how do.
Speaker 6 (01:40:16):
You That's how gout starts for me. I'm just standing
there and I get the twinge and I'm like.
Speaker 4 (01:40:21):
Damn it refused to believe. Have you tried it? Not yet?
Speaker 6 (01:40:28):
I haven't had a flare up since we were doing that.
Well I did, but I haven't. I mean, yeah, I
had one, but it was it was very short lived.
Speaker 4 (01:40:37):
Huh. You should try to try it.
Speaker 6 (01:40:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:40:40):
Yeah, that's what it's there for. It's a whole pain
pain relief. Does gout hurt like a bitch? Yes? You
should try this.
Speaker 6 (01:40:50):
I should. It's maximum relief from.
Speaker 4 (01:40:53):
It is maximum? Really do you need? Would you like
some relief?
Speaker 6 (01:40:57):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (01:40:58):
Would you like it to be maximum?
Speaker 1 (01:40:59):
Really?
Speaker 6 (01:41:00):
Yes? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:41:01):
Would you like a good rub?
Speaker 6 (01:41:02):
Yep?
Speaker 4 (01:41:04):
It would. I don't know why you didn't see the
answer to it prior to this point, But go to
get mojocbd dot com and use the promo code daily
Mojo for forty percent off your purchase and get the
maximum relief rub allowed by law even on second avenue.
There you go, not kidding. Get Mojo CBD dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:41:32):
The Daily mojo.
Speaker 4 (01:41:59):
Sorry it took me in there, i'd be I got
complaints because I hadn't played the birthday song in a while,
and I because we played a different one. And so
I don't want people mad, want people up in my
schnizz and stuff. Don't don't at me, don't slide into
my dms. This is for Kevin and don and uh
(01:42:24):
there's somebody else too. I can't remember, but here's your
birthday song, so stop bitching about it for crying out loud,
but you're not on the other side of the grass.
Speaker 14 (01:42:37):
Once a year we cele a break with stupid had
some plastic past in the fact that you were able
to make no tripper around the sun, and the whole
plan gathers rounding gives them left to do with bound.
We let out a joyful sound and sing that stupid
song Happy. Now you're one year older youthday. Your life
still isn't older, it's not it comme as much. But
(01:43:00):
you did die this year. I guess that's good enough.
Speaker 15 (01:43:06):
So let's do to your fading, help them hope you
don't remind yourself your chance of finding fame and wealth
to increase.
Speaker 4 (01:43:11):
With every year.
Speaker 15 (01:43:12):
Does it feel like you're doing laps of eating food
and takings, hoping that some day perhaps your life ful
holdsome chair.
Speaker 4 (01:43:19):
Happy birthday, what have you done the matter?
Speaker 15 (01:43:22):
Happy birthday, starting to get fatter.
Speaker 4 (01:43:26):
Happy birthdays down hell.
Speaker 15 (01:43:27):
From now on, try not to remind yourself your best
years are all.
Speaker 16 (01:43:31):
Gone the cry Agenet's we're all free than you could
live like Walt Disney and live for all eternity inside
a block of ice.
Speaker 14 (01:43:42):
But instead your time has said this is the only
life you get.
Speaker 1 (01:43:45):
Them.
Speaker 5 (01:43:45):
Though it hasn't ended yet, sometimes you wish it might.
Speaker 4 (01:43:48):
Hath birthday.
Speaker 9 (01:43:49):
You wish you.
Speaker 5 (01:43:50):
Had more money, have your day.
Speaker 14 (01:43:52):
Your life's so sad, it's funny, had birthday?
Speaker 5 (01:43:56):
How much more can you take? But your friends are hungry?
So just cut us to.
Speaker 4 (01:44:08):
Phil Kevin don uh oh wade to all those people.
Yeah wait, we're still waiting waiting on Wade. I think
I've ever heard that part of it. Uh says, uh,
(01:44:29):
hey my birthday song, thanks for remembering Bard. Sorry I
forget to send you all something.
Speaker 6 (01:44:36):
We'll wait Yeah wait, uh don.
Speaker 4 (01:44:40):
Uh excuse me, Dawn, Dawn Dawn? Uh it sent?
Speaker 1 (01:44:47):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:44:47):
And I don't is it a mini courtless Chaints O
bread that's a good question on the topic. Is fragile
frag ale? Okayl must be a Italians must be Italian.
This little bastard is sharp. I love that. Look at that.
It is sharp. It is a very sharp knife, which
(01:45:10):
is good because I need something sharper. Well, do you
have any music birthday music?
Speaker 6 (01:45:15):
I don't have any birthday music. That's weird. I should
have birthday music somewhere.
Speaker 4 (01:45:20):
You should have something. I mean, I would, I mean
I don't have I were in your position, i'd think, hey,
we should probably have some birthday music ready to go.
That's a timpany. That's not music. First of all, how
about that's porn music.
Speaker 6 (01:45:38):
It's not porn music.
Speaker 4 (01:45:40):
That's porn music.
Speaker 6 (01:45:42):
That's Don Newing. That's not porn music.
Speaker 4 (01:45:45):
No, that's Don new And that's porn music.
Speaker 6 (01:45:48):
I don't have any birthday music, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:45:52):
We'll let the porn music go. Then come on, get
done back on. All right, let's see let me he
plays in me and guitar. Well do it now? Because
all right, Brad and ro look does it? Post it?
And just in case she wrote the name on a
on a letter too, on a little card. Just in
case I didn't see the post it. Uh, what does
(01:46:13):
the card say? There's one hundred dollars bill in here?
Just kidding Brad and Ron, happy birthday to me. Enjoy
the gifts. I really enjoy listening to the show. But
during the school year it's a little more challenging. Probably
won't get this in time. But July thirty first is
the day. Oh love Dawn, Dawn, Dawn, Dawn, So happy birthday, Dawn,
(01:46:36):
Happy birthday. Let's see what's in here. Oh oh, I
see why she Now I get why the Brad because Brad. Okay.
And then there's a there's a run.
Speaker 6 (01:46:46):
There's a run in there.
Speaker 4 (01:46:47):
Okay, I got grapes on, grapes on. She knows I
like the meat.
Speaker 6 (01:47:00):
Yeah, look at that.
Speaker 4 (01:47:02):
It is a It is a meat thermometer.
Speaker 1 (01:47:05):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:47:06):
And it is a what's a multi tool? So it
not only will light your meat on fire, but it
will also get the heat of your meat. But we
need an important heat your It is important to know
what the heat of your meat is, is it not? Yes, Yes,
that is a that is a true statement. Plus it's
(01:47:26):
a targeting Get the hell out. It is a targeting laser.
It is a bottle opener. It has a an ultrabike
cobb l e ed. It's great for grilling and tailgating.
And it has a probe light.
Speaker 6 (01:47:43):
And who doesn't like being probed?
Speaker 4 (01:47:47):
I love being probed. And while I'm being probed, you
can test the heat of the meat.
Speaker 6 (01:47:58):
Yes, that is I love that.
Speaker 4 (01:48:03):
I love that. Did I get Oh? She sent me meat?
I love meat. This is a premium meat from Vermont.
This is in the back. This is the meat you
get in the backyard, not too far from the car. Ah,
it's the it's the literary I thought it was a
library cat. It's a literary cat. She expects me to
(01:48:27):
be able.
Speaker 6 (01:48:29):
I know there are you need your glasses?
Speaker 4 (01:48:33):
I need new eyes? No wonder the ancient Egyptians worshiped
cats as gods. Is there an animal with more dignity,
more aloof serenity and innate grandeur? Where is that a
little battery? He's off, he's off messing up somebody else's
desk right now? I love that?
Speaker 17 (01:48:55):
Uh see, uh uh that's so funny, right?
Speaker 4 (01:49:07):
What is it?
Speaker 6 (01:49:09):
Oh, I'm not that one? The other one?
Speaker 4 (01:49:11):
The other one?
Speaker 6 (01:49:12):
Yeah? Was it saying I'm not gay?
Speaker 4 (01:49:15):
But twenty bucks is twenty bucks. That's true. You have
your own I do, I do, And I've had the
pet laser. Where's that cat flash light? There's a pet
laser that I'm looking forward because this isn't that? That
is the best way to tell a cat that you're
(01:49:37):
in charge, by showing them the l and watching them
because when they when they start running after the laser,
you can have hours of fun laughing at them because
they're chasing a stupid beam of light. This is a
and she put a little post it on it. It's
a flashlight that runs on water.
Speaker 6 (01:50:02):
Interesting.
Speaker 5 (01:50:03):
That's okay.
Speaker 4 (01:50:05):
I'm gonna diph it says words on here. I feel
certain I will actually do video on how that works.
I love that. Thank you one. I love it. Uh,
rone lines of doe. What have we got here? I
(01:50:30):
think 'ron? You got the all right, you got the say,
I got the pro you got some meat?
Speaker 1 (01:50:36):
You got? What is that?
Speaker 4 (01:50:43):
I should you know? It makes it easy if you
just open it and take it out of the thing.
It's sticky and it's sweet.
Speaker 6 (01:50:49):
I like sticky and sweet poison.
Speaker 4 (01:50:53):
That's weird. Uh, this is the champlaint ape're oh is it?
What's honey?
Speaker 6 (01:50:59):
I love funny too.
Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
Ah.
Speaker 6 (01:51:01):
My daughter asked me about that yesterday. She said, no,
she she brings the Trump bottle of honey, remember those.
She brings it to me and it's almost empty. Where
can one get more Trump honey?
Speaker 1 (01:51:14):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:51:14):
What does that say? Beer?
Speaker 6 (01:51:15):
Bread?
Speaker 5 (01:51:16):
Beer bread?
Speaker 6 (01:51:17):
Nice?
Speaker 4 (01:51:19):
You've got more meat than I do?
Speaker 6 (01:51:21):
Well, I do so I'm robbing you're batman?
Speaker 12 (01:51:28):
Uh huh, all right, all right, I might have to
lick some of your honey. Okay, are you trying to
make that into some sexual thing, because probably that's you know, it's.
Speaker 4 (01:51:46):
Not all about sexual stuff. Yeah, Ron, no, brother Dawn,
thank you Deawnde. I love that and thank you and
uh wade imagine oh yeah, and the skull. That's a
good point.
Speaker 6 (01:52:03):
You better get to my box, dude. We're gonna run
out of time.
Speaker 4 (01:52:06):
We're not running out of time, jeez, because you got
to read the note with it. How long is it
gonna take me to read a damn note?
Speaker 6 (01:52:15):
You don't know because you haven't looked at it?
Speaker 4 (01:52:17):
Grief?
Speaker 12 (01:52:17):
Is it like three pages? All right, I'm doing it
right now. Then I'm gonna do this right now.
Speaker 4 (01:52:22):
I'm gonna hurry and then you because Ron said this
and said open on air. Yeah, and so I am.
And then after I read the note, Ron is going
to entertain for the rest of the probe. No, I'm not.
I love bubble wrap.
Speaker 6 (01:52:42):
You do, don't you put some extra in there?
Speaker 4 (01:52:46):
Thank you? Other stuff in Oh oh oh, there's more
bubble wrap.
Speaker 6 (01:52:53):
Well, I didn't want to. I didn't want it to break.
Speaker 4 (01:52:55):
It's a very fragile, pretty leble wrap. Must be Aalian,
all right, this is it's delicate. After so, I'm going
to read this along the air.
Speaker 6 (01:53:07):
Just read the top part. You don't have to read
the bottom part. You can in a minute.
Speaker 4 (01:53:11):
I love it when you touch the small of mind.
Speaker 6 (01:53:13):
It's not what it says.
Speaker 4 (01:53:15):
Sorry, that's the bottom part. I won't. I wanted to
send this to you. I bought this just after Doc
passed away and you and I were deciding on whether
to continue the show. I needed a distraction, and so
I was shopping. That's what happens. This is this is
(01:53:37):
an empty box. Open the arrow. This is aerogel. You
know that. Lighter than air space ship? Yeah, lighter than this.
Speaker 6 (01:53:49):
Have you ever held erojail?
Speaker 4 (01:53:53):
You're soaking in it. I wanted to have you to
have it for your shelf. I love you here description Also,
this is hydrophobic disc all right, No, I'm not. I
swear it looks like there's nothing in it.
Speaker 6 (01:54:05):
I know it does. Open it.
Speaker 4 (01:54:09):
All right and.
Speaker 6 (01:54:11):
Take the top off.
Speaker 4 (01:54:15):
Okay, all right, do I take this ring? All right?
All right?
Speaker 6 (01:54:19):
So this is the Yeah, that's that's the aeroor tail.
Speaker 4 (01:54:22):
Can I touch it?
Speaker 6 (01:54:23):
Yeah? You just put it, drop it off into your hand.
Be careful picking it up because it's very fragile.
Speaker 4 (01:54:28):
Well that's why I said. Can I touch it and
drop it off into your hand?
Speaker 6 (01:54:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:54:35):
Uh huh yeah, okay, this is hard.
Speaker 6 (01:54:38):
It is you could see right through it hard.
Speaker 4 (01:54:42):
What is it? This is freaky. It's like it's there,
but it's not. I know that. Touch it?
Speaker 6 (01:54:49):
Yeah, yeah, it's actually it's actually a skeleton, believe it
or not.
Speaker 4 (01:54:55):
Okay, it's in two pieces. Is it supposed to be? No?
What's into you? Gotta be careful.
Speaker 5 (01:55:03):
Well I didn't do anything to it.
Speaker 4 (01:55:06):
I put it in my hand. It's in okay, so
what it's okay, So describe what it is because I
don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:55:16):
The description is on the piece of paper there for you.
Speaker 4 (01:55:19):
Erow gels are a class of synthetic porous ultra like
material derived from a gel in which the liquid component
for the gel has been replaced with a gas without
significant collapse of the gel structure. It's hard to describe
what I'm looking at because it's.
Speaker 6 (01:55:41):
It's delight like it's solid on earth.
Speaker 4 (01:55:45):
It's I can't see that, you, It's hard to see,
but it's it's like it's there, but it's not.
Speaker 6 (01:55:52):
Yah. It's like it's like a ghost. That's what that
image I'll put on the screen. This one here.
Speaker 4 (01:55:59):
That's really free. I mean, it's I hate to say it, but
it's one of those things you have to see to
believe it, because it is it's like it's on my
hand but there's nothing there. I feel like I'm stoned.
Speaker 6 (01:56:12):
You know what they used that for? It was it
was built for the Space Agency because they put it
in ships that go to that follow comets because it
will capture the comet dust and then they return the arrowgel. Yeah,
and then extract the comet dust from it pretty slick. Right.
Speaker 4 (01:56:33):
That is just amazing. It really truly is.
Speaker 1 (01:56:36):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (01:56:37):
I love that it's going to go right up on
the shelf, up up on the shelf, I'm putting it
gently back into Yeah, I'm sorry.
Speaker 6 (01:56:44):
It's in two pieces and it wasn't when I shipped it.
Speaker 4 (01:56:46):
Well it it doesn't well, it's hard to when it's
sitting there like that. It doesn't look like it's in
two pieces.
Speaker 6 (01:56:53):
It's like a ghost. But because you could see, you
could see right through it.
Speaker 4 (01:56:56):
Yeah, God to take a picture of this and put
this out there on the uh on the on the twitters,
because it's it's really hard to describe. It's, uh, thank you,
and this will be I'm closing. It's very and I
love the bubble wrap.
Speaker 6 (01:57:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:57:13):
See how I stretched that. Yeah, wait a minutes, let's
go right there. That was an example of broadcast professionalism
like none ever since the last time we broadcast professionally.
Speaker 6 (01:57:26):
You know how much that little piece was just just
saying out loud because it's hydrophobic, it doesn't soak water.
Sixty five dollars the shit you say. You can go
to buy aerojail dot com and buy your own piece
if you want something. It's pretty cool for those listening.
Speaker 4 (01:57:45):
Have you tried tasting it?
Speaker 1 (01:57:47):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:57:47):
I haven't.
Speaker 4 (01:57:50):
No, okay that I mean it just seems like something
I would.
Speaker 6 (01:57:52):
Break off a little piece and eat it. You probably
won't even taste It's like it's probably like can I
lick it cotton candy or something?
Speaker 4 (01:58:00):
Can I lock it?
Speaker 6 (01:58:00):
Yeah, but it's hydrophobic so it won't get wet. You're welcome.
Speaker 4 (01:58:03):
Huh. Well, there's two hours of something you will not
see anywhere else. We like to call it the daily
Mojo for Today. Friday, the grief at already is Friday,
the eighth day of August. The here of our twenty
twenty five. And here's what people learned when they listen
to the dark. Magneto says, I love it when we
spoon right. Jody won twenty one. He could see it
(01:58:27):
if Bard's fingers were straight.
Speaker 6 (01:58:30):
Happy birthday, lip, said aerojel is called solid smoke. I
have some here at the house. My brother used to
work for JPL. He designed and made the collector for
the quote Starduster project. Pretty cool.
Speaker 4 (01:58:45):
I mean, if there was ever evidence that we've got
alien technology, that's it right there, because that is it's weird,
I mean really weird. Big a Pool, Classic, three Stooges,
one Liner. When they've got jobs as census takers. Mo
knocks on the door man comes out, MO, I'm with
the census. Are you married or happy? That's funny.
Speaker 1 (01:59:10):
I like that.
Speaker 4 (01:59:12):
Let's see here the gearbar. Last few elections we only
saw pipe breaks, closes in some areas but keep it
open past hours, and others in the boxes being dropped off.
Pretty sure there's no hanky panky in the census, of
course not. It would never hank or pank in the census,
because we like to keep things on the up and up.
Deb says, very cool, Ron on your aerosol. It's aeroso
love each and every one of you. Have a beautiful weekend.
(01:59:35):
My sentiments exactly. Don't forget tomorrow morning at nine o'clock
Central time. It will be myself and Jeff Fisher on
Saturday Morning Live, and then back here on Monday morning
with that guy over there is him right, yeah, sim
As for the rest of you, remember that we the
people mustang together, otherwise we show shortly, hang separately, six
(01:59:55):
separate trandus resist stupid and goodnight dot com for him.
Speaker 6 (01:59:59):
You are have a such weekends at the Dailymojo dot com.
Speaker 4 (02:00:04):
Mmm mmm