Episode Transcript
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The following program contains course language and adult themes.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
Listener and discretion is.
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Advised Yesterday December seven, nineteen forty one, a date which
(05:13):
will live in infamy.
Speaker 13 (05:22):
Achieving the goal before this decade is out of landing
a man on the moon and returning him safely to
the Earth.
Speaker 14 (05:33):
We choose to go to the moon and dis isday
and do the other thing, not because they.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
Are easy, but because they are hard.
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Freedom is never more than one generation away from the speech.
We didn't pass it on to our children in the
blood streets. The only way they can inherit the freedom
we have known is if we protected it. And then
handed to them with the well trought lessons of how
they am their lifetime.
Speaker 14 (06:07):
Let's do the same, and Happy Thursday night, ladies and gentlemen.
It is March twenty seventh, twenty twenty five, and Zen
(06:28):
and Rick are back. I'm Rick, She's Jen, and you're
neither welcome into the program, ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
And again we're here. It's been a minute. In between
illness for me and a bunch of technical issues and
her being out, we've been off for a couple of weeks.
I just realized that when I went to go fire
things up, I was like, dude, it really has been a.
Speaker 8 (06:49):
Couple of weeks since the show.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Yeah kind of blurs together because I do. I do
like twenty shows a week anymore.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
But yeah, we're both sick.
Speaker 12 (06:58):
We were both sicked, and then I was I was
enjoying Colorado for a week.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
So yeah, you're you're the only person. You're the only
person I know who does spring break back backwards.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Though everybody else someplace warm.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Yeah, goes somewhere like warm with like sand and water,
and you're like, oh, I forgot, I'm on a ski
trip because it's spring break. I'm like, what the hell?
Speaker 12 (07:20):
Well, so just I mean, let's see here, the week
before we left, though, it hit ninety degrees in Austin,
so we didn't know we had to escape any place warm.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
We haven't been that warm yet, so I get it anyway,
So since it has been.
Speaker 12 (07:37):
It's kind of something we always did because it's like
actually less trafficked and they still get really good snow
mid March. So even growing up, like quite often we
would go like President's Weekend in February or go spring
break instead of going.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
To the beach, which the meats.
Speaker 12 (07:55):
Almost always beach almost always ends up for whatever reason
those couple of weeks in March, even if it's been
great weather and almost always whether you're no matter where
on the coast you are, if you're still on the
coast and not on an island somewhere, but if you're
on the Gulf of America's coast, no matter where you
end up, at some point it gets cold, temperatures drop,
(08:17):
and it rains, so it never really works out well
for the whole week.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Yeah, no, I understand. I mean that's like it was
spring break here was it?
Speaker 8 (08:28):
Like I think it was last week?
Speaker 1 (08:29):
I think, uh, and it was cold and rainy for
half of it. I'm like, this is but yeah, it's
always been light here. But yeah, since it's been a minute,
and because X is being super cranky, no matter which
feed you're listening or watching from, whether it's one of
the X feeds, because there's like three that are active
right now, of the YouTube or the rumbles, please make
sure that you're liking, following and sharing and subscribing and
(08:50):
all those things, because I've noticed for when we first
started doing this, it was we were getting out everywhere.
The longer and more consistently we do this, a's like
the algorithm finding us and grinding.
Speaker 8 (09:01):
Us down again, and it's annoying.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
I don't know what it is because I'm like, I
thought the algorithm was supposed to help people find things,
not keep.
Speaker 8 (09:08):
Them from them.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
I just yeah, but yeah anyway, so yeah, I'm being
I'm being completely buried again, like you know, I'm which
is weird. And I talked about this with Agie the
other day and it doesn't make any sense to me.
Like I have since we've started streaming on X, I
have gone up over forty five hundred followers, and right
now I have five people.
Speaker 8 (09:28):
On that feet five.
Speaker 3 (09:30):
Oh wow, I'm like, what the hell. I will tell you.
Speaker 12 (09:36):
That I do notice a difference whenever I have had
something go not viral, but like I've had something picked
up that has gotten anywhere from like five thousand to
like twenty thousand impressions, that everything I tweet for the
next few days after that also gets a ton of
impressions and a tounch of a ton of eyeballs.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
You know, you're put in the algorithm at that point, but.
Speaker 12 (10:04):
If you haven't for a while, and if or like
for me, like I was out of town, so all
of a sudden, it's not just like the algorithm stopping
slowing it down. It's like even the people that follow
me like, don't see me. I'm getting two likes on
tweets that I normally would at least get twenty, you know,
something like that just acknowledgment of like, oh hey haha,
(10:25):
so you know it can it can get thrown off
really easily, and then you're just kind of like okay,
and there's not really a way to fix it.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
It's weird.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
So yeah, I will admit that talking about this kind
of stuff used to annoy me when I first started,
but I finally understand it. So I promise it's not
us trying to whine. This is how some of us
make a good bit of our money is by getting noticed.
And you know, so if you like what we do
it all, just make sure that you're liking and sharing.
Speaker 8 (10:51):
As much as possible as really all I'm trying to say,
I'm not trying.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
I'm not trying to beat over the head with it
or nothing. But the truth is, regardless of how much
Elon must screams that eas for free speech with football,
that Linda is not, And as long as she's got
control of the bells, whistles and switches on XS, ain't
nothing ever really going to change, which is annoying.
Speaker 12 (11:11):
Yeah, And I also just think that it is a
more difficult thing because like everybody's idea of what they
want the algorithm to be like is different, you know,
because I started seeing certain things in my feed, then
you're like, no, but I wanted to see this in
my feed. And then you start seeing some of that
and you're like, well, now I'm not saying this in
my feed. Well then you start it and so it's
just like a constant balancing act. So even without the
(11:32):
possibly nefarious characters. I think it's always going to be
something that's going to be lacking for most people.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
You're not going to keep everybody happy.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
Well, I mean to me, it's a pretty simple thing.
Like the basis of the algorithm should be if I'm
following somebody and they followed me back, then that should
always be algorithmic priority. When I post her, when they post,
that should be one of the first things that I see.
I don't care what else is grabbing anybody else's attention.
Speaker 8 (11:57):
Or any of that.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
It's like another thing that drives me nuts is I
will have people that will reply to my posts and
I can't see them because there's this new thing that
says most liked, most relevant, or newest, and if it's
not one of those three, I can't see it. There's
just nothing there. And I hate that because that's the
whole thing with X Now the new algorithm is you
have to be a reply guy. How can I be
a reply guy if I can't see the people that
(12:18):
I'm trying to reply to.
Speaker 12 (12:19):
Yeah, the responses really make me mad. Like the other
thing that is the first thing you said. The only
problem with that is that I've got you know, I'm
following twenty five hundred people. So if I'm following twenty
five hundred people in three one hundred of them tweet
within the last twenty minutes, that's already gonna be outrageous
like to keep up with, so like I can't, So
(12:41):
I kind of get how that has to be tapered down.
But the second thing that you're talking about, the replies
and everything, I mean, it is absurd to me that
I can see that there are fifteen replies to a comment,
and then I can only see one of them or
I can't see any, and then it says most relevant.
But unlike Facebook, where in some of those groups and
things that will say like most relevant or newest or whatever,
(13:02):
you can change it to say all comments.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
I want to see all. I don't care what it is.
I want to see all.
Speaker 8 (13:07):
You can't do that.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
It's a drop down option. It just says most relevant,
and then it doesn't give you.
Speaker 12 (13:11):
And then sometimes it's not even a tweet there, and
I'm like, what is going on?
Speaker 3 (13:14):
I can't see anything. And it's not always someone that's private,
you know.
Speaker 12 (13:17):
Sometimes that happens because someone's private and you can't see
their account, but that and you don't follow them, but
there's way too many of them.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
That's not what it is.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
I mean, it's just me. To me, everything's broken and
I've noticed, and it's partly my fault. I got in
trouble with the algorithm monster on the day that Mayor
Catfish finally decided to fire the lesbian fire chief officially,
you know, because she fired her back a couple of
(13:49):
weeks ago. I used to probably about almost a month ago. Now,
she actually fired her officially because she wouldn't do her
after action report and she found out that she sent
a bunch of firefighters.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
Home blah blah blah, YadA, YadA, YadA whatever.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
So of course ABC News breaks the story and me
used to being a smart ass without even thinking about it,
and I was like, that's what And yeah, I just
typed the first thing that came into my head. That's
all right, she'll be back. Token mccarpet munchers are hard
to come.
Speaker 8 (14:12):
By the moment.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
The moment I hit enter, the moment I send it off.
I'm sorry, this comment violates X policies and will be deboosted.
And since then I've been buried no.
Speaker 8 (14:28):
Option to deleted.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
All of a sudden. Now occasionally I will get maybe
twenty thousand impressions, where before I got in trouble, I
was actually on track to finally hit five million impressions again,
which pisses me off because every time I almost get there,
they find a way to take it away from it.
Speaker 12 (14:47):
Every fucking Okay, I've been there at least ten times,
and I can't get it to monetize. It says that
it's pending, and nothing ever happens, and then you I
email or whatever, you only get automated responses. There's literally
no one to talk to. It's super frustrating, Like it
shows me I'm like five point eight million, and it
says I'm eligible and says ask me to you know, submit,
(15:08):
like to try to do it, and then it just
kind of is it's kind of like one y're's just.
Speaker 3 (15:13):
Like loading loading, loading, loading, and.
Speaker 12 (15:16):
I never nothing ever happens, and there's literally no one
to talk to about it.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
There's nobody to email, nothing to do.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
I really I'm really starting I'm really thinking about trying
to get a hold of an attorney that I know
and starting a class action lawsuit because there's no fucking
reason why. If you're paying it's one thing when it
was free, like when it was free and we were
and we were the product, then you can do whatever
you want. And there's not much we can say. We
can either use the thing or not. But if I'm
paying for it, which I have to to be able
(15:43):
to broadcast on multiple platforms, I did figure out that
if we just want to stream to X, I can
do that without paying for any type of premium service.
Speaker 8 (15:50):
So I may actually do that.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
So yeah, because I just because I know other.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
People that I've had issues too.
Speaker 12 (15:56):
And then I know people that have like the they
barely they had like one thing that they did that
got them to that, and they're like, I don't even
think I had five million in it. Let me monetize,
and I'm like, what, it's really weird, and then they
don't keep up with it, but then they still get paid.
And then other people get demonetized like Ordy did, like
and there's no rhyme or reason, and then there's like
(16:17):
again I said, there's no one to ask, there's no
one to talk to. It's all automated crap, so you
don't get any answers. And if you try to like
look it up and just people talking on Reddit or whatever.
Everyone's just kind of like, yeah, I don't know, like
it just goes into the other like who knows.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
So I mean, it's it's just it's insane to me.
I mean, granted, and I didn't mean to turn the
show into let's bitch about exercise, I know, but still
it's just, you know.
Speaker 12 (16:41):
And there's a lot of good features. There's a lot
of great things about it. I still think it is
one of the I know, people have tried to move
on to other platforms many a time, and I still
think that this is one of the most pertinent ones.
I think it's the most relevant, and I think it's
especially for the kinds of things that we're on here for.
You know, it might not be the most relevant for
(17:01):
music fans or for people that are just here to
joke around and find stories, like there's Reddit for that,
but for people that want to be keep up with
you know, news, politics, world events, and then even pop culture.
Really it's still it's still the fastest and most kind
(17:23):
of I think the place that makes kind of the
most sense in the way that you can consume that
media in a very timely manner and things spread like wildfire.
So I don't think it's going anywhere. I'd love some improvements,
but there's still it's still such a cool thing in
general that I have to remind myself that we're we're
lucky to have.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Yeah, I mean, don't get me wrong. I mean, like
I said, it has done wonders. I mean, you know, I.
Speaker 12 (17:49):
Promise I'm not doing this to Kissylanzas. I'm seriously saying
this because I believe it. I feel like as much
as I will be like Twitter and like people talk
about walking away or taking a break, like just for
the kinds of things that we're doing, it's such a
useful tool.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Sorry, well, I mean no, I mean I get it,
but it's it's just like, you know, I'm was talking
about this the other day because there's that account that
you know, took on the persona of finding Retard that
basically took his entire stake, ran with it, monetized the
hell out of it, and then sold a shit coin
and then disappeared.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
I'm like, did that end up happening? That is? He
is he not really been active since I.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
Don't follow him, so I don't know, But I used
to randomly see him in my feed, and I don't anymore.
Speaker 8 (18:36):
So I don't, I don't know, I haven't.
Speaker 3 (18:39):
Did he rug pull? Did he pull a hot claw? Oh?
Speaker 1 (18:43):
I'm sure he probably did. I mean, that's pretty much.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
Well.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
I mean, in her defense, I don't even think she
really knew what was going on that I.
Speaker 12 (18:52):
Think, Oh, of course she didn't. No, of course she didn't.
Unfortunately that doesn't really matter. But I liked him after
him under the rock like three weeks later or something,
and did like one little interview being like, I didn't
you know, wasn't my intention. I didn't know that d
D D d D. And then she's been again, like
(19:14):
her little podcast went on hiatus. I mean, so, I
hope you enjoy your money, girl, because I don't know
if you can come back on the scene now.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
I hope you invested whatever you made, because that's about
the only way you're gonna get any more out.
Speaker 5 (19:24):
Of it, I think.
Speaker 12 (19:25):
And why the hell it's so weird? Who are the
people that are buying this shit?
Speaker 3 (19:30):
Like? Who is buying this shit?
Speaker 1 (19:32):
What are those like everybody that started buying like the
Trump coin and then the Malania coin.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
I'm just like, well, the trading cards, the NFTs.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
I mean, don't get me wrong, there are people that
I know that got in on that shit, and I'm
kind of wishing I had because there was one guy
I know that that had I guess he had like
an extra thirty five grand. The interund turned it into
a million, Like, I fucking hate you. I don't have
that kind of money, but I still hate you. Yeah,
But it's just it's just one of those things where
I'm like, you know, I get it. If you have
(20:01):
the money to play in the system, you can eventually
figure out how to win. But that's another thing that
pisses me off about all this because that's the same
thing that everybody's been screaming about with the stock markets
and everything else, and oh my god, the stock market's
crashing and it's all Trump's fault. The stock market isn't crashing.
What's happening is the rich people that were making money
in all the military contractor things and everything else that
everything that's tied to the government sector, not the private sector,
(20:24):
are pulling all their money out of there and starting
to shift it back into private sector things because that's
what's going to be making money from now. On, So
the only people that are really hurt are the poor people.
That's why I was laughing my ass off when mister
Walls was like, oh, it almost makes me hard when
Tesla loses money. I mean, that's not what he said,
but I as well. I don't think anything makes that
(20:44):
old fucker hard, but except boys or something.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
But I don't want to.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
God, You're welcome, but no, I'm just like and I'm
just like, dude. Elon owns like maybe around fifteen percent
of Tesla stock. You know who owns the rest of
Tesla stock people's investment portfolios through their employers. So when
you guys are screaming and yelling about how you want
Tesla to burn to the ground, you're killing the middle class,
(21:14):
whether you want to admit it or not. And look,
it's one thing, and I get it, you know, that's all.
Well it was okay when you guys boycotted bud Light,
Well I didn't see anybody lighting fucking bud light trucks
on fire. I saw a couple of morons that bought
bud light and then decided to throw it into a
trash barrel and light it on fire. But that was
money that they spent to make themselves look cool, but
(21:34):
we didn't go. I mean, nobody was like, you know,
throwing driving by the bud light, the bud light bottling plan,
like shooting it up and shit gangster style. So it's
just the equivalents with these people. I mean, that's just
like this whole this whole signal gate thing.
Speaker 12 (21:52):
All right, well, but the only way to compare it
is if that you go buy a Tesla and destroy
your own Tesla that you paid for. Me boy blooded,
like you said, the bud light thing, so many memes
and so many people trying to compare it to bud
light and like you're seriously saying me going like people
not buying a six pack of beer or going and
buying a six pack of beer to shoot it is
(22:13):
the same thing as destroying other people's property, and not
just any kind of property, but a expensive car.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
What the fuck is wrong with you?
Speaker 1 (22:23):
I mean, eighty percent of people that drive Teslas there
are still leftists anyway, and you but you've still got
the hardcore leftist. Now they're selling their Teslas, so they
bought this expensive ass car and they're taking a loss
on it to prove a point to Elon Musk, I'm like,
how broke? How broken is your brain that you are going?
I mean, because I mean, look, if you've never bought
a new car before, let me just educate you. Like
(22:45):
the second you put the key in the ignition, after
you've signed the paperwork and you drive off the lot,
you lose twenty five percent of your value, Like within
that moment, it's just gone. Because that's because that's just
the way the system works. So anybody who's like, oh
I bought this, what what are they usually fifty sixty
seventy thousand dollars cars, depending on which one you buy,
sometimes more. I bought this for fifty grand and now
(23:08):
it's only worth maybe thirty five, and I just sold
it because Elon Musk is an asshole. You're the retard
in this equation.
Speaker 12 (23:18):
Well not only that, but as all the ones that
are like saying that, people are taking pictures and posting
and showing that, like they just started putting bumper stickers
on them that were all like left leaning bumper stickers,
or they wrote, you know, on the windows with that
washable paint that like you know, seniors in high school
used to paint their cars on the last day of school.
They're using that to marking their windows, like hey, I
(23:40):
bought this before twenty twenty, or I bought it before.
You know, Elon was who we mean who he is now?
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Like red pilled Elon.
Speaker 12 (23:50):
They're having a right frame like please don't I'm a
liberal or I voted for Some of them have written
like I voted for Kamala, Like if that's what you
have to do to tell your side not to destroy
your personal property.
Speaker 8 (24:03):
Why the fuck are you still on that side?
Speaker 3 (24:05):
That's somethings majorly for coctawn.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
I mean literally though, if you if you're if you're
having to write on the windows of your car, I
voted for Kamala. I don't even I don't even know
how to say your name Moore. I've said it wrong
so many times. I'm just like, why are you even
still on that side when you are living in such
fear of the same people that you that you aligned
with not five minutes ago that now you're afraid they're
(24:31):
going to destroy your property because it has a Testlal
logo on it? Why are you still on that side?
And you know what's happening a lot of people that
were on that side five minutes ago really aren't anymore
because they're like, oh my god, everything that they've been
trying to tell me is true. We really are the
side that doesn't tolerate anything. And the truth of it is,
nothing has changed. And on the left, they they're doing
the same thing they did back in the fifties and
(24:52):
sixties with the masks and the burning shit in people's yards.
The only thing is they're what they're actually I'm showing
seventy two by.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
The way, then it just changed.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
No, yeah, it does that all the time. I'm still
on five.
Speaker 8 (25:06):
By the way.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
The Kala radio feed's doing great, but I'm still on
it is Yeah.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
No, the Carra carraen feed's doing great anyways.
Speaker 12 (25:14):
No, I know that's what it doesn't make this mean, Like,
so now I have to tag my car up to
make sure that people won't keep it, won't try to
set it on fire, won't ram it with whatever the
ATV thing that guy was rested doing.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
And it was funny too.
Speaker 12 (25:30):
Did you see any of those videos of him, because
he's like super obese and he's sitting on this thing
and he's going and ramming it and it's hilarious because
I mean, his body launches forward every time and he
can't control it. But he's gone after cyber trucks that
are basically like semi armored cars, Like what are you doing, dude?
Speaker 3 (25:53):
Oh man?
Speaker 12 (25:54):
But and then the people defending it, and I'm like, no,
this is this is not defensive.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
This is ridiculous. This is the same.
Speaker 12 (26:02):
I mean, you know, shouldn't be too surprised because they're
also defending the guy committing murder, you know, on a
completely innocent man, because he works for evil you know,
big Pharma, big healthcare, big whatever that they think is
so bad.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
And so they he.
Speaker 12 (26:20):
Should be held responsible for people's denials of coverage or
deaths or whatever.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
You know.
Speaker 12 (26:25):
It's it's very similar, like you don't know who that
person is driving that tesla, and you've decided though that
they're bad, and that you hate one person who.
Speaker 3 (26:36):
Does not own that tesla so much.
Speaker 12 (26:38):
You hate Elon Musk so much and Trump so much
that you are willing to do that to someone who
has nothing to do with Elon other than buying this car,
a car that you all used to praise because it
upheld the leftist, you know, utopian idea of having all
electric by twenty thirty five.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Well, I mean the other thing is, until four years ago,
they were calling him the real life fucking Tony Stark,
real life iron Man, because of all the shit that
he was inventing. And now because all of a sudden,
he doesn't tote their line anymore. Now he's a Nazi,
I mean, Tim And this is just me being the
smart ass that I am. If I owned a Tesla
and I was afraid somebody was gonna fuck with it,
(27:18):
I would just grab like shoe polls and shit, and
but swastika is all over it on my own, like
somebody already got me. You ain't gotta do it, because
that's just I'm kind of the I'm kind of to
the no fucks given stays and all this stuff anymore.
As a matter of fact, the funny thing is, I
said this about two months ago, and then I saw
somebody with a h with a bigger name than mine
saying it about two weeks ago. Actually it was Greg
(27:39):
Gutfield in the middle of The Gutfeld Show. He just said,
at some point, we're just gonna have to reclaim the
new inWORD and just start walking up through road and
they'd be like, what's up my Nazi. Oh dude, I
said that two months ago.
Speaker 12 (27:52):
They're like, hey, hey, now, hey, now, no, I I
just it's it's become this starts to get that thing
like everything. It's kind of like we said when some
of the Conservatives became so anti Trump that then they
became Democrats. You know, the dims are kind of doing
it so like so anti Elon now that they are
(28:15):
un against some of the long held ideals of their side,
of their party, of their you know, liberal ideology, just
because they don't like this one man and what he
stands for. And it really is, like you said earlier,
it goes back around to maybe we really aren't the
tolerant ones we claim we are, but if someone goes
(28:35):
slightly out of line. And here's the other thing about
it is, you know, they are so used to having
everyone in any sort of major position misition, whether it's
in media and academia and tech, you know, Hollywood. They
are so used to them cheerleading them on and believing
(28:57):
the same things they do, or at least pretending to
to keep the peace. And so that's the only way
to think that they're just not used to the descent
and so.
Speaker 3 (29:06):
They can't square this.
Speaker 12 (29:09):
What they feel like is a disconnect between his goals
for space, his goals to help the environment, for innovation
and progress, and all of these you know, crazy cool
ways that used to be so much of something that
they wanted. They can't square that with the fact that
he may not agree with them on every little thing,
and he may not be politically aligned with them. And
(29:29):
they're just so used to getting their way and everybody
pampering them and showering them with all of their Oh
my gosh, you're so smart, you believe the best things.
We're all right, you're so good.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
Oh pat on the back.
Speaker 12 (29:41):
Oh, aren't we so awesome? We're such good human beings.
We believe in the best things. And all those bodies
over there on the right are horrible people.
Speaker 3 (29:49):
We're the good guys. They're just so used.
Speaker 12 (29:52):
To that being echoed to them and their bubble that
when someone slightly steps out, you know, they lose their
fucking minds.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Anything is nobody's left. The overton windows just moved so far.
The people that were that are still standing in the
same place have been left behind because i mean, look
at look at what's happening right now, you know, the
Democratic Party only has like a twenty seven percent approval
rating as a whole, Like the Democrats in Congress have
a thirty percent approval rating, but the Democratic Party as
a whole is down on like twenty seven percent. I
(30:23):
think that's basically that's basically their leftist rabbit base.
Speaker 8 (30:27):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (30:28):
That's all they have left. Everybody else is like, I
don't like anything that's going on. And part of it's
for different reasons.
Speaker 8 (30:33):
Though.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
You've got like the really really staunchly left leftist folks
that are pissed off because they don't feel like they're
fighting hard enough. Then you've got the other the rest
of the leftist folks that are like, what the hell
has happened to these people? And why are they so
evil now? And I mean, look, I don't use the
word evil lightly, I don't, but this is what's happening.
These people are so out of touch with everything that
(30:56):
they are still months later choosing the ten and twenty
percent side of eighty twenty and ninety ten issues because
they feel that's the only way to go. I mean,
at this point, even major universities are pulling away from
some of this stuff. I mean, oh, I just broke
a story through Digital Beacon earlier today because it's been
announced that Michigan University is closing its DEI office and
(31:20):
shuttering all of its DII programs because of the executive
orders and because of funding continuencies.
Speaker 12 (31:25):
Well, right, and you know Liberal University of Texas at
Austin did it last fall. This is before Trump even
to the.
Speaker 8 (31:35):
Lot of them.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
I think they were doing it because they kind of
felt like they had to. D I was becoming the pollaburo.
I mean, you had like DEI people in boardrooms. You
had DEI people that were appointed into you know, like
not I can't I don't know what term they used
for universities, but you had people in leadership roles that
were responsible for making sure the DEI was being followed.
(31:57):
It was like you remember the Hunt for Red October
when they threw the officer and like you know a
lot and like druged him and locked them in closet
or whatever the hell they did when they were ready
to deffect. That's basically what d I turned into. Because
there were there were watchers and every business and watchers
and every university to make sure that every aspect of
d I was being followed, and if not, you were
(32:19):
in trouble. And I mean you've seen it everywhere well.
Speaker 12 (32:22):
And and it strayed so far, you know, to to
some people, some of the honest people on the left,
to their point that it strayed so far from what
the original intent was. And I think the bad actors
got a hold of it very early on and went, oh,
(32:44):
we can use this, and then blm happened. So it exploded,
you know once once all of that happened, George Floyd
and then and but it really kind of started as
far back as Ferguson right. So once they saw that
it was something they could latch onto and they could
capitalize on the heat of the moment, on the fervor
spreading around the country, particularly amongst young people and of
(33:08):
left leaning people in certain industries, and so they they
they took it under the guise of deos, full throttle
psycho with it in a way that was anything but
diverse or inclusive.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Well, I.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
Mean, DI sounds good on paper, just like communism, but
then every time it's put into practice, somebody takes it,
warps it to a sit and it just becomes another
way to maintain control. I mean, communism sounds great on
paper until you really until after a while, everybody's like,
so I'm working my ass off and he's hanging out
(33:44):
on a couch and he gets the same share of
everything that I get.
Speaker 8 (33:46):
Fuck that.
Speaker 12 (33:47):
Yeah, I mean, And I have a friend, a really
good friend, who is left of center, but she's not
crazy left of center, and she she is POC, but
she and she's so rational, she's so reasonable. We can
have great discussions about things like she does not like
the pandering to anything of that. And she was early
(34:09):
on a DEI director for Amazon. And if you look
at the way that she views it in the more
classic sense of what it was intended to be, and
and even just what she posts on her stories and
her Instagram and the work that she's doing, and you
know how things how her vision of that stuff is it.
Speaker 3 (34:30):
I absolutely is a.
Speaker 12 (34:34):
You know, there's still be a lot of people that
roll my eyes, cheesy, don't like that, no place for
it or whatever, But it's a much different version than
the radical, militant DEI that we ended up seeing in
most of these places. So you know, like you said,
it gets it always things like this always get worked.
Speaker 3 (34:56):
They always go too far.
Speaker 12 (34:58):
They always have certain people that are going to benefit
more than others, and they get bloated egos and too
much power, and so you know, it destroys the credibility
of the rest of the movement or the program, and
so in that regard, I think the only thing you
really can't do is dismantle it because now it's it's
been corrupted. It's been corrupted, and I don't think it
(35:20):
can be fixed.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
Yeah, no, I mean, it can't be at this point.
So I mean it's kind of like, and we're finding
this out with so many things unfortunately, like USAID and
it's little brother us I P that are basically just
gonna have to either almost be completely scrapped or nearly
be completely scrapped and started over if it's even ever
started over, because it's just become a monster. I mean,
(35:48):
that's like the EPA. The EPA right now is fighting
against the EPA director because the EPA director is trying
to get the EPA back to its original mandate instead
of all little side little businesses it's had going. So
everybody's I mean, and that's like I've been watching all
this stuff, like all of these lawsuits and all of
these things, and I'm like, you know, none of this
is ever really gonna go anywhere, right, Eventually the Supreme
(36:11):
Court is gonna have to weigh in, and if they
rule the wrong way, then we're fucked.
Speaker 8 (36:18):
I mean, and I.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
Don't really have I don't really have that much hope
for any of them anymore, because they already saw what happened.
You know, they've had protesters on their front lawns. They
don't want any of that. So, I mean, I don't
really know where we go from here. I think, unfortunately,
no matter how hard we try, we are headed for
a reckoning of some kind. And the whole thing that's
going on with this whole signal chat thing just proves
(36:41):
it to me, because the last guy who was Secretary
of Defense got thirteen people killed, wasted like eighty billion dollars,
went a wall for three weeks, and he was fine.
They're a reporter somehow got added to a chat that
had almost nothing pertinent in it. I mean, yeah, there
was some stuff in there, and I really wish it
hadn't happened. But at the same time, if it was
(37:03):
really classified, he would have never put it out because
then he would have been yeah.
Speaker 12 (37:09):
Yeah, and it kind of dared him too, like they
were like, hey, well, you know, if obviously it wasn't
that big of a deal, he could if he wants
to prove that there was something in there that was classified,
and then it's like, no, it's not really. But my
biggest issue with it, as with most things that go
this way, is not so much like, yes, it's a
concern what happened.
Speaker 3 (37:29):
It's definitely a security issue.
Speaker 12 (37:31):
It needs to be looked at, investigated, and handled so
that you can ensure that nothing like that ever happens
again in case it actually is more sensitive information. But
my issue with things like this always are the response
and instead of being the fifth enough and snarky and
not really ever saying like yeah, no.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
This is really bad, this is this is fucked up.
Speaker 12 (37:52):
When we got this did was not handled well, you know,
just come out with this statement and say we're aware
of the mistake that happened, we were handling it internally.
Know we're we're getting to the bottom of we were
handling it internally, and we won't be commenting anymore any
further on the matter because it is a sensitive topic period.
But just say like, yeah, that that is And instead
it's gone back and forth and back and it's the
(38:12):
administration and it's Goldberg and it's them, you know, they're
on Laura Ingram and whatever, and it's just kept it.
So that also makes me go a little tenfoil? Was
this on purpose? Was there something they were trying to
do and say? And like, was there something did they
need to start some fight with the with the media
over this, like because it's not a good look for
(38:34):
anybody all the way around. So what would have the
end goal been then? If it if it was done
on purpose, what is the angal? And it was it
done on purpose by the entire like as as a
being undersigned by the administration, or was it done on
purpose by one actor?
Speaker 3 (38:49):
You know what I mean? Like there's all those little
roads you can go down.
Speaker 12 (38:52):
I don't know that it's as complicated as all that
and as well thought out, but but it is something
that crossed my mind because the handling of it has
just been ridiculous, and of course the leftists, the Democrats,
they have been absolutely absurd in their response as well.
Speaker 3 (39:06):
I mean, that's which is a given, absolutely a given.
They have no room to talk. They just don't. Well.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
I mean, there have been a couple of people within
the administration that tried to say just that, and it's
just like I watched a bit of a bit of
as I call her her hotness is press conference yesterday,
you know, the New Press Sect, and she basically just
finally looked at the media and said, look, I've answered
this question five times already in five different ways, and
you keep asking.
Speaker 8 (39:31):
Me to stop.
Speaker 1 (39:33):
And she got so mad, she got so mad at
one lady that she was like, well, I have another
follow up. She's like, I'm not taking your follow up.
And she kept and she kept trying. She's like, I
just told you I'm not taking your follow up, and
you would.
Speaker 3 (39:43):
It's great.
Speaker 12 (39:44):
Every reporter wanted to ask the question in their way
and get their own personals found bite, which was just silly.
I mean, there was so much there's been so much
repetition with it. But I just also think they've given
them too much fodder. She's doing the right things shutting
it down, but there was too much that went on
for too long in my opinion, that kept it up there.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
But I also you know, well.
Speaker 1 (40:10):
Sorry, I didn't mean to step on you, but this
is my tinfoil had take on it, and it's kind
of the same. It's in the same vein of what
you just brought up with. As tightly controlled as the
Trump administration has really been able to be with the
media cycle save the Epstein file debacle, is there another
reason why they wanted this highlighted? Because I mean, you know,
I'm not trying to be that four dy chess guy,
(40:30):
but I feel like there's there's another shoe that we
don't know about yet. Maybe or maybe it was to
highlight the fact that I mean, because signal has been
being used for a while now, it wasn't it wasn't
just used by this administration. So did they let this
happen on purpose so people could see it's where some
of these leaks had been coming from. Because everybody kept
wondering why we were getting so many leaks in the
(40:51):
first Trump administration and why there were even things that
were being leaked in the Biden administration. Could it be
because the members of the media were being included by
the people that we're setting up these chats and nobody
noticed until now.
Speaker 12 (41:03):
Yeah, I mean it's a valid question. And how easily
is that to do? Because not on this, not on signal,
but on other things I've been on that we're sensitive for,
like work or whatever, you know, just just doing the
general thing was had all my contacts exposed, but on
some of the more private secure groups, whether it be
(41:26):
a chat or an email or whatever, then when I
went to select somebody, it didn't populate everyone, so you
couldn't really accidentally add anybody.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
It was the approved members only by the admins. So
if the ad.
Speaker 12 (41:42):
And improved somebody approved, I don't even want to call journalist,
but you know.
Speaker 3 (41:46):
Accidentally approved him.
Speaker 12 (41:48):
Then that's a whole other big that's a whole other
issue because you have to go in and individually select that,
and it doesn't always populate a whole list. So anyways,
I feel like everybody spent a little bit too much
time on it. I think that there are lessons to
be learned. I think that I don't think necessarily heads
need to roll. I know, I differ with some people
(42:10):
that I even respect on this that say there's got
to be something unless they found out it was something
that someone did nefariously, of course, and that is a
different situation. If it truly is just a bonker security
breach on accident, then I think you learn from it
and move on, and there's stop going on talk shows
about it. I don't think any of the people that
(42:32):
were involved in that chat need to be given any
more uh fodder to the media by going on Fox News.
Speaker 3 (42:38):
I think it's silly.
Speaker 1 (42:39):
Well, what I found absolutely amazing was Feng Banger taking
the eggs earlier. Today, it's absolutely appropriate that Pete hag
Sith should resign. Wait, Pete he Sith is still the
Secretary of Defense. I'm like, dude, you bang the Chinese
spy and you still have your game. Shut the fuck up.
Speaker 12 (42:57):
And it wasn't even immediately removed from several of the
committee is one of which dealt with national security. So
there are certain people I don't like to what about
and I don't like to like always turn it around
and go, well, but you did well, that doesn't excuse
what something else was when there is wrongdoing. So I
don't always like to do that, but I do like
(43:18):
to say to certain people you need to sit down.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
You have no leg to stand on here.
Speaker 12 (43:24):
Not necessarily everybody as a whole, but that person that
did that thing, you know, it's like, rather it's like
Dan Rather when he would try to impeach somebody's credibility
or accuse them of lying, and you're like, sir, sir, sir,
mister rather, please please set this one out.
Speaker 3 (43:43):
Please set this one out. This is not something for
you to comment on.
Speaker 12 (43:46):
And it just shows the absolute arrogance of them that
they don't see that as being hypocritical and they don't
stop themselves from getting in the middle of some of
these situations that you can directly turn around and go,
I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (44:03):
Who is talking here? How dare you? But they just
don't they do not have the oh I don't know why.
Speaker 12 (44:16):
I can't think of the word not a humbleness, But
they just don't have that there to be able to
see that before they speak, because they're just so ready
to attack, and they truly don't see that they did
anything wrong really as part of the problem too.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
Oh, it's just insane. And I don't know why, but
because I was just scrolling through ext real quick and
somehow the fucking disabled mocking thing from twenty fifteen twenty
sixteen is back in the news again thanks to whoever
the fuck Liam Nissan is.
Speaker 8 (44:47):
I don't I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (44:49):
Are these people recycling shit from now what eight yrself?
Speaker 12 (44:52):
Well, that is that's coming out because of the Jasmine
Crockett thing, because she called Governor Abbott governor hot wheels.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
I mean I don't I wasn't really that offended by it.
I mean, I I'm disabled and I make fun of
disabled people, so I don't really get it right.
Speaker 3 (45:08):
But see, I am.
Speaker 12 (45:09):
And the reason I am is because they are so
self righteous about anything anybody.
Speaker 3 (45:15):
They take everything out of contact.
Speaker 12 (45:16):
They get so offended over the slightest thing, and they
take it as as something that should be career ruining,
wife canceling, you know, bombard them in their families for
saying anything remote. And they've been doing that for years.
And then to go up there and joke and use
her fake black scent, and and and say something so
(45:37):
ridiculously derogatory about a about a governor in a wheelchair
when you know, and and then her excuse was that
she was actually just talking about the buses, about bussing
immigrants there, and that's why she called him hot wheels,
which is just bullshit. But because she's used it before
that before he ever busts anybody, she used that term.
But Also, it's ridiculous because then she proceeded to after that,
(46:00):
in the same statement, completely chastise everybody for voting for Trump,
who mocks disabled people, and how outrageously offensive that is.
And so don't you dare say anything to me when.
Speaker 3 (46:11):
That's who you.
Speaker 12 (46:12):
Who you align with, and who you have supported and
you have defended. So that's why I get offended by it,
because she sat there and had the audacity to stand
up and then whack her finger at everybody else and
tell them that actually they are the dirty, horrible, you know,
bigoted assholes, and she though was taken out of context.
Speaker 3 (46:32):
So fuck her.
Speaker 1 (46:35):
I hate her, yeah, I mean, will trust me. I'm
no fan of hers either, thanks to things to all.
I call her slavery slavery Crockett.
Speaker 12 (46:42):
So, I mean, the black thing is insane. It is absolutely.
Speaker 1 (46:50):
Insane, entirely fake.
Speaker 12 (46:54):
I mean, there's so much coverage of her out there,
of her when she's you know, initially coming on the scene,
she wants to be taken seriously in the state capitol,
in Congress, coming to Austin rallying for certain things, and
she absolutely talks nothing like that, absolutely nothing like that.
(47:14):
And now she's doing it on Elithing. She's making TikTok
videos trying to go viral, and she so desperately wants
to join the squad. That's what she's aiming for. I
think she wants to be accepted and loved and embraced
by the squad.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
Oh wow, I have to put this on the screen.
Jeff just made a new graphic for Juxtaposition. He just
sent it to me, and it's actually kind of cool. Nice,
actually kind of looks like me too. That's actually really good.
I need to figure out what everybody's using to make these,
(47:52):
because everybody's doing this now, and I don't know which
one they're using, because last I knew ROC couldn't do
anything this cool. So I got to figure out which
one it is. And I'm hoping I can't see it yet.
Speaker 8 (48:03):
Oh you can't see it?
Speaker 13 (48:06):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (48:07):
It should it was on the screen. Are you watching
on the feed? Are you actually watching?
Speaker 3 (48:12):
Here we go? I got I've got it now. Yeah.
Speaker 12 (48:16):
Usually stuff that you put up, though, what comes up
on my feet too, And this one is only on
the kailer and one that's weird. So I like clicked
on the cailor and feed on my phone and I
can see it, but that is that's cool.
Speaker 3 (48:30):
I like that a lot.
Speaker 1 (48:31):
Yeah, got a new promo graphic.
Speaker 8 (48:34):
Thanks Jeff, that's awesome.
Speaker 12 (48:37):
Keep with honish. Oh funny enough, I said, I've never
been you know, I've never been added to a I've
never accudentally been added to a signal chat that you know,
had national security implications. But I have had a couple
(49:00):
things that have happened that have been kind of weird.
And one of them, sorry, I'm trying to find it
real quick.
Speaker 3 (49:14):
Goodness, Okay.
Speaker 12 (49:16):
I get tagged on Instagram on by a couple of
different users, and at first I thought it was like
spam stuff, just trying to get people like, you know,
they'll just tag people in a bunch of stuff. They
do it on Twitter too, trying to get people to
get eyeballs on their stuff. And at first that's what
I thought, and then I started looking at them. It
was happening like once a month or so, and it
was always some sort of promo for like a show
(49:37):
or a film. A lot of us was like an
independent film, but recently one of the ones that the
same company has been working on is going to be
on Netflix now, and I do recognize a couple of
the people in it. Anyways, I am being tagged as
a cast member, and I go and look, and I mean,
all the other people, all the other tags are legit
the writer, the producer, the casting director, that this, that,
But my Instagram name is just one character off from
(50:01):
whoever this actress is. And they repeat, they've never fixed it.
They just always tag me. So I get tagged in this,
and then I get all the comments and all the
responses and.
Speaker 3 (50:10):
Like, can't wait to see this? Can we just see this? Jenny?
And I'm like, this is so weird.
Speaker 12 (50:17):
None of y'all clicked on my profile and realized I'm
not that actress, like never once, and You'll just continue
to tag me in this stuff. And it's like different productions,
so it's not always a copy paste.
Speaker 3 (50:28):
You know.
Speaker 12 (50:28):
I could understand if like multiple of them shared the
same exact caption. So I kept getting tagged, but like,
it'll be different productions of things. There was like a
stage show last summer, so I got tagged in that
because this actress was in it.
Speaker 3 (50:40):
I'm like, who is not check it? Like, who are
the pr people for this?
Speaker 12 (50:43):
They're like this, Like I said this next one is
it's actually gonna be on Netflix, so that's kind of
a big deal. So how how is your PR people
not catching this and making sure that you're not tagging.
Speaker 3 (50:52):
The right people.
Speaker 12 (50:54):
But the other thing that's happened is, you know, just
like the the funny text and so orty and I
that's why I already called me Maria because I had
someone text me saying that, like I didn't show up
for my shift, and I got to like Maria Maria
and they kept calling me Marianne.
Speaker 3 (51:07):
I'm I'm not Maria Maria. And then they're like, you know, this.
Speaker 12 (51:11):
Isn't funny, like, don't play with us, and I'm like,
I'm literally not right. Sorry, I can't come in and
cover her shift, but I'm not Maria. So if anybody
ever hears wort of call me Maria, that's where it
comes from.
Speaker 3 (51:21):
Okay, now it's up on my screen, by the way,
that's rd it just came up. There must be some
log or something that's happening.
Speaker 1 (51:29):
Well, yeah, so if you're watching, like if you're watching
the feed while also especially while you're on the show,
for some reason, it does start doing some lag stuff.
So occasionally after refresh for it to catch up, Otherwise
it's going to be several minutes behind.
Speaker 8 (51:41):
I've noticed that when I call. But the weird the weird.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
Thing is like when I comment in the chat, it
shows up over here like immediately, but it takes like
another twenty minutes or so to actually show up on
the actual shared screen. If I've been inside the communicated
the chat for that long, it's weird. But yeah, very
But yeah, no, it's so that is so first world problems.
Speaker 3 (52:06):
I don't even care. That's fine. I just I'm glad.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
But yeah, I know, I mean, like, you know, the
thing you were just talking about. I actually posted something
about that on Facebook today about how overblown all this
stuff is because it could be that they were trying
to invite somebody else that had like a similar name.
You know. The same thing happened to me When I
worked for OU There was an operations manager or had
the same first name that I did, and his last
name ended with R. Anytime they started onboarding a new
(52:32):
manager that worked beside him, and they had to include
him in emails. Guess what happened? For sometimes up to
six months to a year, I would get emails that
I was never supposed to see, some of which involved
some of which involved like disciplinary actions for employees and
you know you need to take care of this and
you need to take care of that. And it wasn't
even me open and half the time it was in
(52:53):
the subject line and I would just hit reply to
the person that sent it instead of reply all and
be like, hey, you met the other.
Speaker 8 (52:59):
Rick, you know that one.
Speaker 12 (53:00):
Well, So my very first my first femail address was
my first name, my maiden name, and uh or a
combination of like my first name and my maiden name
with a number, because the initial one that was just
my first name and maiden name were was already taken
and that person was a professor in my team. So
(53:21):
once I was like getting involved in it. So I
randomly would get stuff for her, but mostly she got
stuff for me because people will just type my name
right in two and to Gmail. I'm not really pay
attention to look at the look at the very specific thing.
So what ended up happening though, was like for some event,
contracts and things I would get in DA's I had
to sign, so she would thankfully like we reached out,
(53:44):
we figured out who they were supposed to go to.
Speaker 3 (53:46):
I don't remember.
Speaker 12 (53:46):
I think I think it was because people were telling
me I've sent it to this person I've sent you
to seem like you're not responding.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
I need that.
Speaker 12 (53:53):
By five o'clock today, I'm like, I have nothing. It's
not in my trash, it's not in my spam, it's
not anywhere, Like, I have not gotten this. Who what
is the email? I just you send it to and
I'd be like, oh, well it's blah blah blah. Do
you email right? And I'm like, okay, no, yes, that's
my name, but that goes to another user. So that's
when I just emailed her. Finally does that happened like
(54:14):
three or four times. So I just emailed her and
I was like, hey, kind of weird. We have the
same name. You may have accidentally gotten a few things
that were meant for me.
Speaker 3 (54:22):
Da Da Da da dad.
Speaker 12 (54:23):
Thankfully, there's not a lot of people that have had
this same There are only like eight existing in my
whole life with my first time I made a name together,
so it's not like a lot of other names where
there might be hundreds or thousands.
Speaker 3 (54:37):
Otherwise she would have had this problem a lot more.
Speaker 12 (54:39):
But yeah, So I emailed her, and she's like, okay, cool,
no problem, And I told her, like what I do.
I'm like, you know, I'm a bit coordinator. I managed
M News and whatever, blah bah blah. So if it
has anything related to like a bar or an event
or something like that, it's probably mine. If you wouldn't
mind forwarding it to me or at least letting me know.
She was very nice, no problem, blah blah blah. And
so one of the that came through though, sure enough.
(55:01):
I'm like, okay, y'all are so hyper crazy about security.
I get this NDA for this Chinese car company that
was doing a showing during south By Southwest, and it's
like all of this uh prototype technology. It's like highly
it was super VIP. You know, they were very They
blacked out the windows like only super approved people in,
(55:23):
no cameras, no anything, because it's all this new tech
that they're going to do on these cars that basically
look like spaceships, and so they didn't want anybody in there.
And so they're they're so particularly they are reading me
the Riot Act about all this stuff. They send me
the NDAs that they need me to sign, and then
some other really like pertinent information that is to them
pretty much classimed as well be classified, and they send
(55:45):
it to this damn other email lodgist and I'm like, well,
a'll ain't that big on your security. You didn't even
double check who you're sending it to. And then the
same thing happened with the A my justin Timberlake in DNA,
DNA and NDA and then my stoop dog one, and
I'm like, you people are so crazy about your security,
and then you don't even send it. Usually it's a
(56:05):
production company, by the way, it's not usually the artist
that sends it. So you know, I'm so crazy about
this stuff, and you send it to the wrong damn
email address. But thankfully she is someone that does not
give two shits. She is an MIT professor. She has
no interest in any of this stuff. I've looked her
up on other things. She is the nerd of the nerds,
and she like her favorite music is classical music. Like,
(56:27):
she does not care about these pop stars or any
of the information pertaining to your car company or whatever.
Speaker 3 (56:32):
So it's probably like the best case scenario. But that's
that's uh, That's as close as I've.
Speaker 12 (56:38):
Gotten into kind of almost getting in trouble for people sending,
you know, sensitive information to the wrong email thinking they
were sending it to me.
Speaker 8 (56:48):
Did you see that?
Speaker 1 (56:49):
Greg Abbott responded to somebody putting an aimagump of him
in a pressive professor xuit. They see me, Roland, I'm
dying over here. Yeah.
Speaker 12 (56:59):
Well, no, he's handled this perfectly. He really has one.
Speaker 1 (57:03):
More happy stories. We get ready to wrap things up. Apparently,
just a few hours ago, the United States of America
has suspend the Bell donations to the World Trade Organization.
Oh no, happy story womp wom kind of makes you
realize why they're trying sword with this signal crap, because
(57:24):
it's all they have. He's like, he's dismantling all of
our slush funds.
Speaker 8 (57:28):
We don't know what to do.
Speaker 12 (57:31):
They couldn't be bothered to even keep it a major
story when you know, Biden dropped out and when that
debate was so horrific, but somehow managed to keep this
and once everything's already already been published about it, and
even though it's not great, it's definitely not as dire
and crazy as I don't know, having a president with
(57:52):
dementia that you've all been hiding for years and covering
for that seems a little bit like a thing to
me that I would consider a pretty major security concern,
and even one of national security even but couldn't be
bothered to cover that very much, or to not spend
and lie and deny and you know, all the things
(58:14):
that they did for the Biden administration. It's just still
blows my mind.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
It's kind of not saying it. I mean, all of
it's just kind of insane.
Speaker 8 (58:28):
Yeah, I'm sure.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
I'm sure it'll keep you up at night. Rex, I'm
sure it will. He's like, what, no more of my
money going to wt O. I won't be able to sleep. Yeah,
up to these things, you'll sleep like a baby. We
all know it, all right, well, believe it or not. Man,
we have come to the end of our time together already.
Speaker 3 (58:50):
I see that.
Speaker 8 (58:51):
In an hour.
Speaker 1 (58:52):
I don't know where the hour went, but it's been
an hour.
Speaker 3 (58:56):
I don't know. We blew right through it and we're ending.
Speaker 8 (59:00):
Well, damn it.
Speaker 1 (59:01):
We were about to end on the perfect number, and
then three more people found us. We were at four twenty.
I was happy about that.
Speaker 3 (59:07):
Nice.
Speaker 1 (59:10):
Where can folks find you? Yeah, it's weird because it's like.
Speaker 12 (59:13):
It's on Easter. It's actually on Easter. Yeah.
Speaker 15 (59:18):
We can find me mostly yeah, mostly over you know,
staying here on Twitter at Jay Homestead and on other platforms.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
I am.
Speaker 12 (59:29):
Also you can find me under Jay Homesteader Jay Homestead
and tomorrow is of course Misfits Politics. Miss Mischief over
on Misfits Politics. So come have some fun. We've had
a few new people in the last few weeks. Are
like they've just never really done it, and now they
now they do when they're enjoying it.
Speaker 3 (59:46):
So yeah, we love it.
Speaker 1 (59:49):
Yeah, I know that was that was kind of fun.
The one time that you guys were gone and we
kind of took it over. That was kind of fun.
Speaker 8 (59:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (59:55):
Yeah, we'll have to do it again sometime.
Speaker 8 (59:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (59:58):
There was one time that neither of you were available,
and Andrew was like, so you're going to take it
over again. I'm like, she didn't ask this time, and
I don't want to step on any toes.
Speaker 12 (01:00:06):
Oh my gosh, you can always. I don't even care
Rex and they were like, okay, great. Every now and
then our wires get crossed and we just can't quite
make it work. I have more obligations on Fridays during
the spring because of baseball.
Speaker 3 (01:00:19):
So yeah, think of speaking.
Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
Of which, Happy Happy opening Day everybody.
Speaker 12 (01:00:24):
Yes, I tweeted about my uh or experience with MLB
with my brother used to sing the anthem Rangers games.
My kid got to go on the field a lot,
and then he was the junior ranger and he was
on all of the promo stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
I remember that because you posted that a long time ago, like,
oh my god.
Speaker 12 (01:00:41):
Lo this.
Speaker 3 (01:00:42):
Yeah. Yeah, they used them on all the promotional shit
and it was hilarious. We didn't even know. I mean,
of course you you you when you are.
Speaker 12 (01:00:49):
Chosen as junior ranger of the game, you're going to
photograph you, You're going to be on TV most likely
or whatever. So you do sign away like them being
able to use your likeness so that means I get
to put you on a poster. They wanted on a
banner in the dang stadium, and they sure did.
Speaker 8 (01:01:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
I mean it means now son of son of Son
of Krypton is famous.
Speaker 3 (01:01:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
Anyway, all right, folks, we're gonna get out of here.
There will there will there will be a brief shutdown.
There's no Bez's berserk Bobcats alone. He's been taking some
time off to get some technical issues out of the way,
but since I took last night off because I had
a terrible migraine, we do still have some more content.
But to make my life easy because I've been been
making it easier for you guys, but harder on me
(01:01:34):
because I've just been leaving the streams constant and letting
everything run, and then I have to go back in
and separate everything out and figure out which ones I'm
publishing and which ones we don't have the rights to publish.
So instead of doing that, especially on nights like this one,
I'm just gonna do a brief shutdown. Then we're going
to come back. We're going to do Behind the ni
Lines Radio which aired last night. Then we're actually going
to finish the night off over at the s HR
(01:01:55):
crew still doing Sewn's episode from last night since I.
Speaker 8 (01:01:58):
Didn't run them in.
Speaker 1 (01:02:00):
I fell asleep at like nine o'clock, which I never do,
and didn't didn't wake up until like six in the morning,
and slept so hard I woke up and thought it
was already Friday.
Speaker 8 (01:02:09):
Because how long I had slept. It was bad.
Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Ya yay for migrains And about to turn fifty two
and everything going nuts. I used to be what everybody
jokingly called a functional insomniac because I could go most
of the time with sleeping maybe two three hours a
day and then usually maybe you know, getting maybe five
or six on the day off. And then normally I
(01:02:34):
would have like a day every three months or so
or my body would be like, okay, that's enough and
you just have to rest, and then I would be
out for like eight, nine, ten hours. Now that's happening
like twice a month now because I'm old, and it's
annoying because in between the bus driving schedule and the
extra sleep my body suddenly requires, I can't get the
(01:02:55):
four million things a week done that I need to do.
Speaker 8 (01:02:57):
It's annoying.
Speaker 3 (01:03:00):
I hear you.
Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
On that note, folks, We are gonna go. We'll be
back next week. I think Gins told me that she's
gonna be available for most of the time up until
Easter because they're traveling and I don't around that week,
so I'm not really that worried about that because it's
holiday anyway. So we plan on being back with you
guys for a little bit, and then I'll be back
in a minute. Pushing buttons for everybody else and back
(01:03:24):
tomorrow doing the Rick Robinson Show for the Friday edition
tomorrow night, he said, she said with a lovely aguarecan,
followed by what should be a going mental with John Katz.
He is planning on being back tomorrow night. I think
he was on his annual social media hiatus, he says, annual,
but it happens like every ninety days. But I think
(01:03:47):
he's supposed to get back by now. Sorry, I'm camping
up here, but hang out for just a minute and
I will tweet everything out once the new feed goes live.
Speaker 8 (01:03:57):
Bye, everybody,