All Episodes

November 19, 2025 60 mins
Are Boomers Hoarding Wealth? And Why the Epstein Bill Is a Scam | Karel Cast 25-151
Baby Boomers are holding onto their money—and most plan to spend it all before they die. So are Boomers being selfish and blocking the next generation from building generational wealth? Or is it their right to enjoy the money they worked for without owing a financial legacy to their kids? Today we dig into the debate: responsibility, entitlement, and why Americans are so obsessed with inheritance.
Plus, the so-called “Epstein bill” is nothing but political theater. Speaker Mike Johnson is already pushing Senate amendments to block the release of names—framing it as “protecting new victims” from “unproven allegations.” Translation: we will never see the full list. It’s a distraction, a grift, and another example of Washington pretending to act while protecting powerful men.
And in a surprise twist, Bill Maher and I officially have something in common now… and you may be shocked to hear what it is.
The Karel Cast is made possible by your support at patreon.com/reallykarel.
Watch, like, and subscribe at youtube.com/reallykarel.
Streaming on Apple Music, iHeart, Spotify, Spreaker, TikTok, and Instagram — live Monday–Thursday at 10:30am PST.
#KarelCast, #BabyBoomers, #GenerationalWealth, #EpsteinFiles, #PoliticalScam, #MikeJohnson, #USPolitics, #NewsAnalysis, #ProgressiveMedia, #WealthDebate, #EconomyTalk, #FinancialInequality, #BillMaher, #VegasLife, #LGBTQVoices, #BreakingNews, #MediaCommentary, #MAGA, #TalkShow, #AmericanPolitics
https://youtube.com/live/u0HXNYSlC1M


Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-karel-cast--1368295/support.

The Karel Cast is supported by your donations at patreon.com/reallykarel and streams live Monday–Thursday at 10:30am PST. Available on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Apple Music, Spotify, iHeart Media, Spreaker, and all major platforms.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Show time is here. No time to fear.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Corrella is so near because show time is here.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Correct is the one that you need to know now
it's show time.

Speaker 4 (00:30):
You are never in a billion years gonna see the
Epstein file. Then I'm gonna tell you why that plus
our boomers just the greediest generation.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
How we gotta talk? Let's top.

Speaker 6 (00:45):
Uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.

Speaker 7 (00:50):
It's the Corrall Cast. Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 4 (00:59):
And the crowd Cast. I am carell Happy Wednesday, November nineteenth, Smile,
Booby's up here we go. Let's forge into the world,
shall we miss?

Speaker 5 (01:08):
Emberwaard? Where'd you go? Where are you going? Little girl?

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Don't you want to listen to the show today? You
don't even know what the topics are before you're just
rushing out the room. Jesus Christ. Sometimes dogs are quite
the discerning audience. Do you know that Ember has listened
to every show I've ever done? Because she's always with me,
uh more than a lot of you. She's heard every show.
All Right, I'm gonna tell you. I'm gonna tell you
why You're never gonna see him never. You're never gonna

(01:36):
see the Epstein files.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Never.

Speaker 4 (01:38):
Oh, I know about all the votes four hundred and
twenty seven to one, and then Congress fast tracked it
right on through. And why do you think MAGA and
Donald J. Trump allowed that to happen? Why because he's
in it and he's gonna be indicted for things inside of.

Speaker 5 (01:55):
It, New new, new new.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
Because they know, beyond the shadow of any doubt, that
you are never going to see the files.

Speaker 5 (02:07):
Now, let me get some.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
Cocoa power here, mm mm hmmm, me and my waterly
neck turkey neck. Well, it's Thanksgiving time, So how is
this gonna happen? I'm gonna tell you, and I.

Speaker 5 (02:24):
Am chairing you.

Speaker 4 (02:26):
Those files are never They're never gonna be seen.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
There's no way that I'm not a queen.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
No no, no, no wait, no, no, no no way.

Speaker 5 (02:42):
He'll ever let you read them. You're not going to
read them.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
He wants to stay free. I'm sa I'm safe, and
that you and you and you we'll never see them.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
You'll never see them.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
I would say, Randy Rainbow, you can have that, but bit,
you can't sing that way. And you know it all right,
So why why Correll.

Speaker 5 (03:18):
Why tell me? Why can you tell me? Why?

Speaker 4 (03:21):
Why are we never gonna see the Epstein files? Well,
it's can you take a guess? James Schnabel did, and
they're in the chat room. Hi, James Schnabel in Pennsylvania. Hi,
standy at YouTube dot com, forward slash really Carrel, Hi, everybody?
Can any of you tell me why you are never
ever gonna see those files?

Speaker 5 (03:41):
Anybody? Because I can tell you.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
I can tell you, and I'm gonna as soon as
I stop the music playing out in the living room
because I gotta tell you it's annoying. Okay, there we go.
Thank God for automation. Well, here's the deal, and the
deal is not just a group with La and Babyface.
The deal is the deal. And let me tell you

(04:05):
what the deal is. Although it really was a group
with La and Babyface. The deal is that they all
voted for this, you know, big bill, the Epstein Transparency Act.

Speaker 5 (04:22):
So you can see right through him. I need some
Coco clear my throat.

Speaker 4 (04:28):
Well, here's the deal in the bill that went through
the House and the Senate and got to Donald Trump's desk,
and he'll make a huge deal about signing it. It
says that they have to release the Epstein files. The
Department of Justice, Pam Bondi released them.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
Accept a caveat.

Speaker 4 (04:49):
Loophole, accept the files or documents that are related to
any ongoing investigations, because when there is an ongoing investigation,
law enforcement cannot release any files. What did Donald Trump

(05:09):
do on Friday? Anybody raise your hand? What did Donald
Trump do? He ordered Pambondi to start an investigation into
the high ranking Democrats that are in the Epstein files.
So what does that mean, Corel? Well, it means that
there is now an ongoing investigation into the Epstein files

(05:35):
and the people that.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
Are in it.

Speaker 4 (05:38):
So all the Republicans get to say we voted for
the release of those files, and every Senator gets to
say we voted for the release of those files. And
Donald Trump gets to say I signed the bill for
the release of those files. And then the Justice Department
is going to say, and we will release them as
soon as we wrap up this ongoing investigation.

Speaker 7 (06:00):
Carrill dot com Daily you're missing out.

Speaker 8 (06:04):
Get the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at
really correll dot com. That's really k A R e
l dot com.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Corrill is
so near.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Because show time is here, So on with the show.
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Corrill is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 4 (06:29):
So first and foremost, you ain't gonna get to see
the files because they're going to say there is an
ongoing investigation into these files. We cannot possibly release files
when there is an ongoing investigation. That would be unethical
and illegal. So Trump and the Congress get all the

(06:50):
benefits of saying release the files. They voted for it,
they signed it, they get all the benefits of it.
And then Pamba, he gets to say, nicks on tricks,
there is an ongoing investigation, and we're not gonna release
them till it's over. And when will that be over?
Twenty twenty eight. You're never gonna see the files. He

(07:15):
never intended for you to see the files. This is
all a grift, it's all performative, it's all a show.
And if you don't think that's the truth, then you
are sadly, sadly mistaken, because you're never gonna see him. No,
you're never gonna get it. No, you're never gonna get him,
not this time, never ever gonna get him those files.

(07:39):
You're just never gonna get them. They left themselves a
loophole because that's what rich, powerful people do. They protect
themselves and each other. And there is no way that
Mike Johnson, Donald J. Trump, Pambondi, or any of the

(08:01):
scallawags that are in this file are going to let
them be released. And so they it's all a show.
Oh look, we all voted to release them. So when
they go out and campaign, no one can hold it
against them that they weren't for the release of the
Epstein files. We said we wanted to release them. But
here's the friggin thing that you also need to understand.

(08:24):
None of this had to happen because the Orange poof
in chief. Guess what, he could instruct the Justice Department
this moment to release the files. He didn't need an
Act of Congress. He could just have called up Pam
I said, hey girl, what's up. Goad release the files.

(08:46):
But they're going to make such a huge deal. See,
we're totally transparent. We have pushed for the release of
the files. It is not our fault. The Justice Department
won't release them because of an ongoing investigation. That's not
our fault. We want them released, just like you. We
feel your pain. We understand that you want them released,

(09:09):
and we understand we made these campaign promises to do
just that. But the Justice Department is looking into an investigation.
And who started the investigation? Who Donald Trump? And when
did he start it four days before the vote to
release the files? And why did he do that to
make sure the files are never released. It's all a grift.

(09:32):
Everything these people do is a scam, is a grift.
These are despicable, horrible people. They are not repeat are
not going to let themselves be shamed in public.

Speaker 5 (09:46):
Oh, they'll throw people like Larry.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
Ellison under the bus and you know, Prince Andrew and
stuff like that, but they ain't throwing Donald under that bus.
They also said they won't release any victims' names or
any pornographic images. Well aren't those evidence? Oh and they
won't release any of the grand jury proceedings because those
are sealed from who Who the fuck pays for the

(10:12):
grand jury?

Speaker 5 (10:13):
We do?

Speaker 4 (10:14):
Who are they prosecuting people on behalf of us, the
people versus but the people who pay for the grand jury,
the people who pay the lawyers that go in and
argue in front of the grand jury. The people can't
see the proceedings of the grand jury in that special

(10:38):
I mean, really, they got this down. They got this
down on here. They ain't new to this, they knew.
Let's see what they're saying in the chatroom at YouTube
dot com. Forward slash really Carrol John Slade says, well,
the people that saw them that Trump fired will talk
and tell what they saw, not if they don't want
to die. Trump killed Epstein, in my opinion, or had

(11:01):
him killed. He didn't go down to the jail and
do it himself, but you know, he probably said to
someone take care of him and taken care of he was.
They did not destroy the files or any of them
because they have copies of the estate. The estate can't
release the grand jury the estate. There's files that the
estate does not have. The victims should talk, yes they should,

(11:25):
but they won't because again death, that's not entirely true.
A judge can order them to release them to state investigators. No,
they cannot. That's a lie. I can read you the
story from the Washington Post that says if there is
an ongoing investigation, it's in the bill. They put it

(11:46):
in the law that if there is an ongoing investigation.
The files pertaining to that investigation will not be released.

Speaker 5 (11:55):
It's in the I read.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
I had chat GPT read the entire bill and then
summarize it for me, so you know, dudes, I've done it.
I've done the research for you, and trust me on
this Kennedy, Christopher, something's rigged. No, no crap, Colonel Angus Kennedy.
The deck is stacked and the dice are loaded.

Speaker 5 (12:16):
Amen. I live in Vegas, baby.

Speaker 4 (12:19):
These casinos don't make billions of dollars by giving you
all these payouts.

Speaker 5 (12:24):
They give you one little nugget, one piece of cheese.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
To keep you coming back, but they ain't gonna give
you the whole damn cheese log.

Speaker 5 (12:34):
Honey.

Speaker 4 (12:35):
Well, you're gonna get some nuggets like Larry Ellison thing,
the Prince Andrew thing, this Michael Wolf stuff. You hit
some nuggets, but you ain't getting the cheese log. That
just ain't happening.

Speaker 5 (12:48):
Children.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Now, some of you may wonder what happened to Correll,
What happened to Carell? Why is he happier? Why is
he more vibrant? Why is this show not a big
flog anymore? Cause I'm sick of being a slog. You know,
I could die tomorrow all this medical crap. Today, I
get my stitches out for the cancer. Tomorrow I go
to a pollmonologist. I'm terrified, but my lungs seem to

(13:11):
be working.

Speaker 5 (13:12):
This is a moment.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
I'm not gagging and choking, So no matter what the
pomonologist says, I ain't dropping off the planet tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (13:21):
So while I'm.

Speaker 4 (13:22):
Here, it was a good time. It was the best time.
We better have a good time. And I just love
watching this crap play out because all these suckers democrats
might as well put big old sucker stickers on their forehead.

Speaker 5 (13:39):
They really think they gonna see these files? I mean really.

Speaker 4 (13:45):
They Alphaba has You know, Cynthia Rivo has a better
chance of actually being able to fly.

Speaker 5 (13:53):
Defy gravity than you or.

Speaker 4 (13:57):
I have of seeing those files. Because the wiz behind
the curtain may not have any real power, but he
does have the ability to manipulate and manipulate he is honey,
oh yes.

Speaker 5 (14:12):
Oh yes, when will it be rigged for you? And I? Oh? Never?

Speaker 4 (14:18):
That question was in the chat room from Kennedy Critton. Never,
we are the pawns, Okay, So think about a chess board. Okay,
I know a lot of you probably don't play. I play,
but not well, but I play. I know the rules.
So imagine a chess board. Okay, you and I we're
the ones out front where the cannon fodder, where the

(14:41):
pawns behind us are the things that we shield, the King,
the Queen, the rook, the Bishop. The game is rigged
for them. Okay, the King, the Queen, the Rook, the Bishop.
It is the night I ain't rigged for the pond.
The pond goes out and dies. That's the game in

(15:06):
the Game of Chess, which is getting terrible reviews on Broadway.
I'm so sorry, Lia Michelle. The play Chess, which has
all these Abba songs in it, so how could it
be bad? And Lea Michelle has an incredible voice, but
getting bad reviews anyway, So you know, come on, did
you really think did you really think that they didn't
have a plan B to keep these files from you?

(15:29):
I mean, did you really think that they were going
to pass this law and then sometime this week or
next that they're just going to hand out stacks of
paper and say.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
Here's the files.

Speaker 4 (15:39):
No, because there's an ongoing investigation into the Epstein doings,
and therefore we can't release these files right now. Now.
We want to. Oh it's in our little hearts. We
so want to give you these files. We do and
if it were up to me, I would release them today.
But my hands are tad. Yeah, just like Trump's were

(16:01):
in the photos in the in the Epstein files. So
that's that's where we're at with it. Children, that's what's
gonna happen. That's where we're at. You you can say
you heard it here first. When it plays out this
way in the media, you'll be that corell He is
a sage, honey. Oh which man, I gotta get some
actually sage. Uh yeah, I know you're gonna be like

(16:23):
he knows he can call it, he can see it.
I got the vision, I got the third eye blind,
you know, really I do, and I can see. I
can predict the Justice Department. Oh, Lord Jesus helped me
predict the future. Lord Jesus, flow through me and show
me your eternal machinations of time and let me know
what the future holds, Lord Jesus, I see it, Lord Jesus.

(16:45):
It's loud, it's clear, it's in a ring of light.
Oh wait, that's my ring light anyway. Uh, yeah, I know.
That's that's where we're at. We're the subject of an
ongoing investigation. Mm hmm, yes, Lord, Yes, Lord. AI says
a judge can determine what files can be released even

(17:08):
if there's an ongoing investigation. I I I, ah, No,
he can't. AI is telling you wrong. I've asked a
lawyer about this this morning. If documents are sealed and
there is an ongoing criminal investigation, they cannot release any
files because the defense in the case can then say

(17:30):
that it was prejudiced, that the prosecution was prejudiced by
the release of the files. So I mean, in theory,
could they release them?

Speaker 5 (17:41):
Sure?

Speaker 4 (17:41):
Are they going to know? Because they'll claim prejudice, judicial prejudice.
They'll take it all away Supreme Court if they have to.
A judge could say yet, no, you've got to release them,
and then they end up in the Supreme and the
Supreme say no, it would prejudice the jury pool. That
would prejudice possible jurors. It would prejudice you know, the
media would get a hold of it. You ain't gonna

(18:02):
see them. All of this was an act, a big performance.
The house always has the advantage. Take it from someone
who lives in Sin City. The house has the advantage.
They're not gonna give the advantage to the people ever.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
Ever, So I.

Speaker 4 (18:25):
Don't know why y'all think it's gonna go that way
this time, because it ain't.

Speaker 5 (18:30):
It ain't. We will never see the damning evidence from
the files.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
Never will. He will never see a day in jail.
He will never pay the price for all of his crimes. Amen, Raymonati,
that is the truth. If that bothers you, go beat
up ahead of let us, you know, go toss a salad,
go do whatever you go, go to the gym, get
your aggressions out, go masturbate whatever it takes for you
to relieve that stress. Because it ain't happening. Donald Trump

(18:59):
will never stand trial for his crimes. He will die first,
just like gearing gearringate a cinid tablet, instead of being
hung for his crimes. Now we know Donald does not
hung in any way, and he will never ever ever
pay for his crimes. Now, if that bothers you, oh well,

(19:21):
I'm sorry. You know it is a fact that we
will have to deal with.

Speaker 5 (19:26):
Let me say.

Speaker 4 (19:26):
There's as a you know, the smartest man in the
universe would never concede one hundred percent of anything. So
I will say this, there is a ninety eight percent
chance that Donald Trump will never pay for his crimes.
Ninety eight percent. There's a slim two percent chance that maybe,
just maybe, the stars will the line, the Democrats will

(19:48):
win the midterms, and then they'll take the presidency in
twenty twenty eight. And the minute that happens, he's on
a plane to Mother Russia. I mean, don't act like
he couldn't live comfortably in Russia. He wants to build.
I mean, come on, don't be naive. Don't don't be naive,
because you're just setting yourself up for heartbreak. We don't

(20:10):
need no more heartbreak, so don't set yourself up for it.
He's never gonna see the inside of a jail cell
unless he takes a tour of Alcatraz, and it's just
gonna keep getting worse for the next couple of years.
That's the way it is. Democrats are Oh did you
hear about Texas? Did you hear a judge said, Texas,

(20:32):
you can't redraw this map right in the middle here
that no, and you certainly can't withdraw this map to
disenfranchise all these voters. No, Now, Texas going to take
it to the Supreme Court, but it might not get
there in time for the twenty twenty six elections. So
the judge said, for twenty twenty six, you're leaving your
map as it is. You want to change it, you

(20:52):
change it later. Now, California they voted on it, so
I don't think the court's going to be able to
overturn what California did. So Donald Trump and the Republicans
might have just lost themselves the House. And that makes
me happy, makes me happy. Happy when we come back, Oh,

(21:16):
we've got a lot.

Speaker 5 (21:16):
Of talk about a lot.

Speaker 4 (21:19):
But is your sleep schedule depriving you of life? I
read a great article about it. Talk about it when
we come back. Don't go anywhere be disappointed?

Speaker 3 (21:44):
No show?

Speaker 4 (22:00):
Oh yes, James Snable in the chatroom at YouTube dot
com forward slash Really Carrell extending the allegation indefinitely helps
with fundraising for the next election cycle. Solving the crime
makes polls people focus on our issues. Can't have that exactly.
The Democrats will used the non release of the files

(22:20):
to fundraise. Republicans will use the fact that they voted
for the release of the files to fundraise and just
lesser people will be involved and indicted. Nobody big Alan
Dershowitz saying worried Rudy Giuliani, the purv that he is,
is not worried, you know.

Speaker 5 (22:40):
So let me.

Speaker 4 (22:40):
I read this great article in The New York because
this morning, because I'm literate, and I read and it
was all about how this woman's schedule of early to
betterly to rise is actually depriving her of life with
her family, and she doesn't know what she can do
about it because it is her rhythm. Now, I gotta
tell you, I run into this all the time. I

(23:02):
go to bed at not between nine thirty and ten o'clock.
By nine point fifteen, I'm already watching Murdered Deaf TV
and that puts me to sleep. Believe it or not,
you can put on any documentary TV show, you know, murder,
the murder. I'm currently watching the murder tapes. I just
watched New Orleans Homicide, which is the Dick Wolf production.
These are all real life murder shows where they convict

(23:25):
killers and all that I've seen snapped and I've seen, Oh,
I've seen so many I can't even count and the
minute the person of the forensic files, the voice on
the forensic files, I'm out. I mean it's better than lithium.
Just oh, just out.

Speaker 5 (23:41):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
And so I take my edibles at six thirty and
six forty five, and I'm in bed by nine thirty,
nine forty five. But that's because I'm up no matter
what at four thirty two P. I mean that's it
at four thirty IP, and yes, I can go back
to sleep till five thirty or six.

Speaker 5 (23:58):
I can.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
But I have a show at ten. So guess what
I need to do. I need to eat my make
and eat my breakfast. Then I need to do yoga
or waits. Then and I need to text everybody let
them know I'm alive, check the headlines, and then get
to the park and do an hour and a half
walk with Ember all before ten o'clock. I need four
hours to do that. So I get up at five

(24:24):
and then I'm back home at nine hopefully some today
nine forty five, Oh honey, I'm fresh out the shower.
And then I do the show after lunch and between
three and five. Oh, I'm so tired.

Speaker 5 (24:37):
I just don't know.

Speaker 4 (24:38):
But until I've been going since five am, and by
nine thirty I'm done. I have stayed out till ten
ten thirty before, but I ain't seen midnight at a
long time. And yes, if I want a boyfriend, if
I want to date, you know they're out at night.

(25:00):
I need to find a place in the afternoon, a
happy hour sort of thing where gay men go, because
I ain't making it till ten eleven o'clock. So what
is y'all sleep schedule? I'd like to hear from you
down in the comments. What time do you go to bed?

Speaker 5 (25:15):
What time?

Speaker 4 (25:17):
Are you an early riser or are you an idaho?
I know a lot of night owls. I used to
be a night owl in my twenties and thirties. Honey,
I wasn't in bed before two am. Eva like Eva,
and I often saw three or four am. But that's
because I did afternoon drive. I was on at three
in the afternoon so I could sleep, and I didn't

(25:39):
have Ember and didn't have the schedule with the dogs
that I have. I had dogs, but I didn't have that,
you know, the schedule that I'm on. Where you could
change your schedule carell my bladder could so at four
thirty I wake up. Yes, I could go back to
sleep till eight, nine, ten o'clock, but with the show
at ten and a dog that needs walking, an X

(26:00):
size that needs doing. Because I prioritize exercise, I prioritize
good food.

Speaker 5 (26:06):
I gotta have time to cook.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
Now, if I ever do shows like from seven to
you know, I'm thinking of doing shows at three in
the afternoon. Not the podcast, but if I go do
a live show, which, by the way, Bill Maher has
retired from live shows because he's afraid he'd be shot.
He said that yesterday he's not gonna do any stand
up because he's afraid he's gonna be shot. I feel
the same way. I am very hesitant right now to

(26:33):
go do live shows. I am the country is so polarized,
and these people are so crazy, and like the rasroom,
they don't have a metal detector. I don't know to
wear a flak jacket on stage. Plus, if they shoot
your head and do a lot of good, flak jacket
does so. Bill Maher says, Nope, no more touring. He's

(26:53):
afraid he'll be shot. So am I I really am.
It's a tough call to make. Do I go out
and tour or not because it's it's scary. But yeah,
how many of you What time do y'all go to bed?
What time do y' all go to bed? I go
to bed at eleven on work nights, eleven thirty mid
week or on weekends. So good for you, Sandy, I

(27:13):
haven't seen eleven thirty in a a long time. Yes,
I back in the day, I would go to bed
at like three or four am and wake up in
time for all my children at twelve noon.

Speaker 5 (27:28):
That was my schedule.

Speaker 4 (27:30):
Get to bed around three or four in the morning
and wake up for all my children and then One
Life to Live. And I never watched General Hospital, so
from twelve to two, get up, eat and stuff while
watching General hospit or while watching All my Children. Back
when there was Tina and you know, Susan Luchi was
on there, and Tina was on One Life to Live

(27:50):
and it was Greg and Jenny and oh yes, and
what's his name Adam Adam and his brother Adam Chandler
and his brother that he played that part too. What
was his brother's name? It was Adam Chandler and he
played his brother what was his name?

Speaker 5 (28:07):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (28:07):
I still love them. His brother was a little simple.
So yeah, no, I that was my schedule before sleep
at three in the morning and wake up for all
my children.

Speaker 5 (28:17):
Those days are gone.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
Unless if I got a gig at night where I
was working from eight to eleven, you know, doing a show,
then Edber and I would change our schedule. This show
wouldn't be able to happen at ten in the morning,
and I could switch this show to three in the afternoon,
and you know I could. But I like b I
like having more done by six am than most people.

(28:41):
By seven in the morning, I've had a good breakfast,
I have already exercised for thirty minutes and already created
a memoji and sent it off to all my friends
to let them know I'm alive and red headlines and
followed up on emails all by seven am. By nine am,
I've already walked four miles and done everything out. By noon,

(29:02):
I've done all that, a show and had lunch, then
come around two o'clock, cup of tea at three to
keep me going, four to thirty, dinner with Ember, six
point thirty, walk, seven o'clock, play ball, seven point thirty,
wind down, watch TV until nine thirty, and Ben that's

(29:24):
my life. Ain't a bad life, but it's not.

Speaker 5 (29:26):
The way to meet the people, is it. Oh, Lord,
have mercy. But if I'm performing or rehearsings, I will
change my schedule. So Universe, I'll open to you. I
bring them on, bring me a show, rain all right,
let me come back. Greedy old baby.

Speaker 9 (29:44):
Boomer's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.

Speaker 7 (29:50):
Listen daily to the.

Speaker 9 (29:51):
Corell cast on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
Corilla is so near because show time is here.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
Corilla is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 8 (30:16):
Now.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
It's show side.

Speaker 5 (30:30):
When we come back.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
They are the richest generation to ever exis, but both
are keeping their wealth.

Speaker 5 (30:38):
Do they owe it to their kids? Or should they
just have a good time, greedy baby boomers?

Speaker 6 (30:43):
When we return, uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged, it's the Coral cast.

Speaker 7 (30:52):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 4 (31:00):
I can't stand the Rahanne against my window. I was
playing right before I went on, Tina Turner off a
rainy day player. This has rained for three days in Vegas.
I ain't never done that before. Well it has. But
you know what I'm saying, we got more rain in
the last three days than we have in the last
three hundred. I ain't making that up. I read it
in the paper this morning. It rained and rained, and

(31:21):
it's still drizzling today. It's still gray outside right now.
It rained all afternoon yesterday, it rained all day of
the day before. Child, the weekend, Saturday, Sunday, rain, rain, rain,
Everything's wet in Vegas. Ain't nothing ever wet. I live
in a desert. Understand desert d S E r T
two s is it's dessert. One s desert. I live

(31:41):
in a desert, and child, it's wet. Ember's like, what's
all this water?

Speaker 8 (31:48):
Like?

Speaker 4 (31:48):
Well, climate change, the climate has changed, all right, we
got so much talk about here. I was just reading
some of the headlines. Let's call me thing child that
Judge is gonna throw out, gonna throw it out like
bad produce, just gonna switch. You should be composting. Hello, Hello,
get the HEMI eight g E M. It is the

(32:11):
best composter I've ever had. I did a stegment on it.
You can go find it on my YouTube, and oh
my god, it's as of a trash can you throw
all your organic waste in there and it turns it
into compost And oh it's so easy and wonderful and
I love it. G e me HEMI, Oh my god,

(32:31):
it's incredible. It changed my life. I barely take out
the trash. I take out the trash like once a
week now because there's just nothing organic in it. Oh, yes,
you should be composting. But yeah, the judge is about
to throw out this, call me nonsense, because the judge
is agreeing that Donald Trump is just doing this to
try to fuck with you. So they're like, and that's

(32:51):
a very hard high bar to prove. Malicious prosecution is
a very high barre to prove. But the judge is
inclined to think that that's exactly what this is. So
Judge's grilling government over apparent lapses in the Komi indictment.
As we speak, grilling, grilling the government like brought worst
on a fourth of July. Honey, I'm telling you right now,

(33:13):
Vegan brought worst of course.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
Uh oh.

Speaker 4 (33:16):
And I read and before we get to the greedy generation,
I read this great. You know I'm always up on
the medical stuff. I am my Just for those of
you keeping track. My EPO levels came back normal. You're like,
what is an EPO level? Corell Well, I'll tell you
I am slightly polypsyphomic always, and I mean slightly. Now

(33:36):
what that means is my red blood cells, hemoglobin, and hemocrit,
the triad are always slightly elevated. Right now, my red
blood cell was five point ninety five. Five point eight
is high, so as you can see, I'm not like
at ten, but I'm at five point ninety five. Hemoglobin
the high is seventeen point three seven seventeen point one,

(33:58):
I'm seventeen point three. Heemocrit, the high is fifty point five,
I'm fifty point nine. That sometimes goes up to where
it's six point one for the red blood cells or whatever,
but I'm always well. Fifty percent of my blood draws
i'm polypyphemic. On fifty percent, I'm just right below, and
on fifty percent I'm a.

Speaker 5 (34:19):
Little bit higher.

Speaker 4 (34:20):
They attribute that to my oxygen falling down to ninety
ninety one ninety two when I sleep, which is why
I'm going to a pulmonologist to see if my apnea
is controlled or if perhaps I need a c PAP
or oxygen at night or something. However, it's also dropping
during the day, so that's another reason for that. So

(34:40):
one of the things they test is called your epo erythropoetin.
That's how you pronounce it. Your kidneys make an enzyme
to tell your bone marrow to make more red blood cells.
That's how you make red blood cells. Your kidneys make
an enzyme that tells your bone marrow to make red
blood cells. So if your kidney's sense there's not enough

(35:03):
oxygen in your blood, like if you're satting at ninety
or ninety one or ninety two, then your kidneys will
tell your bone marrow to up the red blood cells. Now,
if the bone marrow is upping the red blood cells,
without that chemical, you could have cancer. So if your
EPO is low but your red blood cells are high,

(35:27):
they're going to look for cancer. If your EPO is
high and your red blood cells are high, they're going
to look for polycythemia vira, another cancer. But I don't
have the Jack two mutation and so my EPO is
normal and my doctor was thrilled about that. So now

(35:47):
my slight polycythemia up for grabs.

Speaker 5 (35:50):
About what it is. There did you learn something.

Speaker 4 (35:53):
Your kidneys make an enzyme to tell your bone marrow
to make red blood cells.

Speaker 5 (35:56):
Did y'all know that? Did you learn something new today?

Speaker 7 (36:00):
Is it a really correll dot com Daily? You're missing out?

Speaker 8 (36:04):
Get the podcast videos in the blug including recipes at
really correll dot com. That's really KA R e l
dot com.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.

Speaker 2 (36:17):
Correll is so near because show time is here.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Corrella is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 4 (36:29):
I've been crying a lot the last couple of days
because Ember's been so happy at the park. She's been
running to see her friends here at home. She's been
playing and running. And she's ten, she just turned ten.
And I've also been crying because she's gonna be such
a loss. But that's coming. It's not yet. But she
is ten, but she could she could do thirteen, fifteen,

(36:51):
even seventeen. So keep your fingers crossed. Someone said, you're sixty,
slowed down. I'll slow down when I'm dead. You know
that that's when I'll slow down.

Speaker 5 (37:01):
You know.

Speaker 4 (37:01):
One day someone asked me one day to do a
show about interpreting lab results, because I'm very good at it,
and I don't know if that'd be of interest to
you guys, but I'm very very good at it, you know,
Like I was concerned about my white blood cells being
four point three and my doctor's all, why that's above normal.
Normal is three point eight to eight point zero.

Speaker 5 (37:21):
Your four.

Speaker 4 (37:21):
I said, yeah, but I'm low end. She goes, You've
been down there before, and it's cyclical. It depends on
the time of the day, the time of the year,
what you've been doing, what you've been eating, if you
have any inflammation, she goes, So long as it's not
like my friend at the park, Genie, who's had cancer.
She goes, after my chemo, my red blood cell count
or my white blood cell count was point zero four.
So she goes, I'll take your four point three. But

(37:44):
I do know how to interpret labs, and I'm very
very good at it, and you should know too, just
to know for when you get your lab back, Like
what does it mean? What are isana phills? What are
besa fills? Most people don't know the component of their
body and how their body works. What are they looking
for into your analysis?

Speaker 5 (38:05):
They're looking for.

Speaker 4 (38:05):
Protein, blood cells, creatine and Billy Ruben because it's a
test of your kidneys and your liver. What is that
number EGFR? What does that mean? That means estimated granular
filtration rate. It tells them how your kidneys are. If
you're over sixty, it's probably ninety or ninety five. Mine's
ninety eight. I am told by my doctor my kidney

(38:27):
function is extraordinary for a sixty three year old. I
drink a gallon of water a day. So should you?

Speaker 8 (38:34):
So?

Speaker 4 (38:34):
Knowing your labs, you know, knowing your blood work is
something that you should keep track of, not your doctor,
but you because you need to know over time, how
are things going. You know what's up, what's down? What
does it mean if it's up or down? Or does
it mean anything? Because half the time you can get
an abnormal lab result and it doesn't really mean anything.

(38:55):
It just means at that moment that chemical was doing that.
They look for patterns unless it's something dire and then
you know, But for the most part, they look for patterns.

Speaker 5 (39:05):
If you have an elevated.

Speaker 4 (39:06):
Liver enzyme one time, they're not gonna, you know, sign
you up for a transplant. But if you have elevated
liver enzymes, you know, two times or three times, then
they're gonna see if you've got fatty liver disease or whatever.
So anyway, you know, health is important. And baby boomers,
oh ray, they're dogg You lived to sixteen point five.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
Good for you. So the baby boomers.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
Now, I am technically a baby boomer, but I identify
as gen X. I act young, I adopt new technology,
I listen to all the latest music. I could tell
you all the new songs on Taylor Swift's album. Uh
you know all of that. So I stay pretty young.
But technically, since I was born in nineteen sixty two,

(39:48):
I am a baby boomer. Even though I consider myself
gen X, my niece and nephew consider me gen X.
Almost everyone that knows me can considers me gen X.
Technically I'm a boo. So boomers have a mass more
wealth than any generation in the history of generations in America.

(40:09):
Baby boomers hold about sixty five trillion dollars in wealth.
We could pay off the national debt and still have
about thirty million dollars left or thirty trillion dollars left.
So boomers have a lot of money. Now, excuse me,
not me, but maybe you do. But even me, they
count my equity in this house, you know, hundred fifty

(40:31):
thousand dollars as wealth.

Speaker 3 (40:34):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (40:34):
And there's several articles now that they're not leaving it
to their children. They're spending it. They're taking vacations, they're retiring, well,
they're not retiring in poverty. They're you know, they're living
it up. They are enjoying the fruits of their labors
or their investments or however they've made their money. So

(40:59):
there's this movement from gen Y and gen Z to
get the boomers to leave them the money so they
will have generational wealth. And here's the thing. According to
all predictive models, gen Z and gen Y are not
going to have the money making opportunities on mass that

(41:23):
baby boomers had. Meaning some of gen X and some
of gen Y are doing really well. They're doing online
and they're making ten twenty grand a month. And that's
what influencers make online. By the way, there are influencers
online who just sit there all day and give beauty
tips or fitness tips or travel tips and they're making
millions a year. And I'm not making that up. But

(41:44):
that's not a majority so their wealth is divided. They
have a lot of wealth gen Y and gen Z
at the top, but then below they have a lot less.
So it's not equal. It's not there's not like a

(42:04):
bar curve. It's like either you're rich or you ain't
got shit. Either you're a you know, a gen wire,
a gen Z that can travel the world and do
these sweets. I told you, I follow this guy on Instagram,
baby Stacks I think is his name. He's so handsome.
I can't take how cute he is. I really can't
he is. I can't he he's smoldering hot. That that's

(42:30):
how hot he is. And he's only twenty and he's
got this incredibly deep voice. But god, if he turned
twenty one and said he wanted to go out with me,
I'm that fast. He's making a ton of money. He
flew to Rome just to buy new clothes. He will
have wished he saved that one day. But anyway, so
they're saying that it's our obligation, it is the obligation

(42:55):
of baby boomers to redistribute that wealth to j Y
and gen Z. They're also saying that we need to
give up our homes. Gen X I'm sorry gen Y
and gen z are saying that gen xers and baby
boomers need to move out of their large homes because

(43:15):
they're empty nesters, you know, give up their properties and
move into smaller accommodations so they can then buy these
larger homes and make them affordable. For a while, I
used to think that way for a while. I used

(43:35):
to say it is a parent's responsibility to set their
child up. And in some ways I still feel that.
If you're a millionaire, like Bill Gates said, he's not
giving much money to his kids, No, that's wrong. If
you're a multimillionaire, you should set your kids up. Now,
you don't have to set them up as multimillionaires, but

(43:56):
you should make sure they can afford a house, that
they and they have a savings, and that they don't
have to pay for college, you know, going to debt
for college. You should cover all that stuff. And if
you're that rich, your kids should get a stipend. They
really should. If you're a baby boomer and you've got
five ten million dollars and you've got kids, they should
get some of that.

Speaker 5 (44:16):
They should, but all of it.

Speaker 4 (44:20):
No, Now that i'm older, I tend to think you
made it, you invested. Life is expensive, go live. So
I want y'all to comment down below, okay, on a
couple things. First of all, when do you go to bed?
That's the first thing coming on. Another thing, you comment

(44:40):
down below, do you think we'll ever see the Epstein files?

Speaker 5 (44:42):
Because no is the answer for me.

Speaker 4 (44:45):
But number three, do you feel that the richest generation
there is baby boomers should leave their wealth to their children?

Speaker 5 (44:57):
Should they live.

Speaker 4 (44:58):
Frugally or you know, I don't know, say frugally, but
should they not overspend? Because you got boomers out there
living on cruise ships, honey, God bless them. It's one
hundred and twenty thousand a year to live on a
cruise ship. If I had one hundred and twenty k year,
I'd live on a cruise ship.

Speaker 5 (45:16):
Absolutely. Why not?

Speaker 4 (45:19):
Never have to cook? Never, I mean never have to clean?
Oh God, yes, I'd do it. But what about a hotel.
I'd actually live in a hotel if I had the money,
I'd live in a two bedroom suite in a hotel. Absolutely.
I always wanted to. I always thought I would. In
La Chateau Marmont is a place that stars do that
they live there. That's where they live. Many celebrities have

(45:41):
lived in the bungalows at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. Live there,
that's their address. I would do that if I could
live at a hotel, absolute fusolutely.

Speaker 5 (45:49):
I'd love that.

Speaker 4 (45:50):
There's always restaurants at the bar and the great places
to you know, visit your guests. And oh no, I'd
love living at a hotel, a nice hotel. I used
to watch that show Hotel Set and Sure Francisco. It
was called the Saint Regis. I think the hotel was.
And I love that Josh Brolin, a James Brolin was
on it. He was so sixy and what's her name?
What is her name? I see her long black hair.

(46:12):
And then there was an older woman who was a
big movie star, like Olivia de Halind or something. She
was in it too. So I was growing up, I
thought that would be me. Well it wasn't. But oh well,
so do you think that they should now never? Just
Jay in the Chatroom says that transfer of wealth is
an American tradition.

Speaker 5 (46:32):
It is.

Speaker 4 (46:34):
I will fully agree with him. Your parents left you
whatever they had. Now, if you're my age, your parents
didn't have shit because they came out of the depression.
So they may have left you a life insurance policy.
But my mom left me in debt. That's what she
left me. But I love her and I love my dad.
But they didn't leave me anything, no house, no cars,

(46:56):
no life insurance policies, nothing. I went in debt for
the funeral. Do you owe it to your children to
transfer your wealth or should you just spend as you
want and whatever's left they get? Should you actively plan
to leave your kid's money or should you just live

(47:17):
your life and then if there's money left they get that.
I'd love to hear your comments down below on the video.

Speaker 5 (47:25):
Please.

Speaker 4 (47:25):
We got to get the comments up on the video
because that's how the algorithm finds us. Do you know
I found out that on Apple podcast yesterday, I'm number
one in certain keywords certain keywords. If you type into
search Apple podcast, I come up number one. Isn't that something?
But anyway, do hi everybody on Apple? Do you believe

(47:46):
it is the responsibility of people like Barbara streisand who's
eighty two, eighty three eighty three to leave her wealth
to her son Jason, who's got a great album out
Jason Gould her son can sing, he's got a great voice.
Must be rouffbying her son and have a great voice.
But do you think that she owes it to him?

(48:09):
I mean, she couldn't spend all her money. She's worth
like four hundred million dollars, but she could leave it
all to charity or something. Do you think it is
incumbent upon the richest generation to transfer that wealth? And
should baby boomers be moving out of their homes? In
other words, there's many a baby boomer living in a
three bedroom, four bedroom, five bedroom house on property and everything.

(48:32):
They don't use it anymore, but it's been their home forever,
so they just stay there. Do you think they should
sell those properties, make them available or give them to
their kids and they move into smaller properties. Do you
think that is right? Miss d go girl? Do you
think that is the responsibility of baby boomers? I would

(48:55):
love to hear your thoughts down below. They say, oh it, no,
you can it's nice. I agree.

Speaker 5 (49:02):
I agree.

Speaker 4 (49:04):
Ray Vernadi says, we are still supporting our twenty five
year old kids. They can't find jobs to support themselves.
That is a real problem. Yes, that is a real
problem kids nowadays. Look their jobs are drying up faster
than a ninety year old woman's vagiant. No, I did
not say that anyway, Oh why not even bopted to

(49:27):
buy head all these Epstein file talks. You know, the
outlook is bleak for young people when it comes to jobs.
They're drying up. And in ten years robuts will be here.
There's already robot bartenders, you know, there won't. I gotta

(49:51):
tell you, if you're a woman with a good body,
become a stripper. So one of the murder death kill
shows I watched last night was called love Sex Murder.
That's what it's called. I love the these titles Love
Sex Murder. So I watched it, and it's about murders
that occur around strip clubs, and every one of the
strippers everyone has said how they literally would have garbage

(50:13):
bags filled with cash. Honey, if I had boobs and
announce that someone on to see, I'd be shaking it
right now. Yes, I would put that dollar up in
Oh yes, girl, there you go.

Speaker 5 (50:28):
Little girl. I had to smooth out her pillows so
she could get on it. Go ahead, honey, go ahead.
After all, she is my world.

Speaker 4 (50:38):
So their job outlook is bleak because AI is taken
from jobs.

Speaker 5 (50:44):
You know.

Speaker 4 (50:45):
We had our music advocacy panel meeting yesterday for Grammy
and I'm on the music advocacy advocacy panel for my
second year. Can I just tell you yesterday I talked
to Peter Asher, like talk to him, like interacted, said
things to him.

Speaker 5 (50:59):
I yea, all are like who? Like who?

Speaker 4 (51:03):
Peter Asher just produced the Barbar streisand album partner of
Lyon Too. He is the inventor of a sound the
seventy Sound of California. Peter Asher is one of the
most in demand, incredible music producers alive, and yesterday he
and I were just.

Speaker 8 (51:23):
Lavvy.

Speaker 5 (51:23):
I would like, I'm talking to Peter, Oh my.

Speaker 4 (51:25):
God, all right, when we come back this more don't
go away?

Speaker 3 (51:44):
No show side.

Speaker 4 (52:00):
So when never gonna see the Epstein files because they're
going to say they're part of an ongoing investigation and
you just can't see them.

Speaker 5 (52:06):
So that's happening. How old?

Speaker 4 (52:09):
How old do you think you need to be before
you give away your money?

Speaker 5 (52:14):
Our baby boomers?

Speaker 4 (52:15):
Should they give away this wealth that they have amassed
sixty five trillion dollars? All told that by the way
that your brain can't comprehend how much money that is.

Speaker 5 (52:25):
Billions and trillions.

Speaker 4 (52:26):
Your brain just can't wrap around when you hear that
Elon Musk is going to be a trillionaire. You don't
understand how much money that is. It's something like he
could spend a million dollars a day for ten thousand years.
I mean, really, that's that's how much money a trillion
dollars is. So is it incumbent upon the older generation

(52:50):
to give their wealth to the younger generation because they're
not so Our baby boomers, the greediest generation alive. They're
being called the greediest generation alive, are not. But I
will say this, Baby boomers and some Gen xers are
also supporting a lot of their kids because their kids,

(53:11):
you know, can't find jobs. And that's just only gonna
get worse. There's gonna have to be a national salary.
We're gonna have to take the profits from AI and
make a national salary because people aren't gonna have jobs
and we don't you know, they're cutting snap, they're cutting
social programs.

Speaker 5 (53:30):
It's rough. It is rough, all right.

Speaker 4 (53:34):
Anything else on the agenda before we adjourn for the day,
and tomorrow's Thursday, the final show of the week. Thank
you all for joining me. On Sunday, there's gonna be
a Patreon call at five thirty with my patrons. I
already sent out an email about that, but if you
missed it, just know that this Sunday at five thirty
Pacific time, there'll be a call where we do a
video call and you can all talk to me, see me,

(53:55):
say hello, all of that. If you're a patron, and
if you are, I love you and appreciates you at
patreon dot com forward slash. Really, Carola, I'm going to
be irresponsible. I am talking about money. I don't have
thousands in the bank, but I'm about to spend thousands.
You know why because I fucking want to. First of all,
my blender broke this morning. I need a blender. It broke.

(54:18):
The blender that I have always wanted is a VitaminX
A send X five. It is a seven hundred and
fifty dollar blender, which I will use, by the way,
for the things it's meant to be. I cook. I'm
a cook. I'm almost a chef now. It's on sale
on Black Friday for five ninety nine, and I set

(54:38):
up an AI chat bot at honey, okay, honey, h
O n e y honey. Through PayPal. I did what's
called a drop list. I put this product on it
and told it if it gets down to four ninety
nine to let me know. So I'm going to buy
me this blender one way or another, at least I
think I am. When it comes down to it, I
may not do it, but I do need a new blender.

(55:01):
My VitaminX or my ninja broke and the container, just
the container that broke is ninety five dollars. Not gonna
pay ninety five dollars for a container. Just get a
new blender because this one's like ten years old. The
other thing I'm spending money on is I need a
new Mac for all of the video that I'm going
to be doing in the new year and all of that.

(55:23):
My single comes out December sixth, I Dance Because. Go
preorder it please. That really helps. If you could go
type in Corel I Dance Because and pre order it,
that will help me chart in the Apple iTunes and
all that. Corel kare e L I Dance Because. It's

(55:44):
gonna be a great single. Remixed by Dirty Disco Raphael
Mesa Leo Frappie al kinds of people. So go and
get Corel kril I dance because pre order it please.
But I need a new computer. Mine is five years
old and I need a new one. And they're twenty
five hundred dollars out the door. So unless one of

(56:07):
you want to buy me a new computer for Christmas,
I'm gonna put it on my Apple Card at zero
percent interest for eighteen months, and over the next eighteen months,
use the Patreon money to pay for the computer because
I need it for the show.

Speaker 5 (56:19):
I gotta have one.

Speaker 4 (56:21):
That one out there is getting slow and clunky, and
videos taken forever to process because Adobe keeps getting better
and better and more AI and it takes up more
processing powers. So I need a new computer. And this
morning I thought, and you're gonna get one. You know why,
because you're getting old, You're gonna die. I'm sixty three,
I ain't got any kids. I don't have anyone to
leave my generational wealth too, So I am getting me

(56:44):
a new computer and a new blender. And if anyone
hates me for that, you don't want to be my
patron because you think I'm spending your money wrong or whatever.
I apologize, but I cook a lot and I use
the blender for my cooking.

Speaker 5 (56:58):
For the show.

Speaker 4 (57:00):
Vitamics should give me one, you know what, I'm gonna
email them. They should give me one. They give them
away to influencers. They should give me one. I'm gonna
be using it on air. I'm gonna be showing you
how to cook with it. So anyway, I'm gonna spend
some money on myself over this holiday season. Yes I am.

Speaker 5 (57:16):
I am, and I'll feel bad about it because I'll
be in debt.

Speaker 4 (57:19):
But you know what, I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna
do it. Depends on the attitude of the kids. If
you are feeling discounted, rarely being included in their lives,
then I'd rather donate it.

Speaker 5 (57:31):
Amen.

Speaker 4 (57:33):
Amen, AI can't install plumbing or welding, yes, and those
are low jobs.

Speaker 5 (57:39):
By the way, you're right if the kids today.

Speaker 4 (57:43):
So there's a great twilight zone, and it was about
how robuts take over the world at all. These smart
people are out of jobs. But you know who has
the job The guy that fixes the robuts, the guy
that fixes the computers.

Speaker 5 (57:58):
Yes, be that guy.

Speaker 4 (58:00):
Although there will be there'll be robuts that can do plumbing,
they'll be robuts. I mean, I know y'all think there
won't be.

Speaker 5 (58:06):
There's going to be.

Speaker 4 (58:08):
And healthcare that's where they're going to really take over
because it takes three nurses for one full shift, meaning
twenty four hours. And if you've got a nursing home,
we're fifty residents, then you need twenty nurses. And if
that means you need sixty nurses for three hours, so

(58:29):
or one robot.

Speaker 5 (58:32):
So they're going to really take over health care.

Speaker 4 (58:35):
Yes, So yeah, if I have anything left, if my
sister's still alive, she'll get it, or Jake and Heather
will get it. And that's that's pretty much that Ember
is in my will. If I die before Ember, then
you know she she gets cared for. There's a thirty
five thousand dollars death policy that I have through sag Aftra.

(58:57):
If I die before Ember, whoever takes and Berg gets
that thirty five thousand dollars for the care for her life.
Oh yes, gotta remember your pet, Sonny. Don't forget your pets.
All right, I am almost out of here. I am
corel be who you want to be. Sondon Hurt you, buddy.

Speaker 5 (59:13):
We'll be back tomorrow. Tomorrow. I'll be here tomorrow. It's
only a day. Oh way, I love you. Thank you
for joining me.

Speaker 4 (59:26):
Patrons Patreon dot com, forward slash really Carrell or YouTube
dot com.

Speaker 5 (59:30):
Forward slash really Carrell, Like, subscribe, leave comment on the video.
Have a great afternoon this Wednesday afternoon. I'm gonna go
get the ditches out. My thatch is out my back.
That's what I'm gonna do. Won't that be fun? They
don't give you any drugs.

Speaker 9 (59:45):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the Correl cast on your favorite streaming service.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.