Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Corilla is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
So on with the show.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
Let's give it a go.
Speaker 4 (00:11):
Corilla is the one that you need to know. Now.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
It's show side.
Speaker 5 (00:30):
Hello, all of my puppy dogs. Happy morning. RFK wants
you to d I E w are you talking about that?
Speaker 6 (00:38):
And so much more on this Wednesday, December seventeenth, seven
days so Christmas Eve.
Speaker 5 (00:42):
Wooo, We're going.
Speaker 7 (00:44):
Baby, uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
It's the Corall Cast.
Speaker 8 (00:52):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
It is the Crell Cast.
Speaker 6 (01:01):
I am carel happy Wednesday to seventh, December seventeenth. By
the way, for those of you that tuned in yesterday,
as you can see, I was not drippy this morning.
I still can't believe I'm sat here yesterday and just
announced to the world I'm drippy. God, Oh the things
(01:21):
I say on the radio or on the podcast or
wherever the fuck I am. All right, good morning. I
hope you're having a great morning. Ember, and I are here.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
Where are you?
Speaker 6 (01:30):
A little girl, by the way, she's here somewhere. We
woke up this morning, we had our breakfast. You know,
I'm going to do a day in the life one day,
just so you guys know exactly what happens prior to
me getting here. I'll share that with my patrons. Also,
I really want to talk to my patrons before Christmas,
so Saturday night might be the night because Sunday I'm
(01:50):
going to be traveling, so we'll all arrange that. I'll
send the link so we can have a little Christmas
kikwa kiki before Christmas. But yes, Cumber And I gotta
tell you, it's a whole or deal. In the morning,
it really is. How does your how are your what
do you do? What are your rituals? You know, we
all have them. I wake up at four thirty to pee,
(02:12):
like no matter what it's dark, I go pee. Then
I go back to bed, and that's when Emberg moves
from wherever she's at and comes up, and I have
to lift the covers and she gets under the covers
every morning without fail. And then it's up to me
how much longer we stay in bed. She'd stay for
an hour and a half, but usually at five o'clock
(02:35):
I uncover her and start kissing her madly, and she
starts kissing me madly. Every morning, and then up we go.
And I used to make the bed, but now I
leave it unmade. I pull the bed all the way down,
the covers all the way down, and I open the
window because I learned just last week from Scientific American
if you unmake your bed in the morning and leave
a window open and let it dry out, you'll have
(02:57):
less dust mites. Because making your right away in the morning,
like mommy and the Navy tells you, is wrong. You
trap all your moisture and all of your heat that
from the night before in the bed, and the dust
might love that. So if you pull the sheets all
the way back, open the window, no matter what the
temperature is outside, let some air in, let it air out.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
So that's better for it. So then I go in
the bathroom.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
I go to the bathroom again at five o'clock, and
I set out my dental stuff. I you know, I
I my electric toothbrush, my reech floss, my gum gum
soft toothpick, ember's toothbrush, my tongue toothbrush. Yeah, there's a lot,
(03:42):
and my water pick. So I get all that set
out because I like to be prepared. And then it's
off to the kitchen. Where the night before, I've prepped
as much as I can for breakfast, and I put
my I take a eight ounces of oat milk and
a scoop of protein powder, mix it up, put it
with my oatmeal, app oat groats, apples, dried cranberries, and walnuts.
(04:06):
Put that in the microwave for six minutes. Take my
fruit cub out, put it on my silver tray with
my tea set that's already set up, and the tea
is already made in the tea maker. Then I take
Ember's two bowls. One bowl I put a little kibble
in a quarter teaspoon of fish oil. One tablet that
has stuff for her liver, and it's it's I forget
(04:28):
what it is. It's I'd have to look at it,
but it's for her liver. And then I put that
to the side, and then the other one I put
her moist dog food, which is venison elk, mixed vegetables
and quinoa, and put hot water in that to sort
of cook it a little bit. And then I put
my tea in my pot. I take the oatmeal out
(04:48):
after six minutes, and I strain her food.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
I put it on the side of the bowl.
Speaker 6 (04:53):
I sprinkle some liver dust on it and put some
water back in because I give her an ounce or
two of water with every meal, so she gets fourteen
ounces day. Then we eat breakfast side by side at
the kitchen table where I make my kitchen emoji of
me that I send to all my friends at six
am and send out my emoji. Have breakfast with Ember,
give her her little treats. I have a little bone
cut up for her. After her breakfast, she sits next
(05:14):
to me and gets little treats. Then I clear the dishes,
I wash the dishes. We go in the bedroom and
brush our teeth. I brush mine first and water pick
and floss and then I brush hers. Then we come
in the TV room and we do our morning you
know exercise. She gets her kongball with a little bit
(05:36):
of treats in it. After the kongball, she gets a
little more kibble with water as a mid morning thing.
Then after I exercise, we go off to the park
do two and a half miles including the hills. Come back,
I have my cocoa, I play a little ball with Ember.
She gets another mid morning kibble snack with some water,
and then I can do the show.
Speaker 5 (05:57):
Are you all exhausted visiting Really Correll, don't com daily.
Speaker 8 (06:03):
You are missing out. Get the podcast videos and the
blug including recipes at really corell dot com. That's really
ka r e l dot com.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Corell is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
So on with the show.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
Let's give it a go.
Speaker 4 (06:25):
Correll is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 6 (06:29):
It's funny when I shared that just now that I
realize I do a shit ton before the show. And
it depends on what day, whether I do yoga or
waits or whatever. You know, it's I do a lot.
And that's because I want to live. And that's because
mornings are important and ritual is important to humans. It
is important that you wake up and have a ritual.
It's very important to your body, to your life. You'll
(06:52):
live longer, it's very important. And you know, I eat
the oak groats and the soy milk that this morning
I had to make more soy milk that you know,
I eat all that because I'm trying to be healthier.
And it's really frustrating when you're trying to be healthier
and then RFK Junior comes along. Okay, I got to
read you the headline from yesterday. The headline from the
(07:14):
Hill claims, and the Hill is a conservative paper, the
war on saturated fat was never based on good science.
Speaker 5 (07:20):
And it's over. That's a false claim and it's dangerous.
And RFK Jr.
Speaker 6 (07:27):
Is now saying, oh, saturated fat, it's gotten a bad rap.
Speaker 5 (07:31):
Go ahead and eat it.
Speaker 6 (07:32):
Have the bacon, have the eggs, have the cheese, have
the dairy, have it all? This man, that that advice
couldn't be further than from the truth, then I don't even.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
Know what I mean.
Speaker 6 (07:46):
That is the most insane advice that anyone in a
government office for health has ever given. That is the
most insane. It's not just misguided, its fucking crazy. There
is enough documents to feel this, to fill this room
(08:07):
that tell you sat fat is not good for you.
Trans fats and saturated fats, now what are those? How
do you know which fat is which? Any fat that
is solid at room temperature is a sat fat? Okay,
(08:30):
So coconut oil for me because I and I barely
use it. Coconut oil fat fat and has trans fat
in it. Many fats. Oh, and their anti sed lard
sat fat Okay, and they're saying, oh no, go ahead,
cook with the lard, cook with the bone marrow. Don't
listen to our fk junr. The man has lost his
(08:53):
fucking mind. Okay, he is on drugs. His ex says
he is still doing drug I mean his family has
denounced him. Do not take medical advice from that man.
And are there doctors out there that'll say sad fat's
okay for you?
Speaker 5 (09:10):
Sure?
Speaker 6 (09:11):
There are doctors used to smoke, doctors used to come
in your room.
Speaker 5 (09:18):
So how are you today? Han, You don't w a cloud.
Speaker 6 (09:21):
Of tobacco smoke the same doctors who later would tell
you cannabis is bad for you.
Speaker 5 (09:25):
Oh, don't smoke cannabis. Have a pall mall Yeah, Hi,
I am your doctor. You know. The nurses all sounded
like large mart. Hi, I'm the nurse. Do you smoke? No,
but I hang around with the doctor, you know. So
this man is insane.
Speaker 6 (09:40):
Saturated fat bad bad, bad, bad bad bad. And it's
not just available in meat and dairy. By the way,
Vegans have to watch out for it too, especially in
the impossible products. I had an impossible burger for lunch
yesterday because I was slammed and the coffee house makes
that with Yakima fries, and yeah, I had I had one.
(10:01):
I'm sorry, I'm sorry. Bless me father, I have sinned.
At least I didn't drip. I did not drip to
be on burger. So don't listen to RFK Jr. The
man is fucking bonkers. And all these people online. Oh
seed oils are bad for you, eat real fats. Who
(10:22):
are these fucking people that go online and they're influencers?
They got the brains of a snail. Oh seed oils
are bad, but lard is good. Yeah, go ahead. I
want everyone that thinks sat fat is I want MAGA
to take RFK Junior's health advice. Don't get vaccines. Eat
(10:43):
all the sat fat in the world. I want you,
if you're Maga, I want you to do that. I
want you to not get any vaccines, and I want
you to eat all the sat fat you can shove
into your little righteous pie holes. Okay, just shove it
all it, please, because then you're all gonna drop fucking
dead very soon of really horrible heart attacks. Jesus Christ,
(11:08):
these people. Where the hell are these people from?
Speaker 5 (11:11):
What planet?
Speaker 6 (11:12):
Did they land here on planet Earth from dumbsville the
planet no IQ, I mean really, where the fuck did
they come from? And who thought R FK. Junior would
make a good Secretary of health? I mean, who thought this?
I just you know, I can't. I just can't. I can't.
(11:33):
Sat fat is good for you? Oh sweet baby Jesus.
I mean really, I just I can't, you know, I
just can't. He's a joke, he's a cuckoo bird, he's
nuts Crank Cray lost his fucking mind. Oh God, And
(11:54):
I just you know, look.
Speaker 5 (11:58):
We live in a very dangerous time. I don't have
to tell you this.
Speaker 6 (12:02):
And part of the danger is that established knowledge, established
facts are now challenged because you know, for instance, I
go with Steve to this place down at Silverton called
the Twin Creek Steakhouse. Now, the title alone tells you
(12:26):
it's not vegan friendly. However, many steakhouses here in Vegas.
Many steakhouses are vegan friendly because A they realize not
everyone that walks through their door is going to be
a steak eater. B someone might have an allergy to dairy.
So many binions downtown have a full, extensive vegan menu
(12:49):
that is incredible. They have Wellington mushroom, Wellington and all
kinds of things. The chef prides himself on being talented.
SOS has always accommodated me. They've adjusted their appetizers. Not
used butter, use olive oil instead. And then for an entree,
I usually get pasta with vegetables and olive oil and
(13:10):
it's tasty. So Steve's Christmas party was there this year again,
and of course I go. He invited me, and his
coworkers loved me, so of course I went.
Speaker 5 (13:21):
I like them, they're nice people.
Speaker 6 (13:23):
And this the steakhouse changed in October, so they did
a fixed menu for the group of twenty or thirty.
However many were there. There was nothing on it. I
could eat nothing, So I asked the server, we're gonna
need to adjust some of this stuff for me. Oh,
you're a vegan, I am. This server went to three
(13:46):
different people at the table and told them how hard
it was going to be for him because I'm a vegan.
Three different people. So then they serve artichokes and jumbo
shrimp is an appetizer. Ask is they're butter on the artichoke?
They say yes, I go. Could she roast one up
with just olive oil? Oh, I couldn't ask her that
right now. Her head would explode. What She's a chef,
(14:09):
It is her job to accommodate my needs. You're the server,
it's your job. You're like a priest in confession. You're
in between me and God. So it's your job to
go back and ask her if she can do this.
Not make a judgment call right there for yourself because
you think her head will explode.
Speaker 5 (14:28):
But I leave it alone.
Speaker 6 (14:30):
So they all get their salad and soup course, and
they bring me the paltryest house salad you have ever seen,
with just some balsamic vinegar, and I'm like, whatever, at.
Speaker 5 (14:41):
Least it's food, so I ate it for my entree.
Speaker 6 (14:44):
They were making a big stink about not having anything,
and then they acted like it was an enormous favor
to me that the chef would go ahead and make
that pasta that they always make with veggies and olive oil.
I'm like, oh, gee, thanks, how white of you to
actu feed me. Ah, And so then I have the pasta,
and so then all through dinner, he's all, we're gonna
(15:06):
find something for dessert for you, because they used to
have this delicious sorbet. It was vanilla and it tasted
like ice cream. The last time I had it, I
had to ask three times. This is vegan, right. They're
like yeah, because it was so good. Okay, so I
go for dessert. I'll just have that sorbet you have,
Oh we got rid of that. I'm like, what, why
would you?
Speaker 5 (15:25):
You know?
Speaker 6 (15:26):
So anyway, he keeps saying, I'm gonna work on it,
work on it. Come dessert times, they're all getting these
gorgeous desserts under domed glass and the whole thing. Nothing
appears before me. I finally asked the server on my
way to the bathroom, so did you just forget about
my dessert? Oh, we can't find anything. Sorry, you're just
gonna have to go without. And I looked at him
(15:48):
and I go, okay, so what the fuck?
Speaker 5 (15:50):
You know?
Speaker 6 (15:51):
People come here with allergies to dairy people. You know,
why am I being treated this way at your restaurant?
I have never been treated this poorly at your restaurant ever. Well,
we made a lot of changes in October, and you know,
veganism is very woke.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
That was it. That was it.
Speaker 6 (16:13):
Veganism is really woke. So they now feel because Donald
Trump has vilified being a vegan because RFK is going
the other way and telling you'd eat meat and bacon
and ham and sat fat and all of this. That
(16:34):
veganism is now woke. Somehow, saving the planet and having
a healthier body has become a liberal wokeism. And it's
not just this twin Ceaks steakhouse that that's treating me
(16:54):
like shit these days.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
It's not.
Speaker 6 (16:58):
Many restaurants are going out of their way to have
vegan options now many although can I just put this
out there for anyone that may be listening that runs
a restaurant, gluten free is not vegan. Oh we have
gluten free things. Those aren't fucking vegan, you asshole. So now,
(17:19):
if you have a diet that is in line, would
let every doctor in the world says you should be
eating fruits, vegetables, whole grains, pulses like lentils, beans, legomes,
tofu sitan. If you have a diet rich in all
those things, restaurants now see you as woke and are
(17:43):
no longer starting to accommodate you. Restaurants that used to
have beyond burgers or whatever, Nope, now they're going again
because MAGA and Trump see being a vegan.
Speaker 5 (17:57):
Even Trump put.
Speaker 6 (17:58):
Out on true social we need we eat more meat,
we need to eat more butter, we need to eat.
So now my diet and a diet that you should
be following, is seen as woke, and therefore restaurant chains,
grocery stores, not wanting to piss off Donald Trump, are
(18:19):
moving away. They were all in every place I went,
had fabulous things, every place had wonderful options. And now nope,
it's now seen as woke. So OURFK is over here
saying eat more sat fat, and Trump is saying, ey
more beef, eed, moore chicken, eat more pig.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
They want you to die. I am now.
Speaker 6 (18:44):
Convinced that Donald Trump and RFK Jr. Want you to die,
or they want to make more money for their friends
in healthcare I mean I or they're just so fucking
stupid they can't believe in science. And that's my big fear.
All the science that we have that say seed oils
(19:06):
are better for you than animal based oils, All the
science that we have that says meat and dairy can
only be consumed in very small quantities for both the
planet's sake and for your body's sake, all the information
we have about food, about vaccines, about all of these,
about tail.
Speaker 5 (19:24):
And all.
Speaker 6 (19:26):
All the settled medicine that we have is no longer
settled and is now political.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
Who knew? Who knew? Yes?
Speaker 6 (19:39):
And I love that hotel with the bass Pro Shop
in the aquarium. Yes, Darren, it has the bass Pro
Shop and the aquarium.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
It does.
Speaker 6 (19:47):
And yes, a naked person jumped into the bass Pro
Shop big giant pool one day last summer and was naked,
and when he was taken out he had a little
shrimp troughly. So yeah, no, I can't go to the
Silverton anymore, Steve, and I used to really enjoy going
to the Twin Creeks, And now the way they treated
me this last time and telling me.
Speaker 5 (20:09):
My diet is woke.
Speaker 6 (20:12):
The waiter literally said those words, well, veganism is woke,
you know. And then rfk eat more so that fat
lard lard. My parents used lard. My mom used to
fry everything in lard. There is nothing like a donut
(20:34):
frieda and lard. I'll tell you that right now. I
would never eat one again, but trust me, it's pretty
fucking good. And French fries frieda in beef tallow o
lord again. I would never eat him again, but when
I did, they were good. And subsequently most of America's
on a staaten. I bet rfk Junior is I know
(20:56):
he lies about being on you know what drugs he's on.
And that's the other thing we act like, Oh well
there's statins. Oh well, there's those epics. Oh well there's
no No, there's fruits and vegetables. Oh and their bread bath.
They used to have a bread that was vegan, a
twin tree.
Speaker 5 (21:15):
Not anymore.
Speaker 6 (21:16):
Now they only serve one kind of bread and it's
not vegan, but they used to have it. But you know,
I'm wolf, my diety, sweet.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
Jesus, sat stap.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
No shoes.
Speaker 5 (22:00):
All right?
Speaker 6 (22:00):
So another casualty in the war on woke isn't just
my diet and me going to places like twin Creeks
which used to accommodate but now don't. And it's so
fucking crazy to me. Why would if if you're a restaurant,
why wouldn't you want to make more money? Why wouldn't
you expand your client base at a time when restaurants
(22:22):
are fucking shutting down? Why wouldn't you want to expand
the amount of people that can eat at your restaurant.
Because now if I've got a party of three or
four and we want to go to dinner, I used
to be okay going there. I'd say, yeah, let's go there.
That's fine, they got stuff for me. Now we will
go someplace else. If they want to go to a steakhouse,
(22:42):
we'll go to Binions downtown because they have a full
vegan menu. And I don't need a full menu. But
it's great Ferraros here in Las Vegas, if you're ever here,
great Italian restaurant and full vegan menu.
Speaker 5 (22:57):
No desserts.
Speaker 6 (22:58):
None of the restaurants that offer van menus offer vegan desserts.
Maybe a sorbet and that's it.
Speaker 5 (23:03):
And how hard is that? Buy a fucking pint of
sorbet and put it in the freezer? You know? How
hard is that for a restaurant.
Speaker 6 (23:12):
I can see if it's a chain restaurant, where offering
sorbet would mean they have to buy one hundred thousand
dollars worth of certain No, these are not chains. Well,
I guess I'm pissed about this. I was really pissed
after his holiday party. I really was. They treated me
like shit at Twin Creeks. They acted like I was
the biggest imposition in the world, you know what, being
(23:36):
I'm so tired of people being anti vegan. I didn't
plan on getting this rant today. I didn't, but I
am so tired of it. It is not political, it
is not woke. It's the way that we have to
eat for the fucking planet. And if I were president,
America would import and eat eighty percent less meat and
they would like it.
Speaker 5 (23:54):
And if they didn't, fuck them.
Speaker 6 (23:56):
I am so tired of people acting like just because
it in the norm, that it's okay and that it's right.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
It's not.
Speaker 6 (24:05):
Most people eat like shit. That's why they have to
go to the doctors. That's why the emergency rooms are
filled with people with heart attacks, strokes, diabetes. I'm the
one doing the right thing, and you treat me like
shit as you serve these enormous hunks of beef to
(24:25):
everybody there that's killing the planet and killing them. Oh,
but that's okay. It's okay that our restaurant is killing
the planet. It's okay that our restaurant is causing these
people to have heart disease.
Speaker 5 (24:38):
That's fine.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
As for you, the person that doesn't want to kill
the planet, the person that doesn't want heart disease.
Speaker 5 (24:46):
You are bad. And I know you guys think this
doesn't relate to you, but it does.
Speaker 6 (24:53):
It relates to you because everything that we now accepted
as good and right and factual is being classified as
woke or as bad or you're the fringe, and that
includes your views on politics. Donald Trump's post about Rob
Reiner was so reprehensible the man should be publicly shunned
(25:16):
for the rest of his life and removed from office.
That's how bad it was. Just another day in the
life for Americans. And meanwhile, Netflix wants to buy Warner Brothers,
and Warner Brothers this morning said no to the paramount
(25:37):
deal because Larry Ellison didn't put any of his money in.
He went and got it from the Saudis, from Jared Kushner,
from the fund that Jared Kushner got after Donald Trump
sold the Saudis all those secret documents from mar Lago
and then to get the money, they gave Jared Kushner
two billion dollars for an investment fund that's called constructive
(25:58):
financing of blackmail. And so Netflix needs Donald Trump's administration
to approve the merger. Trump has already said he's kind
of opposed to it. What did Netflix do this morning?
They said they're not renewing one of their most successful series,
(26:19):
Any Idea, what it is? Anybody? Anybody Boots, the story
about LGBTQ people in the military from a book, which,
by the way, was one of the top five most
streamed series on Netflix this year, with one of the
(26:39):
highest Rotten Tomato scores.
Speaker 5 (26:42):
Boots.
Speaker 6 (26:44):
Netflix this morning said no season two. And why why
did they do that? Well, it wasn't because people don't
want to watch it. It was because they know they're
going to need Donald Trump's approval for them me. They
know how he feels about diversity. They know how he
feels about programming that it's fair to gays and lesbians,
(27:09):
and whereas this deals with the don't ask, don't tell
policy and how ridiculous that was for soldiers.
Speaker 5 (27:16):
They're not renewing it. Why because watching such a thing
as woke.
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Because seeing stories of how people in the military were
literally punished for just being themselves, that's woke.
Speaker 5 (27:31):
This is woke.
Speaker 6 (27:32):
So today Netflix said, one of our most popular series
where the highest critical acclaim, which will probably win Emmys
for some of the people involved.
Speaker 5 (27:44):
They're not picking it up. They're not doing a second season.
Speaker 6 (27:49):
Woke, they say, And I guarantee you it's because they
want to do the merger with Warner Brothers and they
need the Trump administration approval, and so they're not gonna
He knew and he shows that might stick in his
craw and the White House commented about Boots and derided it.
The White House was not happy about the show. So
(28:12):
it's not going to be picked up. Why because it's
positive towards gay people. I'm surprised the HBO got away
with Heated Rivalry, one of the great show, fun soap opera.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
It's woke showing gaze. So where's the report. There's the report.
Speaker 6 (28:33):
Ninety percent of what you watch on streaming ninety percent
guess what it is created by white people, white, straight people,
ninety percent, seventy nine percent by white cisgendered men, straight men,
(28:57):
and eleven percent by straight.
Speaker 5 (28:59):
Women white, all of them white.
Speaker 6 (29:04):
Ninety percent of what you watch on streaming is created
by straight, white people, and almost eighty percent of that
is straight white men. That is the highest that figure
has been in a decade. Why Donald Trump Donald Trump.
(29:28):
They don't want to give people of color a voice.
They don't want to give women a voice. They don't
want to give black, gay people a voice.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
Ninety percent by straight white people.
Speaker 6 (29:42):
Wow, we wor through from different point of view yours.
Speaker 8 (29:50):
Listen daily to the Corelle Cast on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Corralla is
so near because.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Show time is here. So on with the show.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
Let's give it a go.
Speaker 4 (30:11):
Correll is the one that you need to know. Now.
Speaker 6 (30:16):
It's show side, all right, when we come back so
much more.
Speaker 5 (30:32):
I'm just robing cavalcade.
Speaker 6 (30:33):
We're gonna take a look at the news and be depressed.
Speaker 5 (30:37):
Probably. Also, I've had my Coco and my Dailey, so
i feel good yea yeaha yeah, And I had like
I knew.
Speaker 7 (30:44):
That I wouldn't uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
It's the Corral Cast.
Speaker 8 (30:52):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 6 (31:00):
Oh my god, Ember is behind me and she is
snoring logs. Oh my god, cause she has allergies and
her nose is always plugged. I wish I could put
a mic down there. She is like snoring logs. Oh
how much I love that little girl. She loves when
we go to the Twin Creek Steakhouse by the way,
because Steve always gets steak and she always gets them,
(31:21):
and you know, I don't give her steak here at
the house. So he ordered a prime rib and he
didn't like it, so he had them package it up
for his dog, the whole prime rib. And I said,
but don't give it to Tino all at once.
Speaker 5 (31:33):
So yeah.
Speaker 6 (31:34):
In the chatroom at YouTube dot com, forward slash really
carell where my chatters are and my patrons. I love
my patrons this time of year, I'm so grateful for
my patrons. Saturday night, we're going to do a patron
call at five o'clock five pm Saturday night, Pacific time.
If you're a patron and can be there, great, you're
gonna get the link on Friday five pm on Saturday evening,
(31:56):
We're going to do a patron call so we can
talk before Christmas.
Speaker 5 (32:00):
Because I love you.
Speaker 6 (32:01):
I love you so much, And a lot of people
aren't putting the dots together.
Speaker 5 (32:06):
Add Sprouts.
Speaker 6 (32:07):
Okay, Sprouts normally has a shit ton of vegan options
around the holidays.
Speaker 5 (32:13):
Now they have two.
Speaker 6 (32:15):
They're hidden and do you know how much a vegan
loaf of side tan stuff with wild rices. By the way,
side tan is just vital wheat gluten. The solid is
a huge bag of It's like fat dolars. Okay, So
this loaf from Field Roast, which I love Field Roast.
They make delicious products. This vegan loaf stuffed with stuffing
(32:37):
kind of like a Wellington, but not not wrapped in pastry,
although identify wrap that roast in puff. Patriot with the
puff pastry would then be like a Wellington. Oh it
would be. That's what I'll do on Christmas Day.
Speaker 5 (32:49):
The loaf.
Speaker 6 (32:50):
Okay, just I could go to the freezer and get
it for you. It's just this big twenty nine dollars
nine dollars.
Speaker 5 (33:04):
Everything vegan has shot up through the roof.
Speaker 6 (33:06):
Why because the White House and RFK Junior have started
an anti vegan campaign and stores don't want to piss
off the administration, and food companies that buy for the
stores don't want to piss off the administration, and they
don't want to be seen as woke.
Speaker 5 (33:24):
Heaven forbid, Sprouts become the woke supermarket. God.
Speaker 6 (33:28):
I hate Sprouts. I hate that I have to shop
there because everything is organic it's all there. It's their
catchword and every like the other day, I said, do
you have any Swiss chart and he goes, oh, yes,
we have some right here in the organic section. And
I said do you have any non organic Swiss shard?
He said, oh, yes, it's down there. And I said,
by the way, what planet is this from? And he
(33:51):
looked at me and said what. And I go in
the organic Swiss shop or the non organic Swiss shard.
Where is it from? He goes, well, somewhere in the
United States. I said, oh, so it's from Earth and
he said well yes, And I go, well, you realize
organic literally means if you look it up, it means
from the Earth. That's what it means. That is its definition.
(34:16):
So if this is non organic, then it's not from
the Earth. So where is it from? Oh well, sir,
that's not what it means. Organic means no pesticides. I said, boy,
are you stupid? And I said that right out loud.
I said, boy, are you stupid? He said, pardon me?
I said, there are seventy count them, seventy pesticides listed
(34:38):
as organic. So you think organic means they don't use pesticides.
That's not true, they just use organic pesticides. And then
I remind him that hemlock is organic, that synide is organic.
They act like the word organic and it means it's
(35:00):
so good for you. Well, hemlocks organic have some of that. Oh,
these people, these people, I can't even tell you. All right,
So wait, we gotta get back on track. Here's the track.
Here's me, gotta get back on track. The RFK Junior
thing that's kissed me off. All the science about sat fat.
(35:23):
That's the actual headline from the hill. The war on
saturated fat was never based on good science? Are you
fucking kidding me? Since the nineteen fifties, for seventy five years,
we have studied saturated fat and its effect on humans,
and we know beyond the shadow of it down. You
(35:44):
eat a lot of SATs fat, you have heart disease.
You don't eat a lot of sat fat, you don't
have heart sigte.
Speaker 5 (35:50):
It doesn't take a brain surgeon to connect those guys.
But I guess our FK Junior is not a brain surgeon,
is you know? Oh? And veganism is well.
Speaker 8 (36:00):
Visiting really corell dot com daily, you're missing out. Get
the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at really
correl dot com. That's really K A R e l
dot com.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
Corrill is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
So on with the show.
Speaker 3 (36:23):
Let's give it a go.
Speaker 4 (36:25):
Correll is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 6 (36:29):
So welcome back to the crowdcast. I have more proof
that the South is useless and that Red states need
to you know, shut the fuck up.
Speaker 5 (36:38):
Basically. Uh, and let me tell you why a map.
Speaker 6 (36:42):
You know, there's a there's a website called the Visual
the visual something, uh, and it basically whether there's something
in the news, the visual the visual capitalists, that's what
it's called, the visual capitalist. When there's something in the news,
you know, makes it visual literally, you know, they they
(37:07):
do maps and charts and things that are easy to understand.
So we have always said that Blue states contribute more
taxes to the federal government than Red states than they do.
But one of the ways that is, you know, measured
is the gross Domestic Product. How much GDP does each
(37:32):
state give or what is their share of the GDP?
So California, let me give the US economy now exceeds
thirty trillion dollars in size, but that output is far
from evenly distributed across the country. While large and economically
diverse states like California dominate to the national GDP, many
(37:54):
smaller states contribute much less. More than one third of
America's GDP comes from the top four states California, Texas,
New York, and Florida two red, two blue. These are
also the country's most populous states, which directly impacts their
economic size and output. So here is how much GDP
(38:18):
these states put in, and that directly affects their budget,
It directly affects their taxation, It directly affects everything. So
California is number one. Their share of the GDP is
fourteen point five percent. If they were to leave the Union,
the Union would be screwed. Texas nine point four. That's
(38:40):
five points down from California, but still pretty big. New
York seven point nine, Florida five point eight, Illinois three
point nine, Pennsylvania three point five, Ohio three point one,
Georgia three point zero, Washington three point zero, oh New
(39:01):
Jersey two point nine, And we can just keep going
North Carolina two point nine, Massachusetts two point nine, Virginia
two point seven Colorado one point nine. But what it
basically turns out is if you add up all the numbers,
all of them, just the blue states. Just if you
(39:21):
add up just blue states, you get more than sixty
percent of the GDP from just the blue states, which
means the Red states and that includes Texas at nine
point four and Florida at five point eight comprise forty
percent of the GDP. So blue states give much more
(39:47):
to the economy than red states, much more by like
twenty percent more. And so it is yet another example
of how the blue state take care of the red states.
You know, it's it's a prime example. And I don't
(40:09):
know about y'all, but I'm Novada. We're at like one
point nine. I don't know about y'all, but I'm kind
of getting tired of taking care of maga, I really am.
Speaker 5 (40:21):
I am tired of coddling them. I'm tired of having to.
Speaker 6 (40:23):
You know, when you've got Marjorie Taylor Green out there
making sense and I have the last four interviews, I
want to interview her. I know she's still Auntie Gay basically,
but you know, I want to interview her. I should
put in a request and see if she'll do it
and say, what the fuck's up with you? You ain't
talking like Maga anymore, saying that no matter what a
(40:45):
person's politics are, they shouldn't be vilified the day they're murdered.
What that's you used to do that? So you know
what it's Did you ever come to Jesus moment? Did
you slip and fall and hit your head? Are you
trying to run for president? And twenty two twenty eight
because she's not founding like the old Marjorie Taylor Green.
(41:07):
You know she'd be likable, if she liked gays, she
would be she'd be like Tammy Faye Baker. Tammy Fay
Baker was a nut. You know, she was crazy. But
when she had the AIDS patient on her show, on
their Christian show from Orange County, when Tammy Fay said
(41:28):
to the audience, we need to help people with AIDS.
We need to show them compassion, we need to hug them.
You're not going to get the disease. We need to
do what Christ would do and God would do and
show them love and compassion. When she did that, she
was denounced by everybody. Jerry Fallwell, her own husband, and
(41:52):
yet she didn't stop. She then continued on LGBTQ advocacy
and she moved to Palm Springs later in life and
became just a favorite with the Gaze. We loved her.
Two gay men did her documentary The Eyes of Tammy Fay. Now,
(42:12):
she was a nut, but she came around and she
loved the Gaze and we loved her back.
Speaker 5 (42:21):
We forgave her for being a nut.
Speaker 6 (42:24):
If Marjorie Taylor Green would just come around on a
few issues, we Gaze would love her. You know, it
should be a fun girl to party. I bet she's
fun when she's drunk. Oh my god, I just get
that vibe from her. I get a vibe from Marjorie
Taylor Green that if you sat and did shots with her,
she'd be taken off her blouse by the fish shot.
Speaker 5 (42:41):
I just you know that's you know.
Speaker 6 (42:45):
James, organic is a loosely applied term. Strictly there should
be no pesticides. Well, come on, ancient cultures had pesticides, James,
And you know this. They've always had ways to keep
insects from eating the crops. They weren't the horrible roundup
that we have today today, but you know, they always
(43:09):
had ways do you know that McDonald's potatoes that they
used for their French fries are not.
Speaker 5 (43:17):
Classified as a vegetable. Did you know that. I bet
you didn't.
Speaker 6 (43:23):
McDonald's potatoes have been genetically altered to resist pests, and
when you look at their classification, McDonald's potatoes are classified
as a pesticide.
Speaker 5 (43:41):
They are.
Speaker 6 (43:41):
I'm not making this up. They are classified as a
pesticide because they have been modified to resist pests. That's
why I never would eat McDonald's unless it was the
last thing and I was going to starve to death
and that was it.
Speaker 5 (43:57):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (43:59):
So we need pesticides, well, of course we do, but
there's very natural pesticides. There's things like men to gnome oil,
and you know for a pot plant. You know, we
use pesticides on a pot plant because you don't want
bugs to eat it.
Speaker 5 (44:13):
They'd be very happy bugs, but you don't want the
bugs to eat it.
Speaker 6 (44:16):
So there's different sprays natural organic oils, oils that are
from the earth. They are organic that you can spray
on a pot plant and keep away insects. One of
them I think is called gnome noem oil. I used
to use it. It smells really good. Cedar oil is
a natural pesticide. Cedar oil gets rid of fleas and
(44:39):
ticks and all kinds of bugs.
Speaker 5 (44:40):
It's a natural pesticide.
Speaker 6 (44:42):
So we have things that won't kill you if you
consume them, that keep away bugs. Or we could just start,
you know, farming hydroponically indoors, in vertical gardens, and guess what,
we wouldn't need pesticides then, Oh, but that makes too
much sense. You're right, James. Most people are not informed,
certainly not as informed as Corell. That's one of the
(45:05):
reasons we listened to him. He informs this.
Speaker 5 (45:07):
I don't know about that, but you know, I try.
Speaker 6 (45:13):
You guys give me credit for being smarter than I
really am. My whole career. That's been that way. I
have been told by heads of state, presidents, professors. I
have been told by great thinkers that I'm very, very smart,
and I do test as a genius, and I am.
You know, I qualify for MENSA. I was in MENSA
for a while. My IQ is such that I qualify
(45:34):
as a genius. I'm in the top five percent. When
I did my college scores and did all the tests
in high school, I was always in the top one percent,
and then I threw it all away. I could have
had a free ride at Uclay. I have a certificate
back here from UCLA. I won a scholarship to them
(45:55):
my senior year of high school, the UCLA Alumni Scholarship.
And I just didn't want to be a doctor, or
a lawyer or a business person. I wanted to be Barbara.
The opening of my bio on my website says, when
I was young, I wanted to be Barbara streisand I
(46:16):
grew up to be Corel But yeah, no, I wanted
to be Barbara from the time I was fourteen years
old in nineteen seventy six and saw starsborn, followed by fame.
That next year I saw fame or seventy eight, I
saw fame, and I knew that was it. The minute
I saw star is Born and fame, that was it.
(46:38):
You could not tell me anything else. I didn't care.
And I could have been a great lawyer. I'd be
a great lawyer. And most of you know I'm practically
a doctor. My friends call me for medical advice, but nope,
I didn't. I just my heart wasn't in it. My
heart is here with you in front of a camera,
(46:58):
in front of a microphone, on stage, in a recording studio,
in a movie studio, in a theater on you know,
Broadway sort of thing. That's where I'm alive. That's just
where my heart sings in those places. I wish. You
don't know how much I wish I had acumen when
(47:20):
it comes to finances.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
I shouldn't be broke right now.
Speaker 6 (47:25):
In my life, I've generated millions of dollars, and you
know there were times I could have tucked away ten
thousand here, ten thousand there. I know nothing about the
stock market. It makes no sense to me at all.
I don't want to know. My brain just scrambles when
I try to understand it. I just I can't. I
can't money. I hate money. I want money, I need money.
(47:50):
I hate money. Money is harmed so many of my friends.
The lack of money has harmed so many of my
friends and family. Back in the age days, people that
didn't have money, they died quick and horrible depths. Even now,
if you have money, you get great medical care. If
(48:11):
you don't have money, you don't. If you have a
pet and you have money, your pet gets great medical
care and it lives a long life. If you don't,
it doesn't. If you have money, you can eat proper food, fruits, vegetables, pulpses, legums,
you can go out to eat and eat wonderful food.
If you don't have money, it's processed foods and bad
(48:33):
foods because that's all you can afford. I have always
wanted to have money, but I never could. And I'm
a genius. I have a genius IQ, but I can't.
I don't understand money. I don't understand the stock market,
and I wouldn't know what an equity fund is versus
a mutual fund versus a I have no idea, and
(48:56):
I've tried to learn. I've read books about it, and
at the end of the book, I'm.
Speaker 5 (48:59):
Like idle of death. So that's why I'm broke.
Speaker 6 (49:07):
I'm broke because I hate money, and I know that
therapists have told me if I repair that relationship with money,
Because I've been told by a therapist, you need to
repair your relationship with money. I said, money literally is
the root of all evil. All the TV shows I watch,
all the murder, death kill, fifty percent of the murders
are about money. The other half, you know. I bet
(49:29):
that Rob Reiner was killed for money.
Speaker 5 (49:32):
I bet he was.
Speaker 6 (49:34):
I bet they told the son, who had been to
rehab eighteen times after he embarrassed them at the party.
I bet they told them, either you're going back to
rehab or we're cutting you off. So he figured, well,
then I'll just kill them and get their money. But
now he won't because of the law that was passed.
It says if you kill somebody and you're their heir,
(49:55):
you don't get the money. So I bet that was
about money. I fully bet we kill people over money.
Look what Trump does for money. Look what he does.
He sacrifices our safety, our health, our country so he
and his friends can profit. I hate money. I hate it,
(50:20):
I need it, I want it. I've always needed a
good financial advisor who would say, give me five hundred
dollars a month and I'll turn it into you know,
thousands for you.
Speaker 5 (50:30):
But I never found that person.
Speaker 6 (50:32):
Andrew was great with money, and we were going to
invest in real estate and we were gonna right when
he died. We were getting ready to like invest in
things and buy things and do things. And then he died.
No life insurance policy, so no money. Okay, I'm sorry,
let's see, artists frequently are not financially astute. Yeah, no,
(50:53):
you're you're right, we don't you know, we don't get it.
We don't understand. Uh, stop selling yourself short. You didn't
throw it all the way. You're exactly who you are,
A specially unique, entertaining funny, a storyteller, musician, songwriter.
Speaker 5 (51:08):
And that's okay. Yeah, but I'm broke like every other artist.
Speaker 6 (51:13):
Why patrons were around, There's always been a rich perty
and an artist line.
Speaker 5 (51:18):
Even now, all these texts broke. They can't progress without money,
so they go find it, but they don't.
Speaker 3 (51:29):
Have sat stay.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
No shoes.
Speaker 6 (51:46):
Sie, you know about the rhiners and what Rachel Kapper
and the chatroom at YouTube dot com for its usher.
Lely Carell says, it's so true. This is not an
(52:08):
isolated event. This could occur in any family anywhere. Last year,
a friend of mine's boss found their son dead in
a park in LA They had been searching for him
for days. He had been to rehab many many times,
(52:28):
and he couldn't live with them because every time he
did he got in fights, he threatened them, he stole
from them, and so they couldn't let him live with them,
and they felt horrible, and when he died, they took
that weight so hard. Wasn't their fault, but they feel
(52:51):
it was. He died alone in a park o d
My sister for decades did dr rugs and alcohol, and
I didn't speak to her, and she did something really horrible.
When my mom was passing away, she came out. I
paid for her to come out. I needed her help.
Many of you, if you listened to KGO, you knew
(53:13):
that this was happening. I told you at the time.
I needed help. I was on KGO, I was working
almost every day. My mom was in a nursing home.
I couldn't get there during the day or early evening.
I had to travel do personal appearances. So I needed help.
I paid for my sister to come out. She lived
with my mom for a while, and when she left
(53:35):
and I had already bought her clothes and set her
up in a place to live. And then one day
she says, I can't stay, I've got to go. And
when she went, I checked my mom's bank account. My
mom's just done disability. She had drained it for alcohol
and drugs. Every month. She drained my mom's account. After
my mom died, I didn't speak to my sister. I
(53:56):
thought I'll never speak to her again. She's an addict.
She robbed, she took from my mother, and my mother
forgave her. And then when Mom and I needed her
most to help with Mom's passing, basically, she just left.
She just left because she couldn't do the drugs and
alcohol like she wanted to. I didn't talk to her
(54:17):
for a long time, and then my mom came to
me in a dream and said, Chucky, I forgave her
because she's my daughter and I love her. She is
your only sister. She's the only living blood family outside
of two cousins and an aunt that you have left,
(54:40):
and you have to do with that. She's your sister.
So I called her and we began speaking once every
three or four months and whatever, and now we speak
several times a week. And she's not on drugs anymore.
She's seventy. Well, she's on fifteen drugs, but they're all prescription.
Speaker 5 (54:58):
And now I love her. I do.
Speaker 6 (55:02):
Could I be as close to her as many brothers
and sisters are. No, I can never be that close
because of all that water under that bridge, But I
love her. I'm there for her if she needs my help.
When her snap didn't come and Randy Raindar sent me
four hundred dollars, I sent Rosanne four hundred dollars.
Speaker 8 (55:22):
You know.
Speaker 6 (55:23):
So we have repaired the But drugs and alcohol took
my sister away from me for decades decades. Roseanne left
home when I was nine years old, and I didn't
really see much of her again until she was in
her sixties. Drugs and alcohol. I begged Daniel Charleston, begged
(55:46):
him to quit ketamine. I offered to come down and
drive him. I offered, so did Brandon. We did everything
we could to get him off that drug. I told
him it ends one of two ways. Well, I was,
that's right.
Speaker 5 (56:00):
He died. Do we feel responsible? Yes?
Speaker 6 (56:04):
Should I have driven down and taken him probably? Would
he have stayed?
Speaker 5 (56:08):
No.
Speaker 6 (56:11):
What happened to the Rihiners is an American tragedy that
every day happens in Middle America that we don't hear about.
Fathers get beaten up, mothers get abused, siblings get abused,
families get robbed from all because of the scourge of
drug addiction. Drugs work, alcohol works, opiates works. These people
(56:38):
are mentally damaged. And these substances work and they are addictive.
We all have our addictions tea, coffee, cigarettes, whatever. Theirs
just happened to destroy them. Very sad. And it doesn't
matter if you're uber wealthy. Well could share share son
(57:02):
with Greg Alman. He's an addict. Share barely talks to him.
She tried to get conservatorship over him because he controls
the Allman estate and you know he's an addict. They've
been fighting for decades. It doesn't matter if your Share
or Rob Reiner or just the neighbor next door. Every
(57:26):
family has its challenges. This notion of an idyllic family life,
it's not real. The only thing that all families have
in common is dysfunction. There is not one fully functioning
family anywhere. Every family is dysfunctional everyone. It's the nature
(57:48):
of family. And so my heart's it breaks thinking about
the Reiners. Such talented people, him as a comic and
then as a direct writer, her as a photographer, and
other things that she did for you know, in entertainment,
bright talented people, really in their prime. Even though he
(58:11):
was late in his seventies, he was going strong. Killed
by their son because of addiction. It's a common story
and it's a sad one. If you or someone you
love has an addiction problem, keep trying to help, keep trying.
(58:33):
But also, no, it's okay to walk away. It is
okay to cut ties. That's the hardest thing for families
to acknowledge that. It's okay to say you can't be
in my world anymore until you clean up. You're gonna
have to want to do this. It's okay to say
that others are there no matter what. That's okay too.
(59:00):
There's no right or wrong. But don't give up. Even
if they're not in your world. Try to keep track
of them. Try to, you know, don't give up until
you have to. And I think the Rhiners got to
the point where they had to, and the Sun didn't
like it.
Speaker 5 (59:20):
So he killed me. I am corel be who you
want to be son to hurt anybody. Tomorrow. I'll be
here for a show tomorrow and next.
Speaker 6 (59:30):
Week in the week after. Some will be pre recorded,
some won't. You won't know the difference. I love you.
I'll see you tomorrow. If you're a patron, we'll talk
to Saturday at five o'clock. We guess it's like I'm laughing, Well,
I look just like.
Speaker 8 (59:44):
Ali's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Speaker 3 (59:50):
Listen daily to
Speaker 8 (59:51):
The corell cast on your favorite streaming service.