Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Old time is here. No time to fear. Corral is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Let's give it a go.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Correl is the one that you need to know. Now.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
It's show time.
Speaker 5 (00:30):
Good morning, and welcome to the Corral Cast. I am Corral.
What is the state of gay in the USA? We'll
talk about that today. Ah, how that tickled me? Actually,
Plus the East Wing.
Speaker 6 (00:43):
Is gone, gone, uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged.
Speaker 7 (00:49):
It's the Corral Cast. Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 8 (00:59):
It is the out cast. And I am Correl.
Speaker 9 (01:01):
So very glad you are joining me on this Thursday,
October twenty third, or whenever you're getting around to listening
or watching.
Speaker 8 (01:10):
What is the state of gay in the USA?
Speaker 9 (01:14):
Today? Is gay marriage going to go away? Could we
rhyme anymore? We're going to talk about that as I
just had to fill out an application for a Canadian documentation.
They've requested more documents from me. My grandparent was born
in Canada. I may be able to get citizenship and
if I can, well, then northern bound honey, or maybe not.
(01:40):
We'll see. But a Canadian passport is stronger than an
American passport. An American passport has fallen to number fourteen
in the world, and now there's only one hundred and
ninety nine out of two hundred and thirty eight nations
that we can enter freely without visas and the like.
Speaker 8 (01:55):
We now tie with Malaysia.
Speaker 9 (01:57):
Our passport is now as powerful as a Malaysian passport,
all thanks to Donald J. Trump, the most failed, miserable
excuse for a human.
Speaker 8 (02:09):
Being that ever existed.
Speaker 9 (02:12):
And today we are going to talk about the state
of gay in the USA. I talk about that every
Friday with a reporter from Canada, and I thought to myself,
I never really talk about it on my show, do
I speaking of the Big Show, Thank you for every
patron at Patreon dot com, forward slash really Corell. I
don't thank you enough. Without you, there would not be
a show. If you're not a patron, shame on you.
(02:33):
But Patreon dot com, forward slash really Carell. There's about
seventy five incredible people there. We are up to eleven
hundred dollars a month. That is an incredible amount of money,
and I just I couldn't do it without you. I
really couldn't. So if you are one of the patrons, oh,
and Randy Radar, thank you for the birthday present yesterday
(02:55):
that you sent. So if you if you are one
of the patrons, just know that you really do keep
the show going. And that's at patreon dot com, forward
slash really Correll. If you're a YouTuber, it's YouTube dot
com forward slash really Correl and there's a live chat
room there. But I really encourage you to leave comments
down below the video. Be sure you hit like on
(03:18):
the video and leave comments and interact with other people
leaving comments. That gets me higher on that algorithm, which
is very, very important these days. Before we go into
the topics of the day, I'm getting crap on social
media and I want to talk about it. Twelk, a
twenty nine year old chess prodigy, died a few days
(03:41):
ago and the media reported on it, and it struck
a nerve with me because nowadays, like when Diane Keaton died, nowadays,
when somebody dies, they don't give you the cause of death,
and that to me is an.
Speaker 8 (03:57):
Incomplete news story. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 9 (04:00):
That's not giving us the whole truth because you can't
just say, oh, this person died, well, what they die
from you know. I mean, if you're going to report
on the story of a death, that the announcement of
the death is only part of the story, the cause
of death. If the person is important enough to write
(04:23):
about their death, then their cause of death is important
enough to include now in today's quick, quick, quick news world.
Sometimes they don't have that. I get it, I understand,
and maybe you know, I don't know that. They guess
they couldn't wait to report on it, but they really
(04:43):
need to follow up or let us know what the
cause of death of this person is the real cause
of death. Like with dan Keaton, they said, oh, her
cause of death was pneumonia.
Speaker 8 (04:53):
No it wasn't.
Speaker 9 (04:54):
I mean, yes, that's what she died, you know, ultimately from.
But something caused the pneumonia. Was she incapacitated in a
nursing home?
Speaker 8 (05:04):
You know what?
Speaker 9 (05:05):
Anyway, so this twenty nine year old dies and I
put underneath I really don't think we should report on
these stories until we know the cause of death, or
they should include.
Speaker 8 (05:14):
It if they already know it. And people are.
Speaker 10 (05:17):
Furious, how dare you the family asked for privacy? Blah
blah blahdah blah, bah blah blah, blah.
Speaker 9 (05:24):
You don't get privacy when you die. If you're a
public person, you didn't get it when you lived. You
took advantage of fame when you were alive, and the
cost of fame is when you die. People are gonna
want to know why. And if families don't like that too,
damn bad. And there's really I don't mean to be
(05:48):
not compassionate. I'm just telling you. When Andrew died, Dennis
Prager went on and said he died of AID.
Speaker 8 (05:56):
He didn't. He said that in the really.
Speaker 7 (06:00):
Correll dot com Daily. You're missing out.
Speaker 11 (06:04):
Get the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at
really correll dot com.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
That's really KA R e l dot com.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
Correll is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Speaker 3 (06:24):
Correll is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 9 (06:29):
So I want to know. By the way, Andrew, when
he died, everyone thing it was of age. That's part
of being gay in the USA that we're going to
talk about the gay man dies. Assume it's AIDS. But anyway,
I had to release his cause of death.
Speaker 10 (06:44):
You know, as soon as we got it They ran
it in the La Times, they ran it in Variety.
Speaker 8 (06:49):
Hollywood Reporter, over two hundred obituaries.
Speaker 10 (06:53):
I had to report it, and they talked about it
on TV, and if I didn't want to watch it,
I had to just turn it off. When I went
to audition for Ultimate Revenge with Mark Summers and Ryan Seacrest,
who is now looking like Skeletor and needs an intervention
of some kind.
Speaker 9 (07:09):
Poor Ryan Seacrest. Do you see what's happening to him
right in front of our eyes. It's just it's sad.
But anyway, you know, I couldn't hide Andrew's cause of death.
We were public figures. People wanted to know how a
thirty four year old guy died.
Speaker 8 (07:26):
So I want to know.
Speaker 9 (07:27):
If you're with me on this, leave your comments down below.
Do we have the right to know the cause of
death when a famous person dies? Do we have the
right to know because.
Speaker 10 (07:41):
Families are like, I'd like for you all to give
us privacy at this moment, and blah blah blahdah. Sorry,
you spent the money, you enjoyed the fame this comes
with it. It's frustrating.
Speaker 9 (07:58):
You see DiAngelo dying at fifty one, years old, You're like, wait,
fifty one year olds don't just drop dead? What happened here?
I hate when a news story leaves more questions than
it answers. That's not good journalism. So when it comes
to celebrities, do you feel that we are entitled to
(08:21):
know the cause of death? With Diane Keaton? With this,
I don't know his name. Unfortunately the Chess pro twenty nine,
and you know, it leaves it to speculation.
Speaker 8 (08:34):
Ball of maga under his post was saying he died
of the COVID shot. He didn't.
Speaker 9 (08:42):
It's now coming out he probably died of suicide, which
is tragic and terrible, and I can see how a
family wouldn't want that out there, But if you're a
public figure, it's going to get out. We know how
Marilyn Monroe died. She was killed by the FBI and
are then placed in a bed with drugs.
Speaker 8 (09:00):
We know that, you know.
Speaker 9 (09:02):
We know how Elvis Presley died on a toilet. He
hadn't pooped in three weeks, that's the truth, because of drugs.
Speaker 8 (09:11):
He was on opiates.
Speaker 9 (09:13):
I mean, we know how famous people died because back
in the day it wasn't even an issue. Someone famous died,
they told you how? So do you think that I'm
wrong for posting under this person's thing that said I'm
getting tired of the news reporting on deaths and not
(09:34):
saying the cause of death. What do you think? I'd
love to see your comments below. I'd love to see
your comments in the chatroom at YouTube dot com forward
slash Really, Carrell, my name is spoke Ka R E. L. Yes,
I would love that. All right, let's look at the
chatroom now, Sandy says Correll. I very much agree with you.
(09:57):
I am a plexion from a patron high patron.
Speaker 8 (10:01):
Love you, Sandy.
Speaker 9 (10:04):
It's super frustrating when a death is announced without a cause,
especially when the person dies unusually young. Yes, that's you know,
James agree on Keaton. At her age, pneumonia complicates a
different disease. She was a heavy smoker who stopped in
twenty twenty one. Yeah, she didn't die of pneumonia, I mean,
ultimately she did.
Speaker 8 (10:23):
You know, we all die of.
Speaker 9 (10:24):
The same thing, by the way, every human being dies
of the same thing.
Speaker 8 (10:30):
Everybody.
Speaker 9 (10:31):
You know what it is, James, Do you know what
it is? James Snabel News Every human dies of the
exact same thing anybody, anybody, anybody, anybody, anybody. Hypoxia, a
lack of oxygen to the organs. We all die of hypoxia, everybody.
(10:58):
A lack of oxygen to the organs. Now, what causes
that lack of oxygen meaning the heart stopping, the head,
being decapitated, whatever, whatever causes the stopping of the oxygen
is what we call the cause of death.
Speaker 8 (11:19):
But everybody's real.
Speaker 9 (11:21):
Cause of death hypoxia, a lack of oxygen to your organs.
If you have a heart attack, your heart stops pumping blood,
oxygen stops getting to your organs. If you have cancer,
you stop breathing, your respiratory system gives out, and once
you stop breathing, oxygen stops going to your heart and
(11:42):
lungs and everything.
Speaker 8 (11:43):
And you die.
Speaker 9 (11:44):
We all die of the same thing, lack of oxygen
to the body. Now, what causes that lack of oxygen
is what we call the cause of death. But the
cause of death for every human is the same thing,
oxygen not getting to our organs.
Speaker 8 (12:00):
Ha ha ha.
Speaker 9 (12:05):
Yes, Sandy's can't agree with me more. She says, I've
ranted about this topic for years, me too, Stop telling me.
Someone freaking croaked without telling.
Speaker 8 (12:15):
Me how they died. Jesus, all right, I love my
I love the hour format.
Speaker 9 (12:23):
I love it. I take more time, we have more fun.
The show has improved dramatically since we've gone to an
hour format. I'm even gonna start booking guests and doing
more segments that I could now if you all see now,
I have my computer here, that's new. I got an
eighteen foot extender cable, so now I can fire videos
and audio. I'm gonna play my song we Dance because
(12:46):
oh yeah, yeah yeah yeah. Loving the new hours, so
thank you for suggesting it, patrons. My patron suggested it,
so thank you for suggesting it. All right, let me
take a breath, numb meal horng gig. Everyone take a
breath with me now'm me o ho ring giek you
you know at the park this morning, Sherry Hamby and
(13:09):
my other friends Genie and all their fabulous dogs Mochi
on Mochi two, Sissy and Sassey, which are a pair
of Chihuahua's the cutest things you ever see. Cody, who's
not even Jeanie's dog, but she's there every day with him.
Speaker 8 (13:23):
So it's her dog. I told him.
Speaker 9 (13:25):
I told her, I said, whoever owns that dog, wo end,
I've given it to you. This morning, everyone was talking
about the east Wing being demolished.
Speaker 8 (13:33):
Everybody.
Speaker 9 (13:34):
I mean, it was on everybody's mind. It's just the
entire east wing. He's he's demolishing the entire east Wing.
It is a I know we talked about this yesterday,
but this is just so horrific. It is a federally
protected building, all right. It is a National landmark. It's
on the list of historic landmarks and historic registries. For
(13:57):
those of you out there that happened, who have bought
a house that is a historic property, you know what
a fucking pain in the ass it can be. I
had a friend that owned a theater in Long Beach,
the Art Theater, which was deemed a historic landmark. They
couldn't even freaking change a window without getting approval.
Speaker 8 (14:17):
The window had to be vintage, it had to be this,
it had to be that.
Speaker 9 (14:21):
So when you live in a landmark, something designated a landmark,
you can't just change it willy nilly. You must submit
plans to the federal board that handles these things. It
doesn't matter if you're the freaking president of the United States,
or if you're the leader of Mars, you it is
(14:42):
a federal building on federal property. He does not own
the freaking White House, no matter what he thinks. And
so this is just another And he's gonna build the biggest, ugliest,
gaudiest gold gilded ninet teen twenties looking piece of shit.
Speaker 8 (15:02):
You ever saw. You wait and see it.
Speaker 9 (15:04):
Like everything he does, it's gonna be garish and an
abomination like millennia. I mean, truly, he only knows garish.
He doesn't he has zero taste in decorating, you know,
so that it's gonna be horrific. And what's worse is
it's illegal what he's doing. It is right, just unequivocally illegal,
(15:27):
and Congress lets him do everything that's illegal. And I
just I don't I don't get it. I don't get
why Congress is letting him do this, Why they could
stop it? Why aren't they, you know, so that a
lawyer could stop it, file an injunction, get it fast
(15:48):
tracked to the federal courts.
Speaker 8 (15:51):
No, no, you know.
Speaker 9 (15:56):
So anyway, he's tested his powers so much for he
will go before we say enough. I agree, I agree,
you know, he has pushed the boundaries to see how
far he could go, and he just knows that he
can go anywhere now.
Speaker 8 (16:13):
And that's sad. You know.
Speaker 9 (16:17):
Really, it is truly like me going to the state
Capitol here in Nevada and deciding, you know, I think
there needs to be a disco, Because I do. Every
capital should have a disco. The White House should have
a disco, mirror ball lit up floor, bar. Hell, yes,
(16:41):
every public building should have a disco. Baby, come and
dance with me. Disco heat, cooking from the beat, HiT's.
Speaker 12 (16:50):
The disco heat, dancing through the night till morning light
shines on me.
Speaker 9 (17:00):
Music makes me tent hah, don't get me started.
Speaker 12 (17:06):
Parancing total freedom, be yourself and use your feelings.
Speaker 8 (17:09):
I'm started. Come on, get up.
Speaker 12 (17:11):
Let's see some swing and swing and move and groove
inside right in rocking reeling. Come on, get up, everybody,
hand chance, w don't you?
Speaker 8 (17:24):
Yes, Sylvester lives in me. Uh so.
Speaker 9 (17:28):
But it's like I took over the State building and said,
you know, if I become governor of Nevada. Let's say
I become governor of Nevada, I run I beat the
horrible Republican that's in power, and I become governor and
I go to the State House with my friend Steve
and say, Steve, this place needs a disco, and we
just decide.
Speaker 8 (17:47):
To build one.
Speaker 9 (17:48):
Don't get any permits, don't take into account that it's
a historical building. Just bulldoze down something and build a disco.
It would be wrong, but it'd be right, but he'd
be wrong. So what he's doing is completely wrong and
no one is stopping him, no one, And it's sad.
(18:13):
And you know, I understand him now. I understand Maga
a lot better after watching Devil in Disguise the John
Wayne Gacy Story. And you're gonna be like, what the fuck?
But so I watched the eight part mini series devilin
Disguise the John Wayne Gacy Story on Peacock Well. They
also have the six part documentary that inspired the series,
(18:36):
and it includes an interview with John Wayne Gacy two
years before his before he got the needle.
Speaker 4 (18:44):
And.
Speaker 9 (18:46):
Watching the real John Wayne Gacy, which was terrifying, chilling,
bone chilling. We're gonna talk about that later. What scares you?
Watching John Wayne Gacy gave me great insight into Donald
Trump because they're both psychopaths and I am not being
flippant here, Okay, I'm being dead serious. John Wayne Gacy.
(19:10):
You could not convince him that he was to blame
for the thirty four murders. You could not convince them
of it. He believed, with every ounce of fiber in
him that those boys deserved to die, that they had
(19:30):
either he paid them the money he was supposed to
pay them, and then they asked for more money, and
in his mind, that meant they deserved to die. They
fought back, and in his mind, that was them attacking him.
Speaker 8 (19:49):
They were just fighting back his rape.
Speaker 9 (19:50):
You know, he's trying to rape them, and they were
fighting back, and to him, that resistance was them attacking him.
He had scars, he had bruises. They attacked me. He
was a liberal. He was a Democratic Party organizer. He
had pictures with the former First Ladies. He was the
(20:14):
head of the JC, even in prison. He did the
largest JC organization in the in the Midwest. He was likable.
He if you just met him, you would think he
was a great guy. You really would.
Speaker 8 (20:33):
And in his mind he did nothing wrong up until
the day he died.
Speaker 9 (20:41):
He truly believed the people he killed deserved it, that
they came on to him, or they beat him, you know,
or they they tried to harm him in some way,
or they might have deserved it because they were fruit
loops as he called them. See he said he was bisexual.
He was gay, and him being in the closet and
(21:01):
having a conservative father is part of the reason he
turned into a killer because he couldn't be out, he
couldn't be open. And when you see that kind of psychopath,
I thought, that's Trump right there, that's MAGA. That's every
MAGA supporter right there. They don't care about fact and
(21:22):
you can't change their minds. We dismissed their mental illness.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
Say, now is show side?
Speaker 9 (21:59):
You know, had John Wayne Gacy not been caught, he
was going to run for office. He was and he
probably would have won. He was likable, affable, he was
a successful businessman, and yet he had you know, twenty
seven bodies under his house decomposing and.
Speaker 8 (22:21):
Watching him speak. It's not an act.
Speaker 9 (22:25):
Go to Peacock, even if you just get a free
trial and watch the documentary, Well, first watch the drama
and then watch the documentary so you can see the
real people.
Speaker 8 (22:36):
It's pretty cool. And I just was.
Speaker 9 (22:40):
Convinced that MAGA and Trump and Mike Johnson they're mentally ill.
And I'm again I am not being flippant here. I
am not These people are dangerous psychopaths, and I think
there's a lot of mental illness in our country that
has gone undiagnosed.
Speaker 8 (23:00):
Science backs me.
Speaker 9 (23:01):
Up on this, and we excuse it, we look away
from it. We don't actually believe it. I'm telling you
Donald Trump is a psychopath. He's a They all have
the same traits, the narcissism, all of it. Let's look
(23:22):
up the definition of psychopaths. But I don't want to
be spreading, you know, because I fully believe that these
people are the same as John Wayne Gacy, and.
Speaker 8 (23:32):
They kill people.
Speaker 9 (23:33):
Donald Trump is causing the deaths of many, many people.
And if the Republicans, if MAGA get their wish and
they don't open the government and Republican's cave and healthcare doubles,
people will go off of health care and they will die. So,
whether it's a gay kid that you rape, peon, throw
(23:56):
up on, and then bury in your basement in a grave,
that you made them dig, and I mean, it's almost
like they're making us dig our own graves.
Speaker 8 (24:04):
Let's see psy psychopath definition. Let's look it up. Shall
we see? John Wayne Gacy?
Speaker 4 (24:11):
No.
Speaker 9 (24:12):
A psychopath is an individual with a mental disorder characterized
by a lack of empathy or remorse. Hello, Hello, MAGA
has zero empathy, zero and zero remorse for any of
their actions, including their leader, manipulative behavior, Hello, Donald Trump,
(24:37):
Mike Johnson, MAGA, senators, MAGA itself, and often anti social
or criminal tendencies. Well, he's a convicted fucking felon.
Speaker 8 (24:50):
So by.
Speaker 9 (24:51):
Key traits include superficial charm, a grandiose sense of self worth.
Jesus Christ, I had no idea how clinically defined Donald
Trump is as a psychopath an individual with a mental disorder,
lack of empathy or remorse, manipulative behavior, criminal tendencies, superficial charm,
(25:15):
grandiose sense of self worth, a need for adulation and stimulation,
and a parasitic lifestyle, also extreme narcissism. Holy fuck me, batman,
Donald Trump really clinically is a psychopath?
Speaker 8 (25:41):
Oh my god, let's wait, I mean really, like I
wasn't just kidding. Wow.
Speaker 9 (25:53):
A mental disorder characterized by a lack of empathy and remorse,
manipulative behavior, criminal ten superficial charm, grandiose sense of self worth,
a need for stimulation and adulation, impulsivity hello, and a
parasitic lifestyle living off something else. Oh my god, oh
(26:15):
my god. Our country is being run by a psychopath
and the people that vote for him are psychopaths. Oh
my god, oh my god.
Speaker 8 (26:28):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (26:30):
What do y'all think of that? Do you believe by
definition donald Trump is a psychopath? By definition, not your opinion.
Do you believe from the definition that I just read
that Donald Trump classifies as a psychopath because it seems
to me he checked every single box, like everyone check, check, check, check.
(27:00):
And if I know this, and if I can easily
look this up online, why house in Congress? I would
think being a psychopath is an impeachable offense. I would think,
maybe it's just me, but I would think if you
are proven to have a mental disorder of psychopathy, that
(27:22):
you could be removed from office.
Speaker 8 (27:25):
Maybe not, but it seems like a damn good reason.
Speaker 9 (27:30):
And his followers are equally as mentally ill, and I
don't mean to excuse them. We hold mentally ill people
responsible for their actions.
Speaker 8 (27:42):
We do.
Speaker 9 (27:44):
If a mentally ill person kills someone, they don't get
away with it. They go to a state mental hospital.
Donald Trump is mentally ill. He is a psychopath, but
that doesn't mean he should be able to get away
with the things he's getting away with.
Speaker 8 (28:06):
And Maga.
Speaker 9 (28:09):
They follow suit, and they follow a psychopath. Only someone
with a mental illness would follow a psychopath. Truly, this
is astounding to me. This is just astounding. Wow, just wow. Okay,
(28:30):
when we come back in part two, a couple of things.
The state of gay in the USA. We're going to
talk about that. Also, horror is cleaning up right now.
Black Phone two at the box office raking in a
lot of money.
Speaker 8 (28:42):
Sinners.
Speaker 9 (28:43):
One of the best movies made last year is Coming
Back to the Theater or this year is coming Back
to the Theaters with Michael B. Jordan, who could come
back anywhere he wanted to come on my back whatever.
And so that's big, and that's a horror movie. We
have the new Welcome to Dairy It prequel on HBO Max,
(29:07):
which is already garnering huge reviews, and people are talking
about Emmy's So horror is really big right now.
Speaker 8 (29:16):
And I'll give you the reasons why.
Speaker 9 (29:18):
You know, there's a reason, But we're gonna talk about
what really scares you, like Halloween's coming, what frightens you?
Speaker 8 (29:26):
I am Carell. Part two of the cREL Cast is
coming up.
Speaker 9 (29:29):
Of course, I always want you to be when you
want to be found to hurt your buddy, but to
day too.
Speaker 8 (29:33):
Don't go anywhere. We'll be right back for the next
thirty minute world within Catalkay, I'm gonna read the chat
room in the break the chat with me, baby chat.
Speaker 13 (29:44):
Let me be from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the Corell Cast on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Old time is here, No time.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
To fear, corrall is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Speaker 3 (30:10):
Corilla is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 11 (30:15):
Now.
Speaker 4 (30:16):
It's show side.
Speaker 8 (30:30):
All right, coming up in part two? What of the
state of gay in the USA?
Speaker 9 (30:35):
And someone in the chat room just said, think of
it a psychopath with nuclear code? Yeah, yeah, not a
not a good thought?
Speaker 13 (30:43):
Is it?
Speaker 6 (30:45):
Uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged, it's no Coral cast.
Speaker 7 (30:51):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 9 (31:00):
Alrighty, it is the crowd Cast. I am Correl, so
very glad you're joining me. I know, I'm a little distracted.
I'm typing into the chat room, and I agree with Sandy.
Imagine a psychopath with nuclear codes and we have one.
And that's that's really scary, it really is. It's just
(31:22):
it's just frightening. Speaking of frightening in the next segment
or even now, what scares you? And I know you're
gonna say Donald Trump and and you know, yes, modern
day life is frightening.
Speaker 8 (31:36):
It is. It's frightening. Where America is headed, it's frightening.
Speaker 9 (31:41):
It's all that's. Yes, I get it, that's frightening. But
let's move beyond that. You know, when I saw Jaws
as a kid, it kept me out of the water
until well into my twenties. Scared the huck a buck
truck right out of me. I wouldn't even go into
a lake because of the movie Piranha, which came out
very shortly after Josh, because I thought with her fresh
(32:04):
water piranhas, So I really was. I was afraid of
sharks because of the movie Jaws. When I saw The
Exorcist when I was fifteen, fourteen years old, every night
I went to bed for weeks, I swore my bed
was moving you know, or I heard sounds in the
(32:26):
attic or I mean I for a while, demonic possession
was something that I truly worried about. I'm not making
that up. When I was a kid, because of the
Exorcist and Damian Oman two and you know, all these
other movies about the devil and evil spirits, I truly
thought just all anybody could be possessed. As I grew older,
(32:46):
I realized that was all gobblygook. But a thirteen fourteen
year old kid who just saw Linda Blair and your
mother south socks and smell, you know, all that stuff,
so it and knowing the lore of that film, you know,
Linda Blair almost broke her back and three people died
while filming, and the entire set burned down except the
(33:07):
room where the possession was going to take place. And
I mean just you know, it was a lot of
lore about that movie. So I got scared. Nowadays, when
I think of horror movies and things that scare me,
it's things that are more real, things that seem obtuse
(33:32):
but could really happen.
Speaker 8 (33:34):
You know.
Speaker 9 (33:34):
Back when I was younger, it was it was stuff
that there's no way in hell it's ever going to
really happen, but you know, like demonic possession. But now
when I see a scary film, it's I usually get
terrified about man's inhumanity to man. So for me, being
(33:55):
alone in a cabin in the woods, isolated away from life,
away from cities, away from people, away from neighbors, with
no technology, no phone, no GPS, nothing, just being alone
in the woods in a tent or a cabin is
(34:19):
terrifying to me. That would, oh my god, I would
be so scared. I would because of the unknown, because
I've seen enough movies of marauding killers, Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
which was ed Geen, And I've seen enough real true
(34:39):
crime things about John Wayne Gacy, ed Geen, Jeffrey Dahmer,
all that kind of stuff, to where if I was
alone in a cabin in the woods, Oh no, I'd
be so sure there were serial killers out in those woods.
Speaker 8 (34:54):
I would be terrified. So what terrifies you?
Speaker 9 (34:58):
Maybe being alone in a cabin in the woods, far
away from technology sounds like a dream thing for you.
For me, i'd be, oh my god, I'd be scared.
What scares you? Horror is big business, now, you know,
big business. I don't fear the supernatural because hey, I
don't believe in it, but b if these things did exist,
(35:22):
my curiosity would get the best to me. I mean,
I'd want to know more. I'm the one who would
try to interview the ghost or the demon. You know,
I'd be like, what's it like in hell? How did
you get there? What did you do as a person?
You know, I I'd be the Barbara Walters of demons.
Speaker 8 (35:39):
I'd want to know everything about them, so you know
I wouldn't. It wouldn't scare me as much. What scares
you for me isolation that scares me.
Speaker 9 (35:52):
Being alone in the wood or in a desert just
by myself, that scared me.
Speaker 7 (36:00):
Really Correll dot com Daily you're missing out.
Speaker 11 (36:04):
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 (36:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Corell is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
So on with the show.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
Let's give it a go. Corella is the one that
you need to know.
Speaker 8 (36:29):
It's murder on the dance floor or Sophie B. Hopkins.
Speaker 9 (36:32):
You better not steal the groove. Someone said movies like
it's alive. I never got freaked out out of demonic babies.
You can just kick them like a football. That never
scared me. Uh, movies like Chucky because I still believe
stuffed animals might come to life.
Speaker 8 (36:51):
I do.
Speaker 9 (36:53):
I told you yesterday. I think my Teddy rexbin causes havoc.
So yeah, movies where stuff animals or dolls. Dolls are creepy.
When you walk into someone's house and they have like
a collection of thirty dolls. I swear to Christ they're
watching me. It's like they're watching always see you lie,
It's like they're watching, don't. I don't trust dolls. I
(37:16):
don't know why I don't trust dolls. I don't trust dolls.
I think dolls and stuffed animals may have an agenda.
So I get a little, a little freaked out. You know,
I think Barbie beat Ken at night. I do.
Speaker 8 (37:29):
Really. I believe that Ken is abused, and I think
that Barbie beats him. I do. I think that, you know,
she takes out her frustrations on Ken.
Speaker 9 (37:38):
So yeah, but so dolls, but not like you know,
my sister used to have this doll called a Chatty Kathy. Okay,
and chatty Kathy was like three or four feet tall.
That's creepy. Who needs a four foot tall doll? And
it talked and she was so nice. I knew that
(38:01):
bitch was plotting something I did. I never trusted chatty
Kathy ever. I became a chatty Kathy, but I never
trusted her. I thought she's listening. Oh Qpie dolls. Oh no, no,
I'd run screaming of someone at her.
Speaker 8 (38:23):
See.
Speaker 9 (38:23):
Dolls are frightening. That's why Chucky and all these movies
with dolls.
Speaker 8 (38:26):
They scare me.
Speaker 9 (38:28):
Oh what was it, Sharon Blair or Black Karen Black,
Trilogy of Terror?
Speaker 8 (38:33):
That doll with that knife.
Speaker 9 (38:36):
Do you know they keep that doll under lock? It's
in the Museum of Television. I've seen it. I have
seen that doll. And when I went to that doll,
I asked everyone, I go, how many of you were
terrified of this doll as a kid, And most people
said I still in I said, yes, that's why it's
locked in that glass. It's like Annabelle that matt Rice
(38:57):
comic just bought all that stuff from them, that couple
that the Conjuring movies are about matt Riife just bought Annabelle,
and annabel exists, she's a real doll. That doll should
be locked up. Oh yeah, Oh terrified me. Uh, just
terrified me. So the state of day in the USA,
(39:21):
you know, I saw Amy Conan Barrett is out talking
about same sex marriage and should it go before the
same Supreme Court. And I just wrote a letter to
the Canadian Immigration about how I need to possibly emigrate
to Canada because it's not safe in the United States
to be gay.
Speaker 8 (39:38):
Now.
Speaker 9 (39:38):
I don't know if you guys realize when I say
that that it's true. Like when I called Donald Trump
a psychopath, It's true. He is mentally ill. By definition,
he has every one of the qualities of a psychopath.
When I tell you it's dangerous to be gay, the
Advocate has a story right now about how many trans
(40:01):
people are leaving or planning to leave the USA. My friend,
I have a friend, David. His daughter is trans and
she's already out. I think she's she may be in
Portland or but she's on her way to Vancouver. She's
getting out. It's it's only going to get worse over
(40:24):
the next three years, and being gay is rough right now,
I myself get afraid now when I go out, Steve
and I weren't even going to go to Gay Pride.
We thought it's going to be, you know, a big
target area, but there's no one there, so bullets wouldn't
(40:46):
have hit anybody, you know. So, but we actually considered
not going because of being a target. There are six
hundred and thirty four pieces of pending legislation right now
in America against gays. Six hundred and thirty four they
(41:09):
are trying to bring back. They are fighting to bring
back conversion therapy. Now that scares me. Conversion therapy, which
is torture. They literally want to try and torture people
into not being gay. That's scary. That's World War two
Mengola kind of stuff.
Speaker 8 (41:32):
It really is.
Speaker 9 (41:33):
It's something Joseph Mengela would have done. And so what
is the state of gay in the USA right now?
Dangerous not to mention because of all this, we are
losing so many queer spaces. In fact, there is now
an investment firm that is buying up gay bars in
(41:57):
various cities, the big ones, the established on the old
ones so they don't go away. A group of wealthy
gay investors are now buying up gay bars in various
cities across the country to ensure that there are still
some spaces left for gay people. And the bars and
(42:20):
clubs that we have now they're sparsely attended. People aren't
going young gen X, I'm sorry, gen Z gen Y.
They don't go to gay bars because when they came
up prior to Trump, gays we're going to regular you know,
regular clubs, regular nightclubs. It's not okay anymore for gays
(42:41):
to go to regular clubs.
Speaker 8 (42:42):
It's dangerous.
Speaker 9 (42:46):
So the state of gay in the USA right now
is dangerous and disappearing. We're not gaining visibility on television,
we're losing. We're not gaining visibility in movies we're losing.
We're not gaining visibility. In government we're losing. We're not
gaining visibility in schools we're losing. We're not gaining rights
(43:08):
guaranteed in states. We're losing. We are regressing, going backwards.
It's getting dangerous. We're losing our queer spaces, we're losing
our identity as a community. They are trying to take
it away, and it's working. That's the really horrible part.
Speaker 8 (43:31):
It's working.
Speaker 9 (43:33):
It's partly working because old gays like me don't have
the fight left in us anymore, and young gays don't
want to fight. They don't know that you have to
actually risk. I have risked my life, my entire life,
for being out even now, you know, young gays they
don't realize that. They don't realize what I went through
(43:56):
in nineteen eighty. They don't realize what the AIDS epidemic
did to our community. They can barely remember COVID. They
don't remember what AIDS did, how people laughed at our suffering.
Speaker 8 (44:09):
How you know.
Speaker 9 (44:10):
In the John Wayne gaycy thing, even in the documentary,
they bring up the fact that the Chicago police could
have stopped John Wayne Gacy at any He had had
eight encounters with police prior, but because it was just
gay people who were being assaulted, or when the families
(44:32):
went to report the kids missing, if they thought the
kids were gay, they didn't do any searching.
Speaker 8 (44:39):
They didn't know.
Speaker 9 (44:42):
There are so many of the files of the victims
of John Wayne Gacy that are one page because the
police didn't investigate because they figured it's just a fag.
In fact, when one of his victims that lived that
testified against him reported that he was eight by John
Wayne Gacy. The state attorney said they can't prosecute John
(45:05):
Wayne Gaycy for that because there was no statute under
the law for gay rape, that under the law a
man could not be raped by another man, that all
gay sex was consensual and if it was rough, Oh well,
that wasn't that long ago, people, that was forty years
(45:28):
So what's the state of gay in the USA right now?
Speaker 8 (45:32):
Dangerous? Dangerous? And what can we do about it at
the moment? Nothing? Oh, I know.
Speaker 9 (45:43):
Everyone says, go out, be visible, still, go to pride,
give to the HRC. And the most useless organizations right
now are GLAD. In the HRC, they're useless. They're not
winning any legislative battles. They're not waging the right battles.
And in terms of GLAD, Hollywood is going backwards when
(46:03):
it comes to gay representation.
Speaker 8 (46:05):
Not forward. So Glad's losing the battle.
Speaker 9 (46:10):
It's a terrible time to be gay in the USA.
And it's sad because so many people were coming to
grips with not only that it's okay, but they were
coming to grips with themselves. The number of people identifying
as LGBTQ has doubled in the last twenty years. It
(46:31):
used to be people said, oh, well, gay's only three
to four percent of the population. Now they're saying twelve
to fifteen percent. A lot of people are saying they're
sexually fluid or pan sexual or by and young kids
are fine with that now, twenty year old guys for
the most part liberal.
Speaker 8 (46:49):
I'm not talking about MAGA.
Speaker 9 (46:50):
They still do gay stuff, but then they beat you
up afterwards, just like John Wayne Gacy self loathing. But
you know, progressive, young kid, they're fine with same sex relationships.
The problem is people between the ages of thirty and dead,
(47:12):
you know. And so I could, I could read to
you all of the different pieces of legislation, but there's
six hundred plus, you know, six hundred plus everything from
banning books in schools, banning trans kids, banning there's several
(47:35):
pieces of legislation to downright outlaw being transgendered, outlawed, make
it illegal to be transgendered. This is scary times. And
there is a gay a pink migration going on. If
you would, one of the number one groups of people
(47:56):
leaving the country are get LGBTQ.
Speaker 8 (47:58):
I just read that yesterday.
Speaker 9 (48:01):
We are leading the way when it comes to getting out,
we're not over it's not over reaction. I know a
lot of you are. If you're not, excuse me, sorry.
I have my own two scoops of cocoa powder, and
I don't mean Hershey's. I mean organic dark cocoa nibs
co cow powder, c ac ao, not oa cow powder.
(48:25):
Two tablespoons of cocw powder, one teaspoon of macha, eight
ounces of homemade sawy or almond milk, and a tablespoon
of agave put into a hotel chocolate velvetizer.
Speaker 8 (48:37):
I do it every morning. It's delicious and good for you.
Speaker 9 (48:41):
So I'm not if you're not gay, you really you
don't get it. I mean, I know you think you
get it, but you don't. If you're black, or a
woman or a minority, you get it, you understand. So
I never understood how blacks are anti gay. I thought,
you know, don't you get it? But for those of
(49:03):
you that are listening to me that are allies, you
think you understand the fear, but you don't.
Speaker 8 (49:12):
You don't. Look.
Speaker 9 (49:14):
I don't want to leave my home. I don't want
to leave my country. I don't I used to like
that I was the thorn in my countryside that I'm
an American and yes I'm gay, and I'm gonna be
in your face and I'm gonna put myself at the
table whether you like it or not.
Speaker 8 (49:31):
I used to like that.
Speaker 9 (49:34):
That is now dangerous, and I don't like that. It
was always dangerous. It's more dangerous now. Trump's rhetoric, and
he used to be pro gay, by the way, he
just flip flopped on that. Trump's rhetoric, Mike Johnson's rhetoric,
Charlie Kirk's rhetoric. These people, and they're anti gay sentiment
(50:00):
where they openly say gay should be stoned killed. They
now have so many people in Maga saying it's okay
to kill a gay person. That's what John Wayne Gacy thought.
It's scary. The state of gay in the USA. It
is truly frightening.
Speaker 8 (50:21):
And so.
Speaker 9 (50:24):
If you have an LGBTQ friend, don't don't tell them
they're overreacting, okay, because they're not. They're not overreacting. It
is a bad time. Let's see Legends nightclub in North Carolina,
mainstay for forty years, remains in Raleigh as queer spaces disappear.
(50:45):
See what did I tell you they're vanishing? Gay places
are vanishing. That's one of the lead stories at Google News.
Let's see what else. Zohan van Dami's dad allegedly tried
to silence LGBTQ professor in Uganda.
Speaker 8 (51:08):
He's a Muslim. Uh.
Speaker 9 (51:11):
Now, more than ever, LGBTQ will need community. This is
some psychology today. See psychology today is saying, look today,
people need community now more than ever because they don't feel.
Speaker 8 (51:23):
Like they have one. Not a good time to be
gay in the U S A.
Speaker 9 (51:44):
No show speaking of being gay in the USA. I
do Apple Fitness and one of the things they have
(52:06):
is dance and they often do throwback hits on the
dance And every time I dance and do the dances
with the three team leaders Lashawan and John and Ben,
two of which are gay, and they play the throwback hits,
I cry. Now it's in doorphins and my heart's going.
(52:29):
But I cry because I went out every night dancing
for twenty five years, really from the time I was
like eighteen to the time I was fifty basically, so yeah,
thirty thirty years, thirty two years.
Speaker 8 (52:47):
Every night at.
Speaker 9 (52:48):
Least four or five nights even Daniel Charleston and I.
We'd go dancing in West Hollywood two three times a week.
I danced can and I danced at the dance clubs.
Every night of our twelve years relationship. Me and Andrew
we went out dancing three four times a week. I
have danced with some of the most remarkable LGBTQ men
(53:10):
to ever live. Andrew Howard ken Pearson, he's still alive.
Andrew's gone, Lorenzo Clark, Braxton, gone gone. So many of
my friends are gone, and I used to dance with them.
And so I wrote a song called I Dance Because
(53:34):
Because after I finished crying from Apple Music, I said,
why do you cry? And I said, you cry because
you dance still because they can't. You still sing like
Sylvester Because Sylvester can't. I wrote a song about it.
The cover has my friend Lorenzo, Me and Andrew from
the eighties in a Tom of Finland style poster. If
(53:57):
you don't know who Tom of Finland is, look him up, uh,
and I can show you that cover and without further ado,
ladies and gentlemen, here's the cover and without further ado,
I give you.
Speaker 4 (54:11):
Is because we do.
Speaker 8 (54:12):
I it's because we could.
Speaker 14 (54:14):
I just to show the world, I just to show
the girl. I just to feel you, neil, I just
don't hold you, dear. I is to be the right
I's to on.
Speaker 9 (54:25):
A night on visit sadness wind fnnights it seemed too cold.
Speaker 8 (54:30):
I know just what to do when it's you ho
wan hold. I stood to feel.
Speaker 14 (54:34):
The beat move into my soul that I no longer
feel alone.
Speaker 8 (54:39):
The rhythm makes me all.
Speaker 4 (54:40):
For years, I have become we too.
Speaker 8 (54:43):
I just become we could show.
Speaker 4 (54:48):
Show I still feel you here.
Speaker 14 (54:51):
I'm still hold you till I still be.
Speaker 4 (54:54):
A right I it's too hot a night and I
still hollow, and.
Speaker 2 (55:12):
We may not be.
Speaker 15 (55:13):
Apart, but you dance in my heart and oh my jore,
you bring still lead my heart to sing yes.
Speaker 8 (55:20):
Still never read as strong. It's like a favorite soul.
Speaker 15 (55:24):
And as I swain, I sing, I feel that shore
you bring es right because you is because be cold,
I have to show off.
Speaker 4 (55:33):
I has to show I feel I hold you.
Speaker 13 (55:39):
To my still be light.
Speaker 12 (55:41):
I have still all my.
Speaker 15 (55:42):
Nights one days it's side this fen all types have
seen you cold.
Speaker 8 (55:47):
I don't just what to do.
Speaker 15 (55:49):
Where did you have on a hold, I start to
feel the beat. Let it prove it to my soul
that I no longer feel alone. The rhythm makes me
hold yes.
Speaker 4 (55:59):
We may help help, aren't you dancing? My heart and
mother enjoy you, brings.
Speaker 14 (56:04):
You'll be for I'm just saying, yes, your man will
be his strong.
Speaker 8 (56:08):
It's like a favorite song.
Speaker 15 (56:10):
And I dost man and saying I feel enjoy you
bring years and I can because we do, I can
become me cold as to show my.
Speaker 4 (56:20):
Answer, show my hans to feel you dear, still hold
you to you. My answer be the right.
Speaker 15 (56:28):
My answer had a nice so I don't feel the
man who read no, I don't see that God because
the time had come for us to say good time.
Speaker 4 (56:37):
Instead, I start to move a crystal tents long, so
wild last.
Speaker 15 (56:41):
And my body starts to feel the love I have
INSIFU answer.
Speaker 3 (56:47):
And all.
Speaker 8 (56:56):
By hides because we do. HI dance me because we
could high dance to show the world.
Speaker 9 (57:08):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, that is I dance because
Written by Me and Ai and Leo Frapier and background
vocals by the incredible Genie Tracy. Dance Icon sing with
Sylvester has Dance number one Dance singles of her own,
still San Francisco based, and I'm one of the few
(57:29):
people she will sing with on a Sylvester song. So
she's an incredible woman. Thank you for joining me today.
I am corel be who you want to be, So
dur anybody. Today is Thursday, which means I won't be
back until Monday. I want you to have a really
super weekend. Have a great weekend, do something really wonderful
for yourself. That single will be available late November. You
heard it here weeks in advance on Swishcraft Records Matt
(57:54):
Consola in Seattle. I thank him for the help with
that as well. Leo Frapia and I are already cooking
up the song that I played last week about thank You,
the gospel song, and so that's already going.
Speaker 8 (58:06):
That'll be my next single come January.
Speaker 9 (58:09):
So thank you for indulging me today and letting me
play that for you after talking about how bad it
is to be gay. I'll never forget. I'm sorry, Gosh,
I'm sorry. I'll never forget all the incredible people that
(58:30):
I have danced with in my lifetime that are no
longer here because the nation turned its back on an
epidemic and because it was just gay people dying. I'll
never forget the love and compassion for my parents When
I told them I was gay. My mom said, if
(58:52):
you ever get Bert reynoldsy's mine first. I will never
forget the love from you all of these years, for
the big loud gay guy on the radio, whether it
was KFI, Different after Dark, on Kypa and kg O,
I have been blessed to be unapologetically gay because I
(59:17):
can't hide it, and it's made me create some incredible stuff.
I thank you for that chance. I thank you for
the continuing chance.
Speaker 8 (59:28):
I love you. I want you all to have a
great weekend and dance. Dance because you can dance with
someone you love. Dance with me. Yes, Lord, I am Corel.
Be who you want to be.
Speaker 7 (59:44):
It's from a completely different point of view yours.
Speaker 13 (59:50):
Listen daily to the Corell Cast on your favorite streaming service.