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December 10, 2024 57 mins
On this week’s show Chris and Aaron talk about: Thanksgiving, extra moon, Ellen Degeneres leaving the US, “Longevity Escape Velocity”, Elon Musk vs NDT, the weight of the atmosphere, R.I.P. Chuck Woolery, and Gladiator II. Please follow us on Twitter @TheWeedsmen420, Instagram @TheWeedsmenPotcast, and on Facebook at Facebook.com/TheWeedsmenPotcast/ Download the rest of our shows at ChristopherMedia.net!
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Christopher Media. Let's make some noise from Asthma Core Studios
near Detroit, Michigan. It's the Weedsman Podcast. And now you
have smoked yourself retard. Here are the Weedsmen.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
You want to get hut.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
Welcome to the Weedsman Podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
I'm Chris, I'm Aaron. Welcome back, Happy Holidays. This is
now the official we said Thanksgiving.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Right, there's nothing wrong with saying Thanksgiving.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
There's uh yeah, but no, I'm just saying we are
like now officially and there's no fucking around. Oh it's
Thanksgiving as this comes out, this is this is the
Black Friday episode, right yeah.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
And notice, to people like me, you can no longer
complain about Christmas music. It is now to me the
line of demarcation. When I know I'm not past this point.
I'm not saying I'm going to listen, but to me,
the line of demarcation, at least when I was a kid,
was thanks after Thanksgiving, game on with the Christmas music.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
That used to be when Christmas started? Yeah, right, and
it was and that even that was like an indulgent thing,
like We're gonna do a whole month of Christmas of
like getting ready and the Christmas music and the decorations
and all that, and now it's just if you don't
get your shut up by Thanksgiving, then you're just not
gonna participate.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
Yeah, you're slacking. No, Yeah, I mean look at my job.
They've been playing Christmas music since the day after Halloween.
To be fair, the person who runs to office her
two favorite holidays are Halloween and Christmas, so she is
just like it's like her two super bowls right in row.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
I have a hard time identifying with people who have
favorite holidays periods.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
It's chicks.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
I feel, Yeah, well a.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
Lot of shit we go. We just look at them
and go, all right.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
We all we all celebrate things, weird things that don't
really matter in our own way, you know. Uh So
I get it, and there's nothing wrong, Like it's very communal.
I can't. I'm almost envious, Like I just cannot be
bothered to decorate for a season. Right. I'm not saying

(02:17):
I don't decorate that I don't think about like the
furniture that I buy that I don't put up art
or anything like that. It's just like that's it I
put it. I'm not thinking about what do I do
in the fall, right.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
I got like two Christmas decorations and I put them
in the window and I plung on the wall and
that's it. I don't tape them. I literally I just
set them in. What I let grab. One's like a
snowmane and one's like a scene. One's like a tree,
or one's like a scene. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
I don't know Mom gave it to me or some.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
Shit, but yeah, I just like gravity holds them in
the window. I do that. I do that little amount
of work. I just set them there. I think the
most amount of effort is I plug it in.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Like I got it. This will be my last an.
It's like if I don't do it by fifty that
I'm just never going to I'm never going to be
that person that has Next year.

Speaker 3 (03:06):
Someone else has to be.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
You know, a target bin full of you know, next
year I'm vy seasonal decoration, someone else will be taking.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
But someone else will someone else will be spearheading it.
I'll be glad, like I'll come home one day, or.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
You'll be married. Yeah, yeah, that's her, that's her job, right.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
Well, no, no, that's that's that's I know that's on
deck for this weekend. No, but she wants to do it.
She likes all that crap. Get it good, go. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
My ex wife was, she was really especially Halloween. I
think how like I live in a very liberal neighborhood,
uh maybe the most liberal neighborhood in in the southeast Michigan,
but h and every almost everybody decorated for Halloween. Most
people still have their Halloween decorations ups.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
You know, you could kind of slide. I don't if
there's something based you could slide into Thanksgiving.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
There's a lot of it that is just fall based, sure,
but there's still a lot of ghost witches in hunched cats.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
Yeah yeah, yeah, the ghosts were.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
There's there's stuff that just doesn't Yeah, it doesn't d
rest of it. But I have no beef with that
per se. But I'm just they I would have thought
as much as they were into Halloween that they would
have immediately like flipped over to Christmas with the same gusto,

(04:31):
the same vigor. And I haven't seen it, and I'm
thinking if that, if it doesn't happen, like I like,
maybe a couple houses have lights up, that's it versus.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Well, you know your your neighborhood's in the morning.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
I think, yeah, I thought you might be right.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
I thought I noticed today there's a lot of Harris
Walls signs just still hanging on in the yards.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
I think, like, like, I'm not even that And this
is this is what liberals have tended to do, is
what So like, conservatives will pose some ridiculous argument that
there's a liberal war on Christmas, right, and the liberals
are like, that's ridiculous, of course there isn't, and they
just keep hammering this, like a year after year. We

(05:21):
keep thinking, oh, it's the war on Christoso. Nope, no,
it's still going. There's still a few chuckleheads out there
that are getting on their soapbox. And I think that
liberals get so sick of it. They're just like, fine,
we're not going to even celebrate Christmas anymore, you know,
not with the same vigor that we do other holidays.
And I think that holidays have like I think Halloween

(05:45):
is the liberal holiday, right, because that's one of the
conservatives are always complaining about, like what types of Like Okay,
so we didn't even see it as much this time around.
Everybody complains about uh about communism and the liberals took
over that the complaints for a while. There was a

(06:05):
stretch of a few years where it was like, you
can't be Pocahontas, you can't be you know, mermaids because
they might be real, I don't know, you can't be whatever,
you know, getting canceled for certain things. But the conservatives
were on that long before, with just complaining about how
everything has to be sexy and how the adults are

(06:29):
taking over Halloween. Am I crazy? Or are we divvying
up the holidays?

Speaker 3 (06:38):
I don't know. I mean I feel that this last
election it's going to mean conservative for being born with
a dick like that's and I'm steering it that way.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
And am I totally crazy? Because it's like I didn't
put much into these the speculations on like are we
approaching another civil war? But if it actually does cut
this culturally deep in this country, like maybe so, and

(07:10):
if you and if you believe that, like all democracies
before it, and longer than any democracy before for that matter,
you know, this experiment's been going, but it probably will
end someday, Like how else would it end other than
some sort of I mean, you think the country is
just going to dissolve.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
No, it'll be individual.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
What happened to what happened to Rome? Like it? It
was chaos. You know, you had many, many years of
freaking well, I saw a Gladiator movie. They had too.
The rulers of Rome at that time were twin brothers
that were just insane. And I'm sure you know they

(07:52):
were amped up and vilified for the movie. But I don't.
I don't know my research enough to know how much
of it was fact. But we know there are a
lot of fucking crazy ass rulers in the end times
of Rome.

Speaker 3 (08:05):
I say, chuck me in January, after the consumer spending
reports come out, once they figure out what everybody spent
on Christmas.

Speaker 2 (08:12):
Yeah, yeah, we don't. I'd like to see those I'd
like to see the politics on that, if you could, right,
like our liberals or conservatives spending more on Halloween or Christmas?

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Well it's real easy again in January, who had the
most money spent at them?

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Well, I mean you could probably. I don't know. It's
not like it's not something you can easily break down.
It's not like you know, just where does you know
Kendrick Lamar sell more tickets versus jelly donut. They could

(08:53):
they can, Yes, I'm saying they can. Look at that
like you can see like you can look at demographic.
It's just by like ticket sales and shit like that.
Kids tend to like all the same ship. It's not
like there's Conservator or liberal toys, right, I'm saying where
it's where it's where it's purchased. Yeah, Walmart versus Neiman Marcus.

(09:15):
You know that's what I'm saying, Like what retailer is.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
Going to be.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
We have too many purple areas, right, especially in areas
where you'd be able to get those usually pull those
figures easily from larger cities. Cities are more purplely. I
don't know. We had an extra moon for a while.
How come I didn't even hear about this until it
was leaving already. It would have been great if it

(09:39):
was stuck around. We could have just had an extra
moon and then we would we wouldn't have to decide
like who gets the moon when we have to divide America,
because America owns the world and everything outside of it too.
Apparently America owns Mars ship. We're already staking claim on that.
So in the big American divorce. Who gets the moon?

Speaker 3 (10:00):
Was it saying? Did we pull in an extra object
for a second? I guess, how do we have a
second moon? It?

Speaker 2 (10:07):
Yeah, it came from somewhere else. They're calling it an asteroid,
which I don't know. We had asteroids. My dad had
them barely sit down.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Hey, I'm in the mid forties. I got them too.
What are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (10:20):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (10:21):
I blamed the job I had where I sat on
my ass for fifty hours a week.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Yeah, there's mini moon. It had a mini moon. The
moon had a mini moon. Imagine just floating around up there.
It's like biting its pinky, like Doctor Evil. That's got
a little little moon going around.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
It nights like it was the one that just jumped
around and went yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Hell yeah, yeah, there's a uh that show ship? What's
the HBO show that about? Making other superhero movie?

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Fuck?

Speaker 2 (10:57):
I can't remember what the fucking thing is called. I
want to call it something else. The guy who did
Veep a guy who does the very farcical series.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
And movies I don't from pop culture, like a decade ago.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
Armando Iannucci. That's the guy's name. But anyways, there's some
big producer that's always visiting the set, and they got
a guy who's there to do uh, like the explosion.
They're going to blow up a bridge, and the guy
like people start noticing. They're like because the producer's talking
to the guy about you know, what were we going

(11:32):
to do? What's the the setup and all this, and
they're like, you know, see looks like he's like a
he's like a three quarter scale version of the producer. Right,
they're both kind of tully guys with the with the
reddish beard. They're both wearing baseball caps. They've got you know,
kind of the same jacket on all this, and then

(11:53):
like the producer realized that, he starts getting into it
and he's like wrestling with him and ship and he's like,
I want to go out with my mini me. It's
like it's like having your own action figure. But the
guy doesn't. They're in Poland and the guy didn't speak
English well and everyone's just kind of joking around with
them and doesn't really understand what he's saying. And then

(12:16):
the mistranslation. They basically blow up the wrong bridge, so
they have their cameras pointed at one bridge that's supposed
to blow up something that they were going to demolish anyway,
and they wired the wrong bridge. There's another bridge facing
you know, the other way, where the cameras weren't pointing,
and they're they're all freaking out, like, oh my god,

(12:37):
we blew up the wrong bridge. And one of the
like the Pia's is like, it's not just the wrong bridge,
and she's holding like this very colorful big bill of
like Polish money. She's like, it's the bridge on their money.
She's showing everyone we blew up their money. But there's

(12:59):
somebody's going to notice that this bridge is gone. I
think she says this bridge was around. She's googling it
right away, like this bridge was around in the time
of Charlemagne. So the mini moon did it actually orbit
our Earth or was it orbiting the moon? It's thirty
seven foot wide or one or eleven point two meters

(13:21):
equal to This is some editorializing that I don't think
we need but six stacked Arnold Schwarzenegger's Oh, I guess
it's going to be back. Like the terminator in question.
Question is well twenty twenty four pts. That's its name.
Enjoy another spell as a second moon around Earth. During

(13:42):
the occupation of asteroid twenty twenty four pts around Earth.
Space dot Com has been corresponding with one of the
scientists who discovered its trajectory status as a mini moon.
It's usually part of our Juna asteroid belt, a secondary
asteroid belt composed of objects that circle the Sun in
orbit's very similar to that of Earth. Usually sits at

(14:05):
an average distance about ninety three million miles from the
Solar System's central star. Isn't that closer? Aren't we ninety
eight ninety eight million miles? How far are we are?

Speaker 3 (14:19):
We? Yeah, give or take. I don't know. I feel
I feel that for some reason, the number one hundred
millions banging around in my head, like we're around one
hundred million miles, ninety eight million would count always around
one hundred million.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Yeah, I'm trying to think it's in a Diggable Planet's lyric.
When what does she say, I'm ninety eight million miles
above these devils. It's a reference to the distance from
the Earth the Sun. So yeah, oh, it's coming back
next Thanksgiving. Astrod will make a slower approach, traveling at

(14:55):
one four hundred and ninety eight miles per hour, can
we just say fifteen hundred miles proud, anybody gonna check
you on that space dot com? You know you have
nerds that listen. What if they're actually leon.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
But if the othernet has taught us anything, Yes, someone
is gonna fucking actually know it's that asshole exists. He's
out there.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
It will only come within to within three point three
million miles of Earth, So it's never yeah, because the
Earth is long since cleared out it's orbit. We're not
going to run into anything that is currently orbiting the Sun.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
But I guess something that's coming into our orbit.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
It's getting close enough that that's what I want to say.
I want to see this thing like looping around the.

Speaker 3 (15:45):
Earth that's overlapping, overlapping.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Yes, yeah, so you're gonna have to last until twenty
eighty four to see it come closer or within two
million miles or our planet. Yeah, so fifty nine years
we're projected to see it come back into our orbit again.
But how long did it hang out for? Just says

(16:09):
the last few months we've been too wrapped up in
our own bullshit to even notice, right, and hardly ever visits.
It's just hanging out. They're like Okay, I'm not going
to be back here for sixty years. But okay, I know,
you guys have an election.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
The government was admitting the aliens and we were all
distracted by you know, the flu, so you know that's
how it goes.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
Yeah, it was just like we're just here. It was
actually aliens. They're like, we're just here to pick up
Ellen DeGeneres. She said she just wants to leave the
planet now because she left America and realized as much
as she hates this country, the rest of the world
is shittier.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Well, when I heard this story, I was like, do
you not see the irony and running to England from
America because you feel oppressed? Like your history teach did
a terrible job.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
You know. I I don't know what specific form of
oppression she might be feeling.

Speaker 3 (17:09):
But also, did you learn nothing from the Beatles and
the Stones in the seventies. They're gonna take England?

Speaker 2 (17:15):
Has this one?

Speaker 3 (17:15):
Your English tax raacher could be like, I'm sorry, I'm
moving back.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
I don't think her accountant's going with her, right, I
bet your accountant staying in the US. Yeah, and yeah.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Yeah, but yeah, I bet all of our income sources
are still going to be United States based.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
I mean, I just I wouldn't want to if I
I don't know that i'd want to be a celebrity anyway.
It wouldn't light the money, but the pain of having
to deal with that. Let's just say you had a
choice between two jobs that paid you millions of dollars
and one of them involved everyone knowing who you were,
I'd pick the other job.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
What's the old trope?

Speaker 2 (17:54):
People say, I wouldn't better, I wouldn't just go for fit.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
They say they want to be rich and famous, and
they say, no, you just want to be rich.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
Yeah, you don't need to be When you're rich, you
don't need to be recognized. People don't know who you are.
You tip out a twenty dollars bill and they're like,
I know who this guy is.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
Now, well plenty super okay, well plenty of super rich
guys can do things like well, bad example, go to
the supermarket. But no, they can go out in public.
They can just go out to regular places and going
on about their day. Whereas if you're rich and famous,
you know you're not running to seven to eleven for

(18:31):
anything real quick.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
I don't know what what is she going to do
in England. All right, she's going to do the maybe
the talk show circuit. While she's over there, she's going
to go on ground.

Speaker 3 (18:42):
Be retired, isn't she in her Yeah, that's true her
early to mid sixties.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
But I'm saying, like comedy.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
Age, do stop working.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
I don't know that comedy like it doesn't really translate
all that.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Well. Well, Ace Man's been mentioned in people who have
been bringing up retirement into him because he turned sixty
last year. Yeah, no, he's like, why I like doing
what I do? Why would I stop?

Speaker 2 (19:07):
Like? He likes both things. He likes he likes talking,
and he likes making money. Yeah, the more he talks,
some more money he makes. Like why would you stop that?

Speaker 3 (19:18):
Well, no good, and then he gets you know, team conversation.
He always gets back and he talks about the shit
that he did when he was nineteen or twenty. He's like,
this ain't work. He's like, yeah, he's like shoveling garbage
on a construction site. That was fucking work. Yes, I
would be retiring from that if I was still doing that.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
I'm sure this has to do with her being gay, right,
she feels oppressed because I don't know. I don't she
feels that like a Trumpet administration isn't going to support
what that actually means to Ellen. Ellen's day to day life,
like zero probably.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
Round up gay people the first time, you think he's
gonna do it the second.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
But I'm assuming that that's because it can't be that
she's going to be silenced. I mean, first of all,
the people who tried to silence you are the people
who lost, right The people that wanted you canceled as
a bad boss are the people that were on the
losing team this time. And the team that you're The

(20:19):
country that you're fleeing to has a shitty record on
free speech, and it's probably worse now that it's been
in a long time. They're actually cracking down on a
lot of things. You know, they used COVID as a
way to clamp down on a lot of things that
they didn't want to see clubs with loud music, you know,

(20:42):
people speaking their opinions openly about government and royalty and whatever.
So like why would you want to go there? Like
why would you want to go visit? Yes? Why would
you want to go live there or try and have
a career as a comedian and entertainer. There no idea
find like England exports a lot of great comedians there.

(21:07):
You know, a lot of them translate very well because
all they have to do is curse. And we're like,
aren't they hilarious?

Speaker 3 (21:14):
Right? You know, but yeah, those guys are going to
pass on the word cunt.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
But stand up does it? You know, Like yeah, We're like, yeah,
what's his name? What's the controversial guy that we were
talking about last week with the long hair comedian? Yeah? Yes, yes, yes,
Like we love Russell Brand because we love the way
he talks and he says content and he can say

(21:38):
it because he's English and he can just get away
with it without actually offending anybody. And but we we
do not need to see Russell Brands stand up. You're like,
keep that said, you're one man show. That's fine. That
keep that over there with you. That that's the English
are into that. We don't give a ship. We want

(22:00):
to see you guest star on on you know, on
a TV show and be really funny.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
So I like Jim Jeffery stand up, but he's not
even from there.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Yeah, yes, And Jim Jefferies just knows he just he's
just a good stand up.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
The uh well he's Australian, right, yeah, yeah, I couldn't
remember if it was Australian.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
I mean it was an English penal colony. It was
England's jail.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
Yeah, they're sneaky. They can go in between, like they
they play both British and American roles. Well, you know,
if we can make it another five years, we just
might get to see that moon come back again. That
twenty twenty four pete, what was it called the Show's
come Back PTSD. No, it's it's not going to be

(22:46):
it's it'll be close enough to like maybe observe with telescopes.
It won't be orbiting again. We might get to see
it wasn't until what when I say, twenty eighty twenty
eighty something, that it'll come back close enough to actually
be in Earth's orbit again. But in five years we're
going to be hitting the mark that futurist Ray Kurzweil

(23:10):
has set for humans to achieve lawn what he calls
longevity escape velocity, which I think we've talked about this before,
but basically that medicine and science will progress fast enough

(23:31):
to at it. They will succeed at extending the human
life enough that, like that progress will outpace one's aging,
so most people will just stop aging with the help
of medical science. So basically, if you can make it
in the next five years, you might have a chance

(23:53):
of living forever.

Speaker 3 (23:54):
Could you turn the clock back? Is my question?

Speaker 2 (23:57):
Sure?

Speaker 3 (23:59):
Can I roll back to like twenty three, twenty four?

Speaker 2 (24:02):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Here?

Speaker 2 (24:02):
This is This encapsulates it better than I can say.
The concept basically states that due to that due to
medical and technological advances, we will soon reach a point
where our life expense expectancies lengthened by more than one
year per year, effectively giving us back time back on

(24:22):
the clock. Yeah, well, I mean that this is a
popular mechanics article and the headline is scientist say humans
will go backwards in time within just five years.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
So I saw that, I didn't click on it.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
I was like, no, no, no, the article is clickbait. Yes,
but what their tartical.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
Physics hasn't changed. Yeah, you can't travel through time. So
I knew. I knew it wasn't clickworthy.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
Now I wouldn't say the article isn't completely a clickbait,
it's just the headline. It's an interesting article, but yeah
it's not. It's not a we're not talking about time travel.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
So no flux capacitor. No which by the way, side note,
I have now seen several as you're back to the
Future fan, I have seen several cyber trucks up close
of different colors. Not just a silver one. I've seen
the black one. The black one looks better, but.

Speaker 2 (25:17):
I saw a red one, but both of them. The
cyber trucks just in general, like, I'm a back doesn't
look like.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
Back to the Future fan, and I think that thing
looks dumb.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
I can't remember who was a comedian that had it
wasn't like part of a skid or something. It's just
something he said to another comedian, he said, it looks
like a DeLorean abortion. Yeah, certainly seeing it move doesn't
do it like seeing it still you're like, yeah, that's deep.

(25:55):
You know. It looks like you see a lot of
these concept cars and you're like, oh, yeah, the car
of the future. This is one where you like, when
you see it in action moving around, you're like, wow,
it looks clumsier than you would one would even think.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
Hey, you know that rich guy rolling around in his
cyber truck that commercial?

Speaker 2 (26:14):
What what commercial? Oh? Yeah, yeah, the political commercial. Yeah.
Donald Trump isn't worried about He's worried about that guy
rolling around the cyber truck. Yeah. People, people are trying
to get a feud going between Elon and uh Neil
de Grass because and he was on Real Time del

(26:37):
Mars show he did, Yeah did you watch the Uh
he was on overtime as well. So in overtime their
little like post show kind of they always pull the
lead interview in with the panel to answer questions. So

(26:58):
Neil was back on from that and they were talking
about you know, I can't remember how it started, but
they were you know, Elon was definitely in the conversation
because he's apparently going to be part of the Trump administration.
And Bill and Neil were both talking about how ridiculous

(27:20):
it is to even talk now about terraforming the Earth,
because we believe the way Neil put it, how bad
would you have to mess up Earth in order to
have to then even consider terraforming another planet? And if
you had the technology to terraform another planet, why wouldn't
you fix the one that you were on? Why not?

(27:42):
You know, it would be still less work. This he
didn't use. But I just think of the analogy of
how it's cheaper to keep an employee than to hire
a new one. Right, it's cheaper to keep the planet
that you have going. I have to just throw your
hands up and scrap it is necessary, but I have

(28:04):
Sometimes you nuke a relationship.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
I thought of something in the last week though, That
the question I want to pose to because what they
had that what that co P twenty nine summit or whatever.
You know, a lot of a lot of stories about
climate change in my seed the last week. That's okay, Yeah,
you know all this talking there's temperature going up, and
this isn't it like they know more people keep showing up? Right?

Speaker 2 (28:27):
Yeah, I think that's part of the problem.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
Isn't it like we're gonna keep Like in my lifetime,
we've seen I've heard the I've heard the I've heard
the figures five, six, seven, and now we're up to
eight billion. It seems like every ten years we get
another billion people. We're gonna keep consuming resources.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Sure, but I'm not saying that. I'm sure they've all
thought of that as being one of the leading problems.
But that's not one that you can legitimately tackle. How
do you stand up at a summit and say, well,
first of all, we need to stop having so many
people on the planet, right, you.

Speaker 3 (29:06):
Need the factor for that. I guess it's more what
I'm getting.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Okay, Hitler, sit down, please, Like you're going to decide
who gets to breed, which countries get to breed, Like,
first of all, there's too many Indians and the.

Speaker 3 (29:18):
Other products are shoot, China and India don't give a
fucking were like they have all the people, right.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
But but I don't think the answer is to just
throw your hands up because well, there's just always going
to be more people.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
We No, I just don't think I don't feel like
they factor that in, like the iination I think going
to think more resources are going to be consumed.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
I think they factor it in, and it's just the
understood thing that they have to talk around because it's
not something that you can control. People are just going
to breed. You're not going to be able to control that.
There's a story on Live Science with that line, why
aren't we crushed by the weight of Earth's atmosphere? Which
I thought sounded like a very stoner type of question,

(30:04):
Like I don't understand it, first of all, like it
seems pretty obviously why we're not weight.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
For starters, heat rises, cold sinks. Notice how the atmosphere
isn't filled with water because it's weight heavier than air.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
But it sounds like, you know, if you're just getting
stone with the buddy in the field, like looking up
at the sky, and then you're like, how come all
that air doesn't come down and crush us? Do you
think about that?

Speaker 3 (30:30):
Man?

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Miles of air cover the Earth? This does you know?

Speaker 3 (30:36):
Or the fact that we're held on the planet bicentropical force.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
Air is lighter than our bodies, but all those miles
of air in the atmosphere a mount to a lot
of weight. The total mass of the era's atmosphere is about
one point five point one billion billion kilograms, that's two
billions under. There's also that I didn't know that we
count a billion billion like that, like a billion billion,

(31:03):
So literally what billion billion? You take one billion and
you're like a billion one billions.

Speaker 3 (31:10):
Apparently doesn't have a name. Yeah, that's eighteen zeros.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
Let's see, or one point eleven point two four billion
billion pounds. Broccoli told Live Science they're talking to Anthony Broccoli. Okay,
so they weren't actually talking to sentient broccoli. When it
comes to a cylindrical column of air that is one
foot in diameter, its mass is one six hundred and

(31:35):
sixty three pounds. So think of that. Every time you're outside,
right above your head, there's a ton and a half
of air just waiting to come down on your head
directly above you. Comes down to distribution of pressure. Air
flows around your body. Ultimately, the pressure from the air
is exerted uniformly on all parts of a person's body.

Speaker 3 (31:56):
Well, yeah, you notice how like it is not fly.
They don't just our own word force, Like planes don't like
ascend and then like hit a wall and then fall
right like.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
Yeah, the pressure of the atmosphere exerts uniformly on our
bodies is not trivial. It amounts to approximately fourteen point
seven pounds about the weight of a large bowling ball
per square inch. So, I mean, what they're saying there
is actually interesting. Though we think of we're we think.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
About resistance all the time.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
Yeah, I mean, and we just think about that as
part of gravity. But that you know, there's gravity, there's
the actual gravity of the planet that keeps everything on
the surface, and it affects the atmosphere too, and that
atmosphere does have an effect that's kind of interesting, Like
if we had if we were somehow able to, well,

(32:49):
we're able to. There's a will as a way, we
could strip this planet of its atmosphere, and when we do,
it'll still have the same gravity. But I wonder what
percentage you know we would it would be everything would
be essentially a little bit lighter feeling, would weigh less well,
I guess maybe it would weigh less like the moon.

(33:11):
How would it You would imagine it would affect you then, right,
so like that affects you. Even when you're standing on
a scale, you would weigh in a zero in no atmosphere,
but same gravity, you would weigh a little bit less
than you would normally. I don't know, we're not crushed
by air pressure because quote our bodies have evolved over

(33:32):
time to withstand the pressures. That's going to Michael Wood,
Chair and professor of quantitative Sciences at Conissius University in Buffalo,
New York. I take exception to that description. Actually, I
think evolution is all about finding the best solution for
the environment. So there's no way for us to evolve

(33:55):
into something that was unfit to exist in the atmosphere
pressures of Earth. It just wouldn't happen. Any mutation that
ended up in being unfit for the atmosphere would go away.
It would be immediately weeded out of the fire fly. Right,
So it's not that like, yeah, he says, our bodies

(34:18):
have evolved over time to wistand pressures. Now they didn't
evolve to wistand pressures. They always could, even from a
single cell organism. The reason that single cell thrived is
because it was good in the environment, in the under
the atmospheric pressures. And actually, if you think about the
fact that all life came from the sea, that's way

(34:40):
more atmospheric pressure then out on land. So it wasn't
even about having to adapt to it. Like a lot
of the things that we had once to adapt to
higher pressures of the sea we've since lost because we
didn't need them. So it's actually the opposite of what

(35:01):
this scientist says. But what do I know? But TLDR, No,
this guy's not going to fall and crush you one day.
Don't worry about him.

Speaker 3 (35:09):
Noted.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Yeah, oh, so what we were talking about Elon and
and Neil, right, yeah, yeah, so that's right. So they
were they were basically talking about how ridiculous it is
ridiculous it is to think about going to Mars right now,
But they weren't specifically going like, oh, Elon's stupid he

(35:33):
wants to go to Mars. But that's however, everyone's trying
to make it into like what you know what Tyson
has to say about space. Actually he said good things
about SpaceX and about uh what's uh, but you know
with the Amazon spaceships.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
Poke holes in Neil's logic. Uh Well, if like explorers
had that mindset, like right, we'd also all be still
crunched together up in New England, right, We wouldn't know
Antarctica or Australia exists. We'd still think the world is
fucking flat.

Speaker 2 (36:10):
Yeah, well think I mean.

Speaker 3 (36:12):
Like, oh no, here's fine.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
We ares who found America right there? People were like,
what do you expect that you don't know that you're
going to find anything worth good? It's going to be expensive,
people are going to die.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Yeah, like I said, we'd all be clustered up in
New England thing, Oh, we don't go past the Mississippi River.
But but we don't know what's over there.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
Neil actually does get into that. I think in the
they taught they might have talked about that in the
interview portion, but he says, we don't base these things
off of whether people are going to die or not.
We're adults. You know, we designed cars that sometimes kill people.
That mean that we stop innovating on automobiles. You know,

(36:55):
there are acceptable costs to progress.

Speaker 3 (36:59):
We don't know exists because Lewis and Clark just say,
oh fuck it.

Speaker 2 (37:03):
So he was he wasn't knocking that at all. And actually,
like what I was going to get to before is
that he was actually saying good things about SpaceX because
he said, what isn't it incredible that we had an
emergency with two astronauts, right, and what happened? They ended

(37:24):
up getting stranded stranded on a space station with friends, right, people.
They know, they had a place to stay, they had food,
and we had options as to who was going to
go get them, right. That's fantastic. I mean he was
he was actually praising I mean, he was praising the
privatization of space.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
I was going to say, can can we also talk
about how in twenty years, a private company has lapsed.
They government agency that's existed for at least three times
as long. Yeah, just lapped them like like NASA's like
a NASA is like a footnote now to SpaceX.

Speaker 2 (38:04):
Yeah, we were all looking to NASA to be like
deliver us the Jetsons, you know, and you know, we
wanted they were supposed to make the cartoons come true.
And all they did were like, well, we got it's
kind of like more like a plane than a rocket
now that we said, I mean, it's got wings, it's
like really sleek looking, but so we can land. We

(38:28):
got that going for it. We basically incorporated some technology
that was older than rockets, and you know, we put
these wings that you know, go through the atmosphere very nicely,
and some wheels on it so it could.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
Land and shows up and just fuck it, We're sending
Captain Kirk into space for real.

Speaker 2 (38:46):
And yeah, and Elon's like, you know how in Loneytunes
when the big Catcher's mit comes up and catches the
rocket and just sets it down there, that we're going
to do that. That's what we're doing. We're going to
catch the rocket in mid air with a Giant Catcher's mit.
He wants to bring the Jutsons to life. You know

(39:06):
that's great. He wants to putter around space and a
little domed personal vehicle.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
You don't forget about land. No body still waiting on
that hyper loop. Let's get to work on that hyper loop.

Speaker 2 (39:18):
Yeah, I think, I mean that just he was biting
off more than he could chew on that.

Speaker 3 (39:24):
To Chicago ten minutes.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
Let's go, Oh, hey, we didn't say we didn't mention
that rip, Chuck Woolery. Oh, yes, he will not be
back into and too.

Speaker 3 (39:34):
No, he will not be back next time.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
Yeah, he didn't sit through all the commercials you want.
Isn't that coming back? The original host of Wheel of Fortune?

Speaker 3 (39:45):
What oops?

Speaker 2 (39:47):
How did I not know that he ever hosted Wheel
of Fortune?

Speaker 3 (39:50):
I know, didn't know that till he died. Apparently he
left over a contract dispute.

Speaker 2 (39:54):
Went so should should have took a little less money.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
Chuck that?

Speaker 2 (40:00):
I mean, yeah, you want to talk about long term
gig man, Yeah, you should have sat in there at
the should have held out?

Speaker 3 (40:06):
I mean, I remember the guy in the eighties, he
hosted every other game show he hosted. You stayed home
from school. You were going to see a good share
of Chuck Woolery that day. What was.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
So love Connection was like the big one.

Speaker 3 (40:23):
I remember they hosted scrabble. They did yes scrabble, remember
because they had the tiles.

Speaker 2 (40:29):
I want to say card sharks, but I don't think
that's true. They've got them. Yeah, okay, also hosted scrabble,
Greed and Lingo. Oh yeah, Lingo. That was a more
recent one. Lingo. Like when the Game Show Network. I
think that was a Game Show Network show. Nineteen seventy five,
the year I was born, Wheel of Fortune as well
as I am MERV Griffin hired him to host a

(40:51):
news show called The Wheel of Fortune. So initially aired
during the daytime, and he hosted until nineteen eighty two. Wow,
I was like paying attention to TV by that time.
I was well aware of what was going on. I
think I still had a black and white but I knew.

Speaker 3 (41:10):
Yeah, I was three. I think the TV was still
just a box with colors and noises that entertained me.
Sesame Street was probably.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
And I couldn't agree on the contractor replaced by Pat's Aeck.
He long regretted his decision to depart the game show.

Speaker 3 (41:25):
Oh yeah, duh. Probably about year fifteen you went oops.

Speaker 2 (41:30):
Yeah. I mean like he continued to work, but I'm
sure every check that he got he was like, well,
that's pretty good, but it's not as much as what
I would have made on Wheel of Fortune. That shit
seen fucking syndication everywhere.

Speaker 3 (41:43):
And now Ryan Seacrest hosted.

Speaker 2 (41:46):
He took over for Pat Pack quietly hit.

Speaker 3 (41:48):
His last show a few months ago.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
I believe yeah, if I wouldn't have left the Wheel
of Fortune, I'd be making about ten million a year now,
he told Times and twenty two thousand and three.

Speaker 3 (42:00):
And then the reporter had to wrestle a pistol away
from them.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
Yeah, and then in eighty three, so the following year
of his Love Connection. How long did that show run for?
It seemed like it was the nineties, was yeah, Love
Connection ended in ninety four. During that time, he had
a short lived talk show, The Chuck Woolery Show. I
do not remember that. That was a ninety one. From

(42:26):
ninety seven to ninety nine, he hosted the dating game
He later hosted Greed and Lingo. Lingo I remember being
a fun game. I can't remember the rules of it.

Speaker 3 (42:37):
I don't remember.

Speaker 2 (42:37):
It was kind of I remember being kind of like
a like a wordal style, like you had one word
and you had kind of you had a clue, and
they'd give you like one letter at a time something
like that.

Speaker 3 (42:50):
It's like half ass wheel of fortune, like like wheel
of fortune, speed round. We'll give you the letters. You
just guess.

Speaker 2 (42:59):
I love watching people guess wrong and obvious answers on
my unfortune. I think there's a famous one that goes
around Instagram with a guy I can't remember what the
phrase was supposed to be, but he just so proudly
proclaims time to take a sausage break.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
Oh yeah, I saw that the other day.

Speaker 2 (43:19):
And then he goes and then it finishes off with nope,
like he immediately realizes that's not a thing, or it
might be a thing for me. I think that guy
really likes sausage breaks, but in that moment, he's got
a look on Pat's a Jack's face and he was like,
oh God, nobody else takes sausage breaks. It's not a thing.

(43:41):
Is people who annoy you?

Speaker 3 (43:44):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (43:45):
As always, we give you the letter rt.

Speaker 3 (43:48):
L Okay, I'd like a B and if I recall
this was one even Comedy Central like this going to
get a lot of help here.

Speaker 2 (44:03):
Yeah, they beeped him.

Speaker 3 (44:05):
Annoy you audience, keep quiet. Black guys looking at him?

Speaker 2 (44:17):
I know it, but I don't think I should five seconds,
mister Marshall, all right, I'd like to solve the puzzle.

Speaker 3 (44:25):
Oh ship, this is the internet.

Speaker 2 (44:30):
Huh yeah, broke.

Speaker 4 (44:43):
They definitely beeped it, and you you know you got
it here he am actually staying so proud that way.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
Rest of episodes outrage will have to be for the podcasts.

Speaker 2 (45:03):
What's that?

Speaker 3 (45:03):
Jesse Jackson makes him kiss his ass? Apologize?

Speaker 2 (45:10):
Let's change the subject. I saw that Gladiator too. That
was a pretty good fun movie. Did you enjoy Have
you seen the first Gladiator movie with the Russell Crowe?

Speaker 3 (45:20):
No?

Speaker 2 (45:21):
No, not into it.

Speaker 3 (45:23):
But I have an issue with the lead in Gladiator too?
Why not with Denzel because I know history? Denzel was great.
What would a black guy have been an emperor in
Rome at that point in history? No?

Speaker 2 (45:39):
I don't think it's completely ridiculous to think that because
they didn't. They not Rome. Rome took slaves based not
based on race like that was. That was a more
of a European and later American thing that this idea

(46:02):
that like, you know that that person is a different
race than us, and so it's somehow okay to subjugate them.
The Romans, they're just like.

Speaker 3 (46:12):
North and just conquered is my point too. They didn't
hang out and rule, They just went north and marauded
and fucked.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
I don't know. I think he I think he makes
reference of where he came from, but I don't. I
don't know.

Speaker 3 (46:27):
I'm sure Dunzel does a fine job. I was just
you know, it's a black guy.

Speaker 2 (46:33):
No, especially at that time, Rome was very multicultural. I
mean you would have had rich and powerful Egyptians that
would be doing business in the city. So I don't know,
I don't it didn't really stand out.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
He looks like it at the gym, in the ozempic.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
He looks really good. He looks really good.

Speaker 3 (46:52):
At it a lot smaller than the last time I
saw Denzel.

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Yeah, well, I think he was kind of beefing up
for those like equal eye rolls, which he said he's
gonna do more of. They got two more movies planned.
I'm like, bring it the fuck on. I know, like
people weren't totally into the third one. I thought it
was great. I don't know what else you fucking want
from a movie. You know, it's a very simple premise.

(47:16):
But yeah, Gladiator too was. It was quite fun. I mean,
even if you're just interested in the spectacle, I mean,
the whole thing looks great. Ridley Scott certainly is just fantastic.
Guy knows how to position a camera. And this was
it was a lot more digital effects than the original.

(47:37):
You know, the original movie was still in the era
where like digital effects were prominent, but you know, like
I'm watching the effects, they were still effects. They were
I've been rewatching the Lord of the Rings set, and
so I'm on the Two Towers, which is a very
Gollum heavy movie, and the Gollum animation looks great, but

(48:00):
it just looks like it's painted directly over the cell, like,
you know, it just pops against everything. And they've since
learned to, uh, you know, control the lighting in ways
that makes it blend in much better. And so yeah,
this is they're able to do things that I don't
think that they could have done practically.

Speaker 3 (48:20):
Yeah, Like today I was on a Microsoft team meeting,
you know, and it's it's been a while since I
did one of those, and I learned you can mess
with the stuff now and then you know, yeah, you
make the lighting softer, you blend in with the background
way better.

Speaker 2 (48:30):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (48:31):
Actually look like I was sitting in the mountains or
fucking you know, I was fucking around though, you know, yeah,
when I was on the moon.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Yeah, So they do stuff like there's a lot more
animals in this because they can just animate it. And
you know, there's a there's a rhino fight and the
rhino is just I don't think that rhino's ever actually
got that big, but it looks fantastic. It's got a
gladiator writing it. There's a fight where they have the

(49:00):
gladiators fight a bunch of baboons, and there's guys in
the outskirts of the coliseum shooting blow darts into the
butts of the baboons that make them aggressive. They're like
ripping guys throats out and shit. Yeah, it's pretty gruesome.

Speaker 3 (49:15):
Movies sounds likes for me. Then not a gore guy.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
Yeah, it doesn't. It doesn't go totally. I mean it's
kind of gory, but it's not gory in a horror
movie way where they really linger on the gore aspect
of it. Then they the the best though, is the fight.
They flood the Colosseum for this fight, and they put
a bunch of gladiators on two ships and they just

(49:42):
have a little naval battle right there in the in
the coliseum. And they've got they've got these fake islands
with like these wooden palm trees that they've made, and
in the water are sharks, and so they're like, you know,
shooting arrows at each others, lighting the sails on fire.
You're doing the whole nine yards, and like and.

Speaker 3 (50:02):
The dogs when they bark, shoot beats.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. And guys are getting knocked off
the boat into the water and getting eaten by sharks.
It was definitely a spectacle.

Speaker 3 (50:13):
Oh yeah, if you make it shit up, go nuts, right, Yeah, don't.

Speaker 2 (50:17):
I don't know how much of it they made up.
I imagine, who knows.

Speaker 3 (50:23):
And strapped to the sharks are wolverines and they're pissed
because they're in the water and they haven't eaten for
two weeks. And on the head of each wolverine a
tiny flamethrower.

Speaker 2 (50:36):
Yeah. I don't know how it's getting reviewed. I know
some people are just kind of like it's just a
retread the original, which are spoilers. The lead in the
Gladiator movie, what's his name?

Speaker 3 (50:51):
Guy who's not Denzel that I always build Lucius.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
He is the son of Russell Crow's character. So I
guess when Russell Crowe dies in the first.

Speaker 3 (51:04):
Movie, someone's pregnant.

Speaker 2 (51:08):
Yeah, well no they haven't. He was like seven years old,
he had a kid. He had a kid with the
daughter of Marcus Aurelius, and so that line. Basically, Marcus
Aurelius was a leader who was in favor of the Senate.

Speaker 3 (51:27):
He was, you know, any one of the guys who
stabs Caesar.

Speaker 2 (51:32):
I don't know, could be, but yeah, I think after
his rule ended, they basically dissolved the Senate and just
went back to note we're just going to have, you know,
rule by divine right by bloodline, and that's how you
get like the cephalitic twins that rule in this movie.

(51:55):
So anyway, that kid, being of the bloodline of Marcus Aurelius,
my you know, be a challenger to the throne someday.
So he was basically sent off for his own good,
you know, for fear that you know, the current emperor
would execute the kid, and that kid ends up being

(52:15):
accepted by some tribe in North Africa. And then eventually,
you know, armies from Rome show up and overtake that
nation like they did many others and enslave the men.
So the kid who grew up not knowing his actual
heritage ends up going back to the city that he
was born in and helps lead a revolution.

Speaker 3 (52:38):
I feel this isn't a fucking Bible different names.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
It's very much like, yeah, it's I wouldn't even say
the Bible. This is how the stories of myth back
in Roman times would go. The story of Oedipus being
sent away from his homeland because his father, you know,
some some witch or somebody told him that your kid's

(53:04):
gonna grow up to execute you someday, and he's like,
all right, well, we'll just kick him out. And then
sure enough he comes back, not knowing that he's going
back to his original burst city. He goes back and
confronts his father and kills him, and the prophecy comes true.
Let's wrap it up for today, all.

Speaker 3 (53:23):
Right, Well, oh well, we're recording this pre holiday, but
I hope you enjoyed your big giant meal. One of
My favorite Thanksgivings is getting high and shit right before
dinner and then just going in and yeah, boom, let's
go eating like four.

Speaker 2 (53:42):
Plates, gravy on everything.

Speaker 3 (53:46):
Oh yeah, graving on, stuffing, gravy on.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
Fucking you gotta get the stuff in, get some cream corn,
maybe some sweet potatoes.

Speaker 3 (53:56):
But not only I am not, and I am not.
Apparently my mom makes kick ass street potatoes. I'll never know.
I just i've tried them once. I was like, no,
thank you.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
I can't do large quantities. I'll have like a few, yeah,
just like you know, five or six little points or whatever.

Speaker 3 (54:18):
I can only do cranberry sauce. It's real cranberry sauce.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
Scallop potatoes. That's how I much prefer cheesey potato.

Speaker 3 (54:24):
Oh yeah, I can't do that. Kranberry sauce tapes the canshit,
I can't. It tastes cranberries tastes weird to me. I
can only do the real ship.

Speaker 2 (54:36):
Yeah. It seems like most people that is cranberry sauce
in it. It's like that's what they want. It's like jello,
which I am also.

Speaker 3 (54:43):
Not a fan. It tastes od. It's just a really texture.

Speaker 2 (54:48):
It's got a sour tang to it that affects everything as.

Speaker 3 (54:52):
A real kranberry sauce is good. He's got actual lighting. Cranberry.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
I like cranberries. Yeah, I like cranberry juice. Anyway.

Speaker 3 (55:02):
The pie camp pumpkin pie.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
Not really. I like the fruity pies, apple pies.

Speaker 3 (55:10):
No, cheese, man can't whoever invented cheese and apple pie?

Speaker 2 (55:16):
Somebody? People keep trying to make that three?

Speaker 3 (55:19):
Is it? At least breef?

Speaker 2 (55:20):
I don't even think it was eating even, No, it's
just an American like American like literally underwrapped craft, single individual,
highly provate, understand.

Speaker 3 (55:34):
Bre like because they do it with like pears and
ship I get, but like pirs like a craft. Are
you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (55:42):
That's how they did it grow? Maybe I'm sure it
was cheddar maybe at one point either.

Speaker 3 (55:47):
I love cheddar cheese gross not apple pie.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
No, there's no place there. Why would you ruin it?

Speaker 3 (55:53):
Yeah, sick a ship on it?

Speaker 2 (55:55):
Yes, yeah you may as well. I'm not eating it now.

Speaker 3 (56:00):
What's that one you pick Thanksgiving to go? Oh?

Speaker 2 (56:04):
Yeah, the macaroni and tea? You know if with the
macaroni and cheese.

Speaker 3 (56:10):
Yeah, just don't. And if you did, hopefully you want
this lesson. Don't Thanksgiving it's not a day for experiments. People.
You you're you are going, You are you are, you
are crowd pleasing and Thanksgiving you are serving. You gotta
go for the basic. You're going for the common denominator.

(56:30):
Don't do crazy ship to.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
Fix traditional meals. We're not looking for fusion. We're not
looking to mix it up.

Speaker 3 (56:37):
I was in charge of green bean cast role and
I substituted. My ex wife was like, let's do broccoli instead. Boy,
did I hear about that ship? Yeah? No, you don't.

Speaker 2 (56:51):
Where nobody has to have an argument about what we're
having for dinner.

Speaker 3 (56:55):
Yes. Anyways, hope you had a good Thanksgiving at the
weedspan four twenty. On social media a Christopher Media dot
Net the PayPal button. It helps us out wherever. Another
way to help us out is wherever you listen to
the show, rate us and review us. Please think, help
us other people find.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
The show and stay high, Stay high.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
Thank you for visiting Christopher Media dot yet.
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