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December 23, 2024 54 mins
On this week’s show Chris and Aaron talk about: taking the holidays off, fake band names, 2024 wrap-up, Micheal Cera vs Judd Apatow, and the New Jersey drones. 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 cor Studios
near Detroit, Michigan. It's the Weedsman Podcast. And now you
have smoked yourself retarded.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
You're the Weedsmen.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Got to know all right, Welcome to the Weasman Podcast.
I'm Chris, I'm Aaron Mary Christmas, Happy end of the year,
happy whatever you see very I'm saying Merry Christmas. There
recovered everybody?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Can you can you turn my monitor back off for
that channel? It looks like it's it sounds like it's
on again. That okay, No, that's weird. Okay, I guess
I can get a triple then all right, click that again? Please?
All right, I'm still getting double in my headphone.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
You're getting me?

Speaker 2 (00:54):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Oh that has to be like super annoying.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
All right, there's other phones. Yeah, I just hate them.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
They what sounds like you have a better experience.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
Well, oh god, I hate the way that he's feeling
my head check. Yeah, you can turn me back on there.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
So it's the last show of the year too. Executive decision.
We've said ten years in we're taking holidays off.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Oh yeah, well what I mean that's gonna be two
weeks off. Yeah, okay, see you next year. We're at
it with the occasional hiccup. We're at it most weeks, right,
So yeah, I mean, I don't know, this is the
this is the end of the year. There's only two
weeks left.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
You have any year end lists?

Speaker 2 (01:39):
Yeah, it's like it's like the I've been seeing a
lot of people use the uh okay, well, what's the
Michael Sarah and Joanah, what's the super Bad? Super Bad? Yeah?
The super Bad meme where he's drilling holes there in
wood shop and he's like, what are you doing? He's
like just drilling holes the last two weeks? Fuck it?

(02:00):
What he's in He's got it.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
I mean that sounds weird. I haven't seen it. Movie
to one I forgot the other day I realized that
I forgot. I forgot.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
I think it's at the beginning a line from.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
Uh Talladega Nights. So in't a lot of movies I
haven't seen in a while.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
I'd say, like anything that I've watched since the year
two thousand, I haven't like done a lot of repeat
watchings of them.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
Oh, I know when super Bad came out. I mean
me and my friends were like the right age. We
were like mid late twenties. Yeah, so I've seen Super
Bad a million fucking times.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Actually, it'd probably be around two thousand and three when
my first kid was born, where it shifted from repeat
watchings of Caddie Shack and Stepbrothers and Fargo and I
you know they Step.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Brothers in two thousand and three. Do you have a
Time Machine?

Speaker 2 (02:50):
Okay, what year did that come out?

Speaker 3 (02:53):
It's like oh eight or no, oh, I think it
was oh five, right, so.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
I'm kind of lumping it in with other movies. But yeah,
you're right, the timeline doesn't match up, but it shifted.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
Your point was made on just being Actually.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
With my first kid, it was Star Wars over and
over again. That's what they liked the most, so I
just got to watch. But they liked the prequels more so.
I mean they were well because they had a kid
in the Yeah, exactly. I was watching the finale for
What we Do in the Shadows the Vampire Still. Yeah,

(03:30):
it's it's last episode of the final season. Just there
the other day, and Nandor has decided that him and Guerrimo,
who is familiar not familiar, are going to become a
crime fighting duo. And he's like, you can be and
I don't know. He's got some ridiculously dumb name with
boy in it, and he's like, and I will be.

(03:52):
And he's got like a tuxedo and a mask, like
a Domino mask, and he's like, and I will be
the fan menace.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
It's kind of a little fuck you in there at
the end.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
So anyways, why did I say that? What were we
talking about? Oh, the Phantom? It was the Star Wars movies. Yes, yeah,
second kid was very much into Tim Burton, so that
was much more tolerable. I've seen Beatleges so many times
but then eventually got it. I've also seen a lot

(04:30):
of Barbie movies.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
See currently, I have seen the twenty eighteen animated Grinch movie.
I think I'm rolling on like a dozen viewings since Thanksgiving. Oh,
that's just that's been there on the weekends.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
That into it.

Speaker 3 (04:45):
Huh Oh the three she's three almost four, That is
just default.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
Yeah, she knows.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
She knows how many times Peacock will play the Grinch
before it stops. She knows it goes through twice before
it stops.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
St She knows so that when it's gonna throw up that.
Are you still watching? Is there an adult in the room? Yes?
Or no?

Speaker 3 (05:10):
Right, No, she's getting to the point she can just
figure out, like press the button on this. When that happens, dude,
she whip her way around an iPhone. So I'm in
the tablet, so I bet.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
Yeah, she's born into it. So it's totally different.

Speaker 3 (05:25):
Both my nephews could type their names and type words
before they could write them.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Yeah, just think about it in the same way that
like our parents' generation is looking at us and going like,
do you people even know how to read cursive? You
never use it. Gen x's don't use cursive. We were
all taught it, yeah, but we don't write it, but
we do not use it. I could write it, but

(05:51):
it would look like.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
Shit because for the same thing, our signature and my
signature is just barely it's just mind's like a few scribbles.

Speaker 2 (05:59):
Yeah, so actually I have mine's like two lines. They
just kind of loop around a couple of times.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
Right.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
But in that same way, like we're going to encounter
a young generation who is you know, not used to printing, right,
having to write things that I digitally sign for everything,
Like what are I what does my signature actually even mean?
These days? What am I signing a check that I
take a photo of and send to my bank?

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Right?

Speaker 2 (06:28):
That's what I usually sign in any legal connect way.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
In a staff meeting a couple of weeks ago, we
were getting things ready for the Christmas party and they're
doing rs vps. We're like, we haven't heard from you,
like we sent you this, and you know, I'm like, oh,
you send me something in the mail. I'm like, I
was like, don't do that. Like well, I'm like I
checked my mail once a quarter.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
They sent you. Oh they sent you an invite for mail,
no notification by email?

Speaker 3 (06:51):
Right, Well, no, I mean I'm was part of the
they knew I was coming. I'm part of the one
of the owners. Probably you know what I'm saying. They
still but for the party, like, hey, your girlfriend and
her kids coming, they want.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
But I think these days like you should be if
you want to send out a card, that's great, have
the official have the RSVP and all that. That's nice.
It's a nice party thing. And maybe even like keep
it as like a memento and put some photos on
it like that night or whatever the fuck you want.
To do or just chucking in the garbage. But send
an email too, Hey, just so you know we sent me,

(07:23):
you know, we shot you out this card, but you know,
make sure you save this date, right.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
I mean my business email because because.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Your calendar is either on your phone or on your computer.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
My business partner, we are the same age. Technically he's
younger by like eight weeks, but we are classic examples
of like he says, oh, you're the digital guy you love.
If he has, I swear to god, he's just got
volumes of those black fucking composition notebooks and that's he's
note taking guy. Yeah, and he is still pen and paper,

(07:55):
and I get it. I got a notebook too, but
like generally, my note function and is just out of control.
I'd probably have if they were posted, if they were
physically manifested so many but I'll say to them, like, dude,
I can find anything you want because I could just
pop open the search bar type and what we're looking for. Boom,

(08:16):
there it is.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Mine sound like a crazy man's manifest if you read it,
because it's mostly just nonsense, like oh, that would make
a good nonsense song title or project name or something,
or sometimes it's just two words that I like together.
Have a I have a whole note of I'm gonna

(08:37):
pull up my notes, Oh, what's new in notes? I
have a note for jokes. Has got two prompts for
jokes that I that I would forget in most situations.
One is the Norm McDonald joke about the parrot. Do
you know that one parrot that says fuck you? Guy
gets a parrot, takes a parrot home and he's like,

(09:00):
probably want a cracker. He's saying his name's trying to
get a talk to the parent's like fuck you, and
he's like, hey, I'm not going to have that. You
know you're not going to talk to me like that,
puts the bird back in the cage. Comes back the
next day. He's like, all right, you know, probably want
a cracker. You know, uh, you're just trying to get
you know, throwing some phrases at it, trying to get

(09:21):
it repeat something. The bird looks at it and he's like,
fuck you. And he's like, is that all you're going
to say. If that's all you're going to say, I'm
taking you back to the store. And they already said
they didn't want to, but for whatever reason I'm finding
out now, so I don't know what's going to happen
to you. This is like your last chance at a

(09:42):
good home. Are you going to say something else? And
the bird just says nothing. He's like, all right, we'll
see what tomorrow is like, that's your last chance. Comes
back tomorrow and he's like, hey bird. The bird looks
at him and he's like, what not the bird? The
guy says what the bird says? You know, I know

(10:07):
it's a dumb joke, but it's also great and it's
Norm McDonald's alright. P. The other one is did you
know tyrhe is hereditary? Yeah, runs in your jeens.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
Oh we are dead, and that will qualify as a
dad joke.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
I don't think these are like like band names. Nico's
peacoat moist Oyster and that's a I think that's a
song name, right, four dollars swords. I haven't looked at
this in a while. I don't know what three MX

(10:50):
is supposed to be. Oh, I think like BMX, but
it's three MX. I kind of like that three MX
kind of make a good good band name. She madic
like skit like schematic, but she meant yeah.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
Chick band name Postmodern Portico. Like this morning, me and
my girlfriend came up with the Aggressive Mews. The Aggressive
meals chick punk band from the nineties.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
I like it.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
I was referring to my alarm clock this morning.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
I'm sorry what you were referring? What did you say?

Speaker 3 (11:22):
I must have missed her Aggressive Mews was referring to
my alarm clock this morning.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Oh that okay.

Speaker 3 (11:28):
We can't go and get up bitch time.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
I was working on a song, just like throwing out ideas,
trying to come up with something, and I had this
loop of the very high pitched synth going that was
repeating a melody, and it was driving both my cats bonkers.
Like they were they were going like distressed, and they

(11:55):
were sniffing around the room. They're looking at everything, and
they wanted to get up by the speakers. And I
was like, what do you think. You must think that
there's a cat being tortured. It says something about the
music that.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Yeah, maybe I should refinke this compositions distressing the animals
that live with me. And it's an instant feedback. Your
cat's are going, no, man.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
No, this ain't it not this one.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Pick a different Yeah, pick a different sound.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Yeah, unless you want to drive people crazy and go,
what the fuck is that noise? Maybe maybe something?

Speaker 3 (12:31):
Pick a different instrument. Which, oh, that reminds me. My
mom's dog eats half of every meal my mom eats.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Because I thought this is going to be some mnemonic device. Now,
isn't this the musical staff and my mom's dog?

Speaker 3 (12:46):
But just remind you that animals can sometimes be a warning.
This dog eats all kinds of human food, eats half
of my it's snobby with dog food because it eats
human food all the time. My mom gave a chicken
nuggets mc nuggets McDonald's. It sniffed him.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
No, No, what the fuck is that? A dog that
ain't food?

Speaker 3 (13:08):
An animal that will eat its own feces if it
needs to sniffed a chicken McNugget. I was like, nah,
only part of this.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
Maybe maybe I wanted it dipped so that possibly no
sweet and sour.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
They say that's white meat. I posit this question.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Is it it's white?

Speaker 3 (13:28):
Right? Yeah? I've seen that much white comma meat.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Meat with some some white mixed. I told you when
did I? I had some I had some Chinese food
and I let h my friend pick it out. I
was like, just get whatever you want, because you know,
all I ever do is get like some kind of
spicy chicken that's just slathered in sugar. Get something, you know,

(14:00):
broaden my palette. Whatever she got was like a lot
of clear stuff, like the clear sauce with the you know,
bean sprout and water chest.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
That's like something about a clear sauce.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
Isn't this what the carrots are for too? Like you
should have a little more like break this up a
little bit, Like remember how cauliflower like.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Crystal PEPSI like clear sauce.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
Yeah, I can't. And that's what I was telling her.
I did. I wasn't being like, you know, completely turning
my nose up, and it wasn't horrible, but I was
just like, yeah, I think what's holding back from being
delicious is the fact that it's mostly clear.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
Remember there's the snl skit for crystal gravy.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Yes, yes, it's exactly.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
The same thing. Like, no, man, I can't do I
just hey, I will stand by crystal PEPSI. I thought
it was good.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Clear beverages are different. I mean like I went nuts
for a New yeark Seltzer like that was like the
gold that was like, I don't know what it was
the best.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
It was the gold something gold standard.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
I don't know if Yeah, like I know that the arches,
but that doesn't I don't want anyway, I retracted my
statement I liked New York Seltzer, especially the black cherry.
So yeah, last two weeks of the year. Fuck it?
How was twenty twenty four? How do you feel about it?

(15:31):
How many like how few words could you sum it
up in.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
For me personally? Well, and I think it just fits.
You're on your own?

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Yeah? Is that like, was that a lesson that you learned?
Is that something that you felt more of this year
than others?

Speaker 3 (15:51):
That is a lesson that I learned this year around
May to July. Yeah, let's just say, if you're relying
on institutions to save you, you're on your own.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
Yeah, I can, I can, definitely. Yeah, I think that's
a strong contender. I don't know That's what I would
have come up with. But you can't. Nobody's like, nobody's
really on your side.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
Well, I could say for me from a lot of
the crazy shit I've heard politically this year, you're on
your own, Like have fun thinking that way, and I
could pick on both sides of the aisle for the
crazy shit we heard this year, and there's a whole
bunch of crazy shit wait for us next year.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
Yeah, man, this is like so last two weeks to relax, right,
I don't want to think about that, but plenty of
time to think about next year. I don't think it
was like, despite despite the election going the way that
I wished, I would not call this year another dumpster fire,

(17:01):
feel generally good about it, like generally personal life.

Speaker 3 (17:05):
I got no beast, business is doing well. I got
a good lady like that looks like that thing's gonna
go with the distance.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
Like, yeah, so twenty four good year. It was a
pretty good year. Yeah, like Tory Amos says.

Speaker 3 (17:19):
Bumping the road there for a few weeks.

Speaker 2 (17:21):
But other than that, Yeah, what was what was the
most entertaining thing that you experienced?

Speaker 3 (17:30):
That's me don't participate in the culture much anymore.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
Right, but like, but you got to be like you're
seeking entertainment somewhere, like given it, like it was a
football game.

Speaker 3 (17:41):
Or I discovered Bob's Burgers. It was fifteen that was, yeah,
fifteen seasons of shows I hadn't seen realizingly half of
them are good.

Speaker 2 (17:50):
Yeah, that's beside the point, but a good binge?

Speaker 3 (17:54):
Yeah, onto a concert?

Speaker 2 (17:56):
Is it all is Bob's Burger? It's all pretty? Is
it all linear?

Speaker 3 (18:00):
Like it's all it's like the Simpsons. It's so it's.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
It's kind of out of time, like they never age.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Yeah, Like those kids should all be in their early term,
in their early twenties, right, you know. I posted on
social media that boy for a restaurant that's struggling. They've
been in business for fifteen fucking years.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Now, Like, yeah, they should just come out and just
kind of make that the standard. Like just imagine that
this is a year in the life of this family,
and we're just constantly finding more and more stories to
tell you about what happened in that year. Yeah, you know,
and if if you get thirty seasons of stories out

(18:38):
of that, great, that's fine, Like it doesn't have to
be you know, but then you get people would try
and piece it together, like, oh, at list, I had
a sexophone lesson, we should learned this song in the spring,
and now this episode was in the winter, and she
said she hadn't learned that one yet, and like it's
supposed to be all the same year, but I guess
you're going to have those fucking weirdos that obsess over
every little detail. Anyway, my issue would Simpsons said itself

(19:02):
A wizard did it?

Speaker 3 (19:04):
My Shore bobs Burgers is just like the Simpsons. You
can tell them the writers change. Yeah, and I really
am only a full of the writers for like the
first half of the show it exists.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
So was it Big that retired from the Simpsons recently?

Speaker 3 (19:18):
Chick? Or does Millhouse Pamela.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
Hayden, Yeah, that's right. Yeah, this was this year was
the death of Millhouse.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
Uh, she's like seventy something. At some point if you're
these people go fucking play golf or sit on an island,
especially if you're like Harry Shearer, like he's like eighty ye,
and I'm not exaggerating.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yeah, it's not even anymore about like I can do
it from my house. Like I don't even want to
do it at all. I don't want to go into
my closet. Yeah, I got other ships to do. Yeah
like that, I've got I've got to somehow spend some
of this money before I die.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
Be Yeah, just be retired. J Moore the best I know.
It's it's it's a rephrasing of something we've all been
told lies. But it's I like the update on it.
You don't see you don't see a U haul behind
a hers like she said something that clock sticking. Retire,
enjoy not doing anything. You got a bunch of money.
You get what most of us will ever have. You

(20:15):
got enough money to do wherever the fuck you want
until you die.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
I think Simpsons or Matt Groening or maybe you know,
the producers involved in the Simpsons should have modeled it
after what's his fucking name? All in the family. So
Norman Lear had a hit show, right, he could have
run that show possibly for who knows, Like maybe maybe

(20:44):
it could be like a twenty thirty well, I mean obviously,
like with a live cast, you can't go that long
because people will just start dying. But it probably could
have gone longer. But what he did with it was
start spinning it off and spending it off and spinning
it off. And that wasn't I mean, he didn't come

(21:04):
up with that himself either. I mean, there were there
are plenty of other old shows where it'd be like, okay,
we've got this family that we're following, and we got
like four or five seasons, you know, with this kooky
girl and her identical cousin. And then but people really
like this guy. We're kind of at ideas for this
and also this person's no longer teenager, so it's no

(21:27):
longer believable, but they like this other character, so let's
spin off a show with that. So Simpsons should have
like reinvented themselves after like the lyrics and said, Okay, yeah,
who's on board for you know what's coming next? Like Sheer,
are you coming with us? If he says yes, then okay,
he's bringing along blah blah blah. Here's what we have

(21:48):
to build, like decide what your palette is. And then
I'm starting to overthink it because then like you have
to renegotiate salaries more often than but I'm sure they
have to do that every year anyways, and the show
just gets more and more expensive.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
At this point, Like Harry Suer could not wake up tomorrow.
And I'm not being hyphed, it's not hyperbole. People in
their eighties, perfectly healthy people in their eighties sometimes go
to bed and don't wake up in the morning.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
What what are what are their negotiations like in the
for the thirtieth season, it's like month to month now
yeah no, but like as far as what they get paid,
does the studio eventually just have to say that's the cap.
Like nobody's ever made more money in animation than what

(22:35):
you're making now per year. And that's it. Like, I
don't know what you want us to do anymore. You
want a foot from.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
No, it's the one what the one thirty rock episode
right where they're renegotiating Tracy's contract. Yeah, and hey, at
this point it's no longer about money.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Right, what He's just want He just wanted to get
the win.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
Yeah right.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
So uh oh, so we were talking about Bobsburgers. What
was the other thing you mentioned there? There's another thing.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
I saw a concert?

Speaker 2 (23:02):
Oh that's right, you saw a concert. The metallic concert
was that?

Speaker 3 (23:06):
I saw a clutch?

Speaker 2 (23:08):
Oh right?

Speaker 3 (23:09):
The only new entertainment was oh my entertainment was old Ship. Yeah.
I'm trying to think. What did I I went to
Alliance game, Yeah, the Monday night one. That was crazy.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
A lot of people going to Lions games.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
I mean yes, no, I mean now it's welcome to
when your team's good. They were taking. I mean, things
have changed this week, but we'll see they were talking
about last week because the tickets are so in demand
for last week. Do you take your family to a
Lions game or do you go on a family vacation.

(23:48):
That's how much tickets were for this game this past week.

Speaker 2 (23:51):
Yeah, live events are getting out of control, and because
you know, it comes down to how much people actually
prize that as the only true escape. And I don't know,
I can really still. I can lose myself in a

(24:12):
movie or a TV show, or a book or anything
really comic book, any kind of entertainment if it's good enough,
and I've experienced it in all forms. That was quote
unquote good enough to actually transport me, but to like
not think about, you know, if I'm getting an email
or not care if I get in a notification or
not pause the movie to check something on my phone

(24:35):
or whatever. But it's not everything, you know, most things,
I can go Okay, this is a fun show, or
like Lioness is the show that I find the most
engaging lately, I've been plowing through that. Have you experienced
this show?

Speaker 3 (24:48):
I've heard about it? The one I keep hearing about
is Land Man, which essentially it's Yellowstone in an oil.
I've mixed.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
I've mixed reviews, and I'm not like, I'm so so,
I'm Billy Bob. I find him charming but not dynamic
as an actor like Billy Bob. Yeah, I like it.
I like him in general. I think he's I mean,
he's obviously a freak and that's cool. I'm not against that.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
He's definitely got to the market. Cornered on Cantankerous.

Speaker 2 (25:17):
Yeah, yeah, I'm gonna check that out. But which is
That's another I mean, like this Taylor Sheridan guy just
took over television, and you know, it just shows you
where the money is going these days, because, like he
saw it. This is a guy who Wroteicar. Didn't he
win an award for Cicario? Somebody won an award for

(25:38):
that movie, But I think it was him as a writer.
He could be doing not only you know, writing all
kinds of movies, but you know, script doctrine on on
other movie. But like, that's not where the money's at.
The money is clearly in the television shows, or at
least that's what the studios are sinking their money into.
Lately when it comes.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
So he's striking all the iron's hot, right, like doing
what you're supposed to do in entertainment. Oh you like Yellowstone, Oh,
here's this, here's this. Because he does Tulsa King, I
know you watch that.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
Yeah, yeah, but Tulsa King is kind of a different
things very similar. It's all it's about. It's all the
Godfather much, all the territorialism type of.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
It's the Godfather in Montana.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Like Lioness is actually kind of unique amongst those shows.
The Lioness is about a secret CIA program where they
take elites from the military and put them in a
non military strike team. Right, So they've got I don't know,
I think in total, like maybe there's seven people, including

(26:47):
the person who heads up this mission, which is uh,
what's her name that plays Gomora in the Guardians of
the Galaxy.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
Then no, no, so we what the fuck are you name?

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Sel Donna?

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Yes? Yeah, my ladies start with ze.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Yeah. And so they've got they're an anti terrorist strike group, right,
they're going for top terrorists on the kill list and
finding out ways to penetrate their organization to take them out.
And the Lioness program is specifically about recruiting females to

(27:29):
befriend other females that are close to the males in
charge in the Middle East and finding that way in
realizing that, you know, they're not vetting people as much
like females. They just they're doing their own thing, and
sometimes they're even fully covered, so like it's easier to
go incognito, whereas like a new dude shows up with

(27:51):
a beard, you know, you might have some more questions
about where the fuck did you come from, what do
you want, and why you're trying to be our friends
all of a sudden. So yeah, it's very interesting, it's
very fun. You know, he knows how to really build
tension well from episode to episode. The characters are all
really fully developed. Everyone on this team, including Nicole Kidman's

(28:13):
in this too, as uh Gee's you know, higher up
in the CIA. Uh. I've got the guy who played
h Kevin Spacey's right hand man in the what was
the political Netflix show Parts of Cards? Yeah, what was
his name? Was that Meacham or no Meacham was the

(28:33):
other guy, Dug.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
I watched a season of that show, The.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
Scary the Scary Bald Dude. He's been in a lot
of things playing the scary bald dude. But yeah, it's
got a fantastic cast and they're I think they're just
wrapping up their second season. Seems to be doing really well.
Probably one of the most entertaining things that I've read.
And it didn't all come out this year, but the
second volume of it came out this year, and I

(28:58):
didn't read the first initially, So I read both volumes
this year of a comic book called blue Book, And
this is you probably would recognize the title comes from
Project blue Book, or you know, the supposed dossier that
the FBI or whoever in the government has on you know,
credible alien sightings and UFOSS and stuff like that. So

(29:23):
what this is doing is taking the most famous alien
encounters and illustrating them and telling them in really interesting
ways that that I found really effective and kind of
was really good at taking me back to when I
was a kid and I would read about I would

(29:44):
get freaked out, Like horror movies didn't scare me so much.
Friday the thirteenth was cool, but like I didn't. I
wasn't hiding behind the college, I wasn't having nightmares. I
didn't like the horror films, the you know, the howling
stuff like that. Like I didn't get freaked out by

(30:04):
the horror stuff. I got freaked out from staring off
into space and trying to comprehend what infinity was. And
from reading books about people, you know, seeing Bigfoot and
Yetti and you know, alien encounters and abduction stories. I
would find, you know, books about true encounters like that,

(30:24):
and you know, most of which was probably bullshit, but
it was all fun to read. And that's what would
keep me up at night. Bigfoot out there, man, Yeah, worried.
That's you know, Bigfoot was going to come down in
a UFO and stick something up my butt. But yeah,
the whole first volume of this, so I think it
was like five or six issues, but you can get
it all in one collected volume. Is I forget. Their

(30:47):
last name is Betty and Barney. It was an interracial
couple in the early sixties. That's the Flintstones.

Speaker 3 (30:55):
They were nothing interracial about them.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
No, it was It was Barney. And I think I'm
saying Betty because I'm making the Flintstones correlation. It was
I remember the guy's name was Barney.

Speaker 3 (31:11):
One of the first inniracial kiss on TV was Captain
Kirk and Lieutenant Uhura.

Speaker 2 (31:16):
That's right, that was in the sixties. Yeah. Volume one
is called nineteen sixty one Betty and Barney. Volume one
retells the infamous case of the abduction of Betty and
Barney Hill of New Hampshire in nineteen sixty one, the
very first widely publicized UFO abduction that went onto shape
and influenced all future encounters. This was you've probably heard

(31:40):
this story like it. I mean, I like any mystery
show has probably done an episode or a segment on it.
It's it is a really famous story. They're driving home
late at night, you know, they decide that they can
just drive through the night and coming from where they
are visiting family or whatever the fuck. I think it
was at a common Difends actually, and he was like

(32:02):
a civil rights lawyer, I think, and she was a
librarian or something like that. And they see these discs
that are flying around in the sky like kind of
in a line, and the husband's like, Barney is just
like it's nothing, you know, or it's this or that,
and he keeps explaining it away. But then they're moving

(32:22):
faster and faster, and then they're following them, they're right
over top of them, and then they remember just kind
of going peaceful and docile, and then and they pulled
over to the side of the road and just sat
there for a while, and then they started driving again,
and after a while they noticed that a couple hours

(32:45):
had gone by. They had lost time, and they kept
having at weeks after they were having like weird dreams
about aliens and stuff like that. And they eventually went
to a hypnotist and he like hypnotized them separate lay
and got very similar accounts, but only differing because there
was different things that they were interested in doing to

(33:06):
the guy than the girl. And yeah, they were basically
like gently escorted from the car to the spaceship, where
they laid them out on a thing and probed him
and asked him the number of different weird questions and
then told them that they wouldn't remember any of this
and wiped their memory and sent them back.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
Story.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
Yeah, this is the this is actually the origin story
of the Grays. That's pretty much what they described the
you know, kind of hairless, big bald heads with large eyes,
skinny limbs. Yeah, but the book is written by James
Tynan or Tinian the fourth, a writer who's wrote so

(33:48):
many amazing books. He's really popular in the comic book world.
A lot of his books have already been what's the
name for when a studio like gives you money to
hold onto the rights to something while they're developing it?
Is it just in development or they.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
There's a something development deal?

Speaker 2 (34:07):
Yeah, he has development deals on a number of his things,
and he's probably going to be like quite big. Oh
and the artist is Michael avon Oming, who anybody who's
into comics knows from. He's decades worth of these, worked
on just everything in the world, all different types of books,

(34:30):
and he's just a It's an amazing and completely unique
type of artist. So I don't know what else? What?
Just what else? The podcast? It's the last two weeks? Yeah,
how do we wrap up the year like this? Well?

Speaker 3 (34:49):
No, I want to find this because I'm sure I
probably what do you want to find? I'm drilling holes
this last two weeks?

Speaker 2 (34:56):
Fuck it, but a dent my new metal water bottle
already had it for a day.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
I can I do plastic, I just I can't do
the metal.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
And I knocked it over. I put it up on
the I was doing like the thing at the Jim
where you what they call it you It just works
your back like you have to basically back into it. No,
it's not the row. It's kind of like the you.
Instead of rowing, you put a cushion on your back
and you push your back against it, the back extension.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
I don't do that. Yeah, watch other people do that.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
Yeah. Yeah. And the machine is a little rocky, and
my water bottle took a tumble off of it, and
like the whole place is like, well, it was so loud.

Speaker 1 (35:48):
What are you making?

Speaker 4 (35:49):
I'm just last two weeks.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
Yeah, he's just putting the two by just drilling hole,
just going right down to two by four. Oh, I
have to watch that movie again. It has been it's
been at least a Yeah.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
It's probably worth another another watch.

Speaker 3 (36:12):
No, it's like Jonah Hill was funny.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
Yeah what it was? He now he's trying to be
ever since he got him and started working with Marty.

Speaker 3 (36:20):
Him and Seth Rogan are all like super serious. I
remember you were a comedian.

Speaker 2 (36:25):
I don't know why it's been going around, but have
you You've seen the footage of Michael Sarah in the
role of uh and Seth's rolling knocked up like he
was originally cast for Oh, look it up, Michael Sarah
knocked up like obviously from the footage he was cast
and everything, because there it wasn't just like there was

(36:47):
a full setup. They were rolling and he's talking to
what's her nuts fucking twenty three dresses or whatever?

Speaker 3 (36:54):
There stood out Patow fires Michael Sarah from Knocked Up.
It was from like two thousand and seven.

Speaker 4 (36:59):
Yeah, I'm pregnant, holy share what I mean?

Speaker 3 (37:05):
Pregnant with a baby? Yes, yes, with the baby.

Speaker 4 (37:12):
Happy for you, I am congratulations you know bigel you
just let's just start from the top again, but just
raise your energy. Yeah, okay, all right, that doesn't make
any sense at all to me.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
I'm sorry that doesn't. Could it not make sense to you?

Speaker 4 (37:25):
Because that has sex, your sperm hit my egg and
now I'm pregnant? Okay, I heard, Yeah, I understand that
all kind of fell into when you said you were pregnant.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
But can we just let's just start up at the top.

Speaker 4 (37:34):
Okay, just can you just raise your energy?

Speaker 2 (37:37):
Just got a little energy?

Speaker 4 (37:38):
Yeah, what do you mean? What do you you can't
be pregnant?

Speaker 1 (37:42):
What are you talking?

Speaker 3 (37:42):
About I'm pregnant baby. What No, that's stupid. That doesn't
even make sense.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
Okay, yeah, I.

Speaker 4 (37:52):
And what is energy? Like you're telling me you say energy,
and then I come and give you energy, and then
you're saying no energy, and like what do you tell you?
We're all kind of wondering what it is? So why
don't you tell us? And I know you feel the
same way because we discussed one. No, I mean, don't
back down. This is your chill, Like it's gonna be
like this the whole rest.

Speaker 3 (38:10):
I'm saying something.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
Right now to you.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
What the big secret.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
Is is what is it that you want to do?

Speaker 4 (38:13):
Because We've done fifteen days of this and I've done
it with high.

Speaker 3 (38:16):
Energy and I did it.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
Low and then middle one. You know that that was
a good take.

Speaker 3 (38:21):
To talk about it?

Speaker 4 (38:23):
Oh okay, then quit shouting out to me when I'm
in the middle of a sentence, not even a take,
a good sentence, that's good on Oh, it's.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
Kind of a dick.

Speaker 2 (38:33):
Having a hard day.

Speaker 4 (38:37):
Who's hey, can anyone find who's directing this movie?

Speaker 3 (38:39):
Does anyone know? Why don't you.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
Why you do that?

Speaker 4 (38:43):
I would love to do that.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
Why don't you do this, this is real. Yeah, it's everything.

Speaker 4 (38:48):
Okay, have fun editing. This is good, so you say,
and then you say, tell.

Speaker 3 (38:58):
Us you know what.

Speaker 4 (39:04):
Good? Okay, okay, Well, why don't you then tell me
what you want to do and then I'll do it
so that you can tell me you don't want it anymore.
I'll do it to perfection and you'll tell me that
it's garbage. Someone bring me a wardrobe change or something
so that we can move on from this scene. That
we've gotten golden takes of time after time, and that
none of them are being used. And if you rolled

(39:24):
on any of the fuss we did, you'd got five
more golden takes.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
Maybe it's not fair because I haven't seen all the
fifteen other takes, But if that's where he was at
those last three line reads that he gave, like he
was nowhere near where he needed to be for that
character right, or to be at all interesting in a
movie period, he was kind of dead.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
Well, maybe maybe's just a bad casting decision.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
I think so, Michael Sarah is kind of It's not
completely fair to him because he's known for that kind
of deadpan delivery. Mm hmm, So it's just poor casting
who knows what happened. Maybe jud didn't want to do
the movie, and you know they were like, oh, well,
Michael Sarah is more likable, and you know he's just
hot off of arrested.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
And wasn't super bad at Jed Appatel movie, Like didn't
they didn'ty end up making nice?

Speaker 2 (40:19):
Yeah, they must have figured something out here, because that
came out after Knocked Up? Right, I believe so, yeah,
or or we've been had in both. Michael Sarah and
jud Appta are better actors than I ever thought. But
they'd have to be way better than we've ever seen
them be in anything right to be to that, because

(40:40):
that was some good acting.

Speaker 3 (40:41):
All right. So Jed app Padel produced super Bad and
it came out in two thousand and seven. Oh, Knocked
Up also came out in two thousand and seven.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
Well there you go. Maybe they worked it out and
he's like, you know what, this isn't working out.

Speaker 3 (40:54):
Or maybe made one before the other.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
Yeah, you think he was really gonna be in both?
That's interesting. I can't see that. I think it makes
more sense that he was like originally cast for Knocked
Up and then as.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
Far as not as far as Apato movies, so Knocked
Up as in a category of like i've seen it,
want some goods?

Speaker 2 (41:13):
All right? Yeah, it's got its moments, it's got its
funny lines. I'm not really a what's her name?

Speaker 3 (41:18):
Fan, so I like to get him to the Greek
more than I like it for the Greek felt.

Speaker 2 (41:23):
Funny, Yeah, very funny.

Speaker 3 (41:24):
Oh but Puffy wasn't acting. That's what made Puffies seems funny.
I thought Puffy was acting. Now you that wasn't acting.
Puffy's probably liked that in real life, and it's probably
why he was able to do that.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
So well, yeah, the fun dancing around Puffy that we
saw on TV, that was the act.

Speaker 3 (41:46):
Yeah, and well what was the one? The follow up
to Knocked Up? This is forty Oh my god, that
movie could have been an hour shorter. I remember checking.

Speaker 2 (41:55):
It was a little indulgent.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
I remember checking the time when I was watching that movie,
like how long have we been here? Holy shit?

Speaker 2 (42:04):
But that that movie hit perfectly for me. I was
kind of just coming out, well, yeah, I'm trying to
like how old were their kids in the movie, because
it wasn't one of them like a teenager already. They
kind of spanned.

Speaker 3 (42:19):
Yeah, one or at least a preteen. Yeah, yeah, because
one was little and one was.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
I was either I was either all the parenting stuff
that they went through in that movie, I was either
currently experiencing or had experienced in the past. And it
was very relatable.

Speaker 3 (42:37):
And I don't remember thinking, these two people don't love
each other.

Speaker 2 (42:41):
And I think, you know, that's the core of what
Jedd Apatow does. It sounds like maybe damning with faint praise,
but he relatable humor. Right.

Speaker 3 (42:51):
I remember thinking in that movie, like, these people are
gonna get divorced. Yeah, they don't write. But but I
just remember thinking like, no, these people are not happy.

Speaker 2 (43:02):
No they don't. They don't end up being a couple. Yeah,
it doesn't end up.

Speaker 3 (43:05):
They break up. Yeah, and we're talking about this is forty.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
Oh I was thinking knocked up still Yeah.

Speaker 3 (43:13):
No, I know, knocked up. They don't know what this
is forty.

Speaker 2 (43:16):
I remember thinking like, no, they don't.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
Yeah, they don't stay together, or they stay together.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
I think they stayed together.

Speaker 3 (43:22):
Yeah that's what I'm saying. But I remember just thinking, like,
can we see the movie about five years from now
when you get divorced, when those kids graduate high school, like.

Speaker 2 (43:30):
Yeah, I don't know, You're probably right, and I just
didn't see it. I was still married and in denial.
Gizmoto's got some opinions on the best TV moments of
twenty twenty four. A strangles Vic. Yes, Oh dude, I'm
right there with them. That's what I was talking about
it last week the finale of The Penguin when he

(43:53):
actually finally does the thing that he's been talking about
the whole season, I should kill you, and he fucking
kills his friend, the guy who helped him build back
up his empire. Uh, Fallout, Are you saying it was good? Yeah?
Fallout was fun. I don't know if that fall Out.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
Fallout was terrible flop the movie with Kevin Hart.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
No, that's yes, it's the other video game Fallout. The
TV series on Amazon was they think they're expecting him
to do well. It did much better than they thought.
And it's definitely been that's with my man Walton Goggins
Uncle baby Billy, Uncle baby Billy. Uncle Baby Billy's got
no nose in this. He looks like a fucking somebody

(44:35):
like shaved his face off. He's a mutated freak with
a bad attitude and a crack shot a battle at
Root's Nest House of Dragons. Man, there ain't nothing that
memoral about what happened in House and Dragons. It was fun,
genotionan genocide X Men ninety Yes, also Gambit heavy episode

(44:55):
and the death of Gambit was definitely the best man
his death and Arcane didn't watch it. Gandalf's name explained
in Lord of Rings. Yeah, that wasn't that, although I
did rewatch every Lord of Rings and Hobbit extended edition,
which I was talking about it with my co workers
earlier today and I think he looked it up and

(45:16):
it was eleven and a half hours worth of movie
that I watched. Movies, Yeah, I think, uh was it?
Somebody had like watched the entire Lord of the Rings series,
all the Hobbit movies and everything three hundred times in
a year.

Speaker 3 (45:34):
Which like so this is a single person.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
Yeah, but three hundred times?

Speaker 3 (45:40):
Yeah, Like are you on disability?

Speaker 2 (45:44):
That's like that's like you turn it. Like maybe they
weren't sitting in front of the TV for the whole time,
but that's literally what they would have to do for
a whole year is wake up and turn on Lord
of the Rings.

Speaker 3 (45:58):
How many movies are there?

Speaker 2 (46:00):
And then falls like there's six movies a right, it's
eleven and a half hours.

Speaker 3 (46:05):
Okay, yeah, hold on.

Speaker 2 (46:06):
Well I think what because we did this calculation, I
think it was around one hundred and seventy to one
hundred and eighty days worth of continuous watching if you
watched it three hundred times, which.

Speaker 3 (46:17):
One hundred and forty three point seventy five days.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
Okay, so I was a little higher. So that's almost
that's basically eleven hours out of your day, right, So
that is literally watching it every day for a year.
To watch it three hundred I mean, well no, because
then you would watch it three hundred and sixty four
times sixty five.

Speaker 3 (46:39):
It's forty percent a year.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
Yeah, you know they're also listening to Accolade on this list.

Speaker 3 (46:44):
Come on, yeah, forty percent of a day is nine
point six hours. So yeah, they didn't work. You would
have to watch The Lord of the Rings as a
full time.

Speaker 2 (46:52):
Job, I think maybe, or they worked from home and
just in sid that they weren't listening to music or podcasts.
They just put on a movie and had it play
in the background while they worked. The whole time. That's
also possible. They could have been very productive.

Speaker 3 (47:07):
I'm choosing to believe they sat it home for a year.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
I'm choosing to believe they're three hundred pounds and have
popcorn in their beer.

Speaker 3 (47:15):
Getting door dash, changing her underwear once a week.

Speaker 2 (47:19):
Yeah, they've also got a sword mounted on their wall.

Speaker 3 (47:21):
Oh yeah, there's any guns in this house have never
been fired for display purposes only.

Speaker 2 (47:28):
We didn't meet aliens this year. You know, the clock
ran out on that one prediction. But there's a lot
of drones. You don't know what's with all the drones?

Speaker 4 (47:37):
Right?

Speaker 3 (47:38):
What is our government's what's what's with the cavalier attitude
they've been around since November eighteenth. Just started hearing about
them last week. What's what the government's like? Nah, we're good.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
Well, just because you don't know what they're doing doesn't
mean they're not doing anything. They could be not doing anything.
I think it's I'd give it fifty to fifty. They're
either doing a lot of things very secretively, or they're
doing absolutely nothing at all. I don't think there's any
in between.

Speaker 3 (48:07):
A bunch of assholes on four Chan.

Speaker 2 (48:09):
Wait, who's the assholes? And no, I'm saying the government.
I'm saying the government is either actually doing something about this.
They're just not telling you what they're doing about because
they don't want to publicize it, you know, or they're
trying to ignore it and hope they go away, or
or they know that it's actually just probably the latest
flash mob thing and a bunch of people with huge drones.

(48:32):
There was there was some senator that was it a senator?
There's somebody involved in government. God damn it. Maybe I
saved it. He was complaining about the drone situation. But
like what you were saying, why isn't the government doing
anything about this is ridiculous. This is getting out of
control with all these sightings.

Speaker 3 (48:52):
Wait, I found a statement from the government about the drones. Okay,
Oh damn.

Speaker 2 (48:58):
It, what do you mean.

Speaker 4 (49:02):
Last two weeks.

Speaker 3 (49:06):
It's statement it's a new guy's problem.

Speaker 2 (49:10):
Yeah, but this person had posted it with their The
picture with their post was of a tie fighter. That's
what he was using as the example of this drone.

Speaker 3 (49:21):
Top five Moments.

Speaker 2 (49:24):
Senator Doug Mastriano, who says it's inconceivable that the federal
government has no answers. He's from Pennsylvania, has no answers
who has not taken any action to get to the
bottom of the unidentified drones. This ffecklessness, this word, this
of this administration was on display last year when a

(49:47):
Chinese surveillance balloon was allowed to fly over the entire
link to something maybe it was and uh yeah, and
here's the photo. It's a tie fi or on a flatbed,
so clearly like somebody's replica or something that they're transporting
to a convention or some shit. So hey, nice try.

Speaker 3 (50:11):
I don't know, but maybe they're it's like a drone
con Yeah, but what is there anything weird about these
How big are these drones that people are or because
it seems like I'm hearing all kinds of things where
they're like, you know, I've heard like they're the size
of a mini van. I've heard the just regular as drones.
I've heard everything in between. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (50:30):
I think maybe somebody, like somebody was fucking around with
some big drones and freak some people out. And you
know the way that viral behavior spreads like memes these days,
and so you probably just got a lot of kids
with drones that are getting them together and like, let's
go freak some people out. I can see that, like.

Speaker 3 (50:51):
I could see this being a social media.

Speaker 2 (50:53):
We can we can hop online or play Call of Duty,
or we can grab our drones and all speed around
the city and buzz people all have cameras and shit
on them. They would be just as fun as a video.

Speaker 3 (51:03):
Just thinking about where it's happening, right, Like if it's
the West coast, like right China, Russia for.

Speaker 2 (51:09):
That matter, it would be really easy to do. I'm
surprised the East Coast somebody has to have done like
ar based drone games where you can just like you know,
score people by height. You get a hundred points for
that dude, fifty points for the kid, and you.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
Just want to think it's part of you.

Speaker 2 (51:26):
You wouldn't actually be shooting anything, it's all they are.

Speaker 3 (51:29):
Canada's right there. It would be candy. Canada wouldn't be
sending drones.

Speaker 2 (51:33):
It's Canada getting froggy.

Speaker 3 (51:34):
No, I'm saying, like people could.

Speaker 2 (51:36):
Be sending drones from Canada over to US, and because
Canada doesn't care, it's a lot easier to get into Canada,
doesn't you. I've been watching too much.

Speaker 3 (51:45):
Lionis telling me that's where Luigi went wrong. You went west.
You didn't go north. You wanted to get caught.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
The best part about spoilers for lionis season one, but
they do get somebody close enough to the number one
guy the terrorist hit list, who is this guy who's
made a profession out of basically stealing oil from a
pipeline and selling it to Russia and China and then
using the funds to buy weapons for basically every terrorist

(52:14):
organization in the Middle East, according to this fictional TV show.
So he's like the number one guy, the most dangerous
guy in the Middle East, number one on the CIA's
hit list, the Ace of Spades, as they say, And
they get their mission together and they're ready to execute,
you know, the person's in place, and the higher ups

(52:35):
get wind of it and they're like, we want to
overwatch on this, and they try and pull the plug
on it, and they're like, you don't want us to
kill them, and they're like, well, you know, yeah, he's
bad and he does a lot of bad things, but
like taking him out of the region would destabilize it,
and flooding the market with oil with destabilize our relationships

(52:55):
with Russia and also affect gas prices is not good.
For the administration and all this shit, and they're just
like the why the fuck did you put them as
the number one hit? Like that you're the one who
made the list, you know that sounds about right? Yeah,
and it's great, it's really great. The politics side of
it is handled really well too. So anyway, all right,

(53:19):
I guess that's it for this year. Wrapping up, Yeah,
wrapping twenty twenty four up in nice little bow. We'll
see what twenty twenty five is like.

Speaker 3 (53:26):
You see on the other side. Yeah, at the week
four twenty on social media, christmal media dot net. It's
got the PayPal banner, rateis and review us wherever you
listen to us. Thanks for all the support this year,
the last ten crazy we're round in eleven years, that's
nuts to me.

Speaker 2 (53:45):
If people want to give us a gift, how can
they do that? RTIs and reviewers that would be the
best way. Yes, Yes, the free free for you means
the priceless to us.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
Yes, exactly. Stay high.

Speaker 2 (53:58):
If if everybody, I was just gonna say, if everybody
listening to this actually reviewed us and raised us, that
would be pretty That would be considerable. Yeah, it doesn't
take much to move the needle. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (54:10):
The podcast world, big notice and stay hi, stay high.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
Thank you for visiting Christopher media dot yet
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