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July 14, 2025 • 57 mins
On this week's show Chris and Aaron talk about: RIP Sly Stone, RIP Brian Wilson, RIP Douglas McCarthy (Nitzer Ebb), and 28 Years Later. 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

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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 your silf retard, here are the Weedsmen.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Do you want to get hot?

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

Speaker 2 (00:23):
I'm Aaron. Welcome back. Get out of school yet? Yeah? Summertime? Huh,
at least it feels like it out there here.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Last day of school.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
It's a long time ago, right, so long ago that
my kids don't even have to worry about that anymore. Yeah,
although still I have to admit I Uh, the other day,
I was walking through my neighborhood walking the dog and
I saw some kids I think they were They looked
like they were getting out of school in the middle
of dan. It's like, I bet you, this is their

(00:55):
last day. And I was so jealous of that, of
having that feeling, yeah, that you never have again. Yeah,
And I understand that, Like it's not just circumstantial like
it it's a feeling of the moment you will never
be that innocent again. That that is that exciting to you. Yeah, right,

(01:17):
That's that's the core of that feeling.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
A lot more to excite you as an adult like that.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Right, and it's all fleeting right, that that pleasure of
the summer ahead of you. It seemed to stretch out indefinitely,
and then of course you know by September it's crept
up on you faster than your thought. But yeah, it
just feels like because doing two months of anything as
a child is for fucking evidence, this is my life now, right, Yes,

(01:47):
so every summer was like, yeah, this is my life now.
You know this can be all right?

Speaker 4 (01:52):
Yet three months when you're a kid is fucking god. Damn,
that's most of the year.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Yeah, what did you do with your summers? Oh?

Speaker 4 (02:00):
A lot of playing with the kids in the neighborhood. Yeah,
uh and yeah there was uh, like where I grew
up had like kind of a parks and recreation program
at like all the schools. Essentially it was essentially a
day camp where you went home for lunch. They're like,
you can come here and hang out all day long, ertaining,
but we're not fucking feeding.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
You, right, You're going home for lunch.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah. I never So you never went to a summer
camp as a kid?

Speaker 3 (02:27):
No, I didn't do the whole Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
I never did either. And like my parents weren't poor,
but like we were just always scraping by. It seemed like,
you know, we never had the latest and greatest stuff.
My dad was always buying used cars and working on
them and stuff like that. There was but like my
dad is a provider. He's always bad. Like I ain't,
I ain't slinging any shit like but uh yeah, we

(02:52):
never like the thought of paying for a camp was
just outrageous.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
Well, there was a family vacation.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
Most yeah, they usually involved camping because they said, yet.

Speaker 2 (03:03):
Oh we went camping. Oh no, we went camping like
a motherfucker. Yes, like actual throw up a tent, have
a bear, steal your food, see a three legged raccoon camping.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
But yeah no, like yeah I did not go to
summer camp.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Yeah yeah, that was that was for rich kids.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Yeah, and you know what, I was never fucking jealous
because it seemed like, hell, they would come back with
all of these I mean maybe so there was some
jealousy of like the kids that you knew that went
to camp and they had you know, stories that like
this and that happened, but you wouldn't you wouldn't understand
why it was so funny you had to be there.
Now we know a lot of them got molested. I mean, statistically,

(03:47):
I guess maybe more likely. I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (03:50):
I mean I feel back when we were kids, like
the counselors, you know, did not keep their hands off
the kids.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
It's now more frowned upon. But yeah, like I didn't
like the camp kids. I guess that's what I'm saying.
But then, so you were a band kid, right, I
was never a band kid.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Yes, my summer vacation ended one week early for band
camp in high school.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
And fucking band kids are that is a fucking like
that's a tight group. And I don't know, like the
band kids always just had a different sense of humor,
like yeah, they all had their own in jokes and
stuff and yeah, and so that's like, you know, however, there.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
Was a cachet.

Speaker 4 (04:35):
There was a cool If you played the drums, you
were allowed to like uh, it seemed you were allowed
to float in and out of perhaps some of the cooler,
the more popular circles, because drums drums is like perhaps
playing the trombone, right, Yeah, and I brought down my

(04:57):
dork factory.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
Why you'd want to hit stuff all day, bro, But like,
who'd want to stick three see three pos dick in
their mouth all fucking day? Who'd want to blow a
droid all fucking day? Uh?

Speaker 4 (05:10):
Well, I had to blow a droid in marching band
with the saxophone so I could play, so I could
knock down some dork points because I played guitar in.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
The jazz band. Yeah, if you couldn't in my high.

Speaker 4 (05:23):
School, you couldn't do jazz band if you weren't in
the marching and symphonic band, but you.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
Did sax Yeah, it's terrible, what size sex all of them?

Speaker 3 (05:31):
All the alto played the baritone for a.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Year, oh yeah, tenor for a year. Okay. The tenor
is like probably the most when we think of eighties,
wouldn't that be a tenor sax Oh yeah yeah, like
eighties man doing a sex so long Huey Lewis song that.

Speaker 4 (05:50):
Is the saxophone that the saxophone solo and old time
rock and rolls being played on.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Yeah yeah yeah, whereas like the what's the.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
Low one Againe?

Speaker 2 (06:00):
So the baritone is more like rhythmic, like a tuba
kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
Baritone you've heard, you've heard that in motown.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Oh yeah, yeah, I get you. But in an ensemble, right,
hold on, I got a good one, like maybe, oh
like dirty Bird, is that a baritone sax? Or is
that still tenor dirty bird? Not dirty the bird, the bird,
bird Bird, And that's kind.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Of well, that guy's a baritone.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
Yeah, so that's just that just sounds like a baritone
sacks and a bass guitar for your low end and
that's it. Like but that's basically just holding down the bass. Yeah,
like I said, more more rhythmic than a melodic or
harmonic instrument. But yeah, most of the the camp kids,

(06:47):
they all had their fucking songs, you know, and then
they do like activities where they put on plays and
ship and it sure like some of the outdoor stuff
like oh yeah you want canoeing or or something like that.
That shit's all fun. But I did that, you know,
That's what I did with my family. We did. You know.
It was nice to be able to like go out

(07:09):
on a canoe, out on a on a lake or
river or something and just experience nature where that is
like you're in a like you're more like contained area
and under like different circumstances and everybody's out in the
fucking canoe at the same time, Like, that's not the
same things.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
To me, that's not It's like school in the woods.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
That's communal, and I get that, and there's nothing wrong
with that, but that's not what I want out of
camping per se. I'm not anti social, but I want
to have opportunities to go out and just experience nature,
commune with nature. Yes, I'm community yeah, and my time's
no schedule for communing with nature. Yeah. So there was

(07:50):
just no there was just zero appeal two uh to
any kind of camp situation. The closest I ever came
My mom worked at Greenfield Village over the summer, and
she she was a server at a restaurant and she
had to wear like the whole like I don't know
what you call it, the big skirt with the layers

(08:11):
and all that shits.

Speaker 4 (08:12):
She had to dress like she was in the fucking yeah,
eighteen nineties or whatever.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
I think further back than that. Even Oh wow, I
don't know, you churn butter. No, she she just serving it.
It was just a restaurant, a regular restaurant where they
dressed up. It wasn't like, you know, the restaurant experience
wasn't supposed to be authentic in and of itself. I
think you could get a hamburger, it's just you know,

(08:37):
the lady who brought it to you'd be wearing a
you know, funny little tea doily on her head or
something like that, one of those like like what the
what is what is the Grandma from the Sylvester and
Tweety cartoons wear on her.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Head like a bonnet?

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Is it a bonnet? That a not like like fucking
handmaid handmaid's tail or? Like the it has like a
last thing. It looks like a shower cap. But if
it was made out of a doily and old ladies
used to wear them, right, what it looks like a bonnet? Yeah?
What is that? Is that a bonnet? That's probably just
a modern bonnet. Yeah, well we're playing this Saturday at

(09:16):
the Magic Stick. The modern bonnets, modern bonnets they are. Now,
I like that name has nice uh oh sounds that
kind of rolls over. So yeah, now your summer's yeah,
I mean summers to you now means fucking hard labor.
Right Yeah for me, Now I'm like the exact opposite
you're in. What's when we make our money. Yeah, it's

(09:38):
like it's it's now hump mode. Yeah, it's bittersweet. So
do you even uh?

Speaker 4 (09:44):
And dude from my calendar is a tale of two lifestyles. Yeah,
Like I said, November to March is completely dead. Like
we're talking like four day work weeks, you know, twenty
five hours that you can do your part owner m m.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Yeah, and you're outside a lot and getting all your exercise.
Do you even go to the gym when you're in
you still go to the gym?

Speaker 4 (10:07):
Yeah, I took you. No, I took two weeks off
during the big push last two weeks of May, I
did not go.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
I took some time off. I had to take some
time off for my back injury. And I'm just now
getting back into the swing of it. Yeah, but you
lose this, I mean, I don't know. I feel like
I lose a step quite easily when it comes.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
You do, but you get it back quickly too. Like
last week was a struggle.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Especially this is first week back and I'm struggling. Yeah,
you'll be fine by next week. Okay, see, because I
was thinking to.

Speaker 4 (10:41):
Like especially the because by week starts on Thursday. Thursday's
day one and last week. Thursday was fucking tough. I
remember going, oh geez, fucking Christ and today I was
like just jamming right through it. So like, yeah, you
get it back in like a week. Never read articles
on it too that say it's yeah, in a couple

(11:01):
of weeks, you don't. You don't lose much and it
doesn't take you much to get back, you know, to
where you were.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
Have you played it around? I mean, I know obviously
you've adjusted your diet a lot too, And but do
you eat specifically for workout? Like do you you try
to bulk up with anything? Do you ever do any
powders or do you eat like certain proteins before or
after your workout?

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (11:27):
Man, you just wow, this is now, this is now
a fitness podcast.

Speaker 4 (11:31):
Yeah, you just we're going to be deemed right wing
fitness throws all that crap. But yeah to everything you said, Like.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
Because I don't and I'm kind of curious about it,
but my fear is I keep my nutrition on a
spreadsheet for starters. I want to get into this, but
like I just want to lay out my fear here
is that if I get into actually putting, like actively
putting on muscle mass, that if I feel like I'm
not fully committed to it, I'll just have a lot

(12:05):
of weight. They'll have to deal exactly, Like, I don't
want to be six months into this process and then
my because I mean, my brain does this. It's just like,
what are you doing? Why?

Speaker 3 (12:16):
Well, my first question is what do you eat?

Speaker 2 (12:20):
Everything? You know? I all I've done diet wise is
really eat less, eat out less, and eat less. That's it.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
I mean, that's start.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Yeah, And I'm not necessarily looking to change my diet,
but I guess, you know, that would be a big
part of if I wanted to actually like put on mass.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
I monitor my nutrition macros. I monitor my intake, calorie
intake and calorie burn.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (12:50):
I monitor my saturated fat, fiber and sugar levels like yeah,
my friends call it.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
It's nutritional. Like I manage it like a serial killer.
I'll monitor signal levels all day long. But I just can't.
I can't monitor those you know else killer. Yeah, it's right,
all right, yes, no.

Speaker 4 (13:10):
But during the winter, and I learned this last year,
during the winter, I do the bulk because I'm moving
around less, so it's easier to eat more calories and
not go broke.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
I tried.

Speaker 4 (13:21):
I tried to bulk up for a few weeks into
summer last year.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
It's expensive.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
It is trying four thousand and five thousand galeries day.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Yeah, or that shit of good protein, yes, of just yeah,
of good calories. Yeah, it's expensive. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (13:34):
So I bulk up in the winter, in the fall,
in the winter, and then right now I'm doing the
deficit for me. And what I've read is the magic
number is fifteen percent.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
Fifteen percent.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
You don't want to eat more than fifteen percent of
your calories you're in taking for bulking, and you don't
want to burn more than fifteen percent on average calories
you're when you're trying to cut, because you'll start cutting
must you'll start.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
Burning muscle, right right.

Speaker 4 (14:05):
You don't want to get rid of the muscle that
you're trying to essentially show off when you're cutting.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Yeah, you're eating into your savings.

Speaker 4 (14:12):
Yes, and then but yeah for and then for bulking.
If they said it's after fifteen percent, you're just getting
fat right right, And then yeah, you have got to
make sure thirty percent of the calories you eat are
protein and you got to keep the fat to thirty
percent or lower, like it's.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Yeah, I think who was I listening to that they
were talking about? Oh it was I think she was
like a kind of a I don't want to say
circus performer because it don't really exist anymore, but some
sort of performer that does, like you know, aerial stunts
and shit like that works in Vegas. And she was
talking about like she eats a serving of what she

(14:49):
called good protein before workout, and she didn't call her sugar,
but that's basically what it was, was like, but good
non non starch, non fibrous sugar, Good morning. I eat
peanut butter, sandwiches, things, things that your body is going
to process right now. Yes, Now, there's certain things that

(15:11):
you ingest that your body is like, okay, that's gonna say.
That's a save it for later. And there's other things
are like we're going to process this now and get
energy out of it. So you eat that sheet that
before per workout and after.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
And then if I work out in the afternoon, I
eat equal parts greek yoga, plain greek yogurt and non
fat greek yogurt and raspberries.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
Yeah, and so I guess what's happening here is that?
And then I do.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
I get protein powder, protein shake every day.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
So you you eat in order to have energy to
do your workout right, and then when you eat again,
your body is making decisions about what to do with
all that stuff right again. Some of it's now and
some of it's later. Some of it can go into uh,
into muscle, some of it can go into fat. And

(16:06):
if you're if your body was just like, hey, we're
using these muscles a lot, break us off, you know
some of that shit that you're passing out because we
could really use them, They're like, all right, you know,
we were going to send it down to the ass
and the gut. But I guess if you guys, you know,
find that you need more of it. And so that's
how your your body's actually working. You just have to

(16:26):
keep reminding it that, like, no, we're we're still working
these muscles.

Speaker 4 (16:32):
Yeah, I mean, I just just keep an eye on
and saturated fat and sugar or what make you fat,
So I don't I keep those to ten percent.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
I gotta and I gotta.

Speaker 4 (16:42):
My spreadsheet is for this week and then a rolling
seven day so I can see where everything's at.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
And that helps too.

Speaker 4 (16:50):
Like when I go to like parties and shit, like
I know and trust me if I gotta, I've.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Learned to make beer work for me. Especially summertime.

Speaker 4 (16:59):
There's like so there's just there's holidays and there's get togethers,
there's all the ship and there's all this.

Speaker 2 (17:04):
I still eat the ship I want to eat. I
just don't eat a whole lot of it.

Speaker 4 (17:07):
But still a lot of a lot of our food
is just fatty and sugary, and like if I need it,
if I need a day, or I need to bring
down my fat percentage a little lower. Hey, it's COR's time, baby,
Like beer's just drinking carbs.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
They're terrible carbs.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
But oh yeah, everybody's gonna want to store all that.

Speaker 4 (17:25):
But I eat a lot of fucking wheat bread. I
eat a lot of whole wheat bread. I ate like
three loaves a week of that ship.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
The whole wheat bread is has good in that glucose.
It's good carbs, good carbs.

Speaker 4 (17:39):
Yeah, a lot of chicken, a lot of white meat,
red meats.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
Now with treat. They've been talking about this a lot
on election profit makers. H David Reese, who was in
dick Town with John Hodgman. He voices the tall character
of that duo. He's very funny, and he was talking
about Oh, they were talking about why they wanted to
why they were working out, and his partner was like

(18:06):
talking about how he wants to be He's always been
really skinny, and he wants to like, you know, he
wants to just change literally change his shape, you know.
And David was he was like, I just want to
be able to get back up if I fall. I
want to be able to get back up, you know.
Seeing old people when you were a kid, seeing old
people that would fall and couldn't get themselves back on

(18:28):
their own two feet without some help, was scared. It
scared the fuck out of me. And I'm that's I'm
right there with him, like at this point, especially at
this point in my life where I'm not in a relationship.
I'm turning fifty this year, and who knows. I mean, like,
I'm not even looking right. I'm not saying I'm completely

(18:48):
closed off to the idea, but I'm not. I'm not
actively looking for anything, and I don't even know how
I would still do everything in my life that I
want that I'm doing right now that I want to
be doing and have somebody else in my life that
I have to share that with. Shit changes, maybe you
meet the right person, but I have to make peace
with dying on my own and if I fall, I

(19:13):
need to be able to get myself back up. That's
why I get. That is what ultimately motivates my ass
to go over to that nasty ass planet fitness over
there and at least spend a half hour just you know,
fitness around here. Oh yeah, the one on eight mile, Oh,
that has to be an experience. Well, living this close

(19:34):
to it where like, especially now, I just hop on
my bike and ride over to it because it's a
half mile. It's a lot better experience because I don't
even touch the locker room, you know, I'm just straight
in and out of that place. Because four times out
of ten, you enter that locker room and you ever like,

(19:55):
you know, just take a towel, wadd it up and
then stick it in a corner for two weeks, and
then hold it up to your face. That's like, that
is exactly what it's like entering the room. It's like
somebody just smashes you in the face with a moldy
ass towel. It gets so fucking pungent in there sometimes.

Speaker 4 (20:15):
See the one I go to is actually noted for
being one of the cleaner ones in the area.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
You go to the Mount Clemmons one right now, Yes, yeah,
I've been to that one. That's the one I would
stop at a lot sometimes before or after our podcast
when I would go out to your place. Oh nice,
I like that one a lot. Yeah, but some of
them do get really nasty.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
Oh no, I've been some interesting locations.

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Oh you wanted to, dude. So I was reading about
a guy who uh this was in Indiana Planet Fitness
and not too far from us. His name was Derek Sink.
He was thirty nine years old. He passed away in
a tanning bed at Planet Fitness. So Planet Fitness wasn't

(21:02):
at fault for any of this. It was a drug overdose.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
Get high and otaining, man, what you do methan and
go sit in the tailing bed.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
He overdosed on fentanyl. So if he overdosed on fentanyl,
who knows. I mean some people do just straight up
take fentanyl a lot of times. An overdose on fentanyl
means his coat it was in his coke, you know,
or something. I mean, this guy was a gym rat
this guy. I mean, it's got a nice bot, But
did this guy screams coke? Right? If anything, If this

(21:33):
guy's high on drugs and he's not at a rave,
I'm thinking coke or even a Yeah, well but something
that fentanyl could get into. That is what I'm saying.
I don't know. But what's crazy is his girlfriend is
has been arrested. It is being charged with supplying him.
I mean, come on, man, this is a free fucking country.

(21:55):
You're telling me that his girlfriend like was pushing this
shit on this thirty nine year old dude. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Yeah, how about you're thirty nine years old and you
did something that fucked with your heart?

Speaker 2 (22:06):
Yeah, being prosecuted for supplying, not for selling per se,
just for like, you know, this person gave it to you.
I think that's just going too far. Southern state Indiana, Okay,
so south from here, but no, no, Well, what was
crazy about this story is that his dead body was

(22:31):
found in the Planet Fitness three days after he passed away.
Oh check your shit. Yeah, when he sat in that
tanning bag. So was it twenty four to seven location?
I don't know, but either it doesn't matter, like either way,
it tells you how often they actually clean those things,
like not just clean, like totally clean the tanning but

(22:54):
and I get you know, they've got the disinfected spray
and the whites and all that shit. You're supposed to
clean it before and after, and that's all good and fine,
but still it has to be professionally cleaned every once
in a while. I would think more often than like
every three days. You can't just trust everybody to do
a good job anymore. So I don't know. I was

(23:17):
I almost did a tanning bed over the winter just
because uh I have uh I have exema and there's
sunlight is one of the best things for it. But
there's not a lot of that to be found during
the wintertime. So I was looking at that as a supplement.
But I was like, I don't want to go into

(23:38):
that fucking thing. Like I just peeked in the room,
Like I'm not getting in that thing.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
I keep threatening to do.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
The nasty ass bacteria ridden cancer tube. You want me
to go sit in massage. The aquam massage is good.
I'll sit in those beds, but it's like vinyl covered
and you can spray it down and you're just laying
down on it with your clothes fully clothed. No, homo,
I don't do those. That's why I haven't sprayed it on.

(24:07):
Oh you see the romance is over. Oh it's a fit,
like the war has begun?

Speaker 3 (24:12):
Whatever did you say?

Speaker 2 (24:15):
Their social media posts going at each other.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
In my opinion, you want my opinion, Trump's reaction is
rather measured to the first term Trump. In my opinion,
I think Elon's being a big baby and all this.
He didn't get what he wanted.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
I mean, the bar is on the ground for this.
But this is a more mature Trump that we're seeing. Yes,
and more he's learned. Yeah, he's actually like he'd like.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
In his one response, he didn't even I don't think
anywhere in either of these sponsors would call them a name.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
I mean the one he's just I'm disappointed.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
Were looking at the evolution of a personality. It is
like saying that fish just got out of the water.
This early stages for him becoming a full human. But still,
I mean, you got to give him props words too.

Speaker 4 (25:04):
Nothing that I've seen he is crazy. There's no nickname, right,
the crazy Elon.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
There's nothing. There's none of that.

Speaker 4 (25:11):
He just says like he's disappointed in him and he
just oh, well, he didn't get what he wants with
This is it for Trump? This is these are measured responses.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
Let's see. Yeah, Trump has said, Look, Elon and I
had a great relationship. I don't know if we will anymore.
Must responded to the comments in real time on x
where he continued to swipe the legislation and Trump directly.
Where is this guy today, question mark? Question Mark Musk
wrote as he re upped another user's compilation of past

(25:39):
Trump tweets, citing high deficits, unbalanced budgets, and more so
basically saying like Trump's lost his way or lied to
you and the during the election.

Speaker 4 (25:51):
I think Trump brought him in, like, man, I we
gotta spend as shitload of money. So this is where
I'm bringing this dude to help trim some money so
we can spend all this money.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
I mean, this is like, this is the battle of
the two craziest people in America, right, and I think
I think Elon's actually winning this one. If if the
goal is to be more crazy power.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
Versus wealth, who wins power?

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Yeah, because all wealth is is the route to power.
And if you have a lot of money and you
just lost power, then you're less powerful.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
Elon's a wealthyes guy in the world.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
But Trump runs like the fucking strongest economy in the world,
So check me.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Uh but yeah, so Musk responded to us. Without me,
Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House,
and Republicans would be fifty one to forty nine in
the Senate. Really, so Musk is taking credit for giving
Joe Biden Alzheimer's.

Speaker 4 (26:55):
Yeah, because how yeah? I mean, like it is Elon's
fault that Biden come string together a sentence.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
A year ago. Are you fucking kidding me?

Speaker 4 (27:07):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Yeah, the date. It's like it's like almost like a
year more voters to Trump than fucking way more than
Elon being like he is. He is in the press
all the time because he's such a curiosity. Why is
his eye black? Why does he have so many weird
kids with the names? Kids with weird names? You know?

(27:28):
How what what about the ketamine used? Blah blah blah.
But he is not influential in that, like unless like
the only people that are kissing his ass of the
people that want his money directly otherwise, what do they
give a fuck?

Speaker 4 (27:45):
I mean, he's influential to the stock market. I don't
know how he has not been Uh, I do know how,
there's just kind of world. But how he hasn't been
called on the carpet by the the sec for manipular
leading the stock market because he can do that with
his tweets?

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Are we talking about Trump or Elon? Elon? Because they
both do this, right, they've both done it well.

Speaker 4 (28:10):
Well, Trump, it's presidential immunity. But yeah, but with Elon,
how has he not been called out for? Yeah, he
can send out a tweet and send the stock market
up or down.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
Yeah. I think who knows why this guy lashes out
because he lashes out at people a lot. But he
also said something to the why haven't we seen this? Uh?
This this sealed the report or whatever the fuck it
was on uh? And what's his nuts? The guy who Epstein? Yeah, Epstein,

(28:40):
the guy who quote unquote on himself. Why haven't we
seen the final report on this? Why is it still sealed?
The truth is, according to Elon, that it's because Trump
is indicted in this that you know he's been on
the Epstein plane. I'm like, of course, yes too.

Speaker 4 (29:00):
Gentlemen who are still alive that we're sitting presidents are
on that list. You're never seeing that list till these
guys are dead, no telling, there's set this years ago.
There is so much power on that list. We'll never
know who's on that list.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
And another post, Musk wrote, whatever period did you? What
are you? Fifteen? Are you a fifteen year old girl? Also,
ABC is you could have left that one out right
He probably tweeted out thirty five times today and you
wrote a story about all the things that he tweeted.
That one made the cut. One that was just whatever period?

Speaker 4 (29:39):
Well, has Elon got the he got the email music
cranked up, get the lights out in his room?

Speaker 2 (29:45):
Oh yeah he uh. Elon is now signaling that he's
going to have his own party. He's going to break
off from the Republican Party.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
One could start a viable third party.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
You think it would be Eli.

Speaker 5 (30:00):
He's got the he's got the resources, but like as
a candidate or just to start it. Yeah yeah, yeah,
be the bag of money like you've been.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Yeah, he's going to start his own party and it's
going to have black jack and hooker. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
Just mean liberals are gonna testa school again. Are you
allowed to slap your DNC sticker back on your Tesla?

Speaker 2 (30:24):
Now? Yeah? What a crazy turn of events for the
Tesla car first praised as an eco friendly alternatives a
gas guzzling ten years ago.

Speaker 4 (30:36):
It was a sign of the sign of the libtard
ten years ago. Yeah then what what what is it?
Who was it?

Speaker 3 (30:44):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (30:45):
Who said it? Was it?

Speaker 4 (30:46):
John Oliver or John Stewart? It was somebody who said
it became the fuck you mobile of the right somehow
in the last ten minutes, No, Bill Maher.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Yeah, Trump fired back. I asked him to leave. I
took away his EV mandate that forced everyone to buy
electric cars that nobody else wanted, and he just went
crazy in capital. Was there really gonna be an EV mandate?
I mean it's long past due.

Speaker 4 (31:18):
Like a few weeks ago, Trump was fucking selling tusselas
in the fucking front lawne of the White House.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
Yeah, I think nobody wants them. It took aways mandate.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
I mean the government could do that easily. They could
make electric car electric cars not just affordable, but cheaper
than gas cars. That that would be easy to do. Actually,
it's all the infrastructure that's built around gas cars that
is making that politically hard to do. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
Man, there's a lot of jobs.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Yeah, there's a lot of jobs in getting the oil
and refining, transporting at all these gas stations up and
down everywhere.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
I'm sure you've seen it went around last year, Billy Bob.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
It's from Lamb Man. Oh yeah, did you watch Lambman
or you just saw the clip?

Speaker 4 (32:09):
I just saw the clip. But I know I've heard
about it. No, I've heard about the.

Speaker 2 (32:12):
Scene where he's and everything.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Yeah, and I've heard about the scene where talks about
he quit drinking.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
He's drinking what is it? Uh, michelott bult Yeah, michelttle Vultar.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
Yeah, you consider this beer. Yeah, he's like, tell you
what they said, tell you what. He points a whiskey
or tequios him, I'll tell me tomorrow night, drink six
of those, and I'll drink six of these and you
tell me, yeah I'm drunk or.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Not, something like tell me you tell me of the difference. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (32:41):
But yeah, but no, there's yeah, the speech he talks
about when they're standing at a wind turbine and he
just goes through all of the oil that's just involved
in putting up the fucking one wind turbine.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Yeah, he does that one. There's another one he does.
A lawyer, a female lawyer at the bar, who is
like being kind of shitty about having to work for
an oil company and just you know, says something off
handle like we'd be better off without it, and he's
like it doesn't matter, Like it's in everything, it's your
whole life is the whole economy runs on it. You

(33:15):
can't just pull it out. This whole thing collapses. He's
not wrong, He's not wrong.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
Yeah, especially we are in Detroit, like this town would
not exist.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
Yeah, well, he's kind of not wrong. I mean, ultimately,
it is totally possible if we take a lot of
the wasted resources that we're sinking into things like the
military and just focus that on changing over and not
just making it affordable for people, but actually making it

(33:49):
viable for companies to change over without having a loss
of profit. This is totally possible. These are things that
we can do as a country. It's just not popular enough.

Speaker 4 (34:03):
But then the way California is trying to do it,
that's not gonna you gotta do it in.

Speaker 2 (34:07):
Ten years, Well, good luck. Everyone's just gonna leave. Yeah,
you can't do it with mandates and taxing the shit
out of people. You have to work. You have to
work with people, and you have to work with corporations
in order to achieve that. So not in our.

Speaker 3 (34:22):
Lifetime, exactly.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
I have a television recommendation for you that I think
you might actually want. Sure, we'll watch it, but you
might watch this one. You do you do have Netflix? Right?

Speaker 4 (34:38):
No, I will have access to it soon. Okay, I
currently do not have.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
It, so you will. You will have regular access to
a Netflix account. They released recently season one. I guess
there's gonna be another season of this of a series
that was based on a movie that was written by
Allen called The Four Seasons. Did you ever see the original?

(35:04):
This is a movie that basically took place in four
different seasons. It followed three couples and how their relationship
evolved over the course of that year. Basically, so, they
were kind of well off couples and they took regular
vacations together. So you know, you see them at a
summer resort, you see them at the you know, in

(35:26):
the fall, they go to visit the college for their
kids for some reason, or other. I don't know, but
this remake, it's Tina Fey and Will Forte play one couple.
Steve Carell and I don't know if you'll know any
Carrie Kenny Silver, Yes, yeah, wasn't she in Reno nine one?

Speaker 3 (35:48):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, that's yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
They're another. And then Coleman Domingo and I've never seen
him before, but he's fabulous in this Mark Marco Klavani.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
Isn't it Domingo guy from Saturday Night?

Speaker 2 (36:02):
No? Wait, that's a character. No, Coleman Domingo is a
picture of that dude. You might have seen him in something.
He's been in shows, in the movies, he's it was
in Sing Sing was really good. He's fantastic. Everything that
I've seen him in he's been just amazing. And he
is not only a standout in this show, but I

(36:24):
think maybe the funniest one, and everybody's funny in it.
It's just it's a really great drama that is funny
throughout and just really well written.

Speaker 4 (36:38):
I mean, my girlfriend has said that we're gonna be
living together, we gotta find some TV shows to watch together.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
This is like a perfect like this is a perfect
show to watch, watch the show. This is a watch
through ladies show. You're both gonna get stuff out of it.
It's like, I found it to be very truthful and
revealing of what relationships are like with but handling it
with a lot of humor. Yeah, he was gonna say more,
but I think, like I don't want it. There's kind

(37:06):
of some spoilers in there, all right, And you haven't
seen the original movie. I have not. Yeah, I don't
know that. Like I knew that Alan Aldo was a writer,
but I don't know of anything else that he did.

Speaker 3 (37:21):
Then he direct the final episode of Mash.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
Yeah, I think you're right. I know he directed a
lot of Mash. He pops up in this. He plays uh,
what's her name? He plays Carrie's character's father. And this
makes an appearance boy looking pretty shaky.

Speaker 4 (37:41):
Well, yeah, he's look better be and I'm not exaggerating.
He's not got to be like ninety.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
Yeah, and he has some sort of it's not completely
debilitating or anything, but he's got some sort of neuro
degenerative thing going on. I just always liked him. I
mean I was I was actually a fan of Mash.
I was listening to Kevin Smith's podcast and he was
talking about Mash because you know, oh hot lips, what's

(38:06):
her name passed away this week? Loretta Switt, Loretta Sweat.

Speaker 3 (38:13):
Yes, how I pulled that one out of my ass.

Speaker 4 (38:16):
I think it was just going to my memory of
the credits from Mash.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
Yeah, yeah, my dad watched that, right, Kevin Smith was saying,
like to him, Mash was like Funds over right, because yeah,
because the real runs always came on at night, like.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
Trying to be bummed out. It's Mash.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
Yeah, like your sitcoms are over, there's no more cartoons. Yeah,
like maybe if you push through this, you could get
to the uh, you know, some weird ass creature feature
movie that we play in the middle of the night.

Speaker 4 (38:51):
I mean in the crumbs you canet maybe there were
some scenes with Clinger or Radar you can get you
your comedy chromebs.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
I ate that hit up though I love Mash. I've
seen every episode of Mash multiple times. I know that
show inside and out, and uh yeah, it just really
and a big part of it was Alan Alda. He
was just the epitome of as a kid how I
thought a grown man would and should be. And I

(39:22):
just thought he was charming as a motherfucker and funny,
and it's like, yeah, it is a I mean, it's
a crazy fucking show. The ship that they did on that.
He also directed the episode where he killed the baby.
She doesn't kill the baby, well, the mother kills the baby.

Speaker 3 (39:41):
He orders her to kill the baby.

Speaker 2 (39:43):
He kind of as a doctor I recommend.

Speaker 3 (39:48):
Yeah, I mean the grand scheme of things, he orders
the execution.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Yeah, but yeah, our ip Loretta swit she was uh,
I don't know her from anything else other than that.

Speaker 4 (40:00):
That's it hot lips the end. Yeah, And isn't she
one of the few people that was from the movie
that made it to the show. Wasn't she also in
the movie?

Speaker 2 (40:12):
You're right? Yeah, because she's she has the nude scene
in it. The prank, the hilarious prank that those rapscallions
play on her. Is it sexual assault? So funny? Yeah,
when she's taking a shower, they rig up the tent
in some way to just like yank off in One

(40:35):
Fell Swoop and while they're all watching, and so she's
just there, completely exposed for the entire camp to cheer at. Yeah,
I might have to go, but I'm done with my
Northern exposurey watch. I think it's time to dive back
into Match. It's been a long time. That's a rough
one as a rewatch though, especially because I think it's

(40:57):
the first two seasons have the AF track, and that's
really rough to get past. It's like in Northern Exposure,
there's I think it's the first three episodes have this
like incidental music that like plays over everything that you're
supposed to be paying attention to, only it's like really

(41:18):
high in the mix and not ducked for the when
people talk, and it's really distracting, and it's also just
you know, it's just kind of like that type of
dumb shit music that's just like doing nothing but like
giving the scene some sense of pace, and that goes

(41:42):
away pretty clear. The music's great in Northern Exposure, they
just didn't figure it out for the first three episodes,
and it's like they have these really great conversations and
you're like, God, this would be like a really great
meaningful moment in the show right now if it wasn't
for the stupid t trumpet that won't shut the fuck up.

(42:04):
Somebody's stepping on a duck. Speaking of podcasters, they're referenced
so many of them today, I have to like really
cut back. I need to actively listen to more music
and listen to less podcasts. There has to be some
some editing. Well, listen to that your takeover going on? Yeah,

(42:24):
this is I live kind of in the armpit of
Woodward in eight Mile, so there's a there's some of
that every now and then. Yeah, it's probably those fucking
stupid three wheel doom buggy things with the speakers that
face outward like you're a fucking animal. I want to
just fucking fling nickels at these assholes. I don't I

(42:46):
don't understand why these things are legal. You don't like
hearing their music, then like I just yeah, like the
mobile PA ship can go suck a dick. But anyways,
I was trying to segue into the fact that Mark
Maren has announced that he is ending his long running
WTF podcast.

Speaker 3 (43:05):
Yeah, hanging it up.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
So that it's kind of funny because I saw that
I still get his feed, it still shows up. I
just don't listen, but I want to know who he
has on and I'll be like, yeah, maybe I'll listen
to that one, and then invariably that person that he
has on will be on some other podcasts that will
be probably more enjoyable for me to listen to it,

(43:30):
And so I just go, yeah, fuck it, Hey, look
at that. I can just listen to John Mlaney talk
to somebody else and not have to hear all Mark
Maron's baggage. Yeah, that was my thing.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
Would why stop listening to WTF? One was we're saying
earlier the politics like the twenty twenty sixteen election cycle
is where I fell off.

Speaker 2 (43:48):
Yeah, like, listen's gonna be all right, buddy, And look
I'm not I'm not slagging him. I respect Mark Marin.
He's just not who I go to for politics. He
is not, it never will be.

Speaker 4 (43:59):
And then two he was just like at some point, buddy,
happiness is a choice, Like like listening to him, it's like, dude,
like you have all of these things and you're still
miserable many maybe go to the shrink every day or something.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
All right, Like two pushbacks on that one. Clinical depression
is real to It's kind of his stick, right, It's
like asking Lewis Black that can't you just calm down?

Speaker 4 (44:30):
I mean I get it. It's yeah, like he made
his bones on being cynical gen x guy.

Speaker 3 (44:38):
I get it.

Speaker 4 (44:39):
But then maybe I got tired of the stick. Maybe
it's more about me as.

Speaker 2 (44:43):
A person, totally appropriate. Yes, and I did too, you know,
I listened all what was the big like milestone. I mean,
this is going way back now, I think to the
beginning of our podcast. He had his like is it
like a thousand an episode or something.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
He had Obama on. I mean, and to me, we
were talking about that earlier. That's that legitimize podcast.

Speaker 2 (45:08):
Yeah. No, that that was a milestone for his podcast
and for all podcasting. Yeah, that that definitely changed the game. Yeah,
and you saw it and the difference in the ads,
like almost immediately, it's like podcasts were just suddenly they
had ads like everybody else.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
Yeah, it went from like Dildo's car.

Speaker 4 (45:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (45:31):
But when he wasn't being all cranky, he was a
good interviewer.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
I think he's a good interviewer. I think his quality
that makes him a good interviewer is that he has
a certain uh he doesn't get embarrassed, right, He's not pompous,
so he's like he's totally like he comes off as
very like relaxed dude, but he's not. He's not relaxed

(46:00):
in is real internally. No, in his interviews, the interviews
is very cash.

Speaker 4 (46:07):
Yeah, correct, Yeah, I wouldn't call him stuff shirt and
he's you know, the setting of having it in the
garage initially, you know, it just it all added up
to an environment where people would kind of forget that
they were doing media and they could just have a
conversation with a buddy and say things that they might

(46:30):
not normally say and get people, people who've done tons
of media, tons of press and interviews, get them to
you know, say shit that they don't normally say.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
That was the biggest I mean, I don't know that
he like interviewing is a skill, and I don't think
that's the skill that he cultivated. I think it's through
his talent certainly, and his own personality and circumstance. He
kind of backed into being a good interviewer. I would

(47:03):
agree with that. And when the circumstances kind of dissolve
around him so that it's no longer you know, nobody
who goes on WTF can convince themselves that nobody's never
really going to hear this, right, they know people are
going to hear it. Not only that, but other quote

(47:23):
unquote real press is going to pick up on it
and printed if they say something crazy in this interview
because they're listening, so you don't have the same open environment,
so you're going to get you know, that interview. The
person being interviewed is going to be on the same
script that they are for any other show that they
go on, and so there's just nothing unique then that

(47:47):
that Maren can bring to the table. He's stymied as
far as getting to crack that nut, which was his specialty.

Speaker 3 (47:57):
And now they're going to either be more guarded.

Speaker 2 (47:59):
Yeah, so I think, yeah, I think it just wasn't viable.
I didn't listen to it, but yeah, I saw that
he had Don mullaney on, and I love John mulaney.
He's now become, I think, my favorite comic, and I
just was curious what he was going to talk about,
and many of you, I know, like he's wrapped up

(48:19):
his latest season of his Netflix weird talk show and
he's somebody who I'm curious about what's next for him.
So I almost listened to it, and then I didn't
because there's so many other podcasts that I listened to
on the RAG and then I saw a news story
that I announced on the John Mullaney Show that he
was going to be ending, and I was like, oh, well,
I could have heard it in real time.

Speaker 4 (48:41):
You're no, I'm more in the Nate Bargatzi camp right now,
he's your top. Well, I noticed, I'm going I've started
to become more of a fan of the guys that
don't work Blue simply because I've kind of and maybe
it's just from doing this for as long as we've
been doing it, Like vulgarity and swearing can be a crutch,

(49:05):
and if you do clean comedy, you have to actually
be funny.

Speaker 2 (49:09):
Yeah, that's why I like Pete Holmes. I think he's
like a popular but still kind of like controversial, not controversial,
like he's edgy, but like I think controversial just because
some people think that he's just kind of hacky, but
he's just has more of an old school like Brian
Reagan's style vibe to his comedy. Yeah, like Reagan's funny swear.

(49:32):
Reagan's one of the funniest comments out there.

Speaker 4 (49:34):
He doesn't swear. Gas again is another guy. He's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (49:38):
He does not swear, and I think that's where Pete
Holmes has found himself. He's really good at it. I
think his latest tour he was he was trying to
find a good name for it, and he was calling
it for a while, the PG thirteen tour, but he
just found that, like trying to put it in a
box too much was just too constricting. He's just like,

(49:58):
I'm just not gonna it's not even like no swears.
It's just not using swears as a crutch, right, Yeah,
it's not like if if you need to quote somebody
for the joke, you're gonna say and then he said,
f you you know, or just could take it out
of your joke. It's just not you know, and then
the fucking guy says to me and then this piece

(50:19):
of shit, Yeah, you're not using swear words. It's a filler. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (50:23):
A lot a lot of action in the city tonight.

Speaker 2 (50:26):
Yeah. The sirens. Yes, there did a study about sirens
that like they found that they were really not helpful,
like people tend to just freeze up. Like I've witnessed
this recently actually because I just had a cop you know,
I was in a line of a light. We had
just gotten off the freeway. Cop got off the freeway

(50:47):
with his lights on, and I had to figure out
where to go, you know, so I'm maneuvering myself around,
and then the one dipshit in the front couldn't figure
out where to go. I mean he literally could have
gone anywhere from the position he was in. He could
have moved up forward enough and still not been anywhere
near across traffic. But he just froze up because he

(51:09):
had this cop with his lights on trying to wiggle
his way through this little snarl of traffic. And yeah,
the cop got pissed and ended up going like practically
up over the curve to get around this asshole. I
don't know what to do. You get out of the way. Yeah,
and yeah, they've actually found in this study, like it's

(51:30):
it's a completely counterintuitive thing. Like you it makes sense.
It's like, hey, get out of the way, but like,
all you're doing is causing chaos and confusion in something
that usually has its own order. You know that people
are used to paying attention to and anytime you introduce
chaos like that, it's not going to improve the flow.

(51:52):
It's like you know, adding turbulence to water, it's not
going to flow faster. I found out today that more
can hark. It has been that he's battled. He's battling
Parkinson's disease. You know, Morton Hackett is no. He is
the falsetto singer of the band Aha. Oh hit those

(52:14):
and possibly high notes that everyone tries to reach in
the chorus of take On Me.

Speaker 3 (52:20):
Yes, he's sixty.

Speaker 2 (52:22):
Five year old, sixties five years old and has had
multiple brain surgeries trying to manage the disease. I didn't
know that you could actually like they give they do
surgery on you for Parkinson's.

Speaker 6 (52:34):
I mean maybe, Yes, I'm guessing I'm actually a fan
of Aha, and not just that song, not just that
album I have.

Speaker 3 (52:47):
I couldn't tell you another Aha song.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
In that record collection. I have at least six A Hi,
a old piece wow over there. And part of it
is that they were just you could find them in
dollar bins all over the place. They kept releasing music,
but none of it caught on in the US like
Take On Me did, and part of that was due

(53:10):
to that video. That video just like blew people's minds.
And it still, I mean, just a great looking and
cool concept that holds up well.

Speaker 4 (53:20):
Yeah, at the time for what it was, it was
groundbreaking visually. Yeah, it's combining live action and animation and
computer graphics. That was a big deal in nineteen eighty six.

Speaker 2 (53:31):
Yeah, it was that and the fucking Dire Straits video,
the Money for Nothing video.

Speaker 4 (53:36):
Yes, do you know if you try to find the
original version of that you have to scour the internet
and it is still hard to find.

Speaker 3 (53:45):
But is there Money for Nothing?

Speaker 2 (53:47):
Is there an edited video where they take out the
faggot word? I was gonna say the f word, but
we can just be adults. Also, that's confusing. Yeah, but
he says faggot in it. Yes, yeah, twice, but it's
still in the original song, right or have they taken
that now?

Speaker 3 (54:05):
Finally find it on the internet.

Speaker 2 (54:07):
It's hard to find. Yeah, for the video, but like
it still gets played on classic rock And I haven't
listened to classic rock radio in ages, but last time
I listened, it was still in there.

Speaker 3 (54:20):
See, I don't know if.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
They've edited it edited out. And here's the thing. When
I say that word, I was quoting, and when that
word is sung, it's also being quoted. Because if you
don't know the lore behind the song, that's fucking Mark
Knoepfler in an ABC warehouse or some shit looking for

(54:45):
new appliances and overhearing two goons that were like literally
moving refrigerators and ships talk to each other about what
was going on on the TV, watching MTV and calling
the dudes of the law. Here's fagots. It's not Mark
Knopfler calling somebody. That word sounds so long. Don't you

(55:08):
have the transcription on the other word? Doesn't that show
the words bringing on those mongos like a jimpanzee. That's racist, right?
That ain't You can't say that? That's that's that they
need to make an updated version of It's like, what's that?
What'd that guy say? You can't say that anymore? Shut
your mouth.

Speaker 3 (55:28):
It is there.

Speaker 2 (55:29):
This is the faggot version. I scrolled back in the lyrics. Yeah,
I mean it should stay right right. I don't care
if the words offensive. It's supposed to be offensive from
the perspective of the character in the song.

Speaker 4 (55:44):
And if you're offended, if you're easily offended, I got
some bad news for you about the n and NWA.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
Yeah. So anyway, we should wrap up this podcast before
we get ourselves into real trouble. Yeah, like it's white guys.

Speaker 4 (55:57):
We can only ever call it NW way, we can
only ever use the acronym.

Speaker 2 (56:02):
I'm fine with that, yes, uh and uh yeah it's great.

Speaker 4 (56:07):
Let's trap door out of this at at the weas
before twenty. On social media, chrisphermedia dot net has all
of the podcasts, has a PayPal bud if you want
to help us out and wherever you can listen to
the show, rate us and review us five stars please
and thank you, and and dowing into some of the statistics. Hello,

(56:28):
all you California listeners mission, we're home state.

Speaker 2 (56:31):
We're just we're way down on the list like we're
we're Yeah, there's a lot of people in California. Yeah,
a lot of people on machine though.

Speaker 3 (56:40):
Yeah, well they like us on the West coast, so nice.

Speaker 4 (56:43):
Hey, thanks for listening, and yeah, leave five star rating
and stuff.

Speaker 2 (56:47):
Yeah, and stay high and stay high.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
Thank you for visiting Christopher Media. Don yet
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