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November 22, 2024 • 88 mins
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
All right, guys, you did for some reason. All right,

(00:29):
it's the Wye Angry podcast getting on here. Uh just
wanted to kind of give you guys a background view here.
This is gonna be one of the few last few
episodes in the case unless something crazy goes on, this
would be the last few episodes of the year. I'm

(00:50):
the chef here in the man Cave studio. You can
kind of see the Man Cave Studios as we show
the end here, you can kind of see there's stuff everywhere.
We're working on different projects. I've got the Christmas lights
in the background there. You know, this is kind of

(01:12):
how the magic has made nothing super exciting or or
super expensive or anything. Here. We've just got the the
standard studio green screen and you can kind of see.
That's how that's how we get everything kind of going
is by using you know, honestly, a second hand five

(01:36):
hundred dollars mac Minnie and a couple of old phones.
I've got a the main camera here is a note
nine makes a great camera to to just give me
the main screen. We got some fourteen dollars lights from minards.

(01:57):
You can see their shadows if you watch chair or
anything like that you can see the video wise their shadows.
I mean, I've got a nice mic. It's a blue
spark and uh, you know, we're using ECAM, which is
kind of an industry standard, so we're we're trying to

(02:19):
use the best kind of quality components. But the thing
that we're falling behind on right now, in all honesty,
is his content is being able to decipher and bring
in the content that we need. We're trying to.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Do a lot of it without the AI.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
You know, I've I've been on the on the cusp
of it and used some animation, made some animation and
and things like that. But but honestly, just like a
ten minute piece of animation takes three or four hours
to actually get it right, to create the right you
know animation, uh for it the actual graphics and stuff

(03:05):
that you see and uh, you know, and then also
to to get the voice right, to get you know,
the person you know it to the right talent. And
so far the voices and things that you've heard or
have been mine on the extra AI and things like that,
We've been trying to work with the guys and just

(03:27):
get the time to record. But you know, we're all
working you know, full time jobs or or I've got
you know, my my kid and and then I'm working
a part time job just to keep things going also.
And so really tonight I'm kind of getting on here

(03:47):
to say we need we need more support than we
let on. Sometimes if you don't ask, you don't receive.
And so we joke about or we we kind of
lightheartedly say, you know, you want to be part of
the podcast, get on our our email and send us

(04:09):
the articles that you see. Well, it's it's it's not
as lighthearted as as I say. You know, I need
the help because to create a podcast, to to get
on and be able to you know, really create the
level of podcasts that we want to. You know, we

(04:31):
need to take those that those hours that we normally
are siphoning through all of the news and through and
getting through all of you know, the standard you know,
boring regular stuff, and uh, you know, we need that

(04:52):
time to be able to create you know, the bits
on the side all of the you know, the animations
and things that that you see on the show side
of things, at the same time as making sure that
we're creating engaging, you know, content for the audio side
of things, and you may have noticed over the last

(05:14):
you know, about six months or so, I haven't involved
a lot of extra help and a lot of extra
you know, voices on the podcast, because every single one
of those voices have been going through a transition time.
You know, they've bought houses, they've gotten married, they've changed jobs,

(05:40):
and and all of those things are our major life
choice late life changes. And although you know, throughout this
podcast over the last five years, you know, I've had
a kid, and I've changed jobs, and you've seen that
the podcast hasn't been as just all. You know, we

(06:01):
haven't been on it all the time every week, every
you know, we miss weeks, and and that's because you know,
none of us, this this podcast is none of our
full time jobs. And if you hear somebody on it,
that's because they're here on it. There's nobody behind that
person giving them information. There's nobody behind that the voices

(06:26):
giving us, you know, helping us write anything. We're we're
the writers where the creators were the producers. We we
we're doing it all and you're seeing the talent as
we're producing it ourselves. And and maybe that's evident, maybe
we're not. We're we're we're not up to snuff. And
that's and that's whatever. You know, we love doing this

(06:50):
and hopefully you see, you know, some value to the podcast,
but we're going to take a hard look at at
the podcast this this next month and month and a
half or so. The plan right now for me.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Is to.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Bring the podcast back on in January, uh, probably the
week before the inauguration, just to kind of give you know,
give some talking points about the inauguration and stuff, and
and even and and and even you know, Maggs is

(07:30):
in North Carolina and not that his house or his
his livelihood was affected by the tornadoes and and the
hurricane there, but they've they've, you know, his family has
been extensive in in the helping to uh to try
to recover. I mean they're they're you know, getting supplies

(07:55):
ready around and and that, and that hasn't just ended.
You know, just because you don't hear about it two
weeks later doesn't mean that that's that's ended. And so
you know, so at this point, we're we're going to
to take some hard, hard looks at ourselves. We're going
to look at how we can structure this a little

(08:20):
bit better so that it's more enticing, more exciting. Here's
more engaging to you guys, to anyone who listens, And
I say you guys like you're my friends and stuff,
because you know, that's how I look at it is
that I'm not just you know, I'm trying to be
genuine here and I'm trying to be a real person.

(08:41):
I'm not just you hear just you know, giving you
you know, I'm not just trying to you know, be
be some something that I'm not. I'm not a character.
The chef is not a character. The chef is you know,
I am the chef. And you know I do have
some character to products that I put out. You know,
I put out a it's called the back back Row Believer,

(09:04):
But honestly, the back Row Believer is me also. And
although I you know, I throw my you know, my
more southern accent, you know, when I just get lazy
about talking and just want to, you know, want to
draw it out a little bit, you know, I throw
that that Southern accent in and you know with that,

(09:25):
you know, yeah, that's kind of a character bit. But this,
this is not a character bit. This is me being
me talking to you. There's no script. I've gotten no,
you know, and and maybe and maybe we'll go to
some more scripted pieces where you know, we read you know,
I read off. You know, I I do a little

(09:45):
bit better with a script or something. I don't know,
but I've always you know, flown off the cuff and
I've always walked off, you know, walk to this as
in real life as it came. And so you know,
that's that's where where we're at with it. And so
we hope that you know that time is you know

(10:06):
that that we're giving you the quality even though we're
not sitting here writing out word for word what we're doing,
because I don't know that it would be as genuine
and as real if we did just write it all out,
if we scripted it out and wrote it out, I

(10:29):
don't think it would be you know, it wouldn't be us.
And so you know, I've got some news tonight, So
don't don't just shut us off yet. But you know,
we just you know, as as I'm going through this here,
I just want you guys to know that you know,

(10:49):
we're still going to be polished. We're going to be
more polished. Hopefully we're going to create a better, a
better version and and honestly, I know that as much
as you guys that the best podcasts are the ones
that all of us get on and collaborate together. The

(11:11):
more people that I can bring on and bounce other
ideas off of and work together with, the better this
podcast is. And and honestly, you know, I can see
the numbers and things like that, and I know that,
you know, me by myself is not the best podcast.

(11:31):
I'm the creator of the podcast. I had the idea
for the name, I had the idea for for the
kind of the concept. But it wasn't just a concept
that I had the idea for. It was that me
and and Jay Boots and honest abe, but we're sitting
around and you know, honestly, we we had the concept

(11:55):
for driving around and just you know, we have the
best ideas when we're when we're just hanging out having
a conversation or we're just talking about whatever comes up.
And that's honestly, some of the funniest podcasts we've had
or just been. You know, we found an article and
we went from the title of the article and just

(12:20):
spun it from there. You know, we we we joke
and laugh that, you know, we honestly, we missed our
We were ahead of our time because you know, we
were creating video content with a Super eight and or
some DV tapes and we were just you know, we
were on the camera just we'd rewind it, record over

(12:43):
this part that wasn't so good, or or we'd edit
it by rewinding it back to make a little video
snip to add into it. We made our own commercials,
We did all of this stuff, and so I understood,
like we've been doing it for so long time together
almost twenty years now, and it or maybe even longer

(13:06):
because you know, me and honest day have been our brothers.
So we've been you know, whenever we had some little
piece of technology, we were using it to do something stupid.
And so we understand that that's the that's that's when
we're at our best. We're just trying to figure out
how we can, you know, bring you better content or

(13:29):
bring you content every week. And if we can't bring
you content every week, then how do we make it
a constant flow of content when it's not every week?
And so the helpe that we're we're that I'm calling
out for right now is that if you want to

(13:49):
be part of the podcast, you hit me up on
why I'm Angry at gmail dot com and you tell
me what you want to do as part of the content.
As part of of the podcast. The big thing we
need is content, you know, articles that you.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Know, we need that that we you know, we.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
Need articles sent topics sent to us. If you have
a comment about the podcast, how how good or bad
or whatever. We need people to get on and like
and share our content. You know, that's that's a that's
a big one, you know, just even to kind of

(14:38):
get us out, you know, get our content out there.
You know, the more the more comments, the more interactive
that we can be with you guys that we can
be with our listeners, the the better that we are.
And and and honestly, that's not just like us saying
we're good at interacting, that we're interactive people because we're conversational.

(15:01):
You know, we're good story to you know, we're storytellers.
Whether we're good or not, that's up to you guys
to decide. But you know, that's that's the kind of
of people we are. We like to listen to a
good story at the same time as playing off and
just adding our story to that because as crazy as
it's been, we've we've been through a lot of different

(15:26):
cycles in our lives, a lot of different jobs and
and things like that. Me and Jay Boots used to
be antiques and memorabilia experts and and we work security together.
And we've even worked at Low's for a short time together,
and and learned how to ride, ride and drive forklifts.
And I'm not sure that that operating a forklift is

(15:49):
the right right term for what we did, but uh,
you know, right, riding and driving is definitely at least
at least uh you know, part of that. And so
you know, we I remember we were just, you know,
we were in the aisles of loads the one time,
and you know, we were playing around with the safety

(16:11):
knives and we made it a game for a while that,
you know, if we could sneak up and stab stab
the other one with the safety knife, which obviously the
blade wasn't out or anything like that, but you know,
we were just we were playing around. We were kids.
And the one time we were making our list of

(16:31):
the top ten things to do to the to do
for the day, and it never included actually doing our
job status or job work load for the day. It
always included like you know, taking over a small village
or building a catapult or something like that that you know,

(16:52):
just never made any sense. And so but that that's
the kind of of of comedy and kind of you know,
sense of humor that we you know, we normally bring together.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
But I know that when.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
We're separated, when we're not you know, when we're trying
to do this on our own, that's that's not as strong.
And we have our opinions, and that's that's why you know,
we're That's why I'm trying. I can still do the podcast.
I can do the podcast on my own, but you
guys don't want to listen to me drone on for

(17:29):
an hour or two. Honestly, the last podcast, the reason
that there was no video of the podcast is I
was so tired from my two year old being up
and down every you know, two or three times a night,
and you know, I'm trying to work on these Christmas
lights and I've got a big display I'm trying to do,
and some other things just regular life things and ministry

(17:54):
and trying to building another podcast that you know, I
was falling asleep during the podcast because I was reading
an article and I was trying to get the information
to you guys about this article, which was important and
and and to keep and I'm trying to keep the energy.
But honestly, there just was no energy to me. I

(18:17):
just didn't have the energy there. And so the podcast itself,
you know, if you listen to it, you can't tell
that I'm I'm really falling asleep. I don't think, you know.
I watch back over and listen back back to it
to make sure, you know, to edit and everything like that.
And that's you know, that's another process that comes with

(18:37):
all of these podcasts and stuff. You know, as much
as we want to I want to be able to
throw it live. So there's there's times where I have
to edit back through and no amount of AI is
is editing right now. It's not just it's just not
good enough to give you a good edit. And so
you know, with that, we need help. And uh, you know,

(19:00):
your two dollars a month is awesome, but we're honestly
not getting very many two dollars a month. So maybe
that's not how you want to help. Maybe you can't help.
You know, these Biden years have been has been slimming
not so much to my belly but to my wallet.
And so I understand that. But if you read a

(19:23):
good article, help us, help me out. Hit the share
button and hit hit hit the email Why I'm Angry
podcast at gmail dot com. We're not scamming you. We
won't send you anything unless you want it. But send
me the article and give me a what what four
on it? Hey, this article is about blah blah blah.

(19:44):
Thought it might be funny to read, or thought it
might be good for you, or just send me the article,
your name, your your email address and whatever will pop
up and I'll be able to see you know who's
who's sending me things and help out. And and I'll
you know, if you want some credit or you don't
want credit. If you don't want credit, they definitely put

(20:05):
on there. You know, don't mention me. And you know,
I'll just say a great American patriot, great angry patriot,
you know, sen us this article. But right now I'm
getting zero articles. It'd be great to get one or
two a week, maybe three at least. It'd be great
to get a hundred and have to like then spend

(20:29):
my time vetting through your great articles, because that's I
want you guys to be in charge of this podcast,
just because I'm going to give my my my opinion
and I'm going to try to educate you in a
way that's that's you know, humorous and at least, you know,

(20:52):
at least backhanded. Then that's what I'm gonna try to do.
But I want you to give me what you want
to hear about out you know, I I know that
you want to hear about some you know, our ideas
on the uh the conspiracy theories. But I got to

(21:12):
get the other guys in here for that. You know,
I can't just you know, drone on about a conspiracy theory.
It's it's it's always better when we're building off of
each other's thoughts and stuff like that. And so you know,
those are the things that we're going, you know, we're
gonna have We're gonna have this this hard look at ourselves.
And if you never see me after this email or

(21:35):
after this podcast, then it's because there was no support
to it. We you know, the podcast ran its time.
And if that's the case, I love you guys, and
this has been a great, great experience. You know, get
on our freestyle uh, creative group pages on Facebook or whatever,

(22:00):
or you know, search us out online and uh, you know,
find us there and find the other things that I do.
But if this is, you know, if this is the
last time, you know, which I don't think it is,
then then thank you, guys. And I'm honored that you've
you've listened to us this long, or that you've listened

(22:20):
to us at all, because I know that there are
plenty of other you know, great talking heads and people
out there, but those people have people behind them. Joe
Rogan doesn't go to his office, click on a camera,
hit a button and just start recording. Now, he may
have moments where he can just do that, but then

(22:43):
it's edited. Then it goes through this guy and a
producer and this guy and and and he's got all
of those things. I literally came down today and you
saw me. I hit the button, I hit the record button,
and you guys saw me live, and I hit the
button to go to turn on the music, and I

(23:05):
brought my mic down, and there were some other things,
and I honestly this is a pre recorded to go live,
so that I knew if this was was really what
I wanted to send out and if you're seeing this,
obviously I wanted to send this out and you're probably

(23:25):
seeing this just a couple hours or you're seeing this
the next day after I recorded it. And I hope
that you feel my heart in this is that I
really love doing this podcast because this is something that
is important to me. You know, I started this podcast

(23:47):
is this podcast started way before the podcast. We threw
a switch and the power came on and the lights
and the green screen and all of this stuff. This
podcast started back when President Obamas you know, started you know, campaigning,

(24:07):
and there was no vetting for him. There was no
major news or organization that held him to the fire
and and disqualified him. I mean, can you think about
like the voice that those voices weren't there. And I
couldn't understand that. So I started a Facebook page called

(24:32):
people Don't Exist because the people didn't exist that were
supposed to be there to raise the voices against him,
and and not because the world ended or that he
brought us into wars, or or or that that we

(24:55):
were attacked or you know, he destroyed the US. But
he's he did. He has signaled the beginning of a.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
New era of.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
Just almost lawlessness of just the fact that when you
when you go and say something normally, there's somebody out
there that's going to call you on it. And he
said whatever he wanted to say, and no one called him.

(25:27):
He went to a church or he was he was
part of an organization or a church or whatever you
want to call it. That was was calling for the
end of white people, was calling for the end of police,

(25:50):
was calling for the deaths of people. I remember that
Mitt R pretty sure it was Mitt Romney was running
for president, and I think it was Mitt Romney because

(26:11):
he was a Mormon. I'm gonna look it up right now.
This is how this is how we do, This is
how we do the podcast. We look it up and
this is just just coming to me. Ah, I think
it was Mitt Romney. Let me look at Yeah, yep.

(26:47):
So Mitt Romney was a Mormon and he was running
for president at the time, and he didn't get through
the primary and part of and and not all of it,

(27:07):
but part of the primary part of the reason he
didn't get through was because he was a Mormon. And
you know, a lot of the US Mormon the Mormon
faith is considered a cult because it is because they

(27:28):
they basically they have a hierarchy. They have a top,
a leader, and they people are are encouraged and asked
to give all of their wealth so they can be
distributed beyond to the members and whatever, and so so

(27:51):
it's considered and so back when they were when when
like the and and even this article here's as you
know why met Romney's Mormonism doesn't matter. Well it did matter,
It may not matter now because we're a less religious country.

(28:18):
And you can you can say that with all true
intent and and and even after this this election, you
can say that this is not as a not as
religious of a country because you know, we we don't

(28:41):
vet people out because of their religion anymore. You know,
being a Catholic was was was considered a fringe or
an outside you know, he's a Catholic. Can can the
Southern Bible Belt vote for a Catholic? You know, the
Southern Baptist Organization Committee, Can they be you know that

(29:04):
kind of thing? And so you know, that's what that's
why we started this long story long. You know, I
started a group called People Don't Exist because I felt like,
if you can convince people to vote for a guy
who can't show you his birth certificate. Who could be

(29:24):
who could be a Muslim in a time when we
were when we were fighting Muslim nations because they bombed
two of our biggest buildings. And you can say what
you want about any of the conspiracies theories, but we'd
that's what we were, that's where our beliefs were at
the time. And you know, if you can convince people

(29:45):
like that, then you can convince people that people don't exist.
And honestly, that's you know, as a Christian believer, the
the biggest thing that or the biggest deception that the
Devil ever did was to convince people that he didn't exist.

(30:08):
And so if you convince people, you know, if you
can do all of that, you can convince people that
they don't exist. And we and we, you know, we
had a thing about you know, people not existing and
how you know, the person should always exist, but the
people as a group, this mad, you know, mob of

(30:31):
people should never exist. This mob of people, it has power.
And this mob of people start to get an idea
and this mob of people can either say, because of this,
no one should ever do this, or this mob of

(30:52):
people can get on and say because of whatever happened that,
you know, we're going to rally against it. And so
that mob of people is the Democratic Party right now.
And luckily some of us woke up and some of

(31:16):
us said, wait a second, we need to band together
and we need to make this you know, we need
to at least come to some sort of agreement and vote,
you know, the lesser of two evils. And I feel
like that's partially what happened this this cycle, is that, yes,

(31:41):
Trump was a good president. He did a lot of things.
Do I do I follow the man because I want
to hang out with him. No, do I think that
if I had a small business and Trump said let
me run your small business, I wouldn't say yes. I
would say yes in a heartbeat because he's a good businessman.

(32:07):
He's proven that he can run a business, and he's honestly,
for the most part, proven that he can run a country.
You know, and maybe he you know, last time, he
didn't surround himself with all of the most intelligent people
or he thought that, you know, he had people who

(32:29):
could make decisions. And so with that, you know, we
got together and we voted for the lesser of two evils.
Do I think there's probably better candidates that could have run.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Do I think a three party system would be better
than a one party or a multiple party system where
we as individuals could figure out who's the best person. Yeah,
I think that would be the best case scenario. I
think that if you were were smart and you went
through the merits of each person, which you have troubles

(33:10):
anyway anymore finding out because there is no vetting system.
There's no you know, the mass media doesn't vet people anymore.
They don't go through the vetting process. And so with
that being said, I think that podcasts like this, the

(33:33):
podcast that we bring, this is the reason why we
bring it is so that A we can vet things. Two,
we can help you think create critically, we can bring
ideas that you may not have thought about before. And
maybe we bring all the same ideas and that's terrible,
and that's you know, And then don't don't don't follow us,

(33:54):
don't help us, don't keep us going because we're not
we're not providing any thing for you. But if we're
providing something for you, think about helping us out some way,
supporting us in in some way, you know, whether it's
whether it's sending us.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
An email that you're reading these this great.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
Article and you can send it. And I know that I,
you know, I get some I get articles sent to
me daily, and and I get all of these news
roundups and stuff like that. But the the articles that

(34:39):
come out, the subjects that come out the best, are
the ones that we're personally.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
Involved in.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
That we have some kind of stake in, you know,
just going and reading the articles and I could just
you know, I can say, oh, man, they're gonna put
land mines in Ukraine and we're gonna talk about that,
because we're gonna talk about that. But at the same point,

(35:15):
you know, just getting sent the articles from another news
organization or a group that puts together a news email newsletter,
I I'm more invested into and this is maybe my

(35:35):
adhd into the things that get sent to me. If
you send me an article, I'm gonna do my darnness
to figure out a fresh take or all of the
takes on it. And so if if we don't do
a subject, either it didn't come, it didn't it didn't

(35:58):
interest me, or you know, honestly, today.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
I was busy getting getting.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
The house around for company coming me and me and
Mila ran around outside in the snow his first day
at Snow for the for the year, and we were
just played around in the snow a little bit. We
did some grocery shopping, you know, we cleaned some of
the studio that didn't look like it when you got

(36:27):
to see the studio picks real quick.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
But we you know, we did all of that.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
And honestly, I didn't throw the TV on, so I
didn't see, you know, what news happened this afternoon or
or anything like that. And so you know, in that,
you know, I can say, well, you know, yeah, it
was probably probably a little behind on on headlines today

(36:57):
or or something like that. But you know, we also
we also want to do what you guys, you know,
the things that you guys are are are wanting to
hear about. You know, if there's if there's an article
that you've read and you think, well I want to
hear I want to hear more thoughts on that, you know,

(37:19):
send it to us. You know, Why I'm Angry Podcast
at gmail dot com. Why I'm Angry Podcast. I know
it's Why I Am Angry Podcast. It's long, but and

(37:41):
I can put it up on the screen.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
Here for you.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
Yeah, nope, I don't have it on here, so I'll
add it to my screen. So if you're watching this
or if you're on the podcast and you want to
watch this so that you can see you know what
it is, then you know it on to our Facebook page.

(38:08):
Why Am I Am Angry on podcast at gmail dot com. Okay, so,
and I'll put this on on our comments and stuff

(38:31):
like that so that you can see it. But uh,
make it real nice and big for you. Put across
the bottom here you get a little little background thing
shadows background, Yeah, at a background. At a background. Let's

(38:54):
do a color. Let's make it black.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Okay, okay, all right, deleat that and uh we don't.

Speaker 1 (39:13):
Need a border. We're just making a box, all right. Safe.
I didn't put me in background. So so just you
know that's where you that you know that, And that's
why we want you to add, you know, to to
uh to do those things. I mean, that's why we

(39:34):
we want your your your info. That's why we want
you to help us out. We want we want that
uh that help that uh input. There we go. So

(40:05):
we want we want you to get on and get
you know, be part of the podcast. We're not just
here to just talk your head offer or to talk
at you, you know, Will and Illi and all. We
want you to be part of the podcast. And so
get on send us an email, and uh, you know,
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(40:28):
share us on different different podcasts, different podcast websites, on
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and just shoot us follow If you never get back
on that site again, we don't care. You know, you

(40:51):
follow us on all the sites that you can. That
helps us with our algorithms, our metrics are all of it.
So so let's uh, you know, let's get in the
news and enough of the the doom.

Speaker 2 (41:06):
And gloom and all of that.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
But you know, I might get on in December, you
never know. But really we're just gonna take some time
to just kind of look back, look over the last
couple of podcasts, look over the last couple of years
of podcasting. And we've been doing this since twenty nineteen
was when we first started putting out podcasts, and you know,

(41:31):
a lot has changed a lot of things have. You know,
we've done a lot of things differently, and we've you know,
we've added this video, we've done it, We've you know,
we're doing all kinds of stuff. We're working with Spreaker
to distribute out our podcast. We're going to look at
that and see if we need to change from them.

(41:53):
But we really, you know, before we can have any
kind of leveraging or any kind of of advertising or
anything like that, we we need the follows. We need
the people to uh to get on and and and
just you know, to show that we have value. And uh,
you know, my mom says I'm special, but nothing says

(42:17):
I'm special like sharing, liking, and uh, you know, following
our podcast page and you can find us on on
all kinds of different social media's at ym Angry podcast. So, uh,
the only one that's not ym Angry Podcast is U

(42:39):
is X and that is the ym Angry Pod C two.
Not sure how or why we got that, but it
is at ym Angry Pod C two. So just you know,
get on, help us out, check us out, look at us,
look us up. We want to be more interactive with you.

(43:02):
We you know, if you if you've always thought, oh,
podcasts would be cool and uh, you know, you want
to be a you know, you want to be a
talent or a personality, you know, hit us up with
an email about that too. I've got a a page

(43:23):
that we can send out to you get some information
about you. We brought on extra people, people that uh,
you know, maybe weren't you know, I didn't know one
hundred percent, you know, Peyton until he got on the podcast.
You know, I knew of him, but I didn't know
him personally, and so we uh you know, we we

(43:46):
met and learned and went from there. So you don't
have to be best friends to get on the podcast.
You just you know, we need to make sure that
we're not going to have a kick, kick down, knockout,
drag out fight on the podcast. And if we do
have that that you know at the end of the
day that we're gonna be able to be amicable. Because

(44:09):
the one thing I don't want to be in the
Why I'm Angry podcast is I don't want you to
be to leave angry and never come back, because you know,
it takes a special set of skills to get angry,
get passionate, get uh get loud and and all that

(44:31):
about a subject and then be able to, you know,
continue to to work and create great content with somebody
without you know, after that. So that that takes, that
takes some talent, That takes a bit of forgiveness that

(44:54):
a lot of people don't have. And and we're we're
cool with that. You know, there's some friends I have
that I wouldn't put on the podcast because I don't
think that about of argument or about of contradiction. Would
we leave us friends or leave us family after that?
And so so let's get into it. They're President Joe

(45:20):
Biden trying to give Joe biden is his due by
giving him his title. The President announced yesterday that the
US will send anti personnel land minds to Ukraine. Like,
we're in countries. This is just first thoughts popping off

(45:43):
my head. We're in countries going through thirty forty fifty
year old now minefields, trying to clear them so that
random people like kids, dogs, kids wanting to play in

(46:04):
an open field area are not getting blown up. We
signed we signed.

Speaker 2 (46:18):
A ban.

Speaker 1 (46:20):
In twenty twenty two about anti personnel land mines, about
land mines. About one hundred and sixty countries signed that
band the nineteen ninety seven the Autowa Convention banned land

(46:43):
banned the mines designed to detonate on contact. Russia and
the US were not part of that. It took us. Yeah, yeah,
So these are supposed to be you know, mines are

(47:05):
reportedly non persistent, designed to self deactivate after a set period.
Analysis estimates that since the war began, twenty percent of
Ukraine's territories became become contaminated by mines. So, I mean
they already got a land mine issue. And so then

(47:28):
these land mines are supposed to like die after so
many years, which which proves that my phone, the washer,
the dryer, the refrigerator can be set to deactivate themselves
after so many years. And they can probably make it

(47:52):
so that it's it's you know, some kind of faulty
wiring or something that the wire just has a half life,
a corrosion rate of five maybe six years. And how
many you know, when this war is over in two
or a year or three, how do we you know?

Speaker 2 (48:13):
How do we.

Speaker 1 (48:15):
How do we know where those land mines are? So
you know that they're already deactivated. Maybe that landmine doesn't
deactivate in five years. Maybe it deactivates in ten like like,
this doesn't seem very fail safe, and this doesn't seem
like it just it is stupid. It's like, haven't we

(48:46):
figured this out? If we introduced coyotes to take the
deer down, then eventually we'll have a coyote problem. If
we introduce land mines to take down the tanks, eventually
we'll have a land mine problem. I mean, it's not

(49:07):
the same. The land mines aren't going out and reproducing
hopefully really hopefully, but it's the same in the fact
that when all of the tanks are gone, or even
before all of the tanks are gone, you can you're

(49:29):
continually putting out land mines in a place where people
can't see them, so that the tanks get blown up
if they go over them, they don't see them and
suck them out. I mean, come on, can we like,
I know we believe in global warming, guys, but still

(49:53):
let's lose. Let's use our brains. Were gonna throw it,
We're gonna This just goes to show you what happens
when you put a person in in in power that
isn't in power. Ukraine needs help and he's doing everything

(50:17):
he can because he Owes, Ukraine. No one in the
right mind would just like, yeah, here, here's a box
of land mines. You can have some more. Yoh, I
mean we it's okay. We made him illegal, maybe forty
years after the rest of the world made him illegal.
But here you go. Even though we banned him, we're

(50:43):
gonna we still got him. Obviously, I can't give you
eighty million, eight hundred million more dollars, but I'll give
you a land mines. I mean, so, I guess there's

(51:14):
this thing called a bomb cyclone, and a bomb cyclone
is hitting or has is set is impacting Seattle and
the Pacific Northwest. So let's learn what is a bomb cyclone?

Speaker 2 (51:29):
I mean a tornado.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
A cyclone is a pretty pretty crazy thing. Anyways, now
we're going to add bomb to the to the equation.

Speaker 2 (51:39):
We're going to add name.

Speaker 1 (51:41):
You know, just is this like, you know, a sharknado
or something like that. I mean, come on, So, a
bomb cyclone apparently occurs when a storm system undergoes bomb
o genius, with its central pressure dropping rapidly within twenty

(52:02):
four hours. This particular storm system has been fueled by
atmospheric an and atmospheric river a band of moisture in
the sky with water vapor levels comparable to the average
flow levels at the mouth of the Mississippi, and the

(52:24):
resulting weather system has unleashed hurricane level winds, which are
less than tornado but okay, hurricane level winds in part
of Oregon and Canada and Vancouver, well and Vancouver Island
winds as high as one hundred and one miles an

(52:45):
hour and the equivalent of a category two storm. So
that's the difference is if you look at hurricane winds
versus tornado winds, you're going to see that winds from

(53:13):
a tornado can move as fast as three hundred miles
per hour. Now that would be considered like a category five.
You're you know, this thing is blowing everything down it is,
you know, hopefully it's not going through your city, where
hurricanes tend to get to about one hundred and eighty
miles an hour or less because they're filled, they're not

(53:37):
like a tornado is not as much a rainstorm as
it is a high pressure low pressure system of wind
and resulting storm systems around it, which is why there's
an eye of the tornado or an eye of the

(53:58):
storm is most of the time. It's because there's two
different systems coming together, and that's creating a vortex of weather.
It's a vortex of pressure systems. So you're going to
have a high pressure and a low pressure system coming together,
and they're both trying to inhabit the same same space.

(54:23):
And so basically what happens is with a hurricane, you've
got a longer time frame of it's going to move
across you know, the ocean or the Gulf of Mexico
or whatever, and it's going to take days to get there,
and and maybe it goes up the coast for a

(54:46):
day or two or five or whatever, depending on how
much how much of the ocean it can still hang
on to because it's being fueled by the water serve
is in the and they'll love that. Where a tornado
is being is being fueled by the pressure systems. And

(55:08):
as soon as that pressure system dissipates wherever it hit,
you know, it could be the mountains, you know, kill
it off. It could be that you know, it just
no longer. You know, those two have have mingled enough.
And if you you know, you remember you put ice
in a in a hot, hot water, hot glass, you
know that'll end up, you know, mingling together and you'll

(55:29):
have you know, you'll you'll hear the ice crack and
all of that stuff. Kind of sounds a little little
violent ish depending on what what level of NFL you like,
but you know, eventually it turns into lukewarm whatever. And
so that's why a tornado is is a lot quicker.

(55:52):
You know. The difference is that you know, if you
had a tornado that lasted two or three or four
or five days at one hundred and fifty two hundred
and twenty five miles an hour to three hundred miles
an hour, there would be none of us left, like
the United States would be gone. At three hundred miles

(56:12):
an hour, you know, it could it could pretty much
traverse the United States in about eight or ten hours
get across to it if it were moving at you know,
that fast. Most of them don't quite move as that fast,
and they don't they don't go that far a few
a few miles at a time. You know, the job

(56:34):
jump things like that, where you know, your hurricanes and stuff,
they kind of.

Speaker 2 (56:47):
Kind of move as a.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
System, building building the storm as it as it is
by bringing more and more water and evaporation and stuff
like that into the clouds and building more clouds and
things of that nature. So so at one hundred and
one miles an hour hurricane ones, you're at a category

(57:13):
two storm tornado. You're on the low side of it.
Heavy winds, rains, and snow are expected to continue impacting
the region in the coming days. Separate storm a separate
storm due to hit the northwest tomorrow as the current

(57:34):
storm moves east. So there just seems like it sounds
like there's, you know, this storm and then a second storm.
I think I feel like bomb cyclone just may just
like acts like, oh yeah, we just threw a bomb
in it and just blowed up and it's big and whatever.
So it doesn't seem like a very technical term to me.

(57:55):
But whatever we can, we can add more adjectives to
things to create a more ominous sounding, but a more
accurate sounding. Maybe, I don't know, maybe it's more accurate.
It's just like maybe some guys just like look at that,
they we just threw a bomb into a tornado and

(58:17):
this is what happened. So you know, it's just one
of those deals, you know, bomb tornado. But it is like,
you know, two people are dead and about six hundred
thousand customers have lost power. So we do need to,
you know, to be watching that licoln Riley's killer was sentenced.

(58:44):
Georgia nursing student. We you know, we've gone all through
that Georgia nursing student was killed by a We've seen.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
All of the ads.

Speaker 1 (58:52):
A a illegal immigrant. He was convicted yesterday on all
ten counts of related to the February twenty second murder.
Was sentenced to a life in prison without the possibility
of role. The trial, which began on Friday, followed the

(59:14):
relatively rare trajectory in which a criminal defendant foregoes is
their rights to a trial and by jury in favor
of just a bench trial, which I mean depending like
depending on where he got his trial. And I didn't
really look at it, but there was DNAV evidence and

(59:37):
there was surveillance video, and so you know, even in that,
it's strange that you if you, if you went to
a a trial, like you went to trial, like, why
wouldn't you just see if you could plead to a

(59:59):
lesser charge and just admit it. So he entered the
US illegally. His immigration status didn't play a role. In
the trial, although you know, he kind of has to
a little bit because he's not not a legal citizen,

(01:00:23):
you know, but I mean his immigration status played a
lot in the actual election. But yeah, so anyhow, if
you know, as long as he got a fair trial,

(01:00:44):
you know, I guess his immigration status doesn't matter other
than the fact that he did break the law to
even be in this country, and so there should be
legal repercussions on that. I'm not sure, like now, if
he goes to jail here, you know, I'm sure Mexico
isn't like knocking down the door or whatever to get

(01:01:05):
him back or extradite him. But you know, if he
does not, now, as citizens, we're paying for that person
to live here, so we you know, unfortunately, now he's
gotten here illegally and he killed someone illegally. Obviously, now
we're legally afforded the right to have to pay for him.

(01:01:32):
I mean, doesn't seem right, but we know whatever. My Tigers,
Tarik Skubele got uh Cy Young, al Cy Young, Chris Sale,
which I'm not sure how he's still he's still pitching,

(01:01:53):
but Chris Sale got Cy Young on the from the Braves,
so one bright spot and the Tigers made it to
the playoffs.

Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
Beat a team.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
Got sioned. Now with it, will he be on the
team next year come July, We'll see, because they already
I mean they are. They had already talked about last
year's sending him on for how many of millions of
dollars and how many picks and whatever. So a couple

(01:02:41):
of things like that going on. And then uh, you know,
I had an article again, Uh, the International Criminal Court,
the i c C.

Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
Went in and UH.

Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
Created war warrants against Benjamin Nette Yahoo and the UH
and their Minister of defense, uh Jove Glant, Well they're

(01:03:26):
former minister of defense. You have Glant uh basically alleging
war crimes and crimes against humanity for their roles in Israel,
Israel's ongoing military offensive in the Gaza Strip. So basically,

(01:03:48):
what I've read about this is is that the i
c C is the International Criminal Court, and it is
basically like they had the Nuremberg trials, and they've had

(01:04:11):
and they had the was the Nuremberg and as you
can't remember that other one that's right here, right here,
right here. Oh, then the Tokyo tribunals, And basically this

(01:04:35):
is This is the world court that basically is set
up to This is the one in the Hague that
is set up to get to do world crime, you know,
war crimes. They try try people on World War two crimes.

(01:05:04):
You know, all of anytime you've heard of the War
Tribunal getting together and arresting someone or uh trying someone
on war crimes, this is this is the group that
does that. So something that I wasn't aware of that

(01:05:29):
in over twenty one years of trying of people of
of doing things, they have never indicted a pro Western official.
So anybody like like you said, like the US, any
any of England, and no nobody from you know, France, Belgium,

(01:05:56):
you know, anybody that was for the Allies in World
War Two. Nobody has ever been indicted from you know,
in that. So Benjamin and Yahu and galant are are
the first to pro Western because Israel is a is

(01:06:16):
a Western country basically or at least a ally to
the rest, you know, the Western you know, they were
part of the Allies in World War two, although that
wasn't a country in World War two. But anyhow so
they you know, they have they are they are part

(01:06:37):
of the pro Western group, and they have they've never
they've never gone after somebody from those those got those countries. Obviously,
Putin has a a warrant out for his arrest, and

(01:07:00):
a few other other major major people. In two thousand
and two, George Bush, the George Bush administration signed a law,
bipartisan bill permitting the use of military force to liberate
any US or Allied personnel charged with war crimes by
the court. And basically they you know, in the world,

(01:07:25):
the bill was known as into the human rights community,
the Hague Invasion Act, and basically, you know, I didn't
realize this, but there are the I c C or
the Act covers any military personnel elected or appointed officials

(01:07:49):
in the US, or anyone employed by or working on
behalf of the government or of a government of a
NATO member, a major non NATO ally, which non NATO allies,

(01:08:10):
because the NATO is that North the Baltic Group is
includes Australia, Egypt, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Argentina, the Republic of Korea,
and North or in New Zealand or Taiwan. And so

(01:08:34):
those are all our non NATO allies plus our NATO allies.
Those are all those are all countries that we would
go to uh we would use military force if they
were tried as a as a war criminal. So if
Benjamin and Yahoo goes to a country that respects I

(01:08:59):
SEC as a as a.

Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
Governing body.

Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
And he is he is arrested.

Speaker 2 (01:09:08):
Then we are.

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Obligated by our laws or required by our laws to
then go fight to get him out. So yeah, this
and not that it's it's a giant thing, but it
does it.

Speaker 4 (01:09:31):
You know, it's going to restrict his travel.

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
And so basically there's one hundred and twenty odd twenty
five I think is what it was that they said
countries that do follow the ICC and will one hundred
and twenty four countries around the world that have signed
the Roman statue ratifying the Court, and the US and

(01:10:08):
Israel are obviously not among them, though the Court has
now rejected Israel's claim that it holds no jurisdiction over
its actions. Now that now that the warrants are issued,
many members any member state that net Yahoo or Gant

(01:10:28):
may travel in the future would be obligated to arrest
the Israeli officials if they enter their territory. So one
hundred and twenty four countries that he cannot come go to.
Now obviously that that just that it basically it restricts

(01:10:54):
his travel. So he can stay in Israel, he can
come to the US. You know, there are some countries
around that, you know. Some of those countries include France, Belgium,
and Netherlands. They all have said that they will abide
by the ruling of the court, making so that he

(01:11:17):
can't go to any of those countries. The European Union
has said that, you know, even though that the Biden
administration has made it clear that the rejects it.

Speaker 2 (01:11:42):
That they you know, they.

Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
Do stand by the court. So EU you can probably
go to England maybe, but you know, I'm just it's
going to restrict as his travel until something is you know,
and maybe he goes with this warrant and and proves
his cause. At the same time, it's a human rights

(01:12:05):
organization basically, that's what this court is set up for.
Is is it's you know, if you've created a war crime,
or you've done a war crime, which is a humanitarian
issue like you you know, you've killed so many people,
or you created a war that just killed citizens and uh,

(01:12:29):
you know, so I guess it comes down to on
this is whether you think that you know, he's he's
attacking citizens on on purpose, or he's trying to you know,
provoke by attacking citizens, and maybe he is. Maybe the

(01:12:54):
maybe his his strategy is that you know, those citizens
are collateral damage, and they're acceptable collateral damage in the
grand scheme of things. And you know, in that that's
a sad thought or a sad way to think about it,

(01:13:18):
you know. But at the same time, he could be
sitting there thinking that, you know, obviously war is bad.
Things happen in war. You you people die, and there
are innocent people who end up in the wrong spot
at the wrong time, and it's not acceptable. And it's

(01:13:41):
not a you know, but it is it is. It
is war. It is the facts of war, whether they're
whether it's acceptable or not. You know, how many people
dying of murder and rape or or gun violence or

(01:14:03):
or knife violence or hammer violence or shark attack are acceptable?
Every year? How many? I mean, how many people just
dying of random incidents is an acceptable you know level.
But the fact of the matter is is that people
still die every year of random bear attacks or of

(01:14:28):
the accidental weather calamity or frostbite or frostbite because they
went out drinking and got caught in outside because they

(01:14:53):
couldn't find their keys. You know, these random acts, like
these random things that happen to people that they happen
and it's not acceptable. But at the same time, you
can't you you can't educate that out of people, and

(01:15:15):
you can't figure you know, you can't be we can't
do nothing for the sake of a few people that
are going to end up in the wrong place at
the wrong time. And as sad as that sounds like,
we can be as careful as possible, but just like

(01:15:43):
with a hurricane or something like that, you can give
people as much warning as you want. People are still
going to try to ride it out. And they gave
the people weeks and weeks to get out because it's
a war zone. It's going to be a war zone.
Told them when they take shelter, they could they you know,
they can come to the two other areas of Israel

(01:16:08):
to take shelter, but the area is going to be
a war zone and there there's going to be some
level of casualty and so in that I you know,
I just I no, it's not acceptable, but at the

(01:16:30):
same time, for the greater good of your country, for
the greater good of security. You you have to you
have to look at it. You have to go into
it with a level of you know, we warn people,
we have given them every accommodation, accommodation possible to be

(01:16:53):
safe to be and yeah, it's it's not cool to
have to move out of your home, but it's just
like in any state in the US, if that home
is not accommodating to you, you have to make the
you have to make the decision to do what's right

(01:17:14):
for yourself. And if you stand on principle, then you
die on principle. Live by the sword, die by the sword.
It's pretty simple. And so who then is responsible in that?

Speaker 2 (01:17:36):
You know, do we hold.

Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
People, you know, do we hold foreign dignitaries responsible for
war and for trying to make you know, to make
the heart making the hard decisions to keep us safe,
because honestly, that's what they should be doing. And in
that same point, if they don't keep you safe, don't

(01:18:03):
you normally whine and moan and complain to them or
or bring them up on you know, charges, or or
at least you don't vote for them anymore. I forgot
we had Biden two years of Barack Obama, but you know,

(01:18:27):
so yeah, I mean it just it is a bad situation.
But war crimes seems seems a little a little, a
little heavy handed. He's not going out looking for Palestinians
to shoot. He's looking for the leaders of Hamas. Hamas

(01:18:51):
is not a race of people. They are a military, militant,
tearistic organization. They're they're not a tribe of people.

Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
They're a.

Speaker 1 (01:19:15):
They're they're terroristic organization that has a belief system and
they're funded by Iran, and so they you know, they
carry out a lot of that undermining of the population,
undermining of society, the propaganda against the Western culture or

(01:19:41):
the against Israel, and they perpetuate a lot of of
anti whatever propaganda. They perpetuate that that that anti Israel,
anti establishment, anti America feeling. And that's fine, you know,

(01:20:02):
everybody's everybody's you know, entitled to their own freedom of thought.
But let's actually be thinking. Let's use our brains the
way that they're supposed to be used and think for
ourselves instead of you know, giving, you know, giving into

(01:20:28):
that that mob mentality that says because of thousands of
years of fighting. We should continue fighting for the for this,
for this, for the honor of our ancestors. Your ancestors
are dead, your ancestors are buried in the ground. And

(01:20:54):
if your ancestors were Christian, or they're in heaven or
whatever they're and they don't they don't care about you know.
I mean, as silly as it is, Mike Tyson and
his legacy thing isn't one hundred percent wrong. Yes, you're

(01:21:15):
you know, as a Christian. I want my legacy to
be that my my family where Christian, you know, became
Christians and followed the same God that I did, and
so eventually when we go to heaven.

Speaker 2 (01:21:31):
We can all be there together.

Speaker 1 (01:21:36):
But I don't know if that's as much about the
legacy of each each generation becoming Christian as much as
just the fact of being selfish and wanting my family
to be there with me. And maybe it is legacy

(01:21:56):
that you want, you know, want that next, But I
don't care if they remember me personally. Oh, my grandpappy Hanover,
Aaron Hanover, was a Christian and so we follow, you know,
but you know that's it. I don't want them to
follow the God of Abraham or the God of Aaron.

(01:22:17):
I want them to have their own God, that that
their own experience with God, their own relationship with Him.
And so you know, legacy wise, you can say I'm
fighting for the or the honor of my ancestors, but
you know, fight for the future. And if that future

(01:22:44):
is like what what help does fighting get? You know,
your your future kids. You know, if you were if
you if you were all Israelis or we're all Palestinians,
or you were all united together, or you lived your
life somewhere else, you know, following your your beliefs in freedom,

(01:23:15):
then that that seems more important than just like fighting
for a piece of land or a piece of dirt
that at the end of the day you're going to
be buried in. So all right, since I said I
hadn't gone through the the news too much, that was

(01:23:39):
an article from somewhere else. Let me see if there's
anything else we needed to talk about. Kenyan President cancels
major deals with a Donning Group statement from Joe Biden
on warrants issued from the International Court. He basically said

(01:24:01):
that he's not going to uphold them because they have
no jurisdiction all right, let's make sure the ICC issuance
of arrest warrants against Israeli leaders is outrageous. It's outrageous.
Let me be clear once again, whatever the ICC might imply,

(01:24:22):
there's no equivalence, none, between Israel and Hamas. They did
also issue warrants for Hamas leaders, one who had died
a couple of weeks ago, another that had been killed
three or four months back, or they say has been killed.
Israel says has been killed three or four months back,

(01:24:44):
and it says we will always stand with Israel against threats.

Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
To its security.

Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
So at least you know that is That's the statement
from President Joe Biden on official White House website. So
that's at least there. There's that US House passed a
bill to punish nonprofits deemed to support terrorism. Seems pretty

(01:25:15):
pretty common sense. Uh. Trent Trump chooses loyalist Pam Bondy
to for Attorney General after Matt Gates decided to fall back.
I heard that there was a ethical portfolio or something
like that. They had been held back for a while,

(01:25:37):
and maybe he got the hey, if you just step
back from the attorney general's pick, then we'll just not
release this and let you continue to do your thing.
So there's that. Let's see. That's about it for around

(01:26:02):
that I see right off the top of my head.
So you know, guys, like I said, to be the
last one until the first of the year, we're gonna
take some time off really think about what we're doing
with our lives and uh, you know, figure out whether
we still have the time and the gumption, the energy,
the ability to to run this thing and see what

(01:26:25):
we can do better. So again, you know, you guys,
send me a bunch of emails all of a sudden
this week and uh, you know, you never know, maybe
next week I'll be right on and uh, you know,
the week after. So give me, give me, give me
some support, show me, show me you you love us,

(01:26:48):
and send us those emails. You want to be a
part of the podcast. You want to be help help,
you want to edit, you want to do you know,
want to produce whatever. We can work out a deal
there too, So send me those emails if you want
to be part of the podcast. We're just you know,

(01:27:08):
I'm to the point where five years in, you know,
we need to pivot and either get better by a
good margin or you know, we need to just put
this on the back burner and start a new project,

(01:27:30):
try to get you know, try to do something else,
and not that we're trying to get famous or anything
like that, but try to figure out where our.

Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
Niche is.

Speaker 1 (01:27:42):
And how we can do our niche and in the
in the confines that we're given right now in our lives.
So get on, follow, like, and share us. We love
you guys, and you know, just like every other time,

(01:28:04):
remember to follow, like, and share the Why I'm Angry
podcast across all social media platforms and anywhere you get
your podcasts. The Why I'm Angry Podcast in now
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