00:00
Speaker 1
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season two, twenty six,
00:03
Episode two of Daily, a production of I Heart Radio.
00:07
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
00:09
into America's shared consciousness. It's Tuesday, March first, which of
00:16
course means it's fat Tuesday. Whoa Yeah, get ready you're
00:21
giving up with something for length for you got hearing
00:24
people out there. Oh man, get it in one last time.
00:27
Every time, I just I just fast for the whole lent,
00:32
you know, just try and get get in the same
00:34
headspace as my man j C. You know what I'm saying.
00:37
It's a beat like it did. Watch the last episode
00:41
of Gemstones last night. That was that was a joy.
00:45
So that is the closest I'll get to doing anything.
00:48
For Lene was watching something about Christian being Christian. My
00:53
name is Jack O'Brien a K. I heard there was
00:57
a secret word to try to guess would be absurd,
01:01
so I google word all answers every morning. I say
01:06
it's luck or maybe smarts. But it's like gang knows
01:09
my crooked arts, so now I have to quirdle just
01:13
to prove it. That is courtesy of X C D
01:18
Potter c X. Anyways, once again, our listeners accusing me
01:26
of cheating at word will take it as a compliment.
01:28
How do you seem so damn google the word every
01:32
morning and then yeah, quick, I just share every time
01:37
I get it in two and people think I only
01:41
get them into or something, and they're like, you must
01:43
be cheating. It's like, not like I'm good. I'm just
01:46
got lucky a couple of times, and I'm really good
01:49
at it. Anyways, I'm thrilled to be joined as always
01:52
buy my co host, Mr Miles gras Ka d oh
01:57
NoHo a k a. The Lord of lakershim a k
02:00
the fucking mayor of City Walk. Okay, the Sheriff's always
02:03
try to give me those curfew tickets when I was
02:05
but a boy, but I dodged them by running into
02:08
the garage. That's how you yeah up out here, unending
02:15
control would come out and oh my god, scatter, scatter, scatter.
02:21
But anyway, we're back, baby, to be back, good to
02:25
have you, good to be back. All right, Well, Miles,
02:31
we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat
02:33
by a talented writer reporter whose works you've seen and
02:36
heard on Vice News, Tonight, Casey r W market Place,
02:40
her fifteen part history of Deputy Gangs inside the l
02:43
A County Sheriff's Department. A tradition of violence is mandatory reading.
02:47
And we'll I don't know, are we allowed to say
02:49
we'll soon be a podcast. Yeah, Network, please welcome to
02:55
our show, the brilliant series Casas. Thanks much for having me,
03:01
so thrilled to be back. Yeah, it's gonna for being here. Yeah,
03:05
excited excited to have you here. I love your Abbot
03:08
Elementary tea. Thank you. That shows. Yeah, I have a
03:11
few episodes behind, but that show has only given me
03:14
smiles every time I watched it. Is that? Is that
03:18
like mercher or what did you? How did you say?
03:20
You got that shirt? Oh? Um? It was uh what's
03:24
what's the word? It was liberated from the set? Yes,
03:31
there we go and fade is like that shows exposure. Yeah,
03:38
there you go, Like there but black mm hmm. And Miles,
03:43
you're saying that Dare is back in these streets trying
03:47
to try to hit I should probably just do a
03:50
cursory Google search to answer the question. But I saw
03:54
people like doing Dare awareness in a parking lot when
03:58
I was at the store, and like dudes in their
04:01
twenties had Dair shirts on, like, hey, man, just gonna
04:03
talk to you about Dare real quick, and I told
04:05
him I was in a rush. And then they said, no,
04:07
it's all good, It's all good, and do you remember
04:09
Dare And I said yeah, they said what do you
04:10
remember about it? I said that it doesn't work and
04:12
I kept walking and they're like, but that's what we
04:14
want to talk about. And I was like, what is
04:16
this conversation? Like, what is the point of this? M Well,
04:19
they're never went anywhere, just just so you know, I mean,
04:23
it was it was a terrible failure, but the company
04:25
has never ceased operations since its founding in the mid
04:29
nine days and it's based in Inglewood. So so what
04:33
I wonder what they're doing, Like is it that they're
04:35
trying to get more support or to try like I
04:38
don't know why they're talking to me an adult and
04:40
what they think. I how I factor into the longevity
04:43
of the you know, DARE program. I was assuming that
04:47
was like some n f T like retro thing that
04:51
they were just like, yeah, yeah, no, Dare, man, you
04:53
remember this is the Dare n f T. Dude, I
04:58
can turn your Dare deploy homa that you got when
05:00
you finished the program into a fucking n f T
05:03
dude for like half an ethereum. All right, think about it,
05:06
Think about it. Damn did you got a diploma? My
05:10
dad was so half past and it was a worksheet
05:15
that the cop like like misspelled my name on. So
05:19
far from it being some kind of like you know,
05:21
worthwhile document. M All right, well, sis, we're going to
05:25
get to know you a little bit better in a moment. First,
05:27
we're going to tell our listeners a couple of the
05:30
things we're talking about. We're gonna talk about Fox News.
05:33
The dilemma at Fox News anytime they have to you know,
05:37
people are interested in a story that's actually happening. They
05:41
they have a tough time. You know, it's like what wait,
05:45
what what what do we say? What do we do? So,
05:48
you know, they have some very spicy pro Russia takes,
05:52
but then they're on the ground. Reporter is pretty good
05:56
at telling them to shut the funk up or shutting
05:59
it down. So we're gonna talk about that strange rhythm.
06:02
We're gonna talk about the what I actually want to
06:06
hear threes of you, Like, there's this story that Rolling
06:09
Stone broke about like what's happening on military basis that
06:13
there's like all these deaths, and it just feels like
06:16
a story that's being held down, held out of the
06:19
of public view pretty strongly. So I'm sure you know,
06:24
even if you're not an expert on it, you are
06:26
an expert on that dynamic. So I'd be curious to
06:29
hear your your thoughts on on that story. We will
06:34
talk about social media and how snack companies are targeting
06:39
like the last untainted way that we find out about things.
06:43
All that plenty more, but first threes, we do like
06:46
task our guest, what is something from your search history?
06:49
Something from my search history? This is something I searched
06:53
last night. Euphoria plot synopsis. Okay, was it a confusing platter?
07:00
You just like wanted to get spoilers out of the way.
07:02
I don't watch Euphoria, but every every Sunday, without fail um,
07:10
everything I see on social media just turns into references
07:13
about this show that I truly know nothing about. And
07:17
last night I I broke down and I finally googled
07:21
Euphoria plot synopsis. I'm not going to watch the show,
07:24
but yeah, I do like to know what's going on?
07:28
It feels like one of those tweets that people do
07:30
are it's like, all right, I'll bite. What's euphoria? Oh
07:33
yeah I did that. I did that? Whatever? Whatever the episode?
07:37
About the play? I tweeted, Okay, I'll bite, what's what's
07:39
a play? Yeah? I saw the first season and then
07:47
I haven't seen I think I've only saw that like
07:49
the first half of the first episode of this season.
07:51
But yeah, the discourse surrounded on Twitter, I'm always up.
07:55
Huh Hey, it doesn't seem like a very good show.
07:58
I just want to like say that. I mean, it
08:02
seems like you have all these like teens running around
08:04
doing like crazy shit, like with no consequence. Like I
08:08
just want to say, for the record, I think that's
08:10
very like bad, unhealthy television. Um, if you do want
08:13
to watch much like Succession, I'm going to get a
08:16
lot of people coming for me for this. But yeah,
08:18
two shows I think that just show shitty people doing
08:21
shitty things with zero consequence. I think that's really dangerous
08:24
for society and for you know what, where things are going.
08:29
I think it's fine to make shows about shitty people
08:32
doing shitty things, but it needs to be done in
08:35
a responsible manner. If you want to watch a show
08:37
like that, I really recommend Dopesick m dope sick. Yeah.
08:41
Michael Keaton just won, did you not? But no, idea? Wait,
08:46
what was the thing he just won for? That was
08:47
a film? Michael? What's Michael? Michael Keaton? I swore he's
08:50
just won a sag Award for something. It might be
08:53
he plays a doctor that gets addicted to Yeah, yeah, yeah,
08:57
you just want a sag Award. Yeah, it's interesting. Like, Okay,
08:59
did you ever watch The Sopranos. I did not. I
09:01
did not like that show. I tried. Okay, is that
09:03
also because you feel like it's a thing about shitty people?
09:07
I just thought it was really boring. Whoa, Okay, because
09:12
I'm trying to find, like, you know what, like like
09:14
sort of triangulate where we are because I get like succession.
09:17
I think when most people who watch it, they go,
09:19
why why am I picking an evil person to get behind?
09:23
Or like that's sort of like I think the sensation
09:26
that people have when they watch it. But I get that, Yeah,
09:29
Like the consequences just seemed like the do o j
09:31
is gonna back off and you're like, oh what Okay,
09:36
So they continue to do it, and I don't know
09:37
if their aim is like we can just show people
09:39
how this ship really works. But on the other side
09:43
of that, you do see people who completely missed the point.
09:45
You're like, dude, be so sick to be like Roman,
09:48
and you're like, no, it would. Yeah. I I watched
09:54
two episodes of Euphoria and then bailed. But they have
09:59
followed the development of the show like paras, like just
10:04
via social media, and like this is the first for
10:08
me where like a big twist that happened in last
10:12
night's episode like made me feel something. I was like, ah, ship,
10:16
that's like another show that I really enjoy, but I
10:19
have a lot of guilt about. Is like Snowfall, where
10:21
it's just like violence, violence, violence. You see black people
10:24
killing each other like pretty much NonStop for an hour,
10:27
and it's just like, Okay, what's the point of this,
10:30
Like what are we learning here? Yeah. I saw an
10:33
article that was like they tried to say that Euphoria
10:36
had can like actually contributed to an uptick of like
10:40
young people trying to address their substance abuse. But that
10:44
was like that felt like one of those things that
10:46
like the producers or the network networking has something something
10:49
to be published and be like, I don't know, I mean,
10:51
that's that's really cool part of it. So yeah, yeah,
10:54
it definitely made drugs and the first couple of episodes
10:58
made drugs look fun to me as like like just
11:02
trying to think through the through the mind of like
11:05
me when I was in high school, Like it was
11:07
like I was, I thought it was amazing if you
11:10
could like score some beer for the weekend, and they're
11:12
just like alcohol is a given, and then they're all
11:16
doing like all these creative, like multicolored, amazing drugs that
11:21
make amazing special effects happen and make things all sparkly.
11:25
I was like, whoa. I think that would have been
11:28
hard for me to watch and not want to do
11:31
every drug I could get my hand on, because yeah,
11:33
I feel like Trainspotting didn't quite be like yo, man,
11:36
I try heroin. Yeah, you know, just made me try
11:39
and swim in the toilet. But I tried heroin. And
11:41
I think Half Baked was like the one thing when
11:43
I was like, whoa, this weed ship. Now this weed thing.
11:47
On the other hand, yeah, what is something you think
11:50
is overrated series? I think the ending of California's mass
11:53
mandate and the easing of c d C COVID restrictions
11:57
is incredibly overrated. All those loud mouth anti mask people.
12:02
I think they're super overrated. I think politicians need to
12:05
stand on their ground and back to science. Yeah, but
12:08
the science always changing threes, science always changing. That's the
12:12
cool thing about sciences. We're always learning more. I liked
12:16
it before when people just saw a dinosaur bones and
12:18
we're like, what the funk that is? And now we
12:22
learn more about the different periods of life on the planet.
12:26
But yeah, that that it's it's another one of those
12:29
thought killing cliches that those anti vax people always deploy,
12:33
sort of well everything is changing. It's like, yeah, because
12:36
you're learning about it, Like just like your vocabulary changed
12:38
over time because you learn more words. You're not being like,
12:41
well we're adding new words now to English. No, you're
12:44
learning more about something. But yeah, I'd be more okay
12:48
with it if they were okay with Like, if if
12:50
I had any confidence that like once the number or
12:53
if the numbers go back up, that they'd be like
12:56
all right, and now we're remasking that they wouldn't like
13:00
ailed themselves, like just to have the worst reaction possible.
13:04
But yeah, they seem they seem pretty unhappy with any
13:08
of it. Yeah, because it seems like you're just pleasing
13:12
a very small specific group of people. Because I look
13:15
around parts of l A, like most people are still
13:18
wearing man. I think a lot of people just emotionally
13:21
psychologically haven't moved into a place where they're like, yeah,
13:24
it's over and it's and I feel safe. I think
13:27
that I don't know how much of the general population
13:30
is like that. I mean, right, well, yeah, courtesy and also,
13:35
but I think other people do feel that there is
13:37
something where it's like, well hold on now, like this
13:40
just because you're saying we can wear maths, no, like
13:42
maths aren't mandated anymore, that that actually signals it, like
13:45
it's completely a harm free environment out there. Yeah, I mean,
13:49
especially for like our disabled friends are people that can't
13:52
build immunities. Like one of my close family members has
13:56
this really rare genetic disease where he's had the he's
14:00
been given the vaccine three times, but he just can't
14:02
build antibodies, so he doesn't have any protection. So I
14:06
mean and COVID cases, like, yes, they're a lot lower
14:09
than they were two months ago, which was the highest
14:11
number of cases that we've had in the past two years.
14:15
So when we're saying that it's dropping, yes it is dropping,
14:19
but cases are still incredibly high. This is still one
14:23
of the highest points that we've had since the onset
14:26
of COVID nationally. And the people that don't have that protection,
14:29
they're just fucked now, Like are they're not supposed to
14:32
leave their house, they still have to, you know, go
14:34
grocery shopping, walk their dog like anything. If it's a
14:38
not very visible group of people, then it's just not
14:41
considered and erased and it doesn't matter because we're talking
14:44
about the regular people who just want to fucking drink
14:47
at Applebee's, you know, a little bit chicken for everybody
14:51
knows your name. Yeah, yeah, And because wasn't at the
14:54
time when they were talking about like putting them, like
14:57
I know, the CDC had their timeline, but even when
14:59
it was talking being talked about in California specifically, like
15:02
many parts of the state are still considered high risk, correct,
15:05
like Los Angeles County and children under five still can't
15:09
get vaccinated. And you know, there are tons of parents
15:12
of kids under five that I talked to that. You know,
15:15
I have to send their kids to school now without masks,
15:18
without any kind of protection, and they're incredibly vulnerable, right, Yeah,
15:23
and kids, I have a four year old. They're not
15:25
great at keeping the masks on to begin with, so
15:28
that's not having a teacher. They're putting it like back
15:32
over the nose every time it comes down. It's not great.
15:37
What is something that you think is underrated? Um? I
15:41
think it's underrated that we're not talking about the US
15:46
taking a military action in Somalia. Last week. This was
15:51
done without White House approval. The United States bombed Somalia
15:55
for the first time since August one. We've been talking
15:58
a lot about what's happening in Ukraine. That's awful, and yeah,
16:02
like definitely feel for the people that the working class
16:06
on both sides of that conflict that are subjected to violence.
16:09
But you know, it's not happening in a vacuum. Our
16:11
country is taking military action in the African continent and
16:16
we should be paying attention. I think we should be
16:18
putting pressure on politicians about this sort of thing, and
16:21
especially the fact that it's happening without White House approval
16:24
is incredibly dangerous. Yeah, it. I mean, I think we'll
16:29
touch on this, like when we start talking a little
16:31
bit more about what just generally what the reactions have
16:34
been on like the in the US as it relates
16:37
to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. But yeah, it's giving
16:40
a lot of people the moment to sort of like
16:43
just paper over past mistakes or other things and just
16:46
act like nothing else is happening except this. And you
16:49
see a lot of of this like sort of contradictory
16:53
behavior from many like nations, whether that's like Turkey, you know,
16:57
saying like you know, they're standing in solidarity with Ukrainian
16:59
people than their bombing Kurds like days later, or like
17:03
you're saying with the US bombing Somalia. There's just always
17:06
things happening where I don't know it allows for for
17:09
right now, because the Ukraine thing is taking up so
17:11
much of the attention, it's been very easy to kind
17:15
of be like, yeah, and that's the only thing that's happening.
17:17
I don't need to like anything else. Let's not talk
17:18
about other people that have been displaced by unilateral invasions
17:22
in place, and is the no White House like approval
17:27
or authorization is that kind of a new trend military action.
17:32
It's a new trend in military action in the African continent,
17:36
which again is something that like I just feel like
17:39
not enough people are talking about and paying attention to.
17:42
That's a huge break from our foreign policy generally, all
17:46
strikes like this need to be done with White House approval,
17:49
and that is not the case anymore for military actions
17:52
in the African continent. That's an official policy. That's an
17:55
official policy, yes, just to say that the people that
17:59
are in charge of like command over there, like that's
18:02
just the buck stops there essentially with whatever is that
18:07
with the sort of pr sort of sort of spin
18:11
on it to be like, well, they have to respond
18:13
very quickly to like a very quickly evolving situations, So
18:17
we have to deputize these fucking bomb humpers to do
18:21
whatever they want. Yeah, because things aren't quickly evolving anywhere
18:27
else in the world where people are dying and killing
18:30
each other. So that's shocking. I mean, that's something we've
18:34
raised just that, like over the course of the past
18:37
week as Ukraine has been like the thing that everybody's
18:40
paying attention to is like the double standard and the
18:43
media when it comes to countries that are prominently brown
18:48
or black like don't get the same attention, but like
18:52
having a double standard for authorization where African countries is like,
18:58
that's that's shocking. Yeah, alright, let's take a quick break
19:03
and we'll come back and talk about Fox News and
19:16
we're back. And Fox News is worst than me right now,
19:21
is their own foreign correspondent. Yeah, there, So the last week,
19:27
I mean Fox has been just like a trove of
19:31
just you know, just some of the weirdest ship that
19:34
you've ever heard, whether it's like just parroting Kremlin talking
19:37
points or just things that are like so yeah into
19:41
like intellectually bankrupt that you even have trouble like following
19:45
what the thread even is, aside from just like it
19:47
ends with like and that's why Biden is worse than Trump.
19:50
There's just been all kinds of stuff, and you know, sadly,
19:54
when some of the hosts want to go into like
19:56
the spin zone, they intend encounter Jennifer Griffin, who is
20:00
one of their like veteran foreign correspondence I guess, like
20:02
with national security and you know, started her career in Russia.
20:06
Whenever she's been on in the last couple of days,
20:09
she's almost every time been like, yeah, the last person
20:13
just said something I can't believe was just said out
20:15
loud or like or even checking the host be like no, no, no,
20:18
that's not actually true what you're talking about, the like,
20:20
you know, really trying to make sure that there's not
20:23
a ton of like misinformation, disinformation getting put out there
20:28
to the viewers. And on Sunday, she was on you
20:32
know Trey Gaudy, Mr Benghazi. On his show, he was
20:35
speaking with retired Army and a retired Army colonel and
20:38
former Trump military advisor who was essentially saying, just let
20:42
Putin do his thing. Man, he wanted to take Ukraine
20:45
for like ever, so just let him do whatever he wants.
20:48
Like there's nearly no point in like getting involved in this.
20:50
I'll play this for you and Gouty, uh doesn't really
20:55
have much to say in response to this, but let
20:57
me just play at this clip for you. I think
21:00
we need to stay out of it. The American people
21:02
think we should stay out of it. The Europeans think
21:04
we should stay out of it, and we should stop
21:06
shipping weapons and encouraging Ukrainians to die. And what is
21:10
a hopeless endeavor so when you say stay out of it,
21:14
you mean no sanctions, no military age, just let Russia
21:18
take the portion of Ukraine they want to take. Yes,
21:23
so uh drade out. He's like, okay, sit idly by,
21:28
why more innocent people are needlessly killed and let Vladimir
21:33
Putin just do as he pleases? And the guys like yes.
21:37
So then once that segment ends and like the you know,
21:40
the viewers have been subjected almost five minutes of this,
21:43
you know, uh like Putin apologies kind of stuff, Jennifer
21:47
Griffin comes on and she just has to. She starts
21:49
off by saying, like, hold on, I actually need I
21:53
would need more than ten minutes to even go through
21:56
everything why everything that guy said was wrong? But I'll
21:59
give you the start of it. Jesse. You can understand
22:01
her sort of like conviction to clearing up what that
22:04
other loser just said. For ten minutes is enough time
22:08
to do so, because there were so many distortions in
22:11
what he just said, and talking about the Western NATO
22:14
vilifying Putin and sounding like an apologist for Putin, and
22:18
talking about how Putin he thinks he knows how far
22:21
Putin wants to go. I don't think anyone that I've
22:23
spoken to UH here at the Pentagon or elsewhere in
22:27
Western intelligence believes they know how far Putin wants to go.
22:31
And I think that the world has seen what Putin
22:33
is capable of. And to blame uh NATO membership for
22:37
what we've seen Putin unleashed, We've seen from Putin's own
22:40
words that he is talking in Czarist terms, from a
22:44
eighteenth nineteenth century view of empirical imperial Russia. So those
22:52
what he just said was so distorted that I do
22:55
feel that our audience needs to know the truth in
22:58
terms of Putin. I've known, so you know. She goes
23:01
on to say, and here's why I'm an authority on
23:03
what like all of this. By the end of it,
23:06
Trey Goudy completely just I don't know, He's like, I
23:10
agree with you, which is the weirdest thing because a
23:13
second ago he did not push back at all of
23:15
that last guest. But let's just hear Trey Goudy at
23:18
the end of her like impassioned rebuttal to that retired colonel. Yeah, Jennifer,
23:23
it takes a lot to surprise me at my age,
23:26
I was pretty surprised at Colonel McGregor, I mean, his
23:29
his view of life as well. Russia has been telling
23:32
you they want to do this. Uh, so they did it.
23:36
Um I I I found his take on a uh
23:39
stunning uh and disappointing. Marco Rubio and other Okay, my man,
23:45
you've just been Auntie, you've been Mr Anti sanctions. We
23:49
need to stay out of it the last couple of weeks.
23:51
And now that somebody with a with some know how
23:53
an intelligence suppressing you, you just capitulate like, oh has
23:57
he been he's been on that side of things, because
24:00
my my main issue was him saying he was stunned
24:03
and surprised when during that guy's like long tirade about
24:07
how we should just step step back and let Putin
24:09
do whatever he wants. I was gonna ask if it
24:12
if they had replaced him with a photograph of him,
24:14
because he just like didn't move. He was just like
24:17
completely still and with a like dumb smile on his face.
24:21
So it seemed he he expresses shock in a very
24:25
in a very strange way, Yeah, by nodding his head
24:28
and being like yeah that part, that part I mean
24:30
before he's like, I don't even know how good sanctions
24:33
are going to be and I mean that's valid if
24:35
you're gonna actually really take it to the point of
24:38
like what does that mean for you know, real estate
24:41
investments in places like New York and Miami, London, Like
24:45
is argue the sanctions go that far? In which case
24:48
is it enough? But he's just kind of been the
24:50
whole time like I don't know, you know, I'll just
24:53
kind of go with whatever the person in front of
24:55
me saying, because that's And frankly, he was lucky we
24:58
were on TV because would have kicked his ass. Like
25:02
the way he was talking that ship. Uh, you know
25:05
you could. I think our viewers could see it. I
25:08
was I was fucking heated. Man. Anyway, he's so strange,
25:15
look by the way, because he can't decide on what
25:17
like fast haircut he wants like every ten minutes. It's
25:21
always changing in the weirdest ways. Like he's really giving
25:24
off like strong Paul Rubens in the original Buffy the
25:27
Vampire Slayer movie, but to that like the referee for
25:32
the Hunger Game movies. The house. Yes, yeah, I mean
25:38
he needs some funny facial hair. He needs to like
25:41
get some sideburns that like connect on top of his
25:44
nose or whatever the funk they were rocking back. But
25:47
you know, this is this is all just kind of
25:49
part of watching like what Democrats and Republicans in this
25:52
country like how they're kind of feeling like with what's happening.
25:55
You know, for the longest time, Republicans have just been
25:58
like Trump, like Apollo, just for the way how accommodating
26:02
he was with Vladimir Putin and or even like how
26:05
he handled like Ukraine's past requests for you know, defensive weapons,
26:09
and they just continue to, you know, sort of double
26:13
down on this or at times make it about the
26:14
culture ward this guy. Congress Person Clay Higgins has tweeted
26:18
like the most nonsense shit a couple of days ago
26:22
about about what's happening in Ukraine, and this is what
26:25
he tweeted. This is again, shouldn't shock you that this
26:28
is a This is gonna be a direct quote, and
26:30
you won't believe it's a direct quote as Miles reads it,
26:33
because it does. It doesn't. It doesn't make sense. It's
26:36
like a mad lib but like mixed with I don't know, man,
26:42
like you you feel like you're on drugs listening take
26:44
off your Nintendo glasses for a second and listen up.
26:48
This is from him quote, You millennial leftists who never
26:51
lived one day under nuclear threat, can now reflect upon
26:55
your woke sky you made. You made a quite you
26:58
made quite a non bare binary fuss to save the
27:01
world from intercontinental ballistic tweets. What this is what you
27:09
write when you take you for your drugs? Yeah? Yeah,
27:14
if the parents there's only one parent or two parents
27:17
in the whole show. But if if that parent took
27:19
the drugs and then tried to fit in, do a
27:23
hey fellow kids. Yeah, that's your wokes guy again. This
27:28
is his really bizarre over old boomer energy wrapped up
27:32
in Basically, Trump would have prevented this upon your wokes
27:37
guy that I live under the wokes guy, I'm gonna
27:40
start saying that now it's pretty live under the woke
27:43
sky sky daddy lives. Isn't that with something, guys, daddy
27:51
quite a non binary fuss to save the world from
27:54
Like I'm trying to like pull out the buzzwords to
27:58
see but like it even then, it doesn't make sense.
28:01
It starts off your sky. Like I could m I
28:06
could remember like when the Soviet Union fell, like I
28:10
was old enough. I can have a millennials, I know,
28:15
but yeah, yeah, exactly we are. I'm a geriatric millennial
28:20
through and through. But I'm like, sir, not to say
28:23
that I I've I've lived under the threat of nuclear
28:25
war or something like that, but to act as if
28:28
there's no context or lived experience looking at things. Granted
28:31
I may have been a child, that's ridiculous. But also this,
28:34
the second part is the whole thing, is that it's
28:37
it's going after the like the idea of people being
28:40
more inclusive. That's why it's a non binary fuss to
28:43
save the world from Trump, which is the intercontinental ballistic
28:46
tweets or whatever. Okay, so you've put I don't even
28:51
know that he has that locked in. To be honest
28:54
with you, like that the because your woke sky doesn't
29:00
really make sense, right, is the sky like alluding to
29:03
the missiles that will I think from the sky now
29:07
reflect upon your woke sky that we avoided war. So
29:10
because we've there's been minimal peace, that the sky is woke.
29:17
Because also I feel like anyone who remembers anything after
29:20
nine eleven is probably remember consistent stream of warfare. That's
29:25
what I was trying to say I didn't live under
29:27
like the Cold War, but I definitely remember the post
29:30
nine eleven hawkishness that ran through the country. Do you
29:35
remember those promotions on the Disney Channel where they were like,
29:39
I love America because Patriots isn't as cool? That was wild, right, Hi? Yeah,
29:47
I'm Hannah Montana and I love scud missiles. Okay. So,
29:52
and and even like the other thing that you even
29:54
see right with Democrats then new even like mainstream news
30:00
the way that they are so bad at hiding their
30:05
own discriminatory beliefs and racism, Like the multiple someone did
30:09
a whole fucking thread of newscasters being like and this
30:13
isn't like some dirty brown country, it's a place where
30:16
white people live, and like they're horror around it. You're like, yo,
30:22
how could you say that? Oh my god? But again,
30:25
these are the people who are synthesizing world events and
30:27
then you know, broadcasting that to the general public. I'm
30:30
gonna play a couple of these because they all you
30:33
can't believe how like fucking just like no filter, the
30:39
like these comments are these are not refugees from from
30:55
This isn't a place with all due respect, Um, you know,
31:00
like it Rock or Afghanistan that has seen conflict raging
31:04
for decades. You know, this is a relatively civilized, relatively
31:09
European I have to choose those words ship, calm the fuck. Wow,
31:17
this relatively civilized relatively And then you can see like
31:21
in both cases they're like I start to twitch because
31:24
they like realize like they've just said something racist. Yeah,
31:29
they're like, it's it's pretty interesting. I think the guy
31:34
also said I want to train, I want to choose
31:37
my words carefully here. Yeah, to bro. Yeah, it's almost
31:43
like it was almost like like a satirical bit, Like
31:46
that's like the perfect execution for like a comedic line.
31:49
It's like and I want to choose my words carefully here,
31:51
and you go for the most offensive version. Right. I
31:55
would have assumed that those like that he was speaking
32:01
of like a critique or something, because but then he
32:04
like tells himself by being like, and I want to
32:08
choose my words carefully. They're so like it's not like
32:11
he's saying and some people have said this, or he's
32:13
like putting those words in someone else's mouth. Not that
32:16
that's like better, but it's like how a newscaster would
32:19
typically like kind of frame that sort of thing. But
32:23
some people are saying that this is like a different thing.
32:27
But instead he's like and I should have chosen my
32:30
words more carefully there, Yeah, my bad. I mean we've
32:35
already forgot about like the people of Afghanistan, like what
32:39
are you the fun what what are we even talking about?
32:42
And even like with the people being like, wow, the
32:43
Taliban said that they should stop, the Russia should really
32:46
stop with their invasion of Ukraine. Meanwhile, things are getting
32:50
really bad in Afghanistan as well, like with the Taliban,
32:54
and it's just a it's just this really again, like
32:57
this moment where I think this overarching center and especially
33:00
with like people who feel like they're you know, like
33:02
liberals or democrats on TV. They're trying to make themselves
33:05
feel good that something has happening. Well, the US is
33:08
providing like like fucking expensive munitions that you know that
33:13
go straight into those those those companies coffers, but like
33:17
it has well not being completely objective about America's foreign policy,
33:22
it's very like summer of vibes, you know, just like
33:27
oh yeah, this thing is so bad and just in
33:30
this very narrow thing and I'm not gonna we're not
33:32
gonna really fully open up an analysis as to how
33:36
we got here or why things are the way they are.
33:38
But in this moment they needed help. We gave them
33:41
stingers and some you know, other weapons, and now we
33:45
can feel kind of good about it and continue on
33:47
with our day of like ignoring you know, the legacy
33:50
of like invasion and meddling and like Latin America, I
33:54
don't know that's what at all. I mean, Like Biden
33:57
just froze seven billion dollars of money in Afghanistan in
34:02
the Afghan Central Bank, and is like taking that money
34:05
and giving it to American families of victims, Like that's
34:09
so beyond, but like people are going to die from
34:15
that decision, and it's just yeah, but it's really Afghanistan
34:21
checks notes has nothing to do with nine eleven. That's
34:26
just a really And that's like so many of so
34:29
much of this very contradictory ship is going on, and
34:32
it really kind of it can be very dizzy ng
34:36
the rate at which people just kind of very clearly
34:39
show their biases and like who deserves dignity and who doesn't,
34:42
because in this instance, there's just this very like Eurocentric,
34:45
like oh my god, they're Christian. Another another clip talked
34:50
about people being blonde hair and blue eyes. I was like, okay,
34:52
hold on, Girbels, Like, no one is talking about the
34:56
African migrants that have been not able to get out
35:00
of Ukraine. And there are videos going around of Ukrainian
35:03
police actually stopping black people from getting on trains and
35:07
buses who are attempting to exit the country. And I
35:10
have not seen Narya mentioned of that on US news. No,
35:14
it's either on like you either have to yeah, you're
35:17
going to European News or like twit tweets from like
35:21
Nigerian people who are from people that are actually living
35:24
this reality and asking for their help online and huge
35:28
threads of being like I will now tweet my experience
35:30
as a black person trying to get out of Ukraine
35:33
at the moment, and there, you know, it's harrowing, but
35:38
this is kind of like what the what these conflicts
35:40
kind of tend to do to our you know, political
35:43
discourse and awareness at the moment. All right, let's take
35:45
a quick break and we'll be right back. And we're back,
36:00
And there's a story that's been kicking around for a
36:02
couple of months Rolling Stone wrote about it a few
36:05
months back about this like mysterious murder where a soldier
36:09
went camping and with his peers disappeared. His head washed
36:14
up on shore a few days later, and the investigation,
36:18
the investigation has been a mess because it's all like
36:20
handled internally, and so this is actually like caused some
36:25
people to like kind of raise a flag and be
36:26
like and actually this is just become a massive problem
36:31
on military basis because like there's all these deaths, Like
36:35
deaths are way the funk up. Murders are way the
36:38
funk up where they were until people started reporting on it,
36:41
and then they just stopped reporting the deaths. Like the
36:44
deaths are still happening, but they just stopped, you know,
36:48
put reporting them, let letting the information leak out. Oh
36:53
so there's just like there's no outward inflow of information
36:56
saying someone died. Yeah, like you gotta like look for
37:00
it or you know, gets like a request or something. Yeah,
37:04
yeah exactly. And yeah, so there's the numbers are crazy.
37:10
But there's like all these cases of you know, people
37:13
being found unresponsive or dead in their barracks and like
37:18
the military is just like, yeah, they died of natural
37:21
causes and it's like they were twenty eight what are
37:23
you and what are you talking about? Like there's and
37:26
then they're like the ones where somebody's murdered body was
37:30
found on like training grounds, like in a way that
37:34
was like designed to send a message. But people within
37:37
the military, people who know people within the military really
37:41
are kind of trying to raise a flag and be
37:43
like this is this is the thing you guys. But threes,
37:47
I don't know, Like you have been reporting a story
37:52
that nobody wants to pay attention to for a long time,
37:54
and certainly the l A Sheriff's Department doesn't want anybody
37:58
to pay attention to it. But do you have any
38:01
kind of perspective on on this one? Yeah? I mean, um, Actually,
38:05
a friend of mine is a federal investigator. I won't
38:09
name where she works, but she does do a lot
38:12
of work looking into these sorts of deaths, and she
38:14
has told me that it's something that is becoming more
38:17
commonplace over the past couple of years. As far as theory,
38:20
she can't really get into too much detail with me
38:23
because she, you know, wants to keep her job, but
38:27
she did say she has told me that there is
38:29
a really toxic culture inside the military. And I mean,
38:32
like we all know about this, right, we all know
38:34
about how there is and a significant amount of military
38:39
personnel that are involved in domestic violence. There's a certain
38:43
amount of military personnel that you know, are involved in
38:47
like anger, anger issues and that sort of thing. And
38:50
she's told me that, like the police, there is a
38:53
culture of silence in the military and that when something
38:56
goes wrong, it is in the unit best interest. And
39:00
that's everyone from you know, the privates, the soldiers up
39:05
to their commanders, lieutenants, that sort of thing, and the
39:08
culture is to cover it up and to protect the
39:12
army and to protect the name and legacy of the
39:16
armed forces. And that's why. And it's it's incredibly difficult
39:21
for her to do her work because you know, when
39:24
a body is found, when a head washes up, you know,
39:27
it's her job to go in and find what happened.
39:29
But because of this you know, green wall of silence,
39:31
it's it's incredibly difficult to you know, get to find
39:37
like who who did the thing and with that find
39:41
a solution. Yeah, you know, and it's like you you
39:46
see this reported as like a problem at for bregg
39:48
or a problem with Fort Hood, but it really does.
39:53
I think they were as of Okay, yeah, but the
39:59
three soldiers die Fort Bragg in the eighteen months ending June.
40:03
Only eleven of those deaths were from natural causes. For
40:07
Bragg hasn't announced any fatality since then. They're still happening,
40:11
but the base has just like gone dark. They're just
40:14
like okay, it's like you guys don't get to find
40:17
out about it this ship. Yeah. The police do this
40:20
too with jails, right, we see very similar, very similar.
40:24
When someone dies in a jail, it's incredibly difficult to
40:27
get that information. And again it's it's this sense of
40:30
wanting to protect the institution, protects the the organization um
40:35
at the expense of the people. Yeah. Yeah, I mean
40:41
I think the first time I really understood that that's
40:43
sort of green wall of scilence was you know, just
40:46
when the when you hear about the lack of accountability
40:49
for like sexual assault that occurs in the military, and
40:52
you're like, well, I really huh, and you're like, yeah,
40:54
it's been like the most suppressed thing you've ever heard
40:57
of until like fifteen years ago. Yeah, It's it almost
41:01
shows that we as a culture lack the ability to
41:04
do any kind of introspection and meaning, don't ever send
41:07
anybody to investigate itself because it's not going to work.
41:11
And even then you have outside people come in and
41:13
people are just sort of tied to this weird sense
41:15
of loyalty to upholding the tradition of across the globe. Yeah,
41:20
that's a really big problem for you know people, Like
41:23
when you do get someone that wants to come in
41:25
and make a difference, it's incredibly hard for those people. Um,
41:28
and that's something I've seen a lot in my police reporting.
41:31
I haven't you know, I don't cover the army specifically,
41:34
but I'm sure that there are, you know, people there
41:37
that want to, you know, investigate these things the right
41:40
way and make some institutional changes. But it's incredibly difficult
41:43
when of the people that you work with are just like, no,
41:48
we're not going to do that. Right And Fort Bragg
41:52
apparently they are in the process of changing their name,
41:55
but there is a I guess a group of citizens
41:58
group who's in charge of the renaming. They cannot come
42:02
to a consensus. M hmm. Yeah. Again, for people don't know,
42:06
Braxton Bragg was a Confederate general that seems to be
42:10
the place they always drag their feet. Is yeah, like
42:14
the Washington football team, Like wouldn't come up with a
42:18
new name, but you have to call us the Washington
42:23
football team for three years just not yeah, we'll do it,
42:27
but we'll do it like a like Paul Rudd picking
42:31
up the things he dropped in wet, hot American summer,
42:34
just like with the least energy possible, just like fine,
42:40
all right, should we talk about snacks? Snacks or doctor Oz?
42:44
I mean please, I dealer's choice, Miles your call, yest choice, Yes, choice,
42:51
guest choice. Let's talk about snacks. I hate Dr Oz. Well,
42:57
then it sounds like you need to hear about his
42:59
campaign because I think we're going to tell you some
43:01
things that might change your mind. Keep an open mind,
43:04
Keep an open mind. I mean, this is like less
43:08
about snacks and more about marketing. But there's this article
43:12
in the takeout like how and why we choose snacks
43:15
in this in our modern world? And it revealed something
43:21
that I think is very definitely true for me, is
43:24
that like family and friends, like that's the only kind
43:29
of opinion or recommendation that I can take at face value.
43:36
Everything else I feel like has just been infected by
43:42
marketing and like it. In fact, this article is based
43:46
on a survey created by marketers, and the the way
43:51
that they report that is another huge contingent of respondence
43:55
said they buy new things on the recommendation of family
43:58
and friends. How does the major food conglomerate capitalize on
44:01
word of mouth by finding every possible excuse to push
44:04
products out on social media and get you in on
44:07
the fun? Which so like that the last like bastion
44:13
of like, okay, the the one thing that you can
44:17
trust is like having a conversation with somebody and being like, well,
44:22
what what do you like really like? And I don't
44:24
give a funk about what you post on social media
44:26
because you might be like sponsored or some sh it.
44:29
Like they're trying to find a way to infect that,
44:32
Like that is a problem for them to solve. But
44:36
the way they look at it's like think for themselves,
44:40
how do we get up in their minds? You know,
44:43
like you're not good with percent of people, clearly, I
44:47
don't know what the other how it all breaks down,
44:49
But assuming maybe a majority of people have probably like no,
44:53
you know, I'll give something the shot if I like
44:54
an ad. I mean, as a child who was mostly
44:57
brain on in the eighties and nineties, commercials fucked me up.
45:02
Like I was, I I would have eaten fucking you know,
45:05
like dry concrete mix, like if it was like marketed
45:09
a certain way just because like, oh cool fucking you
45:12
know rock rock based for your mouth, right, But yeah,
45:17
I mean, I don't know, like I was. I was
45:19
reading this the day after I went to this thing
45:21
at my kids school where the principle was talking about
45:24
how they've seen anxiety and O c D explode in
45:28
elementary school age kids like over the past ten years,
45:31
and like, I just think that there's like that that
45:36
idea of like always find Like I think we when
45:39
we like look at social media and talk about like
45:41
the way social media is affecting us, like we look
45:43
at the actual platforms as opposed to like how like
45:48
how much of what is happening is like happening inside
45:52
our brains and just like changing our definition, changing how
45:56
we like perceive each other, perceive ourselves, Like brand ends
46:00
are now like incorporated into that like how we communicate
46:04
and like think about ourselves like that it's like all
46:07
been kind of corrupted in a way that couldn't really
46:10
be before. And I'm not blaming snack companies for exploding
46:15
O c D and anxiety, but I do feel like
46:18
there's like some element of like unadulterated you know, communication
46:24
and like human socializing that we have lost and like
46:29
replaced with a thing that is basically a problem for
46:33
a bunch of people who went to like Ivy League
46:35
schools and got marketing degrees like to solve, and they're
46:38
always like getting just better and better at it, and
46:41
like that's what our civilization, like or like the U
46:46
S is. That's like it's main thing that it does
46:51
is like solve the problem of how to make money
46:55
off of every single like place that you rest your
47:00
eyes or like put your everything you put into your brain.
47:04
Yeah there. It's like because you know, social media has
47:08
only accelerated the hardest thing that like people have to
47:13
contend with, which is comparing yourself to other people as
47:15
it relates to like your own happiness or goals or
47:18
things like that. And I think social media has definitely
47:21
been like this become this whole way of being, like, well,
47:24
how do I measure up to these other people? I
47:25
look out on my phone constantly and it is. Does
47:29
that make me feel better or worse? And I can
47:32
I can already. I can only imagine again, like even
47:33
when we've talked about when Facebook was very or you know,
47:37
they were their documents leak where they're like, yeah, man,
47:40
it's like face like Instagram like fox Kids heads up.
47:44
But whatever, man, the fucking ad growth is explode c evo.
47:48
So let's just keep that ship going. I think that
47:50
we're just that is only going to continue when we
47:54
have no other way of like I don't know, like
47:57
communicating to the public that this, this isn't, this isn't
48:00
like these are the real, the matter of the real,
48:03
the costs on like our our humanity when like living
48:07
like this is so normal and in fact like something
48:09
people strive for it in certain places. But how do
48:12
you guys like find out about a new tasty snack.
48:16
Don't it would be the fun? I really don't. I
48:21
think it takes me to like be so high at
48:23
the grocery store and it's just all chance, baby, I
48:28
give it up to the good lord. Uh you know
48:31
Backwoods and O G kush my Martin. The most effective
48:35
marketing agency of my whole life is showing up high
48:38
and I'm like, oh, ship this they have disflavor of
48:41
popcorn now and I'm like great, Then I forget about it.
48:45
I finished the bag, I don't buy it again, and
48:47
I go on my life hard to agree. That's how
48:50
I've been finding out about new snacks since I was
48:52
like yeah, because you know, other times too, you see
48:56
people like get too enthusiastic abou ship online and I'm
49:01
like that, shut the funk up, Like even if it's
49:04
not an ad where people are like, how do you
49:05
get another one of these? My favorite? You know, clearly
49:08
not doing any Spahn com like very normal, you know,
49:10
like not someone who's like an influencer and just really
49:14
getting on it. Sometimes it has the opposite effect on
49:16
me with people's enthusiasm. But I don't know. I click
49:19
on banner ads. Have you guys tried that? Just anytime
49:22
you see something cool in a banner edge, just click
49:25
on that ship follow following wherever it wants to take you.
49:29
You know what I'm click on that's like really horrible,
49:33
those like ads that you can't like, you'll never believe
49:36
what this actor looks like. It's impossible. It's so hard
49:45
not to click on that. Are you ever satisfied with
49:49
what you find. Always satisfy. I always learned something new. Yeah,
49:54
which is funny because it's always like in an article
49:56
eighteen years ago, this person said that, and you're like,
49:59
let's to me, I guess right, Yeah, I can't blame yeah,
50:04
that they I honestly, even though you say that, it
50:07
does take a lot of willpower for me to like,
50:09
don't click it, don't click it, don't click it, don't
50:10
click it. It's just bait. And then sometimes I'll talk
50:14
to somebody who will like who who also clearly clicked
50:17
on it, and bring it up in conversation. I'm like, yes, good,
50:21
have outmaneuvered them, because my other friend fell victim to
50:25
the irresistible clickbait. I mean, I think this is an
50:28
opportunity to really like provide a service and tell us
50:32
what who is the actor and what do they look like?
50:35
That you that you you know you got to say,
50:38
I don't even remember anymore. Oh my god, sorry, I
50:43
have to click it and find out. And you do
50:46
work for the whatever the company is that makes makes
50:50
those adds. So yeah, I own all the companies that
50:54
that would actually be a good like service for people,
50:57
like a Twitter account or something where they just like
51:02
go tell you exactly what's behind there and you don't
51:05
have to like click on any fucking spyware or whatever.
51:08
Just be like, all right, the actor that they're talking
51:10
about is this. This is the picture they're going to
51:12
show you. Take Take this. It'll be like remember these,
51:17
remember these sixteen child stars from the nineties, will look
51:20
at them now. Number fourteen will make you piss, and
51:24
like if we could just create some kind of like
51:27
browser plug in you hover over, it's like, here's the list.
51:30
Number fourteen is just the youngest son from seven seven, okay,
51:35
And you're like, keep me moving. Did make me piss
51:38
when I found out what he'd been up to. But
51:40
they always put language in there, like you won't believe ship,
51:46
and you're like, oh, okay, that they that that the
51:49
child grew to be an adult. Man. Three made our
51:55
eyes fall out of our skulls onto the desk in
51:59
front of us. You won't be number three? What the fun?
52:04
Number two and number one do bro right? Oh well,
52:08
you know that's how those that's how those ads get you. Yeah.
52:11
I always fall victim to the ones that say I
52:12
wanted free iPod an iPod. Congratulations, congratulations, you've wonted free iPod.
52:21
I'm like yes, and I click it and then I
52:22
won so many more because then my computer starts telling
52:25
me many times that I wanted to congratulate, and my
52:28
browser shuts down and I have to get a new computer,
52:31
which takes me to the Apple Store and then I
52:33
asked for my free iPod and they say I have
52:35
They have no idea what I'm talking about. My computers
52:38
filled with malware or something. Yeah, mall ware. I think
52:42
it's like the it's like the Internet super Highway version
52:46
of the mall. Okay, yeah, that's how I hear it. Yes, please,
52:52
well then take me to Brookstone. Uh Srei's such a
52:57
pleasure having you as always. Where can people find you?
53:00
Follow you all that good stuff? You can find me
53:03
and follow me on Twitter, Instagram. I am at Seris
53:08
Castle on Twitter. My Instagram is different. Sorry, my Instagram
53:12
is your majesty because my last name is Castle. There
53:15
you go, yeah, and stay tuned to my heart for
53:18
the l A S. D Gangs podcast. Yeah. Yeah, we're
53:22
super excited. Are you ever? Like I'm always heartened when
53:27
I see people holding up Google L A S. D
53:29
gangs stuff like at events or just like have it
53:32
pop up in comments sections on like news articles, and
53:35
I'm like, oh, this is beautiful. Just to kind of
53:38
begin to see people, whether it's you know, people who
53:42
have actually like interacted with the material or who have
53:45
and are just like now on that same kind of
53:46
wave length. I don't know. I always I saw it
53:49
at a at a Laker game recently. Oh wow, that's
53:53
really cool. But when you clip, when you do google that,
53:56
you just win a free iPod. You win a free
53:58
iPod and you get to find out what that actor
54:00
looks like. Right, So yeah, go google that hick guys
54:05
Alex Villaneueva was one of the bad guys and Mighty Ducks.
54:09
Oh my god. Is there a tweet or some of
54:12
the work of social media you've been enjoying. There was
54:16
this killer thread put out by this dermatologist on Twitter
54:20
that is basically like here, uh, let me pull it
54:24
up really quick because I saw is like these are
54:28
the best hydrating serums and as well, so he was like,
54:34
all of those tweets are lying to you. Basically, there
54:37
are only nine rules of skincare that you need to follow,
54:40
and here are as a dermatack here that this is it,
54:44
this is real skin doctor dot et h at us
54:48
A mass Yad. I hope I'm not betraying that m
54:52
D as a dermatologist. I think that of the truly
54:56
scientific skin care tips that you should know can fit
54:59
into a one tweet thread. That's the thread. He just
55:03
lays it all out every event, my entire skincare routine
55:07
thanks to this doctor. Any anything we we should know,
55:11
I mean everybody, well, we'll look off to it in
55:13
the footnotes and people can't go check it out. But
55:16
moisturized sunscreen and retinoids. I didn't catch that last one. Retinoids.
55:23
There we go. I will be googling that immediately after
55:26
this recording. Miles Where can people find you? What's the
55:29
tweet you've been enjoying? Find me on Twitter and Instagram
55:32
at Miles of Gray. Also the other pod for twenty
55:35
Day Fiance with Sophia Alexandro we talk ninety day Fiance.
55:41
A couple of tweets that I like. First one is
55:43
from Ahmed Ali doct at. Mr Ahmed Noor Ali tweeted,
55:48
are they quote developing countries or are they healing from
55:52
your exploitation? Very interesting thing to consider, especially from any
55:56
of the people on the news. And then ram at
56:00
Rem in Heaven tweeted, people will call anemy weird. Then
56:04
watch twenty seven year olds play high schoolers on Netflix.
56:11
Let's see a couple of tweets. Jane al Toys tweeted,
56:14
has anyone tried imagining all the people just thank on it?
56:20
Adam serious at ral Tweeting tweeted me, I'm quitting, here's
56:25
my badge and gun zookeeper your what? And then Jamie
56:29
loft us, sir, you are not Hunter Thompson. You are
56:32
just on drugs. I think that's important for a lot
56:36
of people to hear. You can find me on Twitter
56:39
at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us on Twitter
56:42
at Daily's Like guys. We're the Daily's I guys on Instagram.
56:46
We have a Facebook fan page and a website dailies
56:48
like geist dot com, where we post our episodes and
56:51
our footnotes where we link off to the information that
56:54
we talked about in today's episode, as well as a
56:56
song that we think you might enjoy. Miles, what song
56:59
do we think people might enjoy it? This is a
57:01
track from Stimulator Jones. I think we've maybe played one
57:06
of their tracks like a couple of years ago, but
57:07
this one, you know, their producer, vocalists, all that, but
57:11
this track just has some really good, you know, boom
57:14
bap like hip hop instrumental energy. So I think we'll
57:18
do that. And it's called Chill and sit by Stimulator
57:21
jump there. It is all right, we'll go check that out.
57:25
The Daily Zyka is a production by Heart Radio. For
57:27
more podcast My Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app,
57:30
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
57:32
That's gonna do it for us this morning, for back
57:35
this afternoon to tell you what's trending, and we'll talk
57:37
to you all then. Bites by