The Daily Zeitgeist

There’s more news and less comprehension today than any historical period that didn’t involve literal witch trials, and trying to stay on top of it all can feel like playing a game of telephone with 30 people, except everyone’s speaking at the same time and like a third of them are openly racist for some reason. From Cracked co-founder Jack O’Brien, THE DAILY ZEITGEIST is stepping into that fray with some of the funniest and smartest comedic and journalistic minds around. Jack and co-host Miles Gray spend up to an hour every weekday sorting through the events and stories driving the headlines, to help you find the signal in the noise, with a few laughs thrown in for free.

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/105-the-daily-zeitgeist-28516718/

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episode 2: Media’s Ukraine Memory Hole, Snack Research 3.01.22  

[transcript]


In episode 1094, Jack and Miles are joined by writer/reporter Cerise Castle to discuss Fox News worst enemy right now is their own foreign correspondent, A bizarre tonic, What Is Happening At Military Bases?, Social Media Has Changed The Way We Snack, Do Everything and more!

  1. Fox News worst enemy right now is their own foreign correspondent
  2. What Is Happening At Military Bases?
  3. Social Media Has Changed The Way We Snack, Do...


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 March 1, 2022  57m
 
 
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