Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Today's Daily Highlight from Elvis Duran in the morning show.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Let's get into science with Gandhi. Then we have the
Daniel Report. We have to get too, so music, science, science.
You know how our Gandhi loves her science, and I
love your passion for science. You have a few stories today. Okay,
where do you start? This is all huge stuff.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
You tell me what you're into?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Water?
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Water? Oh okay, So I saw this the other day
and the experiment happened a while ago. But there's a doctor,
a Japanese doctor, who said, I want to experiment with water.
Is it alive? And it turns out, according to him,
it is alive. And not only that, but it responds
to how you speak to it. So he looked at
water under a microscope, little molecules of water, and he
(00:45):
spoke nicely, saying good things like beautiful, thankful, grateful, saying
nice things to the molecules. And then we got pictures
of what those little water molecules look like when you
speak nicely to them. And then he did the opposite
and said mean words. And I sent you guys all
the pictures alleged of what water looks like when you
say nasty things. To it. It responds in a nasty way,
(01:05):
and I had no idea. I think that's so beautiful
in some way, and it makes me just want to
be nice to everything.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
Okay, So water is molecules, right and response. Yeah, and
they're responding to you and what you say. But that
they may say speak English or you're Japanese or well,
I know, but you're speaking English to the water. Am
I overthinking this? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
I don't know. Maybe just it's a feeling. It's a vibe.
We're all ye, we all give off vibes.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Okay, Well that I've always believed that. And this is
this is not a new theory where you know, we
can actually communicate with each other without ever saying a word.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
They're saying that if there are beings from other areas
of the universe, that's how they communicate. We haven't perfected
that yet. We have to open our big traps and
go a bunch of nutcrackers.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
We've all gotten that feeling, right when you meet somebody
and you don't necessarily have to speak to them a lot,
You just get a good feeling from them. Why would
that be any different with anything else?
Speaker 2 (02:02):
I feel like our animals do that. I felt the
dogs and the cats do it. I haven't because we're
so caught up at us. We haven't really perfected anything
else other than our egos. All right, So okay, science
water water responds to your happiness and your sadness, all right,
Okay Alzheimer's.
Speaker 1 (02:20):
Oh okay, this one's coost This is a great way. Yeah.
If this is true, and I really hope it is.
The things that I've read, it seems like it is
that there's a procedure out of China right now that
they have been able to cure people with Alzheimer's disease
using this surgery that helps your natural waste drainage from
your brain, because that's a huge part of what causes
Alzheimer's is build up and plaques and all of that.
(02:41):
They say of the forty two people that they've tried
it on so far, it's like a ninety percent success rate.
We don't have it here. It hasn't been cleared for anything.
You can go look it up if you want to.
What it's called like an LVA procedure, and it seems
like it could have some really promising stuff behind it.
I cried when I read that story, that'd be amazing.
I really need it to be real, be true and
come here and not cost people ten billion dollars. That
(03:04):
would be amazing.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Okay, and because of my insurance please yeah, please, well
do you know please? That would be awesome. And just
think of all the people we've lost along the way,
you know for Alzheimer's.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Alzheimer's is so dark.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Maybe not quite as scientific, but the Pokemon Go conspiracy
is unbelievable. Remember Pokemon Go, we'd like look at your
phone and like just walk in circles and people like,
what are you doing? Well, I'm chasing this thing, right,
you know, how do you describe Pokemon Go? Is that
how you describe it?
Speaker 1 (03:31):
So basically, it would tell you where one of your
little Pokemon characters was, and you had to use your
phone to go and find it and capture it.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
In some ways you geo track it to yourself to it. Okay,
So what are they saying in this conspira, this conspiracy
you're hearing.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
About that everybody who was playing was helping map navigation
systems themselves on the ground see that you were using
you were your phone was using your location and if
they Let's say that the people who created it or
wanted to help with it, they didn't know a lot
about this one area of New York City. They would
put one of the Pokemon Go characters there so everybody
would go, and then they could track it better. They
(04:06):
can map it better because everybody was going to this area,
so they got a better view of what it actually
looked like.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
Yeah, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
There's so much happening to us that we don't even
know about, and we're part of it. It's amazing for you.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
Well okay, so this Nate's also saying, this is kind
of like capsha. You know what capsha is when the
computer wants to make sure you're a human, so you
have to type the letters. Well, we were talking about
this when you were down the hull getting your car mines.
By the way, Okay, well so what is your what's
your thoughts? Kind of like katcha.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
I mean, you have all of these people on on
the web, on the internet, and you can use them
for other things like capcha apparently is texts that they
are trying to digitize, if I'm not mistaken, So when
you have to type in Q seven three R or
what you know, type in what you see, your digitizing
(04:55):
text that is going to a greater good.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
So the the way we were talking about this, it's
funny he brought that up, Ghande, because we were just
talking about the same exact thing. A capture. A capture
thing will come up. It'll say, hey, type in the
letters you see and it usually looks like letters, like
a photograph of like a book, like a page text
of some sort. They're saying that we are digital. We're
taking it from text to digital, for like the Library
(05:22):
of Congress, for like other other like I don't know,
what do you say, I guess books that were before
the age of digital. And they're using us to they're
using us to do that. We're the mules.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
We're being used for a lot.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
Yeah, we're not getting paid for this. They're using us.
We're doing the work and they're not compensating us. But
think of it this way, scary. If you type down
the little letters you see in the little box and
push entering into the right letters, you can go onto
the porn site you're trying to get on.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
So okay, what about what about when they give you
like the nine pictures and you have to, oh, pick
the ones with the stocks. Oh yeah, is that for
like Tesla's auto pilot or something like if I all
knows where there's not a stop sign, somebody's gonna drive
through it.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
You know what, Maybe I don't know, we're gonna say Gandhi.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Scary was saying, we're doing all this stuff and we're
not getting paid for it. And then there's a whole
other thing going on with roadblocks, which every kid in
the world plays roadblocks, they love it. There's a lot
of scandal behind roadblocks if you want to go look
that up.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
Now, what if they're.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
Using children to digitally mine all kinds of things for free,
They're exploiting them. They're not paying them to do this work.
It's wild everything, and we sign up for all of it.
We say, yeah, okay, I agree, whatever it is that
you're doing, I'll do this, no problem. Let me play
the game. And here we are.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
I know.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
Well, now we're in those strangers to using people. We
don't do it as much now, but back in the day,
we would say, hey, if you want to hear a song,
call us at eight hundred and two four to zero,
one hundred and so you did it, thinking we were
going to play that song. We were doing it to
get information from you. It was all research to see
what the most requested songs would be.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Oh my god, for the problem.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
We are part of the problem. We are the roadblocks
of yesterday. What speaking of porn gone, Oh yeah, this
is hilarious. Tell Horn, tell the story like you told it,
because there's no way for me to recreate this.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
Okay, I saw part of a porn over the weekend
that made me laugh out loud, like crying, laughing. So
the premise behind it is that these two women are
having a good time together and one of them is like,
hold on, I want to go get my boyfriend so
he can be part of this too. So then she
covers up the top half of the girl who's with her,
and she leaves the room to go get her boyfriend,
(07:39):
so only the bottom half is exposed. But the boyfriend
before he is summoned, comes in on his own and
he sees this woman laying there, thinks it's his girlfriend,
and they just start having sex. Well lo and behold,
they have a conversation. They say, what is going on?
He pulls the top of the sheet off, it's not
his girlfriend and they screamed, the funniest scream I have
ever heard. Oh my, guys, don't worry, have it if
(08:02):
you want to? Yes.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
So what would you do if you saw the bottom
half of someone and you went to town on it,
and then you realize you pulled the sheet down, it's
not the person you thought you were doing. Would you
scream like this? They play it?
Speaker 1 (08:16):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
They that was? That was porn.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
That was I just send it to all of you.
If you want to see it, I see it.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
You painted the pictures with words. I just thought it
porn supposed to be like, I show the deed and
get over it. I don't want to see people like
trying to be funny.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
I don't. I'm not sure they were trying to be funny,
but I was laughing.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
That was good, of course. What do you mean they're
trying to be serious by screaming at each other where
they discovered? Okay, so back to the very beginning of this,
of this conversation. Do you really want us to play
less music and talk more?
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Yeah? You sure,