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October 21, 2024 52 mins

In this edition of Deep Fried Trendz, Jack and Miles discuss their respective weekends, Donald Trump's "closing arguments" on the campaign trail (featuring McDonald's employee cosplay and Arnold Palmer's huge dick?), Elon Musk's PAC paying Trump voters to register to vote, the upcoming remake of 'American Psycho' and much more!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
What do you think this world series is going to
be like for the respective cities, Because now it's like
a thing I've always fantasized about.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
I'm like Dodgers.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
Versus or like the l I would love to see
that it's and it is the It is the world
series that I'm sure every advertiser on Earth was praying for.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
But every connoisseur of toxic masculinity is probably just licking
their chops right now, the various forms, varying forms.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
I'm licking my chops.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
I'm licking chops so hard over here about this world series.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
It was so hard to watch it from the East
Coast because like it starts at eight, and like I'm
already I'm already tired from being a parent and shit,
so like even the adrenaline of watching like a you know,
Pennant deciding game, I was like.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
Baseball is purely background noise for me, even like at
this point, like I will put it on, but I'm
it's not ever going to be like we're staying up
or we're like changing plans to do it. But I
do find myself.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Room for the Dodgers, as you should. You know, I just.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Want more dopamine in the general brain system that's moving
around Los Angeles. We need all the help we can get.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
I hope, I hope this just tears the country apart.
If I'm gonna be honest, that's.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
What I want that. I just want this the civil war. Yeah,
the election goes off, fine, we.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Don't even care. But it doesn't even matter.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
They're like, right, yeah, nobody saw this ship coming. It's
all about like different styles of baseball, and they steal
and move the runners along.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
Yeah. Oh that's how you guys like to win.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
Oh okay, stealing interest. How we stop the steal, stop
the steal?

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Show hazen first, they're just screaming, stop the stealing sport.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to this week trend edition
of Guys.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
Yeah, this is the sonorous tones of one miles. Whoa,
whoa do we do? Yes?

Speaker 1 (02:15):
Yeah, it's Monday, and hey, and I know you can
hear it. I'm a little congested. I'm a little congested.
The allergens on the East Coast they kind of fuck
with me.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
They different on the the allergions. We get to my
underrated no joke.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
The allergens on the East Coast hit different that was
the first person to ever because that one's actually true.
The allergiens do hit different on the East coast. They
fucked me up.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Wait really, Oh you mean like I'm well, I'm sure
it's person dependent. I'm sure the other way people will
be like the fucking allergens on the West coast are system. Yeah,
because I can't even handle the ship and like I've it,
I have always fall allergies just.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
In l A and now it's it's no different. But
what I it's not as bad, not as bad.

Speaker 3 (03:02):
This is the episode where we tell you some of
the things that we're trending over the weekend. We also
let you get to know us a little bit better
about what's going on with a little a little bit
of an underrated, a little bit of an overrated.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
You know, we we talked.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
To these guests all week and get their overrated and underrated.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
Blah blah blah.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
What about us, Miles, We've got thoughts, we've got ideas. Exactly,
they're pretty similar week to week. But anyways, it's just
a fun, fun way to set the aat idea what
we've been doing over the weekend. Yeah, exactly, do you
want to kick us off say to go, Yeah, what's
something Miles that you think is underrated.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Under Oh boy, what did I put here? Oh?

Speaker 1 (03:47):
First, up, I am the East Coast. I was at
a wedding for New Jersey people. It took place in
New Jersey. Bruce Springsteen's baby I Was Born to Run
came on and I I'm I'm look, I'm from La,
I'm I know the I know Bruce Springsteen is deified

(04:09):
and you're in the midst of.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
A religious moment.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
The way people rush to the dance floor like the
most emotional faces, singing along like damn near like tears
in people's eyes. I was kind of like, oh this,
I thought it was a bit at first. I'm like, oh,
here we go. Yeah, you're you're getting all into it
because it's Bruce Springsteen and you're in New Jersey and no, no, no, no, no,
this was like for real with.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
Like their eyes are like rolled back. Yeah, You're like,
and I feel like that's.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Kind of how it is like with millennials sometimes, like
when California Love comes on, there are like certain like
Tupac sort of tracks or other like West Coast artists
that kind of bring that out.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
But nothing quite like this.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
So that was it was I was underrating just exactly
how much of a out of body experience it causes
for the people of the guard in state. And that
was a wonderful thing to witness because I do, like
I have, you know, I love I love New Jersey.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
I feel like the valley what the Valley is to
La New Jersey is to New York. And that's why
fuck with y'all.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
But the other thing, salmon as a sandwich protein I
think is underrated. Salmon sando and I'm not talking about locks.
I'm talking about like grilled salmon or however you're you're
st pan, frying it, whatever it.

Speaker 2 (05:25):
Because I'm trying to I'm forty.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
I don't know if y'all heard, come after me, I'm forty.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
I'm forty, man, come after me. Don't come after my
beef and chicken.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Though then I'm just trying to eat less beef and chicken,
and I usually default to those, especially if I see
like a you know, a nice kind of roast beef
sort of a sandwich or a fried chicken sandwich.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
I like those things.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
I like, But I also love salmon like just as
an entree, and I had the opportunity to have this
fucking amazing salmon sandwich, and I was like, this is
this is where, this is where I should be going.
This is how you know, no, no, no, no no. This
was just completely out of there. This was like on
my travels back to DC HM shout out a Soco

(06:06):
and Tacoma Park. We're had this sandwich. They have like
this salmon sandwich, and I look, it's all about the margins.
So I could still have my big, gigantic sandwich. But
I don't need a bunch of shit that is bad
for me and the earth, So why don't I just
have some salmon in it?

Speaker 2 (06:22):
And it was fantastic.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
And now I'm like just trying to, you know, just
just cultivate those habits so underrated sandwich.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
Sandwich miles and this is weird and this is like
where you're fucking lying amically connected. I didn't have a sandwich.
I had salmon over the weekend that was better than
any like any salmon I'd had before, Like there was
something about how they cooked it.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
It just had a little bit more flavor.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
I feel like anytime I'm getting grilled salmon, for the
most part in my experience.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
It's dry.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
It's dry, and it's also very flavorless, like it doesn't
And this time they had all lives in there with it.
That gave it a little saltiness. That just gave it
a little bit of something.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
That you have to underneath it.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
You have to under like most people cook it to
temperature and you kind of got to do it a
little bit before.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Yea.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
So it's like chicken too, you know, media, But that's
the warm pink center, wormy pink center.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
But no, no, no, The other thing too, if you should
try is to slow like roast it in your oven
at super low temperature and you will get that just
like a delicious juicy So just give it a nice
sweat in there, all right, my underrated What did I
write down? Animal's ability to do stuff only humans supposedly do?

(07:44):
Is my underrated? We talked last week. We're still on that, man.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Yeah, I mean my eyes are open, so my eyes
are open to things that in the past I might
have scrolled right by. But we talked last week about
how scientists are decode birds song and have known for
a while that there's like more complicated communication happening than
I would have thought possible. A type of tit in

(08:10):
the UK figured out how to open milk jugs, and
then it like went viral among birds, Like the birds
taught each other how to open the milk jugs across
Europe and like it just over the course of decades,
it was like, now birds can open these milk jugs
they used to not be able to because they can
teach each other. So I just learned about another type

(08:31):
of animal making a work of art that's really like beautiful.
So scientists kept noticing these like large crop circles on
the ocean floor in the subtropical waters off southern Japan.
There's these like big intricately designed circles that have all
these like squiggles and you know, indentations in the sand.

(08:52):
It's just like and you have to like rise up
above it to like fully appreciate it. It's pretty cool,
Like you need to zoom out, like you need to
need to zoom out. That's the whole perspect get it,
And scientists a really what what weird force is making
art like this that seems like it's designed to be
appreciated from a different perspective thing you would have while

(09:16):
making it. And then they saw these little horny male
pufferfish doing it basically as like an elaborate mating ritual.
They just work twenty four hours a day, and because
it's under at the bottom of the sea, there's like
various currents that are like fucking it up, and so
they're just repeatedly over and over having to like make

(09:38):
this design, set it up, reset it up, redo it.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Oh, it's like sissyfician basically yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
But like for twenty four hours. And then if they
do a good enough job, the female pufferfish laser eggs
in the middle of the circle.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
And I don't know.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Even like the BBC article that I found talking about
it calls the designs like random squiggles in some places
where it's like I don't know, like they say, First,
first the male traces basic circular shapes that embellishes them
with ridges by swimming inward at different angles. Next he
fills in the circle with doodles or of random squiggly lines.

(10:15):
It's like, I don't know, man, you don't know. You
don't read puffer fish, you don't know what the I bet.
I bet the language looked like random. And then they
also have to like add their like, and we we
think that they do this because it like sweeps oxygen
rich water towards the middle, which is cool if that's

(10:36):
actually true, but it also feels like they just needed
like some sort of survival based mechanism for it to
tie into being like we just did something dope to
attract people, which is just like basically art. And this
does tie back to birds. I'm going to tie back
to birds, folks. There's this book Evolution of Beauty that

(10:59):
looks at birds doing like all these elaborate mating dances
and says that it doesn't it's not because like they're
showing off how good they'll be at like getting.

Speaker 2 (11:11):
Food or whatever. It's just beauty. It's just right.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
The trees are full of singing flowers that exist just
to be like beautiful for each other. And they do
it in like really complex ways, and like one of
the birds uses forced perspective. They like design their nest
with like different trinkets, and like they will put smaller
ones two larger ones in a way that makes it

(11:38):
look like it's like going away from you.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Which yeah, it's just I don't know.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
Like cuddlefish have been shown to be able to like
keep track of like weird three dimens, like very complex
three dimensional equations when they're camouflaging themselves, because like if
they're in a tank and they see someone walking around
the room, they'll camouflage themselves, keeping in mind like Okay,
they're twenty feet out, so to them, like the thing

(12:04):
behind me is what the fuck? Yeah, Like it's wild,
Like they just can do shit that I think we've
just like we'll look back on our writing about animals
up to this point in a lot of cases and
be like we were just like so so dismissive. Just
like they're probably like doing it because they want to

(12:26):
signal day can be early bird to get to worm.
And it's like, nah, it's it's actually they're doing art
in very complex.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Ways, and they're talking idiots and they're.

Speaker 3 (12:37):
Talking dumb, dumb. So that's my underrated What what's something
you think is overrated?

Speaker 1 (12:43):
Miles referees, referees, referees and sporting events.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Yeah, some there's a lot of our sponsored segment about
how AI should replace.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Referees, right, I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
I feel like it might have got that Brandon Stewart
call right last night.

Speaker 2 (13:00):
But there's been some.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
Interesting calls throughout the NBA post WNBA postseason and the
finals finale happened last night where the Liberty beat the
Link but little contentious going into overtime.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Was it a foul? Was it not a foul?

Speaker 1 (13:16):
I mean, Cheryl Reeve, you know, the coach of the
Links and you know team coach of Team USA who
won the gold is like broll. We've had two fucking
championships just stolen from us from bad from bad calls.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
One of that was to the Sparks, and you know,
we don't have to get into that.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
But like, aside from that, like there's just a lot
of ambient anger about refereeing. I feel like, really that's
like increasing more and more over the last couple of years,
especially when there's like more replay technology. We're like, well,
we want to give the referees a chance to be
able to like right their wrongs. This also happened like
in the English Premier League over the weekend. There were
a lot of like inconsistent calls or like fouls of

(13:54):
the same type were not being penalized in the same way,
and video referees are not having asistant calls, so whether
justified or not. It just feels like there's just more
and more awareness of refs making these game shifting calls,
and you know, I feel like a good ref is
a ref who knows how to manage the game and
also understands that like higher intensity games call for some nuance,

(14:18):
Like it can't always be like the letter of if
you call everything. If it's if you're gonna be to
the letter of the law, you have to be to
the letter of the law, like every single time. And
I just don't know if that's really possible, because it's
also an entertainment thing, and a lot of people, I think,
get more.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
And more like.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
And I know part of that is a sort of
part is in fanness. Part is in fandom as well,
But like there are times when like you're just looking
at an instant replay over and over again.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
They're like, they're gonna review this, and you're like, surely
they can't.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
What okay, so they can't get it wrong after the
repay when they see it again in slow motions And I'm.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Going to stand by what I said before. We're uh,
yeah we're going with that one. Yeah, we're going with
that one.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
I'm not wrong, and I don't want a cop to it,
so let's keep it moving.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
But yeah, anyway, that's that's that's just something I've.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
I've been watching over the weekend a lot of sports
and a lot of fan arsenal.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
Is a you know what fucking did this weekend? You
know it did every time? It does every fucking time. Yeah,
every time. But I'll leave that there. I don't need
to get into the specifics of my pain.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
But I was just saying, I was just saying, Oh,
it's universal, it's a universally shared frustration that referees are
like they're like activist referees, you know what I mean,
Like you're not keeping the game intact, Like you're saying,
like I'm the main character and I'm going to decide
this thing should happen. And then so anyway, that's me,
that's me being a partisan fan.

Speaker 3 (15:49):
I wonder I like a psychological profile, Like what if
there's a part of the ideal psychological profile that like
makes a referee that is just like contrarian, you know
what I mean, because they have to be willing to
eat so much shit like from the masses, right, you know,

(16:10):
like right widely derided and like hated by entire cities,
Like I wonder if that then requires a certain personality
type that's like, you know, came out of the womb
being like, fuck you, that's why, right, yeah, oh you
know my name?

Speaker 2 (16:28):
Fuck you, that's my name.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
I feel like in my time like playing organized sports,
you had refs that were clearly like, I suck at
this sport and this is just what the only way
I can kind of get near the game.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
Now, Yeah, I just like the game so.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Much so, but I also have a chip on my shoulder,
so I'll be kind of like an asshole as a ref.
You do have like like rule book nerd refs who
truly are just like I want to adjudicate this sporting
competition as best as I can.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
Yeah, but yeah, I don't know. I mean, I'm sure
I'm sure there either way would be.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
I hate them man Nerds. Fuck my least favorite dude.
Get out of my sports nerds.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Man, but also come on, give me some fair calls
Nerd please.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
My overrated is just any I've noticed it happening on
Microsoft teams a lot, which I don't think anybody uses,
but like it also I guess happens on FaceTime the
thumbs up.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Yeah, where does it happen on zoom?

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Yeah it does right now, Okay watch three two one
and boo.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
There it is where it uses ai, I think, to
read our gestures to then underline our gestures with a
like mog thumbs up or thumbs down or like you know, laughter,
you know, just so much dumb shit. I've never seen

(17:55):
this be additive in the least bit. Like there, I
can't and I can't.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Conceive of a scenario where it would be additive.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
I feel like I get like, for like accessibility issues
that like might be one thing, but there to raise
your hand like in a meeting, there there's usually just
like a button you can click where you don't have
to like physically be like wait for the camera to
be like, oh it has recognized my hand inconsistently like
a terrible referee. And yeah, I don't know. I think

(18:21):
it's just kind of like one of those things where's
like look what it can do now, and you're like,
I don't care if this, like this big lighter is
also a can opener, Like it's not a function I
needed on this other thing.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
And when it does get my hand gesture wrong, I
do stop the call to uh tell it to get
its eyes checked and ask it as shit for brands.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Hey, zebra, why don't you go, Hey, you're lafe for
your shift a foot locker.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
But yeah, I don't know, Like they never get it right.

Speaker 3 (18:52):
Sometimes you stop a call because you accidentally showed your
thumb on a meeting at a point where you have
absolutely no opinion and are trying to keep your head down,
and it's just like.

Speaker 2 (19:02):
Oh, wow, Jack agrees. Do you care to chime in
on that? Yeah? No, that was an errant thumb. I'm
sorry the AI is tripping. I was doing the hand
jive for some reason. Uh yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
Like best case scenario, someone is giving the thumbs up
and you're just like adding an emoji to like something
that was already communicated via thumbs up thumbs up the
original emoji, Like you don't, you don't need it right right,
like you Sometimes you need to do the heart the
heart emoji with your hands to like, hey, it'll create

(19:37):
a heart emogive if you do the heart thing with
your hands, the hands are doing the work for you.

Speaker 2 (19:42):
You don't, you don't need to do it, but.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
It recognized what your hand did through the intell machine learning.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
Yeah, and then put that form on the screen.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
Yeah, it's just it's just tech people saying, look look
at me. Yeah, I can see how it would make
sense inside Silicon Valley. Uh, and it makes sense absolutely
nowhere else. I feel like, but let me know if
you got if you got the answer for why this
makes sense, why it persists, why it is like default
on on all these applications. Uh, don't let me know,

(20:14):
but you know, just feel good about knowing something that
I don't know. I guess let's take a quick break
and we'll come back and get into some news, and
we're back.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
We're back.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
And Donald Trump had a weekend, didn't he, folks us
two weeks y'all.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Served. It's so wild fifteen days. So it's interesting.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
So his campaign said he was going to begin previewing
this weekend his closing argument with election day nearly two
weeks away, and in that public appearance, he paid tribute
to native Pennsylvanian Arnold Palmer. This is giant dick Yuh.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, oh right, yeah, that thing,
that thing, that thing, Yeah, that was cool. You have that?
Oh do we have that? Yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (21:21):
Well let's just pull this up. This is him just saying, hey,
we're here in the Trope, Pennsylvania home of Arnold Palmer.
He really loved this place.

Speaker 2 (21:29):
And then he switches it up to this.

Speaker 4 (21:32):
But Arnold Palmer was all man. And I say that
in all due respect to women, and I love women.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
But this guy, okay, but this guy, what was a
better woman than any of you?

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Will be?

Speaker 3 (21:44):
Guy?

Speaker 2 (21:44):
That was all man. Oh, this man.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
Was strong and tough. And I refused to say it.
But when he took showers with the other pros, they
came out of there they said, oh my god, that's unbelievable.
I had to say it.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
No, no, you did not know you did it? What.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
I hate to say it, But when he took showers
with the other golfers, Wait, are all the PGA golfers
just like showering together after I wouldn't expect that.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
I mean, like, aren't you like? But like, aren't you
It's kind of like you're subtly eliminated. You're out of
contention at certain points. No, I mean, I guess everyone
has to complete their rounds of golf.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
But I don't know.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
I guess, but the showers are communal the time that
we all come together.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Hey wait, wait, hey, you want your shower already.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
Arnold isn't even in here yet, man, hold on, No,
it's just it's just so wild. Yeah, he had to
say it, though he had he prefaced it in the
way that all fans proprietors of toxic masculinity do.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
Like, I love women, folks, I'm about to talk about guys, Dick,
so like, just be right up.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Love women. God, I love women, right, God, I love women.
But this guy's hog, Oh my god, a thing of beauty.
Holy shit. But also, let's be real. He didn't say
in what direction. It was unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
He had the tiniest so they could be a man
from his own heart. Yeah, maybe he's like the Greeks
where they like admired a perk little you know, perfect.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Hey, adrenaline in the heat of battle. We'll do that,
you know, so you never know, you never.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
Know, swinging that wood, you know. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
Yeah, Unfortunately, and even like the like construction worker dudes
behind him were like, oh man, like they did like
the laugh that wasn't like, holy shit, this guy's killing it.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
They're like, ohja, what the fuck?

Speaker 3 (23:50):
I had to say, we have women that are highly
sophisticated here, but they used to look at Arnold as
a man, is what he said after after that, I
don't I don't know what that means. Yeah, So Mike
Johnson sounds perfect, h Mike Johnson. So Mike Johnson speaker,
And uh, he's the guy who monitors and is monitored

(24:16):
by his teenage son's pornography intake. You know, if he
watches porn his teenage son finds out about it. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yal relig Yeah, he's covered eyes old coveted eyes. Johnson
had to like go on CNN Sunday and answer for this.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Yeah, which is funny because he all, this is like
what happens because it's always like is this your king
every time and he's like, come on, here's the thing
you have to understand about eating pets or whatever. So
this is him trying to pivot out of the Arnold
Arnold Palmer penis commentary.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
Why is he talking about Arnold Palmer's penis in front
of Pennsylvania voters?

Speaker 2 (24:58):
God, the alliteration j you seem to like that line
a lot. Let me tell you that I don't let
me around the country.

Speaker 5 (25:05):
Just say something I don't want to be talking about, right,
Donald Trump is out there saying it. It is what
you continue to let's talk about.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
But you keep talking about it.

Speaker 5 (25:16):
He is out there talking about I'll address it. Lets it.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Okay, don't say it again. We don't have to say it.
That's just where it ends. Okay, don't say it again. Okay,
that's not wow, wow, you will you keep talking about it.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
This is like when like when people have like these
like terrible relationship moments that like probably have damaged a relationship,
but one partner is like, well you you keep talking
about the fact that I was cheating.

Speaker 3 (25:44):
You know, and it's your decision, whether it's your favorite topic.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
It sounds like he's the one fucking.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
Bring I didn't say it to tell him to bring
it up.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
This is what is coming out of his mouth as
he again makes his final you know, closing our arguments
as to why he should be voted for, and he's like, yeah,
I admire Arnold Palmer's dick.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Okay, will you vote for me now? Thank you, Mike.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
The argument, by the way, goes on to ultimately be
shouldn't we give Donald Trump some credit for all the
parts of the speech that weren't about Arnold Palmer's giant
dick R or microscopic.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
We don't know, you know what I mean. I still
want to hold up my gosh. Oh, Mike, it's unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (26:27):
This is just like beautiful. What if it was just
like a beautiful cock? You know, it couldn't be Yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
And we never know Trump say that, Wow, then they
would drool folks. And it's like the whole they have
to lower the bar so much, it's so offensive, even
more and more.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
It's like, what about the other stuff? He said? Okay,
do you want to know what else he said?

Speaker 3 (26:46):
He said he could outdrive Arnold Palmer, mean go, he said, yeah,
he's like when he was the maybe seventy five he
mind would be a good four or five yards past him.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Okay, this year pitching yourself.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Then then he did a casual, you know, brought up
another potential Logan Act violation by saying he spoke with
bb net and Yahoo over the weekend of killing of
Yah Yah sin War and you're like, what he's like?
I told him he can't listen to Biden and if
in seed it, and if he did, he wouldn't be
able to do the things that he did.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
He also said Kamala is a shit vice president. He
said a lot of fucking nonsense.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
So I mean, Mike Johnson, do you want to talk
about any of those things too, or just do you
want to ignore?

Speaker 2 (27:23):
He's like, can we just ignore the other things?

Speaker 3 (27:25):
He said, we just like move along and talk about
Like here, I have like kind of a cut together,
auto tuned thing with just various scraps of what he
said that kind of make.

Speaker 2 (27:36):
It sound coherent, right exactly.

Speaker 3 (27:39):
And somehow that moment was upstaged by a press event
in which Trump pretended to work at McDonald's, uh, just
to I think the idea was like to burn Kamala
Harris for her claims of having actually worked at a McDonald's.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
But I think she did.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
Yeah, right, Well, he has no proof that she did,
and she says she did. It doesn't seem it doesn't
seem anyone's like, you know, denying the fact that that happened.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
But keyword here, she actually worked and you at.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
Any point in her life you larped as a fucking
lost old man who wandered into the back of a McDonald's,
is what That whole fucking thing looked like, yeah, he
even manned the drive through, just total like killer photo
shoot opportunity, very similar. In a just world, this would

(28:33):
have been just the ben Affleck Super Bowl commercial, not
a campaign event for a presidential candidate.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
But alas we are where we are.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
Yeah, that whole event was really every single detail like
makes your eyes water in the bad way.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
Yeah, the restaurant was actually closed. The customers were screened
by the Secret Service and positioned before his arrival, which
obviously kind of to be expected.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
Yeah. Also, like this is why.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
Presidential campaigns don't usually do something like this, because you
can't actually do it, and otherwise it's just a weird
like transparent photo right exactly, nobody.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
Is going to trust and feel like really shitty with
your pre screen customers who also couldn't even order food.

Speaker 3 (29:23):
Yeah, they didn't order food, He just they just got
whatever Trump gave them.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Yes, yes, I mean I think this is a good
just example of like how this is Donald Trump's entire
existence is like just a bunch of setup opportunities for
him to pretend that he contributes fucking anything. Okay, oh yeah,
and go there. You won't even have to actually work,
You just touch the gross stuff the poor people, dude
as they toil, and then you can leave after forty

(29:48):
five minutes or an hour, however fucking long he was there.
I'm surprised, like the customers, like they didn't go as
far as be like, yeah, they weren't even customers. There's
just like his own staff and a bunch of rental
cars just doing the loop around and dressing like actual people.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
But I'm sure they got like some very wealthy people
to like poney up a bunch of money to be,
to be, to have the good fortune.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
He he loves to give fast food out like this.
That is that is his love language, as we saw
when the college football championship winning team went to the
White House and he just served them all like big
holes and McDonald's in a room that just must have
smelled like when it started, it must have smelled like farts.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
And then holy shit.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Did you see the clip of him trying to work
the deep fryer like on the fry station. No, there's
one where this guy who's working there is like trying
to show him like and then you like submerge the
basket into the fryar.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
And Trump looked so lost.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
Trying to do it, and then there's a moment where
like the fries are coming out and like the guys
like showed him like and then you and then you
kind of assault them and Trump put I think he
puts like way too much so because I goes, oh, okay,
like you.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
Just don't know.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
You're not gonna be like, oh no, not like that.
But it's like someone who like, you know, higher status,
you have to just be like, well, I'm not going
to point that out.

Speaker 2 (31:12):
I'll just present He's like, bring this one up.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Okay, he's lifting a fryer out, he's shaking him out.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Good for you, Donald killing.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
He's gonna bring it over so dump them there, and
he's dumping them in into the under the heat lamp.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
But this salt part is funny. He just goes right
it right up there. Yeah, and then do you want
to do this over here?

Speaker 4 (31:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (31:40):
You got to do that one right there, so grab that.
Give him extra no ye because here he went over
all right. Well, luckily these people are fucking paying.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
For this ship so they can deal with their hypertension
and whatever they whatever way they choose.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
That does highlight one of my favorite things about Fast
food restaurants these days. Is that they all sound identical
to like an intensive care unit. Yeah, because yeah, the
friar like lets off an alarm that like all of
the employees are completely anerged too, after like their second
day on the job, and so it just sounds like
a life support system. My son and I go to

(32:20):
a veggie grill every Sunday and spend like an hour
there and it's just working.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
Yeah, and he's working the friars.

Speaker 3 (32:28):
We get behind the desk, you know, but behind the
counter and just get her hands dirty.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
You're gonna love this buffalo cauliflower, folks, you gotta love it.

Speaker 3 (32:37):
But yeah, I think that's a really good point though,
Like this is who he is, Like he's been a
professional spokesmodel for an extremely long time.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Like he's is.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
The way he was making his money primarily from the
Apprentice on was by lending his name to products, letting
people license his name, and then he just kind of
stands there, which also is kind of the ideal Republican president.
Like I feel like that's what Reagan was, was just

(33:09):
like an empty suit who the Republican operatives were able
to just like kind of hide behind and get their.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
Shit done.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Yeah, so you're our neocon death puppet. Now let us
work your little strings.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
Yeah exactly, but yeah, it should probably go without saying.
But just to confirm Trump's first term made things way
worse for fast food workers, specifically McDonald's workers, Like they
forced a settlement with McDonald's and its workers in a
dispute over unfair labor practices.

Speaker 6 (33:45):
So huh, which, yeah, it seems like as he like
he was taking questions from the press through the drive
through window, obviously another photo op, and then one just
bluntly he's like, yeah, what about raising the federal minimum
wage before that, because it hasn't happened in a long time,
And he's like then just pivoted off to something like

(34:06):
completely didn't answer it, and the entire like gaggle of
reporters go.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
What about the minimum wage?

Speaker 1 (34:11):
He just like turned his body to like a probably
conservative newest person to be like, how hard were you
working today, mister president. Oh my gosh, your forearms must
be fucking just stinging from all that work you did.

Speaker 2 (34:24):
So good. Oh my goodness, these I've never had fries
this good, mister president. These are so cool. I'm like
I'm seeing streaks of light as I eat them. But I, oh,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (34:36):
My face is visibly shriveling as I eat these holy sweating.
I think I just mummified to the right side of
my face somehow eating one of these fries. All right,
let's take a quick break and we'll come back. We'll
talk to Ela Musk, we'll talk other stories that happen
over the weekend. We'll be right back, and we're back.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
We're back.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
And so Elon just announced that his pack will give
away one million dollars every day to a registered voter
who signs his pro Trump petition in swing states only.
So he's basically turning voting into a game show in
order to ensure that Trump supporters are all registered to vote.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
I like he's doesn't just feel like a little too little,
Like we're fifteen days out, Yeah you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (35:36):
Like, I guess you're just turning the volume up that
quick now.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
I mean, like you could have been doing this for
a month if this was really about voter I don't
know what I don't I don't even know what the
fuck this is about anymore.

Speaker 2 (35:45):
It's like so absurd looking. I don't even know how
to wrap my head around this.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
But he does like to just step into a situation
when it's too later. He's completely around his depths, right,
I mean his super has been.

Speaker 1 (36:02):
Boy, they've been working away, they've been working at anytime
like very you know, I don't I don't.

Speaker 3 (36:07):
Always trust political operatives and political strategists, but uh, they
seem to uniformly be like they suck it like his
his uh super pack. Like one of the things they've
been seen spending money on is just ads on Facebook
that are just screen caps of Elon musk tweets.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
So there's just like trying to make him feel good
about himself.

Speaker 1 (36:32):
Hey, Elon, do you want to do an ad where
you express your concerns like on camera to people so
they connect.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
No, just put up one of my old tweets on my.

Speaker 3 (36:40):
Tweets are actually lull copters, so raffel I actually don't
know the same, but oh my god, uh yeah, and
I don't know he's literally paying them off with giant
novelty checks. Our writer Jam said, this is the kind
of shit that plays on TV. In the background of RoboCup.

Speaker 2 (37:03):
Behind a big American flag.

Speaker 3 (37:05):
American flag, Yeah, giant American flag woman in a Trump
T shirt holding the check above her head just with
like gaping smile. Yeah, this is we should have mentioned
this is uh transparently like very illegal.

Speaker 2 (37:24):
Yeah yeah yeah, yeah yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (37:27):
Like Joshapiro, who obviously is a Democrat but you know,
has a legal background, pointed out that this is, uh,
you're you're not allowed to offer cash prizes only to
register voters. Uh, it's basically bribing people to register to vote,
which is punishable by up to five years in prison.

(37:48):
But yeah, I wonder and Elon Musk is really going
to go to prison.

Speaker 1 (37:52):
Well it's funny because you know, like there was that
clip when he was on Tucker Carlson, like he was
talking with Tucker Carlson and he's like, oh my god,
if Kamala wins, like I'm fucked. Yeah yeah, and that
well some people he's like he's like, I'm going to
go to jail or whatever. Like I don't know, maybe
I don't know if all dreams can happen for everyone
so quickly, but I think it does show that he
understands that he will he can only flourish under someone

(38:16):
like a like a Trump in office versus other people
who are like maybe actually looking at what he's doing,
his illegal behavior all of that. Yeah, because like this
is even if it's like giving it away for the
like what they call like a lottery chance at winning
something that is still considered like up completely beyond the pale.

Speaker 3 (38:35):
Right now, Like sweepstakes are generally like legally fraught. Like
so yeah, I feel like they're just hiding behind that.
But I just hope he has good legal representation because man,
this could be bad for him.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
Oh yeah, I hope it's a good legal representation because
you know this d o J.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Is going to do something about it, right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
I'm like that's the part I'm really thinking about it
is like, is will anything come of this?

Speaker 2 (38:59):
Like everyone is pointing to like statutes.

Speaker 1 (39:01):
I mean like this is clearly violating that, and it's
like I don't know, man, maybe I'll do with it
after depends on who's president.

Speaker 2 (39:08):
Sorry, folks, it's I'm just trying to get We're just
trying to get to election day.

Speaker 4 (39:12):
Man.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
I got a lot of tables. Man, look at these cuttlefish. Uh,
it's interesting. So I was listening to an episode of
on the Media. They were pointing out that the five
biggest individual donors in this election cycle gave to conservative causes,
which is the first time that's ever happened, which I
assume I would have assumed that would happen all the time.
But if you think about like Elon Musk probably eight

(39:36):
years ago, was not like an out and out like
right wing character like it, it feels like things are
accelerating in the direction of like a class war being
waged by like the billionaire class on the rest of
us that like it's just it's happened.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
We've just accepted it as like, yeah, of course that's happened. Yeah,
of course that's what they'll do. But and yeah, yeah,
like I don't know.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
It reminds me of the Business Plot, where like the
richest people in America tried to overthrow the government and
install a fascist military dictator like during FDR's administration.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Mm hmmm. And it feels like as we.

Speaker 3 (40:17):
Get closer and closer to like the possibility of outright
fascism and authoritarianism with Trump, like the billionaires, the richest
people in the country are like stepping.

Speaker 2 (40:28):
Up and being like, yeah, I mean, of course, please
protect my money.

Speaker 1 (40:32):
I mean, because everyone's like coming out of the fucking
crypt the whole crypto industry also just being like sorry, folks, yeah,
we kind of we need this to work for us,
and here's all this money to sway it. And it's
it's also interesting too, like America pack his pack like
it was also yeah, Elon Musk's pack was just all
these other top huge MAGA donors could just dump their

(40:56):
own money into it. Musk has given seventy five million
to this committee so far. But the other thing that
is really interesting. A lot of people have talked about
how the Trump campaign has been really bad with like
their ground game, like they are not really doing any
kind of real the proper voter turnout kind of initiatives
that you'd see most presidential campaigns, or they're like or

(41:17):
they're emphasizing some places at the total expense of other
really competitive states. And in this article is saying America
Back has formed a crucial part of the Trump campaign's
ground game and is running major canvassing and get out
the vote initiatives in swing states that could impact the election,
including Pennsylvania. So it's almost like Elon was seeing, or
these other donors are seeing like, oh, man, like we

(41:39):
can't just give him money, like we actually need to
like help in these other ways to actually help turn
votes out. And yeah, so now you do is you
you have to vow to vote for the first and
second Amendment. That's how they're coding it to be like
you're going to vote for Trump. But hey, Kamala has
a glock, so you know you should still take the money.
You can still take the money, you know, or do

(42:00):
whatever you want.

Speaker 3 (42:01):
Yeah, I mean she like it feels like the wealthies
hold over our political process was more of a you know,
discussion point in twenty twenty and more even more of
one in twenty sixteen. But it just feels like we're
getting to a place where, yeah, the wealthy just have

(42:24):
After Citizens United, this was kind of inevitable. The more
money they have, the more they're able to wield power.
The more power they wield, the more money they're able
to steal, you.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
Know, by evading taxes.

Speaker 3 (42:40):
And it's just like we're over a decade into this
vicious cycle and they're on the verge of like having
a legitimate shot at installing a dictator, which is like
if you just look at the extremely wealthy in America
as like a continuous like organism from early twentieth century
like Gilded Age like up to today, like that's kind

(43:02):
of what they've always wanted, right, And then like Trump.
Trump had a meeting with fossil fuel executives where he
was like, get me a billion dollars and I'll get
you whatever you need.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
I think that's a direct.

Speaker 3 (43:15):
Get me a billion and I'll get you whatever you
need right to quote.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
And they're even like, grow dude, we don't even we
don't even say it like that, man, but thanks, well,
we'll think about it. The other thing is like you know,
as we see this like aging Trump, you hear more
and more rumblings about like what the actual administration maybe
or not be, which is does Trump even have the energy?

(43:40):
Like he's falling asleep at shit already, right, he has
no energy. He's canceling all these fucking events. And you
see someone like JD. Vance, who is like handpicked by
the Silicon Valley donor class, and they're kind of.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Like, here, here, my hare might be the thing.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
Maybe if they win, you can pardoned the Trump like
he'll he'll resign and then you're president and then you
can pardon him and then we have a much younger,
willing and able bodied person to to really to really
fuck things up.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
So well, yeah, I mean I think they just like
haul him out as long as he's alive, you know,
they're just going to do what they did with Reagan,
you know, like Reagan. Reagan's second uh ah, said Semester.
Reagan's second administration, second term was like he didn't he
was like invisible, Like he was behind the scenes for

(44:36):
most of it because they were hiding him because he
was declining. But he was able to get a lot
of damage done, you know, despite the fact that even
from the start he was like, don't give me briefings
that are more than a paragraph.

Speaker 2 (44:52):
You know. He was just like I'll kind of leave
it up to everybody else.

Speaker 3 (44:56):
But yeah, I just I don't know, like they're they're
there is a hopefulness in the sense of, like it
doesn't have to be like this. There there's such a
clear problem with like the power that the wealthy wheeled
over the system. But it's just like during the Civil

(45:17):
War there was no tax on income like that that
was the thing that like people had to fight for.
So like there are these instances of like progress that
have been made, these battles that are won by working
class people over like billionaires, but they just kind of
get written out of the historical record and instead, you know,

(45:40):
we name buildings after the billionaires that were fighting against that.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
It's just so much easier for like American discourse to
be like, well, what's wrong with these poor people?

Speaker 2 (45:51):
And why are they on drugs? And to be like,
how come like.

Speaker 1 (45:55):
There there's like eight people who's if you combined all
their wealth, they have more wealth than fucking everybody, like
half the planet or some shit, you.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
Know, like that, The conversations need to be around that.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
But again, class consciousness in this country is not easy
to come by these days, especially now when you have
people like you know, Elon Musk sort of being like, no,
I'm like you dude, like hang out with me and
help me and do what do as I say, And
that's how we'll have a better tomorrow, right, will we?

Speaker 2 (46:26):
No?

Speaker 3 (46:27):
Jeff Bezos barely paid taxes and got a four thousand
dollars tax credit that was aimed at helping parents who
are struggling check to check. Like, that's that's where we're at.

Speaker 1 (46:37):
Who is his accountant? Can I get a deal like that?

Speaker 3 (46:42):
He has like an entire massive company's worth of accountants
like working NonStop to pull shit like that off.

Speaker 2 (46:49):
But look, I pay five million to save three billion. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (46:53):
There's an episode of the podcast search Engine where they
like interview this pro public reporter who leaked like a
rogue IRIS agent leaked them all of the text documents
of like the top five hundred wealthiest people in the country.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
I think it is.

Speaker 3 (47:10):
And yet it's just horrible, like transparent abuses of power,
abuses of the system that should be enraging, but because
they're you know, we have a pro wealth, pro capital
mainstream media, so like those things just kind of get
washed through and yeah, yeah, so it's a bomber, but

(47:33):
it is a problem that we have that could be solved.

Speaker 2 (47:38):
Yeah, yep, yep.

Speaker 1 (47:39):
Well, I mean at least we have an American Psycho
remake that we can look forward to or not.

Speaker 2 (47:44):
I don't know that.

Speaker 3 (47:45):
Yeah, I don't know about this story. It's so there's
rumors that Luca, why didn't you know is working? That's
the guy made like call me by your name and
challengers and whose name I'm probably pronounced. I can't call
you by your name because I don't.

Speaker 2 (48:04):
Know how to pronounce it guad.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
He so apparently is in talks to remake American Psycho,
although the studio is stressing that this is a new
adaptation of the book by Brett Easton ellis not a
remake of Mary Heron's film starring Christian Bale, which is
a classic. That is probably the movie that I've seen

(48:30):
the most. People just missed the point of so so drastically.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
Be like, dude, Patrick Bateman is so fucking dope. Dude,
that's isn't that that's the name of character.

Speaker 2 (48:43):
Right, yeah, Patrick Bateman?

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Yeah, yeah, Like I know people who I reme in
the beginning like dude, this guy's fuck, this guy's a machine.

Speaker 2 (48:51):
I was like, bro, I don't that's not what this
is about. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
I ended up at one point in college like with
a you know, lacrosse player at his place and he
was showing me that and being like, dude, so sick, right,
like this guy, Oh, I fucking love this part and
just like the weirdest, the weirdest taste in that movie,
in particular, the weird they're like I got.

Speaker 1 (49:16):
Into Genesis because of this guy exactly. You're like, oh boy, no, no, no, no, no, the.

Speaker 3 (49:21):
Book has some really funny parts, like where Patrick Babin
like write the long, deeply thought out reviews of band
like Genesis and all these things that I don't know.
I feel like the first movie adaptation like really nailed it.

Speaker 2 (49:38):
I don't. I don't see the need for this. But Jack,
we're in the age of grinse and repeat and ring
it out for as much fucking money as possible even
if it makes no sense, and potentially have already done
it before.

Speaker 3 (49:50):
And he's a good filmmaker, so I have to assume
like he sees something in there that's worth taking another
pass at. But so the big controversy is that there
are rumors started by a single post on Twitter, so that.

Speaker 1 (50:07):
I think we should take that with a Trump McDonald's
fries amount.

Speaker 2 (50:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (50:12):
Yeah, Apparently they're going to gender swap the lead role.
Get ready for Patricia Stateman. Guys, shit, I don't know this.
This story just like makes me want to go to
sleep for three years.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
Well, it's also funny because, like for all the tokook,
this is a reimagining. It's like there was an American
psycho to gender swap.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
Boogaloo Yeah Girls starring Yeah and Bill Shatner, William Shatner straight.

Speaker 2 (50:43):
The video, y'all exactly. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (50:46):
I think I was just reading too about like an
article about hows like how Hollywood has joined the book club,
and like again it's like this is the new place
that studios are just farming for, I like, just trawling
the IPCs for new stuff that they can do rather
than you know, pay people for new ideas.

Speaker 2 (51:04):
It's like, can we option this book? Can we option this?
Can we option that?

Speaker 1 (51:07):
Because it's all very still, very shaky right now in Hollywood.
Got to say, not a lot happening.

Speaker 2 (51:13):
Compared to pre strikes. So quiet. Yeah, it's it's eerily quiet.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
Like I mean, like I know people who are fully
changing careers now, like had fantastic careers writing comedy and
now are considering like completely other different professions and are
actively like moving towards that, like taking.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
Out I'm a farmer now.

Speaker 1 (51:32):
Yeah yeah, yeah, no, like truly, it's like I don't know,
like I can't. There's no way you can depend on
this anymore. And it's true, it's like really it's really
really bad, and I feel like what's going to happen
is the lack of work is just going to kind
of reduce the industry to like those who can like
just weather the storm and then when it picks back up,
maybe they will begin to start working again.

Speaker 3 (51:52):
But it's people with generational wealth, so it'll just get Yeah.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
It's all the trust fund writers and yeah director type
people out there who will be fine, and the others
will be forced to completely rethink their careers.

Speaker 3 (52:06):
They'll have some interesting takes on how to fix America's
political system, I bet.

Speaker 2 (52:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (52:12):
All right, well, those are some of the things that
are trending this Monday morning. We are back tomorrow with
a whole last episode of the show. Until then, be
kind to each other, be kind to yourself, get the vaccine,
get your blue shot, don't do nothing about white supremacy,
and we will hockey y'all tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Bite bite,

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