0:01
Adam curry
0:03
Jhansi devorah's your
award-winning
0:07
Gitmo nation media
assassination episode
0:09
1151 this is no agenda well
that sounds
0:33
painful
0:33
oh yes always with the topical
opening
0:38
yes you've been ambushed by
Kemal ahead
0:40
well before we before we do
that I have
0:42
something very important to so
to
0:45
mention anything I received an
email and
0:48
I was quite shocked by this
email and it
0:50
was someone who was very pissed
off with
0:52
my performance on the podcast
my pod oh
0:54
you oh you have two or three
people that
0:56
do they did don't like you it
was my pod
0:58
performance
0:59
apparently the performance my
pod
1:01
performance apparently I have
been
1:04
saying you know a lot oh that's
funny I
1:09
have the first thing I said is
really I
1:14
said and I listened to an hour
of the
1:18
show I didn't hear it and as
producer
1:21
said oh yeah you say it it
sounds like
1:23
yo yeah we use please stop
saying you
1:26
know every two seconds it
sounds like yo
1:28
it's making the show on listen
about yo
1:30
I thought maybe this person
centered too
1:32
would meant to send it to Adam
Corolla
1:34
instead of me maybe I was I
saying you
1:36
know no me me and I said and I
even
1:39
replied I said well then I'm
very
1:41
disappointed John and I are
supposed to
1:43
catch each other yes and there
was like
1:47
you sound like you sound like
the effing
1:49
millennial who says like every
three I
1:50
can't
1:51
I don't maybe I do but please
pay
1:55
attention to it we'll look the
end of
1:59
the day you know and look at
the end of
2:03
the day oh my god the matter no
that's
2:10
it I just wanted to make sure
this is
2:12
very important to the show
2:13
it's important to me it's
important to
2:14
hurt yes I know and I'm sure
that you
2:16
would have just said I know I
said I
2:19
know but not you know that
maybe that
2:22
maybe that's the mix-up hmm the
problem
2:27
is I didn't hear it in an hour
a whole
2:29
hour which is you know it's not
the
2:32
whole show but if you didn't if
you can
2:34
listen for an hour and not say
the buzz
2:36
phrase that were complaining or
someone
2:38
is complaining about it's
probably minor
2:41
right well now I'm super aware
of it now
2:43
you know and now it's become a
2:44
Tourette's
2:45
for people don't know inside
baseball
2:48
just make this comment Adam and
I do
2:51
catch each other saying stupid
crap that
2:53
just generally in the public
domain and
2:55
we start doing it cuz everybody
does and
2:59
one of the things that I've
noticed is
3:01
that when I start doing
something
3:04
Adam will catch me and then
it'll take
3:07
me two or three shows the stop
I'm doing
3:09
it generally speaking when Adam
is
3:12
caught even in mid show which I
have
3:14
done yeah um by calling him out
on
3:17
smacking his lips or something
but but
3:21
more more importantly when
there's a
3:22
phrase that keeps being
repeated yes you
3:25
know what is filler it's all
filler now
3:27
you just said you know it could
be you
3:31
could be me maybe the guys
thinking that
3:32
he doesn't understand the
difference
3:34
between our voices the point is
is that
3:36
when I pointed out to Adam he
almost
3:39
stops it immediately I find it
very well
3:41
it's Michael Irving that's Mike
3:42
Tourette's power it's unnerving
3:45
it's my Tourette's power I have
the
3:47
ability to stop the Tourette's
for
3:50
periods of time depending on
what I'm
3:52
doing so I have this I have
this mental
3:54
raishin right but now it's
working the
3:56
opposite it's because you're
also a neat
3:59
freak and this cleans up yours
yes my
4:02
wife would disagree but okay
yeah yeah
4:07
now but now I have a different
issues
4:09
this is such a in fact I
remember when
4:12
you know was big and this is
probably
4:13
when I was eight or nine years
old
4:16
big I've been in the seventies
at a
4:19
certain point everyone you know
you know
4:20
and I recall someone maybe at
school
4:22
saying stop saying that and and
now for
4:27
that to come
4:27
back and to be told that I'm
sitting at
4:30
I'm using this now it's almost
like a
4:31
Tourette's thing that I want to
say you
4:33
know you might want to switch
it to the
4:37
more modern version which is
you know
4:39
what I'm saying you know it's
come on
4:43
now under the black version
come on now
4:45
you know what I'm saying come
on now
4:47
let's talk about it yeah
they've been
4:51
watched too much black YouTube
4:53
influenced over influenced well
now we
4:58
had a second debate which I'm
sure
5:00
people would like to hear our
take on to
5:02
some degree well I've got too
much of a
5:05
degree although I don't have
that many
5:07
clips from the debate I do have
a couple
5:09
mm-hmm I have mostly well I'd
like to
5:12
ask you something first
5:13
how's that Biden Harris ticket
working
5:18
out for you you were so sure of
that's
5:20
still in play Kamala Harris
wipes the
5:26
floor with Joe Biden and I'm
sitting
5:29
there thinking uh-huh yeah
that's gonna
5:31
be a great ticket after the
first time
5:34
she swiped the wiped the floor
with him
5:36
then she really came back and
did the
5:38
whole full-on races busing thing
5:40
regardless of the truth of it I
am now
5:43
that's never gonna work again
ever and
5:46
we have more chance of a Kamala
Harris
5:47
peak Budaj edge ticket than a
Biden
5:50
Harris ticket so pack it in but
it's got
5:54
to be a woman it's not gonna be
5:55
Elizabeth Warren I have put too
many
6:00
clips no you don't and we can
talk about
6:05
this a little bit you we can do
the ABC
6:07
analysis of the Biden Harris
thing let's
6:10
talk about some basic some
basic things
6:13
I had not noticed maybe only
during the
6:15
second debate that the lecterns
light up
6:18
when someone's out of time
yellow red I
6:21
don't understand why in this
situation
6:24
they don't all have buzzers and
then you
6:27
know you hit the buzzer then
your
6:28
lectern should light up and
then it's
6:29
your turn to talk that would
have made
6:31
it so much easier and more of
6:32
entertaining to watch it would
have been
6:35
very entertaining buzzers it'll
be a
6:37
Kamala Harris thirty Seconds
6:40
it would have been fantastic
because
6:41
then you can say excuse me
6:43
you didn't buzz in it's just
this format
6:46
seems seems ripe for use you
look at the
6:49
red light that goes off on their
6:51
lecterns yeah who's that who's
that
6:53
benefit they can't see it I was
6:57
wondering well maybe you can see
6:58
something something changes you
have a
6:59
little red light other thing
too buddy
7:01
don't know but it's obviously
to make it
7:03
clear that they're talking
overtime to
7:05
the audience yes but it doesn't
but to
7:08
the TV viewing audience which
is really
7:11
the audience you'd hardly
notice it in
7:13
fact you just mentioned that
you didn't
7:15
know that was in the first bit
there was
7:16
they hadn't been play in the
first
7:18
debate well here comes my
second point
7:20
not only should we have buzzers
and
7:24
lights to indicate who buzzed
in now
7:27
unless you're directly asked a
question
7:29
but you can intervene with a
buzzer
7:31
we shouldn't have an audience
we don't
7:33
need the audience
7:34
it's annoying this has been
discussed
7:36
under it's annoying it's
distracting
7:39
it takes away time I heard this
argument
7:45
on one of the panels and it
with the
7:50
same logic and I decided now
first of
7:54
all this thing is bad enough
have you
7:56
ever watched one of these the
local
7:58
debates or some of those
regional
8:00
debates where they have people
with no
8:02
audience it's extremely
depressing to
8:06
watch it would not work without
an
8:09
audience it would be a
depressing weird
8:12
quality to it that you could
well the
8:14
kind of can I make a suggestion
then why
8:17
don't we just do a laugh track
all right
8:18
yeah it's just wheat in it that
would be
8:20
that way I sweeten it a little
bit I
8:22
think that that would be more
reasonable
8:24
well if the audience really
does add a
8:27
dimension that even though it's
stupid
8:29
it adds something to it would
it would
8:32
otherwise be horrible horrible
all right
8:35
so so I'm not buying into that
one let's
8:40
listen to the back and forth
with the
8:42
Biden versus Harris analyzed on
ABC okay
8:47
Joe Biden came to Jesse
Jackson's
8:49
Rainbow PUSH coalition today
looking for
8:51
a do-over
8:52
that was stopped right there
when I saw
8:55
that life happening I said to
myself wow
8:59
now you're really going as deep
as you
9:02
can Joe you think you had to
pay do you
9:04
think you had to pay a cover
fee to get
9:05
in or or do you think he just
got on
9:08
stage and it was all good that
was the
9:09
first time he spoke which it
was how it
9:11
was billed by didn't speaks for
first
9:13
time after debate yeah do you
think he
9:16
had to pay do you think you had
to pay
9:17
or it was it just he offered
Jesse
9:20
Jackson the vice presidency
9:22
before I start I'd like to say
something
9:24
about the debate we had last
night
9:27
he's talking about that
defining moment
9:29
from last night's debate
senator Kamala
9:31
Harris confronting the former
vice
9:32
president for touting his
ability to
9:34
work with anyone even
segregationist
9:37
senators I do not believe you
are a
9:39
racist
9:40
and I agree with you when you
commit
9:44
yourself to the importance of
finding
9:45
common ground but I also
believe and
9:49
it's personal and I was
actually very it
9:51
was hurtful to hear you talk
about the
9:54
reputations of two United States
9:57
senators who built their
reputations and
10:00
career on the segregation of
race in
10:04
this country
10:04
Harris then took on Biden for
his
10:06
opposition in the 70s to
federally
10:09
ordered busing to integrate
public
10:10
schools and she made it
personal there
10:13
was a little girl in California
who was
10:15
part of the second class to
integrate
10:18
her public schools and she was
bused to
10:20
school every day and that
little girl
10:23
was me on stage Biden forced to
go on
10:26
the defensive this guy who
raised my
10:30
position across the board I did
not
10:32
praise racist that is not true
10:35
do you agree today that you
were wrong
10:38
to oppose Wow did they just cut
that off
10:40
you didn't even let him keep in
his
10:42
explanation as to why he wasn't
racist
10:44
they just cut it right off nice
get to
10:47
the part where she's like
demanding Oh
10:49
beautiful did you agree today
that you
10:52
were wrong to oppose busing in
America
10:55
down do you agree I did not
oppose
10:57
busing in America
10:59
pose is bussing ordered by the
11:01
Department of Education that's
what I
11:03
oppose today in Chicago and
attempted
11:06
cleanup I heard and and I
listened to
11:09
and I respect sander Harris but
you know
11:12
we all know that 30 seconds to
60
11:15
seconds on the campaign debate
exchange
11:17
can't do justice to a lifetime
I fought
11:24
my heart out to ensure their
civil
11:25
rights and voting rights equal
rights
11:27
are enforced everywhere I've
decided we
11:29
just need to keep that yell on
hand for
11:31
any time someone uses the word
justice
11:33
in any context it's just
important
11:38
anyway so he goes on with I cut
it off
11:41
there for some reason went to
part let's
11:43
go to part two I'll figure out
why
11:44
aren't forced everywhere
11:46
all right Mary Bruce joins us
now from
11:48
Washington and Mary the
discussion today
11:50
not just about Joe Biden's
rough night
11:52
but also about a strong showing
for
11:54
Senator Kamala Harris and
tonight the
11:56
senator is though changing one
of our
11:58
answers on a key question well
Tom
12:00
Harris last night raised her
hand in
12:01
support of abolishing private
health
12:03
insurance and replacing it with
a
12:05
government-run plan now today
she said
12:07
she misunderstood question and
try to
12:09
walk it back but Tom this is
not the
12:11
first time that she's had to do
some
12:12
cleanup on this issue and
tonight her
12:14
position still remains a little
murky
12:16
you know this is I thought this
fallback
12:19
by ABC the obvious I'm guessing
that the
12:23
powers that be do not want this
woman
12:25
even getting close to becoming
the
12:27
nominee oh and that little bit
at the
12:30
end there seemed to be put in
there for
12:32
a reason they didn't need to do
that if
12:34
they're just talking about this
battle
12:35
between Biden and Harris hmm
and a lot
12:39
of people made a big deal about
it I
12:41
wonder how many people and how
many
12:45
voters actually thought as a
problem or
12:48
well it didn't drop him in the
polls the
12:51
pollsters came out this morning
and he's
12:52
still up there and the guy who
got
12:54
dropped a little bit of Sanders
who was
12:58
in the middle of those two
yelling at
13:01
her yelling at him by the way
Sanders
13:05
had way too much lipstick on
13:07
I didn't notice the lipstick oh
my god
13:12
they put some nice shadow on
the guy
13:15
could have like done a show he
could
13:18
have been reading storytime the
13:20
preschoolers yeah exactly
13:22
well I thought Bernie his rap
was good
13:26
but it was it was the wrong rap
for this
13:28
for this show you know his rap
is take
13:32
the money from the rich that's
pretty
13:35
much not even give it to the
board just
13:36
let's take it all from the rich
and
13:39
there's nothing wrong with that
because
13:41
people respond very well and in
with our
13:45
novel understanding of modern
monetary
13:48
theory he wouldn't even have to
tax Wall
13:50
Street he should just say it
the way it
13:52
is we got the tax anybody would
just
13:53
print it but he's not he's not
in him
13:56
he's empty I thought his
campaign lady
14:00
was an mmt yes yes she is
school him a
14:05
little bit so he can say uh I
can't do
14:08
it Bernie he won't do it he has
not done
14:10
it he is the MMT woman and
she's all in
14:13
on this and he but he and he he
doesn't
14:16
bring up the printing money but
he does
14:17
bring up and he did in this
last night
14:19
the income inequality and so he
yes yes
14:25
yes quality which is part of
the again
14:27
justice now let's go back to
ABC and the
14:30
insurance comment now let's
just look
14:32
are there any corporate things
that
14:34
would make sense there I mean
it's a
14:35
huge corporation insurance
companies are
14:38
just banks in in in their
essence
14:42
insurance companies do a lot of
14:44
advertising to an extreme
actually the
14:47
factory i co and all yes very
big I
14:50
think Geico mutual does a bunch
of ads
14:53
and I think Geico and and one
other is
14:58
in the top ten advertiser was
arrested
15:00
yeah now CBS does seem to like
Kamala
15:05
and I said now camera or come
on it's it
15:08
seems people go back and forth
I say
15:11
Camela Gayle King gushes your
15:14
performance last night is
certainly what
15:16
people are talking about this
morning
15:17
I'm hearing words like a star
is born
15:19
she is fervent but just she is
fervent
15:22
but deploys her anger precisely
like a
15:25
flashlight voters in Iowa New
Hampshire
15:27
are telling CBS News today this
she
15:29
deploys her anger like a
flashlight
15:32
I think laser would have been
better
15:33
both see again deploys her anger
15:34
precisely like a flashlight
voters in
15:38
Iowa New Hampshire of telling
CBS News
15:39
today that you had a strong
performance
15:41
how do you intend to capitalize
on that
15:43
momentum clearly the t-shirts
is one way
15:45
I understand that those are
already on
15:47
sale she meant capitalize
literally I
15:50
guess yeah little girl little
girl
15:55
t-shirts so this so this is just
15:57
nonsense by the way let's bet
there was
15:59
a good essay that I put online
and it's
16:02
linked in the newsletter I
already put
16:04
it in the show notes and it is
discusses
16:07
the nonsense that Berkeley
schools were
16:08
already integrated by the time
she came
16:10
around let's just explain
because you
16:13
lived there I really liked your
personal
16:14
taking the newsletter I'd see
if you
16:16
could explain this again you
lived in
16:18
Berkeley and what she said
about being
16:21
we have to explain busing a
little bit
16:23
what she said was a lie well
busing was
16:27
hated by the public at large
and it both
16:30
communities the whites blacks
that
16:33
nobody liked it because
especially
16:34
people who had gone through a
lot of
16:37
trouble to not necessarily the
poorest
16:39
of the blacks but people have
gone a lot
16:41
had gone to a lot of trouble to
move to
16:43
a school district and near a
school that
16:46
their kid could walk to school
safely
16:47
and the idea was and this was
and in
16:50
that regard Biden was probably
on more
16:53
on the right side of this he
was on the
16:54
right side of history more or
less but
16:56
looking in hindsight because
people that
16:58
come along like the Justice
Democrats
17:00
who don't weren't even alive
many of
17:02
them during that era don't
realize how
17:05
divisive it was and it caused
nothing
17:06
but trouble for everybody so
the idea
17:08
was forced busing where you
take your
17:10
kid and you got a school you
can be
17:12
living right next door to a
school you
17:14
kick to walk to school and the
bus comes
17:16
and picks up some drugs drags
them
17:18
across town to some other
school so you
17:21
can balance the races in these
different
17:23
schools that didn't work out
very well
17:24
and they it was mostly done
away with in
17:28
fact they got a some very funny
stuff
17:30
what's going on the most
segregated
17:31
schools in
17:32
country in the most liberal
city in the
17:34
world our New York New York
City is the
17:37
most segregated schools and
that's how
17:39
the final result of busing
thank you
17:42
would be quite hilarious
17:44
but anyway so Berkeley was
always a
17:48
liberal operation it was run by
extreme
17:50
radicals of even in the 70s and
there
17:55
was no way there was gonna have
a
17:57
segregation or anything like
that going
17:59
on she's just exaggerating this
now the
18:01
it to an extreme it's ridiculous
18:03
one thing for Cle we're talking
about
18:06
her father's a professor and
this is
18:08
nonsense she's making this you
know
18:12
Kamala also vacationed in India
in the
18:14
summer it wasn't like she was
wealthy
18:22
and it was for her and this is
how it
18:24
was explained to me from my
Atos friends
18:27
for Kamala it wasn't really an
opt-in
18:30
yes she wanted to or her
parents her mom
18:33
I would say wanted her to to
have this
18:37
experience but for most kids it
was not
18:40
a it was it was a lock-in this
is what
18:42
you had you had note no choice
is what
18:44
you had to do and but Kamala
had so many
18:47
different options and choices
with her
18:49
family one of them is young
vacationing
18:51
summers in India or going
wherever she
18:53
needed to go she's privileged
privileged
18:55
Canon nd and the feeling is
that she is
18:59
stealing people's history
what's the
19:03
call when you steal when you
wear army
19:05
uniform and your pretend to be
that you
19:07
were in false false valor is it
false
19:10
false that was something valor
but she's
19:12
doing yes in kind of an obtuse
way I
19:16
mean she's fallen Valor victim
stolen
19:19
valor I'm sorry stolen somebody
thank
19:22
you patrols trolls
19:24
I have don't want to I want to
jump to
19:29
the teen panel which is
probably much
19:33
more entertaining than the
actual deal I
19:35
think so but I except for the
one I do
19:39
have the Biden gaffe of gaps if
you
19:40
don't have it I have I have no
clips
19:43
from the debate itself I just
have some
19:45
clips
19:45
around the debate what's the
biology oh
19:47
I have a couple debate clips
that are
19:48
quite good especially the Biden
gaffe of
19:50
gaffes would you just upset the
upset
19:54
the Democrats to no end
19:55
the Democrats are very upset by
this I
19:58
mean the heart asks the Brookes
and
20:00
shields I do have Brooks and
shields
20:02
let's jump to that first so get
out of
20:03
the way so we can see how they
felt and
20:05
then I and also another guy who
is
20:06
really disappointed as Van
Jones he was
20:09
he was almost in tears he was
Brooks and
20:12
shields debate run and and by
the way
20:13
there's no Edison here there's
Brooks
20:15
and shields debate run down uh
shields
20:18
and Brooks sorry shields and
finally
20:21
you've figured out how I work
yeah I
20:23
know how you work out the
medical you
20:25
know I think my main takeaway
is how far
20:26
the Democratic Party has gone
to the
20:28
left and how little the
moderates in the
20:30
debates have any interest in
fighting it
20:32
two candidates Warren and
Sanders said
20:35
they wanted to get rid of all
private
20:37
health plans employer-based
health plans
20:38
only 13% of Americans agree
with that
20:41
all of the candidates of all
stripes
20:43
seem to think they can't get
anybody to
20:46
their left on immigration
policy and
20:47
they're wandering very close to
sort of
20:49
an open borders type approach
and this
20:53
would be I think devastating in
the fall
20:54
this country has 35 percent of
people
20:57
who call themselves
conservative 35
20:59
percent who call themselves
moderates
21:00
and 26 percent who call
themselves
21:02
liberals you can't win with 26
percent
21:05
but this debate was entirely
within that
21:07
that little parenthesis is that
what
21:10
you're saying mark and this
first debate
21:12
well I don't see things exactly
the way
21:14
you do from Aspen but no I
would say
21:16
this Judy for those Democrats
for whom
21:18
the highest moral objective
politically
21:21
in 2020 is the retirement of
Donald
21:23
Trump it's not been a good week
yeah now
21:28
I already know what the gaffe
of gases
21:30
well the Gavin gases also
shields picked
21:33
up on another gaff which I went
back to
21:36
look for and I couldn't quite
get it but
21:38
apparently one of the
candidates was
21:40
going on and about equality
quality
21:42
legality Arian thing again we
talked
21:43
about in the last show and they
wanted
21:46
to make sure that transgenders
21:48
I guess trans mmm women who
have women
21:53
who wasn't it wasn't this this
was the
21:55
first debate this is your boy
Julian
21:57
Castro
21:58
well this is the one where they
said
22:00
they should make sure that they
can get
22:02
abortions I I would say this I
mean I'd
22:05
say collectively for the
Democrats it
22:07
was not good just think of the
eighty
22:09
yards of the field that
Republicans have
22:12
some surrendered to them on the
abortion
22:14
issue I mean Republicans have
been
22:16
running away from the
Republicans did in
22:18
Alabama and in Georgia and in
Missouri
22:22
in Ohio and even the president
has been
22:26
distancing himself even and what
22:28
Democrats do I mean they
basically you
22:31
know just endorse abortion and
and throw
22:34
in well how about trends people
covering
22:37
abortion I just I mean it to me
that
22:40
they just it wasn't thinking in
terms
22:42
pretty giclees I mean they
owned the
22:45
majority position in the
country safe
22:46
legal rare and you know so I to
me I
22:49
just don't understand I think
it was a
22:52
Castro and it was the first
evening and
22:55
the I find it really
disingenuous what a
22:59
lot on the right and
conservatives are
23:01
tweeting because what he what
he meant
23:02
by his statement I wish I had a
clip of
23:05
it was you know he's trying to
show his
23:10
incredible woke nasai saying
trans men
23:13
and these trans men can have
babies and
23:18
we yeah it's just that everyone
took
23:19
that is all how could a man
have a
23:21
uterus Tucker Carlson like
please we
23:24
know what he Manta Manta you
can have
23:26
female reproductive organs yeah
female
23:29
reproductive organs you could
still be
23:30
transitioning to a man and have
a baby
23:32
and have right to reproductive
23:36
healthcare so for anyone who
went out
23:39
and said oh okay the matter of
a baby
23:41
you're stupid you just heard
the super
23:47
liberal shields say the same
thing so
23:50
you can't just blame the right
the right
23:52
we should have said is men have
a front
23:54
hole we know the language you
and I have
23:56
discussed this yesterday we
should have
23:58
had that in the debate now was
it a
24:01
ridiculous thing to say yes of
course it
24:04
was just hey maybe I can pick
up five
24:05
people by saying that okay good
work
24:08
okay let's go to this is the
one that
24:11
every
24:11
but he bitched about as shields
did too
24:14
and this is right and a lot of
this has
24:18
to do with these guys not
listening to
24:20
the moderators and the
moderators not
24:22
promoting themselves and so the
24:24
questions that's what's the
first thing
24:26
you're gonna do when you're
president so
24:32
what I thought that was a cue
I'm
24:34
waiting oh no I mean I got it
I'm sorry
24:37
sorry that what's the first
thing you're
24:39
gonna do with your when you're
president
24:41
and when they went to bite and
he goes
24:42
off first of all he goes off
the rails
24:44
and says a number of things
that don't
24:47
make any sense if you listen
carefully
24:49
it's worth analyzing what he
said about
24:51
Obama and then he brings
himself back to
24:55
the question which I apparently
he
24:57
forgot and this is the result
you may
24:59
only get one shot in your first
issue
25:03
that you're going to push you
get one
25:05
shot that it may be the only
thing you
25:08
get past what is that first
issue for
25:11
your presidency Vice President
Biden
25:13
your first issue mr. vice
president I
25:16
think you're so underestimated
with
25:18
Barack Obama dude he's the
first man to
25:20
bring together the entire world
196
25:23
nations to commit to deal with
climate
25:26
change I mean the first thing I
would do
25:33
is make sure that we defeat
Donald Trump
25:41
first of all he starts off by
talking
25:44
about Obama and that was the
transition
25:46
was accurate there I didn't it
wasn't
25:48
edited the yeah he says that
25:50
specifically
25:52
Chuck Chuck does and he says
well then
25:55
he bitches about people not
taking
25:56
Obama's climate change thing
and then he
25:59
says I don't buy that
26:00
in that regard what does he
mean I don't
26:04
buy that
26:05
he says Obama did his first guy
who did
26:08
all this stuff I don't buy that
what he
26:11
said was listen again that's
it's worth
26:12
it I want to see what was you
may only
26:14
get one show and your first a
minute
26:17
what is that first issue for
your
26:20
presidency Vice President Biden
ear
26:22
first
26:23
a vice president I think you're
so
26:25
underestimated with Barack
Obama dude
26:27
he's the first man to bring
together the
26:29
entire world 196 nations to
commit to
26:33
deal with climate change I mean
26:38
interesting there was an as if
that is
26:42
interesting I don't buy that
I'm buy
26:43
that and buy what that I think
if this
26:48
was an answer that he had
pre-programmed
26:52
in case something something
came up
26:55
about aunt Lysa
26:56
go ahead here's what he brought
that up
26:59
because somebody else has said
something
27:00
and let's be the first to do
this or
27:03
that and he's a Biden felt
obliged yes
27:07
exactly and so his I don't buy
that
27:09
refer to whoever was that said
something
27:11
beforehand yeah and then he
comes back
27:14
to the question just these guys
you know
27:16
there's almost like they have
their to
27:18
hold on to grudges that other
people
27:20
said something that would
didn't make
27:21
any sense held onto it right
into his
27:23
answer yeah
27:24
and so you ends up screwing up
big time
27:26
and they says the first thing
he wants
27:28
to do when he's president is
make sure
27:29
Trump's out just crazy this is
like the
27:35
joke about Maxine Waters saying
when I'm
27:37
elected president I'm gonna
impeach
27:39
Trump but but to be fair to
Uncle Joe
27:42
sleepy Joe
27:44
first he says this about the
first thing
27:47
I'll do and then he he doesn't
say that
27:50
the first thing I have to do is
get rid
27:51
of Trump he says the what we
got to do
27:52
is get rid of Trump here the
first thing
27:56
I would do is make sure that we
defeat
27:59
Donald Trump yeah I guess it
was a gaffe
28:02
it was no good to the face that
Joe was
28:04
no good
28:05
he was just no good he was in a
28:08
different mode he you know he
has kind
28:11
of shook up earlier cuz I feel
she
28:14
rattled him rattled him Suvi
right down
28:16
to the teeth bro definitely
here's
28:20
another one that I got two from
the
28:22
phones before I get to jeans
this is
28:24
Kamala on Trump as its ret what
is the
28:27
greatest national security
threat to the
28:29
United States it's Donald Trump
28:34
because I agree climate change
28:37
represents an existential
threat he
28:39
denies the science you want to
talk
28:41
about North Korea real threat
in terms
28:43
of nuclear arsenal but what
does he do
28:45
he embraces Kim Jong on a
dictator for
28:48
the sake of a photo-op I want
to say a
28:52
few things about Kamala before
you move
28:54
on to the teens she had a
fantastic line
28:59
which I think really got
everyone's
29:03
attention and she she's very
expert at
29:06
how she does things she said
instead of
29:08
a food fight we don't want a
food fight
29:10
we want while America's trying
to put
29:11
food on the table was rehearsed
29:13
perfectly executed she yes yeah
I'm not
29:18
gonna disagree she threw that
in there
29:19
but it was totally rehearsed
yes and she
29:22
she goes in with the food fight
food on
29:24
the table this is the other
thing these
29:26
guys and I mentioned this in the
29:28
newsletter they under I
mentioned it
29:30
into in the rundown of it which
is
29:32
linked to in the newsletter all
these
29:36
guys went on and on about stuff
like the
29:38
food fight we went food on the
table
29:40
economy sucks it's only the
stock
29:42
market's doing well nobody
owned stocks
29:43
and we're all dying out here
and then
29:46
that was like a big problem
they all
29:48
mentioned at the beginning of
the debate
29:49
and then when it came to the
very end of
29:51
the bid debate they said what
is your
29:54
top priority and without that
maybe one
29:57
or two little no no real
climate change
30:01
the economy so bad people can't
put he
30:05
says food on the table don't
you think
30:07
that's a little more important
than you
30:09
know regulating carbon dioxide
yeah
30:11
surely you didn't take any of
this
30:13
seriously the other thing I the
other
30:18
thing I need to say is that
Kamala
30:21
Harris is an outstanding
storyteller she
30:26
has a way to draw you in yeah
she's good
30:29
I for I died she doesn't do it
it's too
30:32
many of them everything's a
story yes is
30:36
what you're supposed to do I
mean Reagan
30:38
was a master at this year and
she does
30:41
it her stories to me seem like
30:45
bullshit it's it's this is
unimportant
30:48
if they're bullshit or not who
cares she
30:51
tells a story and she grabs i'm
just
30:53
analyzing it I don't that
content is
30:55
almost it's clearly unimportant
cuz
30:58
they're all over the map
themselves no I
31:00
agree okay let's go here listen
here's a
31:02
little angle on her that I
thought
31:03
Brooks I'd this is it to me a
new
31:05
observation I never thought of
I didn't
31:07
to hear the court before is
Brooks on
31:09
kamala so so David whether it
was Kamala
31:12
Harris or a people judge or you
know
31:14
unless we forget the first
night when we
31:17
had Elizabeth Warren up there
with the
31:19
others it were their candidates
who
31:21
significantly help themselves
in these
31:24
debates
31:24
yeah I would say Warren and
Harris would
31:27
be the two that what's
interesting is
31:29
right now the the key fight is
who's
31:31
going to be the progressive
rival who's
31:32
going to be the progress of the
face for
31:34
progressive side of the party
and Warren
31:36
and Sanders and Harris are all
vying for
31:38
it I think Warren and and
Harris did
31:41
particularly well I've always
thought
31:43
Harris is gonna be the most
formidable
31:44
progressive just because her
whole life
31:46
going back to when she was a
prosecutor
31:47
she's just a forceful argue
where she's
31:50
she says I've I've been an eye
for an
31:53
enemy and I know I have to go
after them
31:55
and that strikes me is right
for the
31:57
mood of a lot of progressive
and a lot
31:58
of Democrats you know I agree
32:00
I think she's the force to be
reckoned
32:03
with this just one thing that
had
32:05
happened that that we need to
highlight
32:07
and Donald Trump jr. retweeted
a tweet
32:14
that targeted Kamala Harris's
identity
32:18
as quote not an American black
and now
32:23
he has since I don't know why
but he has
32:26
since deleted this retweet like
a little
32:28
pussy because this is a
nightmare to the
32:34
American descendants of slavery
they are
32:37
seeing Obama 2.0 literally the
same and
32:43
not a drop of african-american
blood in
32:45
either of them and what do they
32:48
immediately confronted to what
does joy
32:50
read hop on and what is
birtherism 2.000
32:53
another birthday racist might
not which
32:56
will immediately
32:58
stifle any debate about her
heritage
33:03
which isn't it she's using so
it's it
33:05
should be Fairplay
33:06
it should be fair play to talk
about it
33:09
was she jumped in on this
debating I'm
33:11
the black one up here that I
can do this
33:13
I should talk about race
because I am
33:15
the one yes exactly but you
can't
33:17
because then you're racist and
it's a
33:19
birtherism and birthda room is
a racist
33:21
that oh my god they're doing
the same to
33:23
her they did you Obama except
now it's
33:26
blacks doing it well I have the
not a
33:31
racist I so for your
consideration I do
33:37
not believe you are a racist
33:39
that's not bad it's not bad
alright
33:42
let's go to the teen panel so
he can get
33:44
the wrap this up all right
33:47
okay this team found is the
first take
33:48
and it starts off with kind of
an
33:50
analysis of the kids and then
the one
33:53
black girl on there's two girls
that are
33:57
color but there's one that's
black and
33:59
she hates Kamala and she brings
up some
34:02
points and she brings them up
again
34:03
after this clip but she makes
the points
34:07
that the eight dots would make
and this
34:10
is a this is a serious
something that
34:13
has to be considered because
the black
34:14
community is not gonna come out
in
34:16
droves necessarily if at all to
vote for
34:19
her and this needs to be
realized by the
34:21
by apparently the I'm thinking
the
34:24
Democrats are just oblivious to
this oh
34:27
man it was a lively room in
here tonight
34:30
a lot of hot takes and I'm
gonna ask for
34:33
them now guys you've had a lot
to say
34:35
while we were watching and I
want those
34:36
top-line reactions right now
what what
34:39
stood out about the candidates
and what
34:40
was your take on on the debate
overall
34:42
tonight especially compared
with last
34:43
night Vice President Biden and
senator
34:47
Sanders both buckled under the
pressure
34:48
of being frontrunner you know
it seemed
34:50
like when the heat really got
turned up
34:51
on them they couldn't hold
their out and
34:53
I think that that's pretty big
of you
34:55
know are they gonna be able to
last in
34:57
this field and you know for
somebody
34:58
like Vice President Biden if
you know
35:00
Carla Harris was pretty tough
on them
35:02
tonight the president's going
to be
35:04
tough on him in a general
election is he
35:05
gonna be able to handle that
speaking of
35:08
Kamala Harris I felt that
35:11
even though tonight a lot of the
35:13
candidates were able to come at
Joe
35:14
Biden for his controversial
past I think
35:17
that Kamala was able to benefit
from
35:19
people not checking up on her
particular
35:22
past as she talked about her
role in
35:25
regards to prison reform and
immigration
35:28
I feel like other candidates
should have
35:30
held her feet to the fire just
as they
35:32
held Joe Biden to that standard
as well
35:35
so that should be interesting
to see
35:37
what's going to happen in the
future
35:39
however I do feel that she was
able to
35:41
make very strong quotes that
are going
35:44
to be headliners and from that
people
35:46
are going to be under the
impression
35:48
that she quote/unquote won this
debate I
35:50
however don't think so right
yeah right
35:52
on she said she's saying it in
nice
35:54
terms actually very very
pleasant I
35:57
brought it up again later and
she
35:59
bitches a little bit more about
it but
36:00
she does not like this woman
and that
36:01
just makes it clear after a
while but
36:03
she's you know these kids are
did they
36:05
get their shot at televisions
let's
36:07
listen to this is team panel -
36:10
somebody's making a good point
yeah I
36:12
mean you guys when I asked you
about Joe
36:14
Biden before the debate I asked
who was
36:17
excited nobody raised their
hands what
36:20
what did his performance
tonight do to
36:23
change your opinion of him he
was a
36:25
distraction I feel like the
entire
36:26
debate because a lot of the
candidates
36:29
were just using their time to
attack him
36:31
and go to him and then he spent
all of
36:33
his time basically defending
himself
36:34
saying oh this is what I did
this is
36:36
what I did and he very rarely
talked
36:38
about what he actually planned
to do
36:40
there wasn't a lot of substance
with
36:41
that that's why I was more
interested in
36:43
some of the candidates like
Pete Buddha
36:44
Josh and Andrew yang because
they were
36:48
just more focused on what they
were
36:49
actually planning to do and
even though
36:50
they didn't get as many
opportunities to
36:52
speak as some of the headliners
they
36:54
actually used their time to
explain what
36:56
they plan to do hmm not very
36:58
inspirational but by the way as
I went
37:02
back and watched pieces from
the first
37:04
debate Julian Castro kept
repeating
37:08
about the removal of section
1325 from
37:16
the Immigration Act yeah and I
decided
37:19
it was I don't know what what
drove me
37:21
maybe my crazy no agenda had to
look up
37:23
what section 13
37:25
five is it is it is well we
need to
37:29
decriminalize when you say
decriminalize
37:30
doesn't that sound kind of soft
like oh
37:34
yeah so make it a misdemeanor or
37:36
something like that
37:37
decriminalization Tevan
misdemeanors a
37:40
criminal act right well so okay
so then
37:43
he's being truthful because
section 1325
37:46
is the only section that sets
forth the
37:49
criminal offenses relating to
prop
37:52
improper entry into the United
States
37:54
which has the voter 5-year or I
think
37:59
250,000 dollar penalty that's
on the
38:02
books I mean if you come in
illegally
38:04
there is a penalty and he wants
and it's
38:07
a very short section he wants
the whole
38:08
section to be removed yeah open
borders
38:11
which is the literal definition
of open
38:14
borders and that's okay that
you can
38:17
have that opinion but the one
thing
38:19
we've we've agreed on you and I
here is
38:21
you can't have open borders and
medical
38:26
healthcare for everybody who's
here and
38:28
this is exactly what they're
saying yes
38:31
with every single one of them
in the
38:33
second debate put their hands
up is
38:35
should undocumented aliens have
health
38:39
care right Ohio it be what did
what
38:43
nobody said because there's no
moderates
38:45
Brooks bitched about this
38:46
there's no moderates that defend
38:48
themselves saying look look
which is
38:51
what we heard a lot from Biden
look if
38:56
you're going to have open
borders which
38:58
be by the repeal of that act of
that
39:01
section section I mean that
means anyone
39:05
with the worst kind of medical
condition
39:07
living in southern Mexico and a
farm
39:10
would zoom up the United States
for free
39:13
medical care yeah I mean would
just
39:16
invite the sickest of the sick
to come
39:18
into the country to get free
medical
39:20
care because you're gonna treat
them
39:22
does this make sense to anybody
as a
39:24
good idea
39:26
apparently I mean even when I
went to
39:30
Canada to get some medical they
get a
39:33
flu shot as some years back to
go to
39:36
their through their health care
39:38
I had to pay was it free yeah
you're not
39:41
a Canadian you have to pay
there's a
39:43
card if you're a Canadian yeah
it's free
39:45
if you're an American using
their system
39:47
no it's not free you pay it at
a normal
39:50
rate and it cost me 50 bucks or
39:52
something was not cheap but the
point is
39:55
is that no they want to give
free
39:57
everything to everybody and
have open
39:59
borders at the same time and
nobody is
40:01
calling them out on this just
as a quick
40:04
as just impractical as a quick
addition
40:07
to section 1325 subsection C
this
40:11
pertains to Ilan Omar
40:13
fresh congresswoman from where
she from
40:17
Wisconsin Somalia well that's
where
40:19
she's from now there's there's
ample
40:21
evidence that she married her
brother to
40:24
help him enter into the United
States
40:27
yeah there's plenty of evidence
under
40:29
subsection C any individual who
40:31
knowingly enters into a
marriage for the
40:33
purpose of evading any
provision of the
40:35
immigration laws shall be
imprisoned for
40:37
not more than five years or
fined not
40:39
more than $250,000 or both and
she could
40:43
go to jail I wish you would
that be
40:46
great and be good for the show
that's
40:48
for sure that would be good for
ya all
40:51
right okay so here's the final
fit now
40:55
now I'm gonna ask that minute I
got to
40:56
ask Adam segment something this
is gonna
40:58
be one of them so they're gonna
give us
41:00
a rundown this is the same they
did the
41:02
last time who won the debates
but
41:04
they're gonna make it they're
made it
41:05
more interesting they're gonna
ask the
41:08
kids who if you combine both of
these
41:11
debates who was the winner and
I'm gonna
41:16
ask you what do you think the
answer
41:17
will hold on a sec
41:27
yeah that's right you came to
the right
41:29
place if you want to have
answers to the
41:30
questions you ask because the
ask Adam
41:32
segment what was your question
again
41:34
kids are going to pick the
winner of
41:37
both debates in other words not
one or
41:40
the other but the combined
combined so
41:42
Oh
41:43
who won the combined debates
and these
41:47
kids are how old they're all
like Geoff
41:51
soft I would say sophomores in
college
41:54
level now is just gonna be one
answer
41:57
the kid's gonna have different
answers
41:59
you're gonna have waffle of
course no
42:00
one's gonna give one answer but
they're
42:02
gonna kind of beat around the
bush but
42:03
dude there will be a conclusion
at the
42:06
end and you'll hear it I would
think I
42:09
would think there would be more
people
42:11
interested than we might
surmise in
42:15
Marianne Williamson who I
respect for
42:18
being Irish listen look let me
cerumen I
42:22
know I'm not gonna theremin now
even I
42:25
had to tweet out a funny video
about her
42:26
because and it she really yes
she wasn't
42:30
given any chance no equal
chance at all
42:32
horrible moderation
42:34
they just didn't give her
anything they
42:36
should let her talk more that's
what the
42:37
Republicans want they're the
ones
42:39
supporting her I pointed this
out in the
42:40
newsletter it turns out that
most of her
42:42
supports coming from
Republicans to keep
42:45
her on the debate stage kind of
a
42:47
chicken ship thing i funny a
New York
42:51
Times bestselling author I've
listened
42:52
to some of her some of her
motivational
42:55
stuff it she's helped millions
of people
42:57
listen to these way you were in
the
42:59
bathtub with all those candles
all over
43:01
the place that's right I wish I
told you
43:03
baby that's exactly what he
would say I
43:05
nailed it I said that's John's
only
43:08
response can be that because
you're an
43:10
old misogynistic white guy and
I give
43:14
anybody who says I'm gonna run
for
43:16
president she met the criteria
shed you
43:20
know fifty thousand people who
are on
43:21
her list to the million and a
half
43:23
dollars I give her some respect
for
43:25
standing there and at least she
had a
43:27
different message and her
message was
43:29
inspirational although she knew
you
43:31
can't give your inspirational
message in
43:34
sixty Seconds
43:35
chance but I have respect for
her and
43:38
and everyone out there you know
you're a
43:40
misogynist not you John a
little bit
43:41
misogynistic
43:43
assholes you should be called
out on its
43:44
making fun of her she's a witch
all day
43:46
okay great so anyway now let's
listen so
43:49
I would say that there's more
interested
43:51
in Marion Williams Williamson
then they
43:53
think then we would expect and
I would
43:56
say Pete Buddha judge appeals
to them
43:59
the most well that's a good
guess and
44:04
it's probably wrong
44:05
oh very so who won from both
nights
44:08
let's start with you know one
oh well
44:10
tonight no one won but
yesterday was
44:12
hooli on a customer
44:14
I think Huyen won for both
nights
44:16
because he was actually to show
his
44:17
personality and also his policy
I think
44:21
caster from last night
definitely but
44:23
Carla Harris for tonight but I
would say
44:25
overall probably Castro would
prevail I
44:28
think secretary Castro stands
out for a
44:31
bug's life
44:32
I thought Castro did stand out
during
44:35
the last debate I also thought
Elizabeth
44:37
Warren did a pretty good job
between
44:40
both nights
44:41
I like Castro more just cuz I
really
44:43
wasn't expecting anything out
of him I
44:45
guess you could say and he
stood out
44:47
during this debate again I
thought
44:49
people judge did a great job
and I also
44:51
thought in his limited time
speaking
44:52
Andrew yeah and getting a job I
actually
44:55
think Kamala Harris won both
nights at
44:57
the debate I think she showed
herself to
44:59
be able to battle another
politician for
45:02
clearly immoral policies in the
past I
45:06
liked how she stood for
something very
45:08
clearly um and I also like that
she was
45:10
a very strong speaker she
asserted
45:12
herself and that's something I
want to
45:14
see in a president president
candidate
45:16
especially when they take on
Trump no
45:18
surprising I did not expect
Julian to to
45:22
be such a front-runner and yeah
it was
45:24
swept and these are their 18 to
21 year
45:28
olds that kind of thing they're
probably
45:31
twice a twenty years old
45:34
220 at 2021 I don't use any 18
freshman
45:38
in there but could be they're
you know
45:40
they're in college types right
45:44
okay well I think it was great
that you
45:50
brought up that thing about the
the
45:52
segments of the section of the
law that
45:54
he wants to repeal which means
he's an
45:55
open border guy totally and
they don't
45:58
these kids they don't they
don't see it
46:01
they don't see it yet and then
it
46:02
probably see that they don't
learn what
46:03
section 13 this is why he's
saying
46:05
section let's repeal section
1325
46:08
section no one is like whatever
I'm sure
46:10
it's something where no one
looks up
46:12
looks it up anymore so like
that's why
46:15
he's not saying we should open
our
46:16
borders that wouldn't work but
to say
46:18
repeal section 1325 oh I'm all
in with
46:21
that sounds like math do it
Andrew yang
46:25
was bitching and moaning then I
think we
46:28
need well this is after this is
his
46:32
speaking to his constituents
46:53
- yeah seems to be a problem
with Andrew
46:56
yang not just in the debate but
on this
46:58
clip that he's you can't hear
him he
47:01
claims that his mic was turned
off Oh
47:04
big controversy there's mic off
and I
47:07
went back and I looked and it's
here's
47:09
the way it works when someone
is talking
47:12
the engineer brings down all
the other
47:15
mics you have to yeah not off
what he
47:18
was not caught off by any means
I've
47:20
really analyzed it you have to
bring the
47:22
mics down otherwise you're
gonna hear
47:23
you know you're gonna say - you
know
47:25
you're going to hear Bernie
Sanders
47:28
you're going to hear Joe Biden
roar so
47:32
they have to bring it down when
47:33
someone's talking when you want
you did
47:36
the perfect imitation of both
of them
47:38
thank you I have to go back and
analyze
47:41
that to do more when you when
you so
47:46
Gillibrand understood it very
well you
47:48
have to have to pipe up and
then the
47:51
audio engineer by oh crap then
they'll
47:52
push your mica and Yu yang
raises his
47:55
hand and goes no your mic is
not off
47:59
it's your levels low because
you have no
48:01
presence good point
48:03
and he's bitching about it and
in bed oh
48:07
now here's Beto man Beto is the
best he
48:10
figured he'd go on down to the
border on
48:11
the other side of the border
and talk to
48:13
some of the asylum seekers who
now are
48:17
requested to stay in Mexico
while their
48:20
request is processed which is a
good
48:23
idea in my citizen opinion and
here's
48:27
what's a great idea and that's
then put
48:30
them in cages oh that's a good
question
48:33
we should go see what kind of
facilities
48:35
they're in there here is what
he had to
48:39
say to them we've got to
remember
48:41
that they are fleeing the
deadliest
48:43
countries on the face of the
planet
48:45
today compounded by drought
that was
48:48
caused not by God not by mother
nature
48:52
but by us man-made climate
change our
48:55
emissions our excesses our
inaction in
48:57
the face of the facts in the
science
48:59
when it is that deadly and when
you're
49:01
unable to grow your own food to
feed
49:02
yourself you have no choice but
to come
49:04
here okay now I get it
49:10
you know some town in the
middle of
49:13
nowhere Guatemala you're not
growing
49:16
your own food it was a farmer
but like
49:20
that you have no choice you got
to come
49:21
here come here yeah you got no
choice
49:26
because where else would you go
you
49:27
can't go to Uruguay you can't
go to
49:29
Venezuela you can't go to
Colombia where
49:32
there's plenty of work there's
things to
49:34
do there Brazil well you can't
speak
49:36
Portuguese necessarily uh Chile
I mean
49:39
there's all kinds of South
American
49:40
countries won't you hit South
instead of
49:42
north of England which makes no
sense if
49:45
you're Spanish speaking but
okay let's
49:48
just stay in Mexico well this is
49:52
operation speak Spanish they're
just
49:55
bringing voters in with ya if
you speak
49:57
Spanish and you watch US
television from
50:00
time to time you watch CNN or
MSNBC it's
50:03
on satellite all you see is our
50:04
politicians speaking Spanish
hey so it's
50:07
time to go there was an
interview with
50:11
Stacey Abrams in this Metro and
of a
50:15
newspaper it was and I would
like to
50:17
read one one question and
answer many
50:21
people thought you would be
running
50:23
is there still a possibility
her answer
50:26
it is it's still something I'm
50:29
considering I have always said
I want to
50:32
I think that certainly the fall
is the
50:35
deadline for making a decision
and that
50:37
is what I'm looking at but you
know I
50:40
will say that I will run if I
believe
50:42
there is value that I can add
to the bit
50:44
to the debate and add to the
contest and
50:46
if I believe I can win but I'm
50:48
incredibly pleased with the
caliber and
50:50
quality of the candidates we
have now
50:52
which is why I haven't thrown
my name
50:54
into
50:54
ring yet she's running he's
running
50:58
okay let her run I don't care
she's
50:59
gonna be legendary there'll be
fancy sag
51:03
that means I keep Hillary on
the list
51:05
you you've given me the
rationale to
51:07
keep Hillary on the list I'm
sure that's
51:10
right justice now uh-oh your
bridge
51:13
you're gonna bring her in there
saying
51:14
she's really impressed with
everything
51:16
else listen to Van Jones whine
about the
51:19
debates then I mean is that
right that
51:22
this that this will not have an
impact
51:24
you know I don't I don't know
but it's
51:27
worth me to imagine that it
won't we're
51:29
now sitting here with the
Democratic
51:31
frontrunner having a
spokesperson trying
51:34
to defend his comments on
busing in 2019
51:38
this is not good last night I
was happy
51:41
happy happy because I so
probably a
51:43
Democrat everybody's doing so
great if
51:45
you had told me three hours ago
that we
51:48
would be sitting here trying to
figure
51:50
out how the Congressional Black
Caucus
51:51
can keep supporting Joe Biden I
would
51:53
have said on what planet is
that but
51:55
that's the planet that we're
all those
51:57
in these debates matter these
debates
51:59
matter you've got an X I'm hurt
I mean
52:04
I'm I'm I love Joe Biden I
think a lot
52:07
of people love Joe Biden Joe
Biden stood
52:09
by Barack Obama and and
defended him and
52:11
and made his case to people who
didn't
52:13
want to listen to him and
that's who Joe
52:15
Biden is to us but there's this
this
52:18
thing that there's something
else going
52:20
on and I think
52:21
nia-malika it was correct when
she said
52:23
maybe he already thinks he's
he's woke
52:25
he's already there and doesn't
have to
52:26
keep learning and growing we
all have to
52:28
keep learning and growing on
women's
52:29
issues on racial issues on
immigration
52:31
issues that's the whole point
of the
52:33
country we try to become a more
perfect
52:34
union together and we need Joe
to lead
52:36
us there not be drugged there
this is a
52:39
bad night for Joe Biden's a bad
night
52:41
for Democrats lady lost a bet
it's a bad
52:43
night for democracy thought he
would
52:47
have again everyone taking it
all so
52:50
seriously except for the actual
setup of
52:53
these debates this is I think
it's rude
52:56
the way they've done it the
what it's a
52:58
clown show it was the same with
the
53:00
Republicans when they had me on
20 was
53:03
it 16 17 people this whole
concept is
53:06
about faster than they could
53:08
regroup have we ever seen this
type of
53:11
field where we have so many
candidate
53:14
not you know the debates used
to be run
53:16
differently on television I
believe it
53:18
was the yellow the yellow the
Women's
53:21
League of voters who ran it and
then at
53:23
a certain point they got the
the women
53:25
League of voters were so pissed
off with
53:28
how the Democrats and
Republicans were
53:30
manipulating to determine who
gets on
53:32
stage forget it if you're
independent
53:34
where's the independent debate
oh I'm
53:35
sorry it doesn't exist there
are plenty
53:37
of independent candidates money
that
53:41
they left they said screw it
we're not
53:43
doing it anymore now it's just
purely
53:45
run by the DNC in the RNC this
is this
53:48
is really a detractor to the
democratic
53:52
process this is it's it's
soundbite shit
53:57
it's not good and then the guys
who run
54:00
the the debates of the moderate
I've got
54:03
one this is a gaffe by the
question
54:06
the questioner did one of these
Mir NBC
54:08
guys tell me if you can figure
out what
54:11
this gaff is the debates gaffe
yeah got
54:17
it
54:17
the obama-biden administration
deported
54:20
more than 3 million Americans my
54:24
question to you is if an
individual is
54:26
living in the United States of
America
54:28
without documents and that is
his only
54:30
offense should that person be
deported
54:36
and what is the ghast part why
are you
54:41
smacking your lips that's the
timer I'm
54:43
sorry it's Miss Mary Elizabeth
supposed
54:45
to be a timer okay it's not
very well
54:47
done yes there's a gap in there
I mean
54:50
listen to the obama-biden
administration
54:52
deported more than 3 million
Americans
54:56
I'm sorry it took me a minute
to get
55:00
there yes yes Americans aren't
typically
55:04
deported from their own country
all
55:18
these gasps but they never
caught this
55:19
gift because the Democrats in
particular
55:22
really think that these illegal
55:25
immigrants aliens illegal
aliens that we
55:28
used to call them are Americans
and
55:30
that's what there's a process
that goes
55:34
on that makes them think that
yes the
55:37
Obama deported three million
Americans
55:40
and so nobody even took a
second look at
55:45
that at that question and it
passed
55:47
right by me the first time too
and of
55:49
course I saw it during the beta
didn't I
55:50
did not catch it
55:52
hmm well it's it's there you go
it's
55:56
worked very well and yeah and I
guess a
56:00
merit by the way that was a
question he
56:02
read yeah America was written
that way
56:07
so I'm it's all very subtle
propaganda
56:10
well this is not subtle but
it's very
56:12
effective and very dangerous
because we
56:15
definitely have it slipped into
the look
56:17
to the to our minds that
everyone who
56:20
lives here is an American that
56:22
citizenship is a different
thing that it
56:25
may not even be important you're
56:27
American yeah you're under I
gotta play
56:30
that one more time the
obama-biden
56:31
administration deported more
than 3
56:34
million Americans my question
to you is
56:37
that's fantastic they're pre
Americans I
56:42
would say well they're not even
pre
56:44
America's necessarily yeah
that's kind
56:47
of sad that that not only does
that get
56:49
said but
56:50
lots of people including myself
not even
56:52
catch it
56:53
nice brainwashing brainwashed
56:57
we've been brain I've been
brainwashed
56:59
brainwashed brainwashed so I'm
glad we
57:01
do the show nobody brought up
any of the
57:03
news stories I saw nobody exam
off
57:07
against Biden and his you know
the other
57:09
gaff which was really no kind
of just
57:11
dubious but they won't mention
this and
57:14
this is the guys right and
they're
57:15
reading it like I said that
should be
57:19
that needs to be called out I
mean we
57:21
just did it but said okay I get
one
57:29
other thing maybe well this is
kind of a
57:32
but slamming Trump but slamming
57:34
compilation who's he look
slamming this
57:38
is but slamming Trump the Trump
is a
57:42
pathological liar and a racist
and that
57:46
he lied to the American people
during
57:50
his campaign he said he was
going to
57:52
stand up for working families
while
57:54
President Trump you're not
standing up
57:56
for working families when you
try to
57:58
throw 32 million people up the
58:01
healthcare that they have and
that 83%
58:04
of your tax benefits go to the
top one
58:07
percent that's how we beat
Trump we
58:09
expose them for the fraud that
he is
58:11
what does Donald Trump do he
says go
58:15
back to where you came from
that is not
58:17
reflective of our America and
our values
58:20
and its gotta end president has
done is
58:23
not only attack these children
not only
58:26
demonize these immigrants he is
58:28
attacking a basic principle of
America's
58:31
moral core we open our hearts
to the
58:34
stranger but the worst thing
President
58:36
Trump has done he's diverted
the funds
58:39
away from cross-border terrorism
58:41
cross-border human trafficking
drug
58:43
trafficking and gun trafficking
and he's
58:45
given that money to the
for-profit
58:47
prisons President Obama I think
did a
58:50
heck of a job to compare him to
what
58:52
what this guy is doing
58:53
is absolutely I find for
tomorrow
58:56
this president though for
immigrants
58:59
there's nothing he will not do
to
59:01
separate a family cage a child
or erase
59:06
their existence there's nothing
he won't
59:10
do that's right
59:12
cages chilled can't a cage his
child
59:15
it's right what now
59:20
what I would I missed really
except for
59:22
Marianne Williamson no one had a
59:24
visionary statement no one had
something
59:27
that no one said our country
this is my
59:30
main pet peeve oh yeah it's
it's our
59:33
country everyone says this
country was
59:37
just yeah where do you live do
you live
59:40
here it's our country there
anyone who
59:42
says our country gets high
marks from me
59:44
and I did not be open to voting
for them
59:47
I can't vote and he used to be
fine to
59:49
many of the Democratic Party
and the
59:50
other thing is somebody pointed
out
59:51
there's no where there was not
one
59:52
American flag in the whole set
oh that's
59:56
another good point
59:57
hmm was there a new flag or a
that I'd
1:00:07
like to thank you for your
courage for
1:00:09
watching all that and making
clips of it
1:00:10
and let's say in the morning to
the man
1:00:13
you put the C in American
citizen John C
1:00:16
[Music]
1:00:19
Busan graphene the Arabs in the
water
1:00:21
and all the Dames tonight 7:00
in the
1:00:23
morning to the troll room no
agenda
1:00:24
streaming dot-com and it's a
good place
1:00:28
to hang out during show times
and
1:00:30
there's lots of shows that are
running
1:00:31
on no agenda stream comm so you
control
1:00:34
all of them it's great yeah we
don't
1:00:36
care we want you to come in and
troll no
1:00:38
agenda stream comm also in the
morning
1:00:40
to our artists for episode 11
five-zero
1:00:44
1150 episodes this is bear asked
1:00:49
Godzilla who I do not believe
has a
1:00:52
chosen artwork in the ranks he
has put
1:00:55
in some artwork previously she
and this
1:00:58
was based upon the first
democratic
1:01:01
debate it was the
1:01:04
dot-dot-dot dummies for etc
book series
1:01:08
made to basic Spanish for
Democrats and
1:01:12
it got a lot of laughs it's
very funny
1:01:16
it's it's it's it's a classic
it's a
1:01:19
it's a classic take it's been I
think
1:01:21
the dummies books are they
still are
1:01:23
they still as big as they you
know
1:01:24
they're still there yeah
1:01:26
a new ones all the time the
newer that's
1:01:29
fantastic been out Oh
1:01:31
so bear ask Godzilla nailed it
with that
1:01:34
one there was just you know we
had a
1:01:35
couple couple of faves but this
is like
1:01:38
you got to use this now and I
think that
1:01:41
in general everyone who saw
that got a
1:01:42
good chuckle out of it so thank
you very
1:01:44
much bear ask Godzilla and you
can see
1:01:47
all the artwork art our artists
and some
1:01:49
people are just amateurs not
1:01:51
professionals anyone can
participate go
1:01:54
to no agender art generator
comm you can
1:01:56
upload an image we have
templates that
1:01:57
overlay stuffs you don't have
to do a
1:01:59
ton of Photoshop work it's a
lot of it
1:02:02
works a kind of an engine you
probably
1:02:05
do auto magically eBay what the
1:02:06
templates are there and and
it's it's a
1:02:08
fantastic resource we're up to
the over
1:02:11
13,000 pieces of art it's much
more than
1:02:14
we have in episodes there's a
lot of fun
1:02:16
stuff to see no agenda art
generator
1:02:18
calm thank you again to all who
1:02:19
participate and as is the same
with our
1:02:23
producers we don't have
listeners we
1:02:25
have a value for value Network
we have
1:02:27
producers who support the show
in many
1:02:29
ways we'd like to highlight
just like
1:02:31
Hollywood our executive
producers and
1:02:33
associate executive producers
upfront
1:02:35
because they actually finance
to finance
1:02:37
this episode yes at the top of
the list
1:02:41
today surprisingly at least to
me mm-hmm
1:02:44
out of the blue yes nonnamous
letter
1:02:47
being oh she's back jumps to
the top
1:02:50
with a 341 dollar donation
because she
1:02:53
decides to become a dame Wow we
thought
1:02:57
she'd gone overboard we thought
she was
1:02:59
lost didn't we know who she
shows this
1:03:02
shows that be subscribe she
said she
1:03:05
likes you and she always
communicates
1:03:07
with you and me what good does
that mean
1:03:10
good she likes me yes she's got
a thing
1:03:12
for you I think she has a thing
for you
1:03:14
oh good yeah yeah but I think
she's the
1:03:17
best
1:03:18
here's my annual birthday
present to
1:03:20
myself she says of a producer
ship to
1:03:23
the BP ITU she's done that a
couple
1:03:25
times as you know I also have a
1:03:27
subscription that combined what
this
1:03:29
donation means it's finally
time that I
1:03:30
take my place at the round
table yes I
1:03:34
will be known as Dame anonymous
lesbian
1:03:37
excellent it's a stretch but
we'll take
1:03:40
it thank you for all you do to
keep me
1:03:43
sane thank you
1:03:45
and she then she says I have no
idea
1:03:49
underlined how I would stay
sane without
1:03:52
you
1:03:53
sincerely anonymous lesbian and
it's a
1:03:56
card from Canadian card that's
funny
1:04:00
she's wrote into it upside down
some
1:04:04
couch in sweaters couch and
knitting was
1:04:07
developed by the couch in First
Nations
1:04:09
I'm actually familiar with these
1:04:11
sweaters but now she in the
Knitting
1:04:12
community I don't know maybe
because
1:04:15
there's all I know is that she
maybe
1:04:16
she's a fan of these sweaters
you know
1:04:18
there's a big controversy in the
1:04:19
knitting community about these
sweaters
1:04:22
no no no about anyone who
supports Trump
1:04:25
they get kicked they get kicked
out of
1:04:27
then it's true that's true
1:04:28
your team has been following
this this
1:04:31
is the knitting community
knitting
1:04:32
community that kicking people
and for
1:04:35
kicking people out for not
denouncing
1:04:37
him oh you have to denounce yes
yeah the
1:04:41
knitting community getting all
up in the
1:04:43
grill so does she want anything
for the
1:04:45
round table she mentioned
nothing but
1:04:48
maybe we should show the
sweater she
1:04:49
can't eat so another she get a
free
1:04:51
sweater no she did not mention
anything
1:04:53
for the round table and so
we'll just
1:04:55
assume she's happy to do what
this
1:04:56
what's there already okay well
I have
1:04:58
hookers and blow
1:04:59
and some rent boys and
Chardonnay I know
1:05:02
if she wants that no I'll have
a nice
1:05:05
little selection ready for her
good
1:05:08
anyway congratulations to her
thank you
1:05:10
very much we'll see you at the
at the
1:05:11
ceremony she is like I know
what she
1:05:14
does for a living and she's in a
1:05:15
community of artists that might
as well
1:05:18
be in the Knitting community
thank you
1:05:20
for pointing that out I know
that we're
1:05:22
not gonna say what but we know
what she
1:05:24
does and when she says I don't
know how
1:05:27
I'd stay saying without you I
think she
1:05:29
really means you John but maybe
1:05:31
the show I think the show it's
really
1:05:34
the show because we brick
breakdown
1:05:36
stuff that she's hearing all
the time in
1:05:38
this community of
1:05:40
artists and it's not it's just
1:05:43
unpleasant to be around these
these
1:05:45
people that have these swollen
amygdalas
1:05:48
and they hate Trump more than
they love
1:05:51
their work kind of and if you
ask me
1:05:53
that's the stuff I get up for
in the
1:05:55
morning if I can hear what once
during
1:05:58
each show someone says you keep
me
1:06:00
saying you keep me going
because of what
1:06:02
you do that's that's why I'm
still here
1:06:08
and I'm yeah John's apparently
no I'm
1:06:13
looking for the other card
around oh no
1:06:17
oh no thank you anonymous
lesbian we
1:06:19
will see you as I said at the
roundtable
1:06:20
if we are 341 dollar donation
anonymous
1:06:23
in Virginia is next our second
executive
1:06:25
in Virginia wink wink hopefully
we don't
1:06:30
know if this really important
Virginia
1:06:32
money or not but 300 bucks
1:06:34
another card coincidentally two
cards
1:06:37
this one here shows a some
Renoir not a
1:06:41
Renoir but I forgot together
did all the
1:06:43
paintings of the ballerinas
mostly
1:06:46
Matisse another ballerina guy
the
1:06:50
ballerina guy did pastels but
anyway so
1:06:54
I should know you should please
keep me
1:06:57
in my who you should know know
so many
1:06:59
other chat rooms should know
you'd think
1:07:00
and I do know I just for some
reason the
1:07:03
King come doesn't come to me
please keep
1:07:05
up the end please keep me
anonymous
1:07:07
thank you for your hard work
imagine
1:07:09
this is how Trump picks up
comely
1:07:12
blondes for his rallies just
give me are
1:07:15
you thinking Monet is that who
you were
1:07:16
thinking no it's not Monay
Monay just
1:07:19
about arenas oh okay i am going
to take
1:07:25
it we're gonna go check the
book at
1:07:27
knowledge or I'm gonna actually
check
1:07:29
that Degas a lorina Edgar Degas
Degas
1:07:36
thanks guys thank you troll
room I knew
1:07:39
somebody in there would know he
did
1:07:41
mostly pastels and he did a few
oils but
1:07:43
mostly pest those are these
1:07:44
we used to hang out everyone
call him a
1:07:46
horny old fart that was going
go hang
1:07:50
out with ballerinas do drawings
of all
1:07:55
these little girls and now it's
1:07:56
considered fine art of the
centuries
1:07:59
wait that's considered fine art
but now
1:08:00
is pedophilia oh yeah okay you
can't
1:08:02
look at any more so anyway so
this is
1:08:05
how Chinese got a picture here
that's a
1:08:08
pretty funny card actually and
he says
1:08:10
thanks and that's that and so
he's in
1:08:11
for 300 now you wanna thank you
thank
1:08:13
you very much he got
highlighted as
1:08:16
night but I don't think he is
no he's
1:08:18
not highlighted oh it is on mine
1:08:20
no it's gray gray means notes
blue means
1:08:25
knighthood or daming okay a JMS
comes in
1:08:29
next that is a jade $230 and 20
says be
1:08:34
associate executive producer I
just want
1:08:39
to open by saying and how much I
1:08:41
appreciate the show on the job
you guys
1:08:42
do to deconstruct media BS I'm
long
1:08:45
overdue for contribution I am
ending my
1:08:48
Amazon Prime subscription this
month and
1:08:50
now can afford to put you guys
on the
1:08:52
dole however I have one
complaint oh I
1:08:58
know who this is
1:08:59
yeah yeah oh I have one
complaint when
1:09:02
experts right into the shows
you refute
1:09:04
to refute your BS maybe you
should have
1:09:08
a difference response then
blocking them
1:09:11
I am NOT going to comment on it
further
1:09:15
that said attach find my
donation of two
1:09:19
30.20 for stodgy old Dvorak's
early
1:09:22
retirement fund just kidding he
said he
1:09:27
says not kidding no he's not
he's not
1:09:29
he's given half of it to my
retirement
1:09:31
fund he says 150 dollars point
one for
1:09:34
each of you as a white male age
30 with
1:09:37
postgraduate degree in
environmental
1:09:39
science oh I know who this is -
I'm
1:09:41
looking for a job in stem and
could use
1:09:44
some help as the algorithms
conspire
1:09:46
against me hey please no agenda
show
1:09:51
spread your magic and help me
to glitch
1:09:54
the algos thrust open the
climate gates
1:09:56
and let me end
1:09:58
jingo request follow the L goes
1:10:00
Climategate jobs karma okay
yeah so yeah
1:10:07
this he followed up with me so
we don't
1:10:10
have to talk much about it but
he wrote
1:10:12
an email and he needs a D
douching
1:10:14
actually cuz he's never he's
never
1:10:16
donated before which was how he
started
1:10:18
his initial his initial email
to you but
1:10:23
people have to understand that
a lot of
1:10:27
how people send notes to us
when they
1:10:30
have an a correction or you you
have it
1:10:34
down you have the guy you even
have
1:10:36
their voices down
1:10:37
I'm not gonna do it in this
case because
1:10:40
the text the way he just wrote
it was
1:10:42
just it was just rude you know
and then
1:10:45
a follow up you have to note
you know
1:10:47
not in this note no no no in
the note
1:10:49
and then a follow up after you
said hey
1:10:51
you know screw this
1:10:52
yeah don't follow up then it's
like I
1:10:54
can see sorry your your de
platforming
1:10:57
from PC Magazine has roll up in
arms
1:11:00
yeah looks really really really
rude
1:11:02
hurtful things and I don't know
it's an
1:11:06
approach and you know like
everybody you
1:11:09
can catch someone with an
approach and
1:11:11
it's just you come off as a
dick and
1:11:13
patronizing and really over
something
1:11:15
quite minut other than that
apparently
1:11:19
there's an entire community
surprise
1:11:21
surprise of
1:11:22
earth scientists who disagree
with your
1:11:24
mudflats theory because that's
1:11:26
ultimately what this whole
thing was
1:11:28
about yeah he claimed that the
mudflats
1:11:31
are always here because of a
buildup of
1:11:33
silt and it doesn't mean
anything that
1:11:37
apparently the waters going way
up
1:11:39
although they pointed out to
him that
1:11:41
there is a roadway right next
to the mud
1:11:44
flats that's not going up
because of
1:11:47
silt it's built on ground well
you know
1:11:51
if you didn't you didn't get
his reply
1:11:54
to that because he had graphs
and shot
1:11:56
him I know he had graphs and
charts and
1:11:58
showed how the Howards
increased one
1:12:01
millimeter per year for the
last 60
1:12:03
years and I actually got into
it with
1:12:05
him after you blocked him I'm
like hey
1:12:07
how do you measure that how do
you
1:12:09
measure one millimeter of
1:12:11
the mudflat c-level whatever
and his
1:12:15
reply was I'm not quite sure
what
1:12:16
instrument they use but they've
been
1:12:17
doing this in 1800s that's one
eye so my
1:12:20
eyes glaze over it's like a fun
fine how
1:12:22
do you make satellites space
force I
1:12:25
don't know it's fine but what
regardless
1:12:28
we're wrong you're wrong you're
old
1:12:30
you're full of shit and here's
230
1:12:33
dollars thank you very much
it's somehow
1:12:35
that's that's how this all
ended it was
1:12:38
very sad the magic ultimately a
very sad
1:12:41
sad ending to this said yeah I
don't
1:12:46
like the you blood that you
blog people
1:12:47
on Twitter okay but when you
block
1:12:49
someone on email it that is
also very
1:12:52
harsh just don't respond no
here's the
1:12:55
thing I get too much email and
so I
1:12:58
don't need the aggravation and
I don't
1:13:00
respond you still see the email
you open
1:13:03
it because it's got an
interesting title
1:13:04
I don't like getting a bunch of
stuff
1:13:08
that is just not something I'm
1:13:12
interested I'm not interested
in it and
1:13:14
I'm not interested in
constantly being
1:13:16
harangue by certain people
weird email
1:13:19
email yeah this starts coming in
1:13:21
especially we respond once you
know the
1:13:23
next thing you know you got
another than
1:13:24
another another dialog I do not
like a
1:13:27
dialog by email I'm not
interested I
1:13:30
usually tell people I don't I
don't
1:13:32
argue for free with people on
email or
1:13:34
Twitter as I do a show and
that's where
1:13:37
we do we try to do our best
work and
1:13:39
it's like I'm not here for your
1:13:41
enjoyment so just email me back
and I
1:13:43
love hearing from people who
are smarter
1:13:45
than me but an actual you can't
have an
1:13:47
argument on these emails to
read today
1:13:49
there are people that are
smarter than
1:13:51
than me or you well first let's
take
1:13:53
care of this and we I totally
appreciate
1:13:55
that he that he donated because
that
1:13:57
would be the first thing it's
like
1:13:58
you've gone through college if
the
1:14:01
Masters sorry I had no money to
donate
1:14:03
uh-huh so he donated and that's
1:14:06
appreciate it it's not it
doesn't fix
1:14:08
everything but thank you very
much
1:14:15
[Music]
1:14:21
[Music]
1:14:36
[Music]
1:14:38
there we go there you go it's
all good
1:14:42
I guess I guess what he the
main thing
1:14:44
just to finish this up is that
he's been
1:14:46
trying to play to get to hit
people in
1:14:48
the mouth at his university or
his job
1:14:51
wherever he is it's it's earth
scientist
1:14:53
and and yeah he's able to turn
everybody
1:14:57
on the different podcast but
never ours
1:14:59
because of the mudflat segment
and yeah
1:15:01
and then if he's role crap and
it's
1:15:04
worse and if he's wrong about
the
1:15:05
mudflats how can we believe
what he says
1:15:07
about 5g right yes logic yeah
there's
1:15:14
still this anyway thank you
very much a
1:15:17
journey every seems to raise it
rising
1:15:20
okay Albert Peter Jurgen ver
hides for
1:15:25
high or high or high 22222 some
serious
1:15:31
poop donation for the Gitmo
nation from
1:15:34
the friends from Gitmo nation
east close
1:15:37
to Amsterdam keep up all the
cleaning
1:15:42
work which needs to be done
1:15:44
hold on a second is there an
issue we
1:15:46
need to be alerted to an
Amsterdam
1:15:48
are they pooping on the streets
I don't
1:15:51
think so maybe some I was there
for
1:15:55
Queens they're whatever they
call that
1:15:57
it was a long time ago John
this things
1:15:59
have changed since then but
there was a
1:16:01
woman that peeing on the street
okay but
1:16:05
we're talking about now we're
talking
1:16:06
about this pooping phenomenon
and maybe
1:16:10
there's something we're missing
1:16:11
it's I know it's become quite
nasty in
1:16:14
general certainly we don't
think is cool
1:16:16
in Amsterdam I think well
there's people
1:16:18
pissing in mailboxes
1:16:22
men I should say oh all right
thank you
1:16:26
very much these men how old are
they old
1:16:30
enough to drink how tall how
tall I
1:16:32
don't know I don't know sir
Julian's
1:16:36
last on the list 200 bucks
1:16:38
sir Julian here I just returned
from a
1:16:41
trip to Guadalajara why I was
offered
1:16:45
Eskimo oh yeah Eskimo that's
what I had
1:16:47
to do my banker dinner
1:16:48
it's the ant the ant larvae
barbae the
1:16:51
ant eggs and a high-end
restaurant no
1:16:55
way am i passing that on
passing on that
1:16:58
it was delish wait wait stop we
can't
1:17:03
just let someone say delish and
pass
1:17:05
over that he said delish you
can't say
1:17:08
that I wonder if you Evie also
says
1:17:10
Murch
1:17:14
I'd like some aunt Murch
because it's
1:17:17
delish you know there's a
number Pot
1:17:20
you're saying you know that
sell merch
1:17:23
you're saying you know a lot
John I
1:17:25
think I've inspected this must
be me I
1:17:27
think so I think he's wrong I
think I
1:17:29
think you're the one that's
saying it
1:17:30
okay well thanks for calling me
out on
1:17:33
it I know the small donation
puts me
1:17:35
past the Earl if it pleases the
peerage
1:17:38
committee I'd like to be known
as Sir
1:17:39
Julian Earl of the South Bay and
1:17:42
autonomous cars sounds good to
me
1:17:45
that sounds good on the naming
rights
1:17:49
for the studio I once found
myself
1:17:50
surrounded by dozens of
accountants and
1:17:52
CPAs from competing accounting
firms at
1:17:56
a dueling piano bar not sir
Jeff's in
1:18:00
addition to throwing bread in a
jar to
1:18:03
get a song played stairway to
heaven is
1:18:05
always a good idea they had a
running
1:18:08
gag at the bar where for a
price the
1:18:10
staff would write on a huge
chalkboard
1:18:13
behind the pianos the phrase of
your
1:18:15
choice it would stay up there
until
1:18:18
somebody paid more to usurp
after some
1:18:23
time and some libations these
warring
1:18:27
firms went back and forth
taunting each
1:18:29
other via the blackboard - to
the tune
1:18:32
of thousands per message
1:18:34
provide this is actually a very
1:18:36
interesting idea I don't know
how it
1:18:37
would work for the studio
provided the
1:18:39
name or phrase made it past the
No
1:18:41
Agenda Ethics Committee I'd
love to see
1:18:44
that name good for one year
unless aserp
1:18:47
by one thousand dollars greater
than the
1:18:50
last naming by the end of the
year it
1:18:53
would be comically large and
then
1:18:54
dropped to a deep discount on
the next
1:18:57
show yeah well I appreciate it
sir
1:19:02
Julian I'm against all of these
ideas I
1:19:04
like the idea of having a bar
oh yeah
1:19:07
bar is fantastic but not a show
with
1:19:10
value for value is a whole
different
1:19:11
thing but I appreciate the
thing no idea
1:19:14
reticle e you're correct yes I
I come
1:19:18
here for different reasons like
this
1:19:19
bidding war idea for this
something to
1:19:21
say something stupid yeah it
would
1:19:23
become clownish yeah and it's
not really
1:19:26
the not really our model but I
1:19:30
appreciate the thinking and
appreciate
1:19:32
the fact that he's supporting
the show
1:19:34
that's what it's about that's
how you
1:19:36
become an associate executive
producer
1:19:37
producer which is a credit
which is
1:19:39
valuable you can use to taunt
people
1:19:43
with to show it excuse me I'm
in I'm in
1:19:46
show business check it out
1:19:48
I'm associate producer associate
1:19:49
executive proofs with a No
Agenda show
1:19:51
episode 1151 or executive
producer we
1:19:54
had two of them today do we
have any
1:19:56
more is that our list no that's
it I
1:19:58
want to thank these folks for
supporting
1:19:59
show 1151 with their producer
ships and
1:20:02
we did have a lousy turnout
overall know
1:20:06
that the show was saved by the
anonymous
1:20:08
lesbian yeah an anonymous in
Virginia
1:20:11
well actually Virginia whoever
that
1:20:14
might be it's gonna be a very
short
1:20:16
second segment today yes we did
very
1:20:19
poorly finish the month of June
as
1:20:21
expected
1:20:22
poorly mm-hmm June swoon yes
all right
1:20:28
disappointing we'll be thanking
more
1:20:30
people $50 and above in our
second
1:20:32
segment anything that comes in
we always
1:20:35
appreciate it love to have these
1:20:36
diehards here and as I said my
heart is
1:20:39
filled thank you very much
anonymous
1:20:41
lesbian for the things you said
in
1:20:42
addition to your donation we'll
be back
1:20:44
here for another show on
Thursday you
1:20:46
can support us by going to
1:20:48
dot org slash and hey you
probably have
1:20:51
enough now to go out there and
hit
1:20:52
everybody in the mouth when it
comes to
1:20:53
what happened during the beach
the
1:20:55
proper guide formula is this we
go out
1:20:58
we're here people in the mouth
1:21:02
[Music]
1:21:07
just death
1:21:09
[Music]
1:21:15
in the we started this show
hello 11
1:21:20
years ago really for ourselves
initially
1:21:22
that was about 20 minutes long
we we
1:21:25
chat back and forth about I was
in
1:21:29
London mainly at the time or I
would
1:21:31
rush no show there was a Skype
call I
1:21:35
think we kind of found that
there was an
1:21:38
interesting thing to talk about
and we
1:21:42
both hold the belief that
pretty much
1:21:44
all media is advertising and as
as we
1:21:48
started to deconstruct news
1:21:49
Deconstructor was taking place
at the
1:21:51
time we had in the European
Union I was
1:21:54
in in London though we were you
know
1:21:56
looking at the Lisbon Treaty
and finding
1:21:58
out that what people were were
were
1:22:01
saying on television about how
great
1:22:03
this would be there's only 11
years ago
1:22:04
and now you can see I guess we
were kind
1:22:07
of right we said hey this is
not gonna
1:22:08
be so great and they're not
telling you
1:22:10
everything and it's not just
about the
1:22:12
same money which has a lot of
problems
1:22:14
by itself which you're not
being told
1:22:16
and then the the true freedom of
1:22:20
movement which you really don't
have but
1:22:21
there's no passports and so I
think we
1:22:24
kind of morphed into before
ourselves
1:22:28
more than anything to provide
mental
1:22:31
tools tools to understand media
and
1:22:35
really stay healthy how to stay
safe
1:22:37
from these concept constant
barrage of
1:22:39
propaganda and just attacks on
you
1:22:43
trying to manipulate you into
believing
1:22:45
things that really aren't true
is that a
1:22:48
fair representation of how we
evolved
1:22:50
it's not just the media does it
the
1:22:53
media minions which the people
that read
1:22:56
and believe the media and of
creating a
1:22:58
huge force a 1984 style force
which
1:23:03
reminds me a 1984 force of the
public
1:23:08
itself pounds on people I mean
you see
1:23:11
in certain areas where that's
where it's
1:23:12
inundated to like the Bay Area
for
1:23:14
example where everybody's hates
Trump
1:23:16
and you wear red hat yes I got
my new
1:23:20
hat I'd mentioned that I guess
- oh I
1:23:22
also got the Maxine Waters
gravel I got
1:23:25
my hat and I got my grab my god
1:23:27
I got a gravel some time ago
yeah I know
1:23:30
I had to go to my p.o box and
oh I see
1:23:33
yeah the grout yeah by the way
what's
1:23:35
interesting about the gavel is
it's got
1:23:38
a thing that you can pound your
little
1:23:41
yes which I'm you which I
founded once
1:23:43
and it dented right away I'd
Mont not
1:23:46
mine I tried to Dennis mine
dented right
1:23:49
away really because my I'd
pounding I'm
1:23:53
thinking what is me what is
this wood
1:23:54
that won't dent no also not
only the
1:23:56
gravel but the two hats are all
made in
1:23:59
China which I think makes the
tats extra
1:24:01
valuable poorly made it is the
perfect
1:24:16
representation of this time
1:24:18
there will be someone who finds
this hat
1:24:21
says make America great again
but says
1:24:26
Keep America great that's the
one the
1:24:27
new oh I didn't get that I got
the to
1:24:29
make America's I didn't get a
keep
1:24:30
America great oh I got to keep
America
1:24:34
anyway so and we really did
this for
1:24:37
ourselves more than anything
certainly
1:24:39
in the beginning you know it
just oh man
1:24:41
look at this ball cut look at
what
1:24:42
they're selling and and it was
and I
1:24:44
think that over times well she
has
1:24:45
grousing yeah but when you hear
now a
1:24:49
thousand eleven hundred
episodes 1151
1:24:53
episodes later you hear the
anonymous
1:24:55
lesbian who has quite standing
and the
1:24:57
artistic community saying
without you
1:25:00
guys I would be going nuts okay
so this
1:25:05
is this is important but
somehow what
1:25:09
we're doing is caught on me
some people
1:25:12
yes we're helping lots of
people but
1:25:15
there's a scheme of things is
some so
1:25:18
when okay so I have a little
1:25:19
presentation to make and it's
really
1:25:22
about advertising because over
the past
1:25:24
few weeks and we've done stuff
you know
1:25:27
we've mentioned brand safety
we've
1:25:29
mentioned what advertising
Porton
1:25:32
advertising is to Silicon
Valley and you
1:25:35
know a large middle of a large
George
1:25:38
Korres portion
1:25:40
of our producing audience is
very is
1:25:44
very disappointed and angry
that we were
1:25:47
gonna tell you that we refuse
to admit
1:25:51
and wake up and open our eyes
to the
1:25:53
fact that it's crazy leftist
douchebags
1:25:56
who are censoring the right and
if we
1:26:00
have a little different take on
it and I
1:26:02
realized that that we need to
go back to
1:26:04
our original roots and explain
and
1:26:07
unveil a few things about
advertising
1:26:10
because ever since the the
banner ad
1:26:15
there's been this which by the
way
1:26:17
became very it became almost
worthless
1:26:22
very quickly yeah it wasn't it
was
1:26:25
quickly in terms of like the
long-term
1:26:28
scheme of things but it was a
very
1:26:30
effective product for probably
two to
1:26:32
three years right right and
then it
1:26:33
became ineffective that's
because people
1:26:35
stop looking at him exactly
because that
1:26:38
is not true brand advertising
it's why
1:26:41
they call a display advertising
and it's
1:26:44
not really what advertising is
in the in
1:26:48
the true sense of the word of
how you
1:26:50
manipulate someone into
purchasing
1:26:53
something or believing in
something
1:26:54
political take a look inside
and this I
1:26:58
don't know if you want me to do
this now
1:26:59
or later
1:26:59
go ahead so the the banner AI
was
1:27:02
largely invented by two guys
out of his
1:27:04
if Davis who went over to work
for CNET
1:27:07
mhm and they had kind of
invented that
1:27:10
banner ad and how it works and
how
1:27:11
they're gonna present it and it
was new
1:27:13
when they when they even they
started it
1:27:15
seen it I was a one of the
early people
1:27:19
had seen it myself and they
were getting
1:27:24
$100 per thousand for at least
two years
1:27:32
so that's just let's just we
got to do
1:27:34
it all here that's the CPM cost
per mil
1:27:36
they always like to have some
French
1:27:37
words in there so they can be
1:27:39
hoity-toity
1:27:40
so you don't understand what I
am means
1:27:42
gods per thousand alright so if
they had
1:27:44
a thousand views a thousand
people saw
1:27:48
that ad which became
controversial soon
1:27:51
thereafter you'd get a hundred
bucks now
1:27:53
yeah but that devolved down to
16 15
1:27:56
cents by the time by the time
started at
1:28:02
$100 yeah so then we got cost
per clicks
1:28:05
when we got click-throughs and
we don't
1:28:07
have to belabor all of these
things
1:28:08
because ultimately brand
advertising
1:28:11
branding that is what it's been
about
1:28:13
since I would say since forever
but
1:28:17
really with television and and
video is
1:28:21
really where brand advertising
became
1:28:23
what real advertising is where
the real
1:28:25
money is and if the advertisers
I've
1:28:29
said in the United States is
God the
1:28:31
advertiser controls everything
controls
1:28:34
what you eat what you drive who
you love
1:28:36
what you love who you vote for
if the
1:28:40
advertiser is God the brand is
Jesus and
1:28:45
this is going to tie into the
1:28:48
platforming but I'm really not
that
1:28:49
interested I want to explain
1:28:52
I want to us to help you
understand true
1:28:55
brand advertising what it's
about
1:28:57
because when you understand
that if
1:28:59
you're pissed off about the
platforming
1:29:01
I'm personally not because I
don't use
1:29:02
the platforms this will show
you how to
1:29:05
stop it and who to go after is
going
1:29:07
after Google and Twitter and
Facebook is
1:29:10
futile and stupid because
they're not
1:29:13
really the problem and let's go
back
1:29:16
before Trump arrived on the
scene in
1:29:19
2013-14
1:29:21
we had big problems with
advertising on
1:29:26
YouTube mainly for one reason
1:29:29
terrorism videos there was no
it wasn't
1:29:32
like political discourse there
was no
1:29:34
one trying to shut down the
right or the
1:29:36
left the problem that Silicon
Valley
1:29:39
companies had was with
terrorism videos
1:29:41
then 2017 now all of a sudden
we have a
1:29:46
real problem because of
Cambridge
1:29:48
analytic and it became about
privacy and
1:29:51
what are these people doing
with your
1:29:52
data you can see all of the
Silicon
1:29:54
Valley company stocks started a
tank it
1:29:57
was a big problem that's
somehow morphed
1:29:59
into its Trump Trump is toxic
everything
1:30:04
Trump has got to go
1:30:06
I want to take us to the core
of how and
1:30:10
this is biology how successful
brands
1:30:15
are successful with their
messaging and
1:30:19
I'm gonna use Apple as an
example and
1:30:22
the old Apple as you'll see in
a moment
1:30:24
what is the difference between
a brand
1:30:27
like Apple computer company and
an any
1:30:30
other brand and there's this
guy called
1:30:32
Simon cynics and he's a
motivational
1:30:35
speakers written books on the
subject
1:30:37
but he really takes the core
essence
1:30:39
that is only understood by a
few by few
1:30:41
legends in the advertising
business how
1:30:43
great brand advertising works
and he's
1:30:46
going to do this he's actually
gonna use
1:30:48
Apple as an example and the
three
1:30:50
questions for any company or
any any
1:30:53
entity really is why how and
what listen
1:30:57
to this and then be able to
apply this
1:30:59
to what's happening today
1:31:00
why is Apple so innovative year
after
1:31:04
year after year after year
they're more
1:31:06
innovative than all their
competition
1:31:08
and yet they're just a computer
company
1:31:10
by the way this is a 10 year
old TED
1:31:12
talk the audio shit clears up a
little
1:31:14
bit later on but it's it's
enough to
1:31:16
understand what's going on
there just
1:31:18
like everyone else they have
the same
1:31:20
access to the same talent the
same
1:31:22
agencies the same consultants
the same
1:31:24
media then why is it that they
seem to
1:31:26
have something different as it
turns out
1:31:29
there's a pattern as it turns
out all
1:31:32
the great and inspiring leaders
and
1:31:34
organizations in the world
whether it's
1:31:36
Apple or Martin Luther King or
the
1:31:37
Wright brothers they all think
act and
1:31:39
communicate the exact same way
and it's
1:31:43
the complete opposite to
everyone else I
1:31:45
call it the Golden Circle why
how what
1:31:49
this little idea explains why
some
1:31:53
organizations and some leaders
are able
1:31:54
to inspire where others aren't
let me
1:31:57
define the terms really quickly
every
1:31:59
single person every single
organization
1:32:01
on the planet knows what they
do 100
1:32:04
percent some know how they do
it when
1:32:07
you call it you're
differentiating value
1:32:08
proposition or your proprietary
process
1:32:10
or your USP but very very few
people or
1:32:13
organizations know why they do
what they
1:32:16
do
1:32:17
and by Y I don't mean to make a
profit
1:32:18
that's a result it's always a
result by
1:32:21
Y I mean what's your purpose
what's your
1:32:23
cause what's your belief why
does your
1:32:26
organization exist if Apple
were like
1:32:30
everyone else a marketing
message from
1:32:33
them might sound like this we
make great
1:32:36
computers they're beautifully
designed
1:32:38
simple to use and user friendly
wanna
1:32:42
buy one and that's how most of
us
1:32:46
communicate that's how most
marketing is
1:32:48
done the time of sales done and
that's
1:32:49
how most of us communicate
1:32:49
interpersonally we say what we
do we say
1:32:52
how we're different or how we
better and
1:32:54
we expect some sort of behavior
or
1:32:55
purchase of both or something
like that
1:32:57
here's how Apple actually
communicates
1:33:01
everything we do we believe in
1:33:04
challenging the status quo we
believe in
1:33:07
thinking differently the way we
1:33:10
challenge the status quo is by
making
1:33:12
our products beautifully
designed simple
1:33:14
to use and user friendly we
just happen
1:33:17
to make great computers wanna
buy one
1:33:20
totally different right you
ready to buy
1:33:22
a computer from me all I did
was reverse
1:33:24
the order of the information
what it
1:33:26
proves to us is that people
don't buy
1:33:28
what you do people buy why you
do it
1:33:30
people don't buy what you do
they buy
1:33:31
why you do it
1:33:32
this explains why every single
person in
1:33:35
this room is perfectly
comfortable
1:33:38
buying a computer from Apple
but we're
1:33:40
also perfectly comfortable
buying an mp3
1:33:42
player from Apple or a phone
from Apple
1:33:44
or a DVR from that ball but as
I said
1:33:47
before Apple is just a computer
company
1:33:49
there's nothing that
distinguishes them
1:33:51
structurally from any of their
1:33:52
competitors their competitors
are all
1:33:54
equally qualified to make all
of these
1:33:55
products in fact they tried
Dell came
1:33:58
out with mp3 players and PDAs
and they
1:34:02
make great quality products and
they can
1:34:03
make perfectly well design
products and
1:34:06
nobody bought one in fact
talking about
1:34:08
it now we can't even imagine
buying an
1:34:10
mp3 player from Dell why would
you buy
1:34:11
an mp3 player from a computer
company
1:34:13
but we do it every day people
don't buy
1:34:16
what you do they buy why you do
it the
1:34:18
goal is not to do business with
anybody
1:34:21
with everybody who needs what
you have
1:34:23
the goal is to do business with
people
1:34:25
who believe what you believe
1:34:27
the goal is to do business with
people
1:34:30
who believe what you believe
and this
1:34:33
has been proven many many times
that
1:34:36
this works and the troll room
is very
1:34:38
interesting by the way a lot of
people
1:34:39
really know what they're
talking about
1:34:41
and so they're all making troll
D jokes
1:34:43
let me tell you so this is this
can
1:34:47
really come down to a mission
statement
1:34:48
so if we look at a trolli car
the
1:34:51
mission statement of Apple when
Steve
1:34:53
Jobs were still alive was this
to make a
1:34:56
contribution to the world by
making
1:34:58
tools for the mind that advanced
1:35:00
humankind
1:35:02
that was their mission
statement here's
1:35:06
apples mission statement today
and that
1:35:09
may kind of show you why people
are
1:35:10
walking away from the brand I
was a
1:35:13
Apple believer I never sat I
never slept
1:35:16
in line for an iPhone but I got
one
1:35:18
pretty quick and I was a Mac
fanboy and
1:35:21
that somehow that started to go
away in
1:35:24
and even though the products
has never
1:35:27
been fantastically perfect
they've
1:35:29
always had flaws I got sick and
tired of
1:35:31
it
1:35:31
here is Apple's mission
statement today
1:35:33
as of 2019 where'd you get it
right from
1:35:36
their website okay Apple
designs Mac's
1:35:39
the best personal computers in
the world
1:35:41
along with OSX I life I work and
1:35:44
professional software Apple
leaves the
1:35:46
digital music revolution with
its iPods
1:35:48
and iTunes online store Apple
has
1:35:50
reinvented the mobile phone
with this
1:35:52
revolutionary iPhone and app
store and
1:35:54
is defining the future of
mobile media
1:35:56
and computing devices with iPad
yeah
1:36:00
that's Nikhil not inspirational
and I
1:36:04
think to say the least
1:36:06
let's look at Google's mission
statement
1:36:10
Google's and people say don't
be evil
1:36:13
now that wasn't their mission
statement
1:36:15
their mission statement still
is to
1:36:17
organize the world's
information and
1:36:19
make it universally acceptable
and
1:36:21
useful yeah not all that great
at
1:36:25
Facebook in early 2017 the
Facebook
1:36:29
corporate mission was to give
people the
1:36:32
power to share and make the
world more
1:36:34
open and connected that's
changed
1:36:38
they've changed the mission
statement it
1:36:39
is now to give people the power
to build
1:36:42
community and bring the world
closer
1:36:44
together so they've removed the
open
1:36:48
part and the connected and so
you know
1:36:50
they've changed that Twitter is
the one
1:36:53
that really got me Twitter's
original
1:36:56
mission statement to give
everyone the
1:36:58
power to create and share ideas
and
1:37:01
information instantly without
barriers
1:37:04
do you think there's a problem
with what
1:37:07
Twitter originally sold to us
and what
1:37:09
it is right now
1:37:10
yeah because clearly they have
barriers
1:37:13
in fact they've changed their
1:37:14
statement their mission
statement is now
1:37:17
reach the largest daily
audience in the
1:37:20
world by connecting everyone to
their
1:37:23
world via our information
sharing and
1:37:26
distribution platform products
and be
1:37:28
one of the top revenue
generating
1:37:31
internet companies in the world
1:37:33
however a tional how
inspirational is
1:37:37
that huh let me give you an
example of
1:37:39
an inspirational message versus
one
1:37:42
that's not inspirational
inspirational
1:37:44
make America great again not
1:37:47
inspirational I'm with her this
should
1:37:52
have light bulbs going off in in
1:37:54
people's heads
1:37:55
so brands want to be
inspirational they
1:38:03
want to be a part of a movement
they
1:38:05
want to have people who believe
in them
1:38:07
some brands most actually don't
really
1:38:11
have that message anymore if
they ever
1:38:13
had it and so they go and look
for
1:38:15
inspiration such as during
Pride Month I
1:38:17
mean has Budweiser ever had some
1:38:20
inspirational message about
LGBTQ is
1:38:25
their products has it ever been
1:38:27
inspirational for sexuality no
so
1:38:31
they've jumped on board
everyone's on
1:38:34
board
1:38:35
Oh IKEA Oh Kmart Walmart
everybody has
1:38:39
pride flags is completely
disingenuous
1:38:42
and brands started walking away
from
1:38:47
anything Trump the silence is
deafening
1:38:51
major brands are avoiding Trump
even as
1:38:54
he promotes them from the White
House
1:38:56
you recall he had a chick-fil-a
and
1:38:58
Burger King and and McDonald's
for the
1:39:02
what team was it that came to
visit him
1:39:04
John I forgot the football team
yeah
1:39:08
they were going to Super Bowl
it be the
1:39:10
Patriots exactly so here's a
bit from
1:39:15
marketing week
1:39:17
that explains why brands these
days are
1:39:21
taking a political stand brands
1:39:25
advertisers not Silicon Valley
companies
1:39:27
brands are taking political
stands there
1:39:30
is absolutely an appetite for
brands to
1:39:33
have a point of view on social
issues
1:39:35
but it is a really dangerous
area there
1:39:39
is more consumers who are
likely to be
1:39:41
turned off by the idea or to be
cynical
1:39:46
towards the idea than those who
are
1:39:48
actually going to embrace it
and that
1:39:50
finding the right social issue
to really
1:39:53
match with your consumer group
and be
1:39:56
aware of the negative impacts
that it's
1:39:57
going to have is going to be
key so you
1:40:00
see this is where the brands
are going
1:40:01
they're trying to find things
where
1:40:04
their people are and then it's
like
1:40:06
identity politics only it's for
brands
1:40:09
who like to advertise towards
these
1:40:11
groups but they're not really
1:40:12
inspirational that that is no
longer
1:40:14
part of the equation and this
and this
1:40:17
is why on television let's just
be very
1:40:19
clear this is not just on the
internet
1:40:21
on television brands have run
away from
1:40:24
of Fox News
1:40:26
they've run away from Sean
Hannity from
1:40:28
Laura Ingraham from Tucker
Carlson and
1:40:31
these shows will have to go
away if
1:40:34
advertisers continue to stay
away and to
1:40:37
show you how this works we had
this
1:40:40
happen just just the two days
ago Megan
1:40:43
Rapinoe of Team USA you know
I'm a big
1:40:46
fan of the women's soccer and
you've
1:40:49
probably seen this little video
where
1:40:51
she's asked about you know the
success
1:40:52
they have and now in the semi
final so
1:40:54
are the Dutch girls and you
know they
1:40:56
probably go to the White House
1:41:01
I'm doing the fucking white ass
1:41:03
no you're not going the White
House
1:41:05
we're not gonna be invited
you're not
1:41:07
gonna be invited I doubt it
1:41:09
so not going to the fucking
White House
1:41:12
everyone's like oh she's great
she
1:41:13
fucked Rob not going to the
fucking
1:41:15
White House why is she saying
this it's
1:41:18
completely on brand for her
what is she
1:41:22
wearing she's wearing a Nike
swoosh
1:41:24
she's wearing a Nike uniform
she's the
1:41:26
whole team is sponsored by Nike
Nike
1:41:28
hates Trump Nike sponsored Colin
1:41:32
Kaepernick so this is on brand
this is
1:41:36
advertising it may not even be
her
1:41:38
personal feeling about the
topic but
1:41:41
it's on brand from her sponsor
that is
1:41:44
what she is supposed to say she
could
1:41:46
never say anything else with
that Nike
1:41:48
logo just to understand in
digital
1:41:53
advertising in the United
States is also
1:41:57
true with the basketball teams
1:41:58
absolutely then feel free to
jump in
1:42:00
wherever you have something to
one
1:42:03
hundred and seven billion
dollars were
1:42:05
spent on digital advertising in
2018
1:42:08
that is an unbelievable amount
of money
1:42:12
and a huge majority of that
some say up
1:42:18
to 90 billion is is really
going to two
1:42:21
or three companies this is
surpassed
1:42:23
television advertising
television
1:42:25
advertising is stuck somewhere
about 60
1:42:28
or 70 a billion dollars this
year or
1:42:31
2020 according to The Wall
Street
1:42:33
Journal ten billion dollars
will be
1:42:37
spent on political advertising
in the
1:42:40
billion number flies around a
lot but
1:42:43
that has an incredible amount
of money
1:42:45
so now let's get into the
issues that
1:42:48
these brand companies have with
1:42:50
right-wing conservative talk
because
1:42:52
that's really what we're
talking about
1:42:54
these are the people being deep
1:42:55
platforms thrown off of Twitter
YouTube
1:42:58
etc demonetized I know that
we've
1:43:01
asserted and you know the the
mantra is
1:43:03
this is about brand advertising
they
1:43:06
don't want anything that is
toxic Trump
1:43:08
and conservatism has become
toxic that's
1:43:11
the exact
1:43:11
right there Nike and it's not
an online
1:43:14
example but it goes for all
brand
1:43:16
advertising this is from a
webinar which
1:43:20
I watched for it a lot of work
on this
1:43:21
delivering trust in advertising
online
1:43:25
specifically brand safety
1:43:27
it's a webinar so it's not that
dynamic
1:43:29
but the information is good
every brand
1:43:30
has her own unique positioning
their own
1:43:32
target audience their own set
of brand
1:43:34
values and and really the brand
safety
1:43:37
protections that they enable
should be
1:43:39
reflective of all of that so
while we
1:43:43
certainly can come up with you
know sort
1:43:45
of a generic definition of
brand safety
1:43:48
as a practice you know what's
really
1:43:50
critical is that every company
address
1:43:53
how they're going to implement
1:43:55
protection that's in line you
know with
1:43:58
their own products and
positioning brand
1:44:00
safety can absolutely have a
bottom line
1:44:02
impact there's a 2017 report
that says
1:44:07
85% of brand marketers are
making a
1:44:12
priority the improvement of
their brand
1:44:15
safety positioning in digital
media and
1:44:18
why are they doing this this
isn't
1:44:20
simply an issue about the
performance of
1:44:25
you know their ad spend this is
this is
1:44:28
a much broader issue companies
spend
1:44:31
substantially on ensuring that
consumers
1:44:34
have a positive experience
across all
1:44:38
their interactions with the
brand they
1:44:40
spend it on products and
packaging they
1:44:43
spend it on on service and
support and
1:44:45
they spend it on you know even
1:44:47
potentially the causes or
charities that
1:44:50
they sponsor and you know every
time
1:44:54
there's a poor online ad
placement that
1:44:57
is not aligned with the brand
1:44:59
positioning yes
1:45:01
absolutely it wastes part of
the media
1:45:04
spend but it also the images at
that
1:45:08
brand equity that they're
trying to
1:45:09
build up through their entire
product
1:45:12
and service portfolio and this
is really
1:45:14
why we see and why that study
shows that
1:45:17
you know six out of seven brand
1:45:19
marketers have prioritized the
1:45:22
improvement of
1:45:23
and safety in their digital ask
the
1:45:26
statistics that we see here are
that the
1:45:30
threat of brand safety presents
a threat
1:45:34
to digital ad budgets so
whether you're
1:45:36
a content creating publisher
whether
1:45:39
you're an ad delivery platform
whether
1:45:41
you're media buying agency all
of these
1:45:44
participants in the digital
ecosystem
1:45:46
are you know tied to the
performance of
1:45:50
digital ad budgets and and why
every
1:45:52
participant in the digital
ecosystem has
1:45:55
to pay attention to and help
facilitate
1:45:58
effective brand safety
protection now
1:46:01
you understand why it's a big
deal
1:46:02
because there's a hundred
billion
1:46:05
dollars a year and if there's a
fuckup
1:46:09
with something that does not
give the
1:46:12
brand a good positive
experience or if
1:46:14
there's a Mitch mismatch it
takes out
1:46:17
directly away from the budget
so I'm not
1:46:19
saying it this is the
advertising
1:46:21
industry who lies use a lot of
buzzwords
1:46:23
but it's true so we had the big
freakout
1:46:27
in 2017 YouTube hit with
another ad
1:46:29
scandal Procter & Gamble
leaving the
1:46:31
platform giant advertiser
Unilever
1:46:34
threatens to pull its ads from
Facebook
1:46:36
and Google over toxic content
1:46:38
advertisers fleeing YouTube to
avoid
1:46:40
directly funding creators of
hate
1:46:43
YouTube struggles with
advertiser vs.
1:46:46
conservative voices conflicts
big tech
1:46:50
helps advertisers avoid unvetted
1:46:52
user-generated content they
they were
1:46:54
freaking out billions of
dollars were
1:46:57
leaving Silicon Valley
platforms so they
1:47:00
had only one way to go they had
to
1:47:03
immediately stop anything that
is toxic
1:47:07
to the brand's so 2019 we had
the big
1:47:10
con festival it's where all the
1:47:13
advertisers go the Lions
festival and
1:47:15
they came up with their group
and they
1:47:17
canned the the the main theme
of 2019
1:47:21
was brand safety I have a
couple Clips
1:47:24
here this is the the CEO of WPP
the
1:47:29
largest advertising entity in
the world
1:47:31
what are their what are their
annual
1:47:33
Billings John they've got to be
50
1:47:34
billion at the
1:47:35
but they bought everybody the
fifty
1:47:37
billion dollars at least and
they are in
1:47:39
charge of spending it in
Silicon Valley
1:47:42
his name is Ammar Creed and
we're going
1:47:45
to listen to him speaking about
brand
1:47:48
safety and his concerns one of
the
1:47:50
things that you're here
discussing at
1:47:53
the liens is this new alliance
focus on
1:47:55
brand safety why is this so
important
1:47:58
for you and for your client but
it's
1:48:00
critical for our clients you
know when I
1:48:02
talk to our clients they're
really
1:48:03
concerned about you know the
platforms
1:48:04
of which their messages are
received
1:48:06
they want them to be in brand
safe
1:48:07
platforms they're responsible
so we're
1:48:10
really working with you know
Google
1:48:11
Facebook Twitter people 16
advertisers
1:48:15
together all of the major
holding
1:48:17
companies we launched it this
morning at
1:48:19
the WP beach and it's really an
1:48:20
initiative to bring those people
1:48:21
together it's a collective
action to
1:48:24
make sure the platforms are
safe places
1:48:26
for our clients to reach their
consumers
1:48:29
lay out for me what this brand
safety
1:48:32
issue has done to advertisers
on YouTube
1:48:35
and Facebook are these no longer
1:48:36
considered safe platforms for
brands
1:48:39
well I think you know the first
issue
1:48:41
was are our clients messages
appearing
1:48:43
alongside content that they
shouldn't be
1:48:45
like in clients are very clear
that you
1:48:47
know they don't want that to
happen and
1:48:48
I think the platforms are done
you know
1:48:50
not a bad job at taking down
you know
1:48:52
the most of the sort of content
that
1:48:54
concerns and they probably made
you know
1:48:56
better progress with terrorists
leaked
1:48:59
images and else but they've
made good
1:49:00
progress on that I think what
1:49:02
consequence over the next is
making sure
1:49:03
the problems are overall as
safe not
1:49:05
just where their content is but
all of
1:49:07
the content so I think it's
really
1:49:10
industry initiative that we
need to push
1:49:12
forward much harder yes they
need to
1:49:14
push it forward much harder and
they
1:49:16
push very hard because these
guys own
1:49:19
Silicon Valley with a lot of
money well
1:49:22
that we have robust discussions
with
1:49:23
Facebook you know we spend
eight billion
1:49:25
dollars across Google and face
that we
1:49:27
spend eight billion dollars
across
1:49:29
Google and Facebook per year one
1:49:32
advertising conglomerate
there's another
1:49:34
one called Omnicom just a
little bit
1:49:35
smaller but the same size this
guy owns
1:49:38
these bitches well we have
robust
1:49:40
discussions with Facebook you
know we
1:49:41
spend 8 billion dollars across
Google
1:49:43
and Facebook platforms we have
a robust
1:49:45
discussions with them and we
have a you
1:49:46
know at backwards and forwards
on what
1:49:48
they need to do I think even
they would
1:49:49
say they haven't done enough
you know
1:49:51
when I listened to Sheryl
Sandberg and
1:49:53
I'm talking to her
1:49:54
on Thursday here in Kerr NorCal
and even
1:49:56
I think they would admit that
they need
1:49:58
to do more I think there's a
general
1:49:59
acceptance and I think there's
a degree
1:50:01
of frustration that we're in
this
1:50:03
position but a desire to make
progress
1:50:05
what are the other platforms
that you
1:50:08
think could be powerful third
players so
1:50:11
that digital duopoly is it
Amazon is it
1:50:13
Snap is it Twitter who is the
rising
1:50:15
force that we should be paying
attention
1:50:16
to I think you know the Alibaba
is now
1:50:19
the third largest media
platform right
1:50:20
so we need to look you know
China to
1:50:22
find you know a third largest
digital
1:50:24
media platform I certainly
think the
1:50:26
Amazon and if the coasting to
commerce
1:50:28
makes it a very powerful
platform my
1:50:30
sense here is that snap I don't
know
1:50:33
maybe my feeling of snap is
coming back
1:50:35
two things one Amazon is a is a
major
1:50:38
major competitor for the
advertising
1:50:40
based Silicon Valley platforms
because
1:50:43
Amazon has the direct
connection to
1:50:45
sales and we've talked about
them and
1:50:48
their advertising capability
they track
1:50:50
more people then then Facebook
and
1:50:52
Twitter combined they're not at
Google's
1:50:54
level but they're getting damn
close and
1:50:56
they have the talking tube
you'll
1:50:58
remember so they have a lot of
data
1:51:00
about people and the platforms
are
1:51:02
worried about Amazon why is
snapchat
1:51:05
wise snap interesting because
the
1:51:07
messages are deleted that's why
there's
1:51:09
nothing that hangs around that
can be
1:51:11
seen as something bad for the
brand we
1:51:13
couldn't see it brand guide the
message
1:51:15
is Auto deleted I don't know
where it
1:51:17
went feline
1:51:18
this snapped back there's a lot
more
1:51:20
confidence in the organization
and I
1:51:22
think they're getting more
traction with
1:51:24
their target audience clearly
the reach
1:51:25
is not as big as Facebook and
Google but
1:51:28
there are you know new players
coming
1:51:30
out and I think you have to be
really
1:51:31
interested to see what happens
from the
1:51:33
east you know bite dance a
Chinese
1:51:34
company that owned tik-tok here
in can
1:51:37
you know in a big way for the
first time
1:51:39
so this continued innovation I
think the
1:51:41
elation of all industries is
that
1:51:42
competition you know does drive
1:51:44
innovation so I think the more
1:51:46
competition there is the better
it will
1:51:48
be in the more diversity of you
I mean
1:51:50
that's clearly a good thing so
they have
1:51:52
this they put together this big
alliance
1:51:54
they created a group where they
now talk
1:51:59
about everything they need and
they've
1:52:00
created something called the
brand
1:52:03
safety floor framework
advertising
1:52:08
assurance it's a PDF I have it
in the
1:52:10
show notes and these are the
things that
1:52:12
are not possible for them to
advertise
1:52:15
in or around and I will go
straight to
1:52:18
hate speech and acts of
aggression
1:52:20
because they have adult and
explicit
1:52:23
sexual content arms and
ammunition let
1:52:25
me do that one since we're some
Second
1:52:27
Amendment believers here
promotion and
1:52:29
advocacy of sales of illegal
arms rifles
1:52:31
and handguns instructive
content on how
1:52:34
to obtain make distribute or
use illegal
1:52:36
arms glamorization of arms for
purpose
1:52:40
to harm others use of illegal
arms and
1:52:43
unregulated environments crimes
crime
1:52:46
and harmful acts to individuals
and
1:52:48
society and human rights
violations so
1:52:52
you cannot have any content on
your
1:52:54
platform that has graphic
promotion
1:52:56
advocacy and depiction of
willful harm
1:52:58
actual unlawful active criminal
activity
1:53:01
which we know is is available
everywhere
1:53:05
pace speech and acts of
aggression
1:53:07
unlawful acts of aggression
based on
1:53:09
race nationality ethnicity
religious
1:53:13
affiliation gender or sexual
image or
1:53:16
preference behavior or
commentary that
1:53:19
incite such hateful acts
including
1:53:21
bullying this is no longer
accepted for
1:53:24
the eight billion dollars this
guy
1:53:26
spends in Silicon Valley
1:53:29
promotion and advocacy of
tobacco and
1:53:32
e-cigarettes vaping and alcohol
used to
1:53:35
minors they you gotta wonder
about why
1:53:38
some of this legislation was
coming up
1:53:40
about getting rid of it and
then finally
1:53:42
my favorite sensitive social
issues
1:53:44
slash violations of human
rights dis
1:53:49
disrespectful and harmful
treatment of
1:53:51
sensitive social topics examples
1:53:54
abortion extreme political
positions
1:53:58
acts language and gestures
deemed
1:54:01
illegal not otherwise outlined
in this
1:54:03
framework such as harm to self
or animal
1:54:06
cruelty targeted harassment of
1:54:08
individuals and groups that's
right from
1:54:11
Twitter's TOS targeted
harassment of
1:54:13
individuals and groups anything
anything
1:54:17
like this and the brand walks
away so
1:54:20
when you think that Silicon
Valley are
1:54:23
filled with a bunch of leftist
1:54:25
douchebags who just want the
silence
1:54:27
conservative voices yes of
course they
1:54:30
are of course now that it's
handy for
1:54:32
them they're leftist douchebags
I think
1:54:35
John we could both say that
these people
1:54:36
were more right-wing capitalist
fuckwads
1:54:38
before all that before Obama
they were
1:54:41
real I mean there were hippies
but they
1:54:44
were all about money and world
1:54:45
capitalism and all that went
out the
1:54:47
door there were libertarian
right-wing
1:54:50
libertarian okay so on Atlas
Shrugged
1:54:58
exactly thank you very much
Atlas
1:55:01
Shrugged ayan Rand
1:55:02
exactly and that was of
2007-2008 and
1:55:07
and and that changed now
1:55:10
has it well that yeah I think
only for
1:55:15
this one reason and you look at
Media
1:55:16
Matters and little groups
really like
1:55:18
sleeping giants they are the
ones that
1:55:22
made this connection they are
out there
1:55:24
every single day messaging big
brands
1:55:27
and saying oh do you know that
this
1:55:30
brand is advertising on blah
blah blah
1:55:33
who's a Nazi right-wing
alt-right fake
1:55:36
news bah bah bah and the
brand's all
1:55:38
immediately go I will take it
off
1:55:42
yeah of course it's that's back
at this
1:55:45
this thesis up I mean I'm not
gonna
1:55:47
argue with you I personally I
don't
1:55:49
think the laundry list of bad
things is
1:55:50
a bad thing to be honest about
if I was
1:55:53
an advertiser I don't want my
1:55:55
advertising showing up again
you know
1:55:57
against some certain kinds of
people
1:55:58
that are bitching and moaning
about
1:56:00
whatever but this really goes
back a
1:56:04
couple of steps because if you
go back
1:56:06
to the 60s and 70s it was the
right-wing
1:56:09
pressure groups these family
operations
1:56:12
in this especially in the 70s
that were
1:56:15
pressuring advertisers to get
away from
1:56:18
certain messages that were
left-wing and
1:56:21
it was Media Matters and the
others who
1:56:23
took the cue from the
right-wingers on
1:56:26
how to do it and they just do
it better
1:56:29
yeah so so else that means
you're making
1:56:32
my point for me it doesn't
matter who's
1:56:34
doing it in your point and what
that
1:56:36
means is that which I think you
would
1:56:38
agree with if the left-wing
took the cue
1:56:42
from the right-wing and did it
better
1:56:44
that means the right-wing can
up they're
1:56:47
gay exactly and do it better
than the
1:56:50
left-wing and Media Matters and
really
1:56:52
take it to another level and
and quash
1:56:55
what's been going on currently
which is
1:56:58
what looks like a purge of
people like
1:57:01
Paul Watson and you know the
other
1:57:04
people who are actually to me
humorists
1:57:06
in their cynicism but yeah yeah
this is
1:57:11
this is a real interesting
situation and
1:57:13
by the end it also backs up
your thesis
1:57:16
the fact that this is the
reason why
1:57:18
this show is done the way it's
done yes
1:57:22
even though we don't mean
because I look
1:57:23
at those money numbers too and
I say you
1:57:25
know if the two of us put
together some
1:57:27
operation that was just
designed to
1:57:30
exploit that money that that
money flow
1:57:33
without we wouldn't be able to
do
1:57:35
anything we're doing on this
show now
1:57:37
none of it so but we could do
something
1:57:39
that would work and it would be
could
1:57:42
exploit the money flowing
especially
1:57:44
since you've already we already
worked
1:57:45
on that or at me vo and and
you've seen
1:57:48
how people have done a better
job of it
1:57:50
with different approaches it
could be
1:57:52
done but again nothing that
we're
1:57:54
talking about on this show
1:57:55
could ever be done and that's
why we
1:57:58
need the support of our
listeners a
1:58:00
little too early on the pitch I
was
1:58:02
getting there so the point is
if you
1:58:12
need to go after the big brands
they
1:58:15
will buckle they're incredibly
afraid
1:58:17
but there is no organization or
this
1:58:20
organization everyone's
organizing
1:58:22
around you know Tim Poole yeah
Dave Tim
1:58:24
Poole Tim Kass
1:58:26
if you went out and said hey
you know
1:58:28
Gillette the best a man can get
which
1:58:31
they changed their slogan to
the best a
1:58:34
man can be it was a failure it
was a
1:58:37
failure their sales went down
after that
1:58:41
if Tim pool or you know and
anyone else
1:58:43
who you know I don't know a
stefan
1:58:46
molyneux all these guys they
all got
1:58:48
together and said you know what
Gillette
1:58:49
screw you I'm going with
Harry's razor
1:58:52
which I am boycotting Gillette
you want
1:58:55
to see how fast things happen
get your
1:58:58
voice out there you want to see
people
1:58:59
being brought back onto the
platform
1:59:01
thank you for bringing that up
John it
1:59:03
doesn't matter if it's left or
right
1:59:05
because when it was the right
doing it
1:59:07
they did the same thing they're
chicken
1:59:08
shit they are so worried about
their
1:59:10
perceived brand we want people
to
1:59:12
believe in us but people don't
believe
1:59:14
in them anymore because they
don't have
1:59:17
that brand why anymore that
just its
1:59:19
identity politics for
advertising
1:59:21
so no absolutely no surprise
that during
1:59:25
Pride Month the month of June
we have
1:59:28
massive D platforming because of
1:59:31
discourse over gender over sex
over
1:59:34
homosexuality people having
1:59:36
conversations left right angry
oh my god
1:59:39
we have all our money in the
pride flag
1:59:41
we got it anyone who's saying
anything
1:59:42
horrible steven crowder go away
do you
1:59:44
start to see the picture you've
got to
1:59:47
go after the advertisers and
not after
1:59:49
these platforms you're wasting
your time
1:59:51
so then people say well what
about
1:59:53
reddit what about the Donald
what iboga
1:59:56
well isn't it interesting that
reddit in
2:00:00
May hired a former Twitter and
Google
2:00:04
advertising executive to build
their
2:00:07
brand advertising
2:00:09
business her name is Marianne
2:00:12
Beliveau and she is here being
2:00:15
interviewed with Reddit chief
operating
2:00:17
officer Jen Wang and they have
a unique
2:00:20
proposition to brands this is
very
2:00:22
interesting they have something
that no
2:00:24
one else has Twitter and
YouTube and
2:00:27
Google and and Facebook walls
got a I AI
2:00:30
will stop all the bad talk well
we know
2:00:32
that's failing I read it has a
different
2:00:34
idea Mary Ann your role in
regards to
2:00:37
brand sponsorships what's gonna
be the
2:00:39
strategy there for reddit in
regards to
2:00:42
brand sponsorships yeah so I
think the
2:00:44
strategy and in regard to brand
2:00:45
sponsorships is really about
making sure
2:00:47
that we're tapping into
authentic
2:00:49
communities in a way that seems
real and
2:00:52
okay to them right so your
consumers
2:00:54
everybody needs something and
you just
2:00:56
want to make sure that we're
getting the
2:00:59
affinities correct in terms of
reaching
2:01:01
people you had a moment where
they're
2:01:02
receptive to it and in a way
that feels
2:01:05
authentic and I think it's a
really good
2:01:07
point right so I think we work
with
2:01:08
brands to try to be creative
and bring
2:01:10
the magic in the places that it
matters
2:01:12
well I'm glad you bring that up
because
2:01:14
then you know reddit is a place
for a
2:01:16
wide swath of different
personalities
2:01:19
opinions perspectives all of
that you
2:01:21
know you know brands are very
risk
2:01:23
adverse so how do you make
reddit a
2:01:25
welcoming environment when we
know that
2:01:28
it's no that's the beat to the
ethos of
2:01:29
what reddit is all right so
let's just
2:01:31
stop there because what you're
hearing
2:01:33
here is is real life billions
of dollars
2:01:36
worth of business and how
that's going
2:01:39
to be handled so you need a lot
of the
2:01:40
of the brand it has to connect
to the
2:01:42
people so this is the
inspirational part
2:01:45
of the brand it has to be the
right
2:01:47
people so it's in the community
that's
2:01:49
bullshit
2:01:50
how they get as much money and
as
2:01:51
possible well we can show them
a better
2:01:53
way yeah it's a great question
so it's a
2:01:55
great question too we start
with the
2:01:57
thinking question brands should
be equal
2:02:00
members in the community and
when you're
2:02:02
a member in a community it
means that
2:02:04
you have to observe the values
mores and
2:02:07
rules set by the community just
like
2:02:09
everybody else
2:02:10
so when brands understand that
and they
2:02:13
that's their starting place I
already
2:02:15
start off a great search yeah
just
2:02:17
listen to it just shut up with
the
2:02:18
community
2:02:19
and that's something that we we
help
2:02:21
brands understand but then on
top of
2:02:23
that we have a whole set of
things that
2:02:27
we do that are very unique to
us in
2:02:28
terms of moderation right so at
the base
2:02:30
level we have policy that
ensures that
2:02:32
we our anti evil team is able
to monitor
2:02:35
abuse and apply those anti evil
teams
2:02:39
those rules and policies the
thing
2:02:41
that's really unique about
reddit is
2:02:43
that second layer of human
moderation so
2:02:45
on unlike other platforms we
have a
2:02:48
system where every single
community so
2:02:50
over a hundred and fifty
thousand
2:02:52
communities have five 250 human
2:02:55
moderators who set rules to
keep the
2:02:58
conversation on top all of those
2:02:59
communities is where all of our
content
2:03:01
comes from right so nothing
makes it
2:03:03
into the front page or the feed
that
2:03:06
isn't already moderated by the
community
2:03:09
the second is we have an upvote
and
2:03:11
downvote system that's really
powerful
2:03:13
to have both so that users can
actually
2:03:16
weigh in on what is appropriate
content
2:03:19
and what's good content and
there it is
2:03:21
this is a whole new
presentation and
2:03:23
they're saying we have human
moderators
2:03:26
we have 15 to 50 moderators
before
2:03:30
anything surface is up high
enough for
2:03:32
your brand to be tainted by it
don't
2:03:34
worry you're safe with us
2:03:35
we got this lady over here she
knows the
2:03:37
inside workings of Twitter and
Google
2:03:39
we've figured it out we've
tackled it
2:03:42
they hired 60 people 6-0 60
people in
2:03:45
New York for brand advertising
and then
2:03:48
they quarantine the Donald well
of
2:03:52
course they do they're pitching
this to
2:03:54
advertisers what are you doing
about all
2:03:56
that horrible discourse all
these all
2:03:58
right people on the Donald
subreddit
2:04:00
we've quarantined that so if
you want to
2:04:04
be effective and if you are
worried
2:04:07
about free speech and you
really feel
2:04:09
you need to use these platforms
which
2:04:10
I'm against and you need to go
after the
2:04:13
advertisers can stop bitching
and
2:04:18
moaning about censoring go
after the
2:04:20
advertisers go for the jugular
where the
2:04:22
money is
2:04:24
this is where we could get into
our
2:04:26
pitch Oh the final thing I
wanted to say
2:04:28
I got a notice where we could
this is
2:04:30
another exit strategy we could
start
2:04:32
that group no interesting what
what
2:04:37
group the the the anti brand
group the
2:04:40
Media Matters greed be a media
matters
2:04:42
at No Agenda matters well I
just wanted
2:04:47
to mention you know that
there's a
2:04:49
Google of YouTube specifically
is having
2:04:52
issues where their
recommendation so
2:04:53
that they need to figure out
you know
2:04:55
how do we recommend stuff to
people that
2:04:58
is the right stuff and is not
you know
2:05:00
putting our our advertising
business in
2:05:03
jeopardy and we got a note from
Ally
2:05:06
Jade Ally Jade is our official
No Agenda
2:05:09
producer experiencing
transgender and
2:05:11
she says that she had signed up
for some
2:05:13
Google rewards where they they
pay
2:05:15
pennies to you to you know look
at stuff
2:05:17
and answer and and and she
believes that
2:05:20
she's been targeted as
transgender to
2:05:22
review certain YouTube videos
what
2:05:25
they'll do as I say here's a
video what
2:05:27
would you want to see next this
video or
2:05:29
that video so she's helping to
train the
2:05:32
algos based on her transgender
2:05:35
experience there's a lot going
on
2:05:43
these guys aren't making enough
money
2:05:46
which guys aren't making enough
man all
2:05:48
of them they're taking an awful
lot out
2:05:51
of the market I'll tell you
that they're
2:05:53
taking it out of the market and
the
2:05:54
market should yeah I can see
whether it
2:05:56
be concerned and other and I
can see
2:05:58
whether it be this nonsense
that bulls
2:06:01
that Shroomish talks like this
because
2:06:04
he's part of a community that
is a
2:06:06
subgroup by the way that is a
milieu of
2:06:09
women and that is a bogus but
very
2:06:15
appealing argument in other
words she's
2:06:18
there bypassing the AI doesn't
work yeah
2:06:21
is what she's saying the yeah
it doesn't
2:06:22
work it doesn't work we know it
doesn't
2:06:24
work that's why there's these
problems
2:06:25
in his brother's wife she said
it worked
2:06:27
she said it literally other
platforms
2:06:29
have they got problems they
can't do it
2:06:30
then we get runs we got layers
layers
2:06:32
hmm instead of the problem with
them to
2:06:35
get one layer human and then
this is AI
2:06:37
that doesn't work we got 25
layers of
2:06:39
humans you can't get by him
yeah it's a
2:06:42
good pitch so the you know it's
no prep
2:06:45
it's not an it's not an egg of
course
2:06:47
it's bullcrap that it's obvious
bullcrap
2:06:49
because they had to quarantine
the
2:06:51
Donald subreddit because they
could not
2:06:53
contain it but they just can
any on one
2:06:55
of the main things no no
monetization of
2:06:57
that group you know so they're
they're
2:06:59
going in big on brand
advertising and
2:07:02
they're gonna try and grab some
away hit
2:07:03
another competitor so this is
heating up
2:07:05
but what you want to do is
instead of a
2:07:08
Media Matters or you know
squashing what
2:07:11
is it farting Giants whatever
their name
2:07:12
is you want to be something
like I don't
2:07:15
know conservatives by shit too
that's
2:07:19
the message you want to
communicate
2:07:21
because it will work but now
yeah it
2:07:25
just has to be structured
correctly yeah
2:07:27
and I don't think that's up to
us to do
2:07:29
well we could do it we have the
skills
2:07:33
well the way donations are
going we
2:07:36
might have to resort to it I'm
gonna
2:07:38
show my food by donation to no
agenda
2:07:41
imagine all the people who
could do
2:07:42
awesome oh yeah that'd be fine
2:07:47
[Music]
2:07:51
we do have a few people to
thank of your
2:07:53
issue starting with
surveillance $152 uh
2:07:57
he wants a jobs karma for his
daughter
2:08:00
well give him that at the very
end
2:08:01
Austin Wilson $133.33 it he's in
2:08:05
Sammamish Oh Washington
Washington yeah
2:08:11
I bet that is what is this mr.
Royce
2:08:17
Austin of the snowy Cascades
and Dame
2:08:21
Laura of the snowy Cascades
okay yeah
2:08:25
Chris Casey hundred dollars and
33 cents
2:08:28
hey once a D douching today is
also his
2:08:31
birthday David Boswell in
Georgetown
2:08:39
Texas $100 even Darrin Walkman
of the
2:08:44
Buckeye 8:08 William Alston of
Baltimore
2:08:50
dollars he says Portland ROK
saw on the
2:08:59
Twitter's what is this
2:09:01
I never what are you reading
sir Kevin
2:09:04
McLaughlin if I count of Aluna
locust
2:09:06
North Carolina ate 8006 the
lopsided boo
2:09:09
anyone's an F cancer karma for
is uncle
2:09:11
Huey will do that in that moment
2:09:14
Gordon Jones in Sikeston
Missouri 74 the
2:09:20
kiss
2:09:21
this is Americans versus the
Canadians
2:09:23
round 1 $74 it means you're
celebrating
2:09:28
the fourth of July $71 means
you're
2:09:30
celebrating Canada today and
this around
2:09:33
1:00 means we're gonna have a
second
2:09:34
round on next week the next
show is on
2:09:37
the 4th of July okay but so far
it okay
2:09:41
so this one I'll tell you the
score
2:09:43
America one two three four five
six
2:09:47
Canada one two three four five
six
2:09:51
Oh even-steven uh it'll be over
after
2:09:56
the fourth of July because the
Americans
2:09:58
of hopefully come
2:09:59
it was 74 I'm sad about think
Canadians
2:10:01
won't follow the Canadian
support is it
2:10:03
looks pretty dismal I mean is
six
2:10:06
they always we're always
following as
2:10:08
closely as possible the gym
helping out
2:10:11
our northern neighbors and that
just let
2:10:13
me down here $74 for Gordon
Jones Peter
2:10:16
Chong Stephanie Kunkel Baron
Walkman of
2:10:19
Buckeye and Geoffrey fields a
new bra
2:10:22
new brown spells New Braunfels
Texas
2:10:25
Braunfels
2:10:26
New Braunfels harissa Braunfels
2:10:28
Braunfels and Ron Woodbury in
st. George
2:10:32
Utah they make a good barbecue
there
2:10:34
then in that Tim then Canada's
got
2:10:37
anonymous $71 for Allen bows
Baron of BC
2:10:41
he came in a 71 Richard Dunn
and Mont
2:10:45
Monde Moncton New Brunswick sir
John
2:10:50
Knowles a baron of Murfreesboro
for some
2:10:53
reason oh he says he'll be
flying to
2:10:56
Canada it's okay doesn't even a
Canadian
2:11:02
nathan kress us even down one
Nathan
2:11:05
Craddock and Patrick Sullivan in
2:11:07
Sturgeon County Alberta ok
onward with
2:11:11
Robert Bruckner 55 55 Monica
day Monica
2:11:15
Lansing 55 10 great shows
lately she's
2:11:18
Baroness I'm sorry Sir James
Knight of
2:11:22
the Paradise star 55 10 Shawn
Lucas
2:11:26
shucks in Winnipeg Manitoba
2:11:30
he's got the Simpson he counts
that good
2:11:32
did you bring the Canadians up
to a plus
2:11:34
1 and then a minus 1 because
that Brian
2:11:36
of Murphy's bro
2:11:38
okay I'm keeping score
2:11:40
yeah and that felt lastly we
have our
2:11:42
group of 250 dollar donors a
name and
2:11:45
location where applicable
starting with
2:11:46
Eric do trow in Flint Michigan
a Robert
2:11:51
fitler in Mars Pennsylvania
Brian
2:11:55
Matthews in rostov-on-don in
the Soviet
2:11:58
ID Soviet in Russia Russia
2:12:02
I tell you it's in Russia all
right sir
2:12:04
Brian Watson in Raleigh North
Carolina
2:12:07
and last but not least and then
with a
2:12:09
huge fall off Dean Powell and
Evanston
2:12:12
Deanna and then there's this
naughty boy
2:12:14
this is our worst show of the
month
2:12:17
it's a weird show of the yeah
of the
2:12:20
month I think we had a worse
one worst
2:12:23
show than this it's pretty bad
but did
2:12:26
this June swoon there's a June
swoon or
2:12:29
people just don't like it maybe
they're
2:12:32
sick of us maybe yeah maybe I
haven't
2:12:34
been agreeing enough with the D
platform
2:12:36
people are very mad sending a
note I
2:12:39
wake up man don't you see what's
2:12:41
happening well I don't know I
have to be
2:12:45
honest about it I think you've
done five
2:12:48
of these so far the last one
I'm done
2:12:50
now I mean this was pretty
definitive
2:12:52
yeah you don't get it by now
you're
2:12:55
never gonna get it no exactly
and then
2:12:57
go ahead run around behind
everybody
2:12:58
yelling censorship censorship
if you
2:13:00
want if you want to fix this
today you
2:13:04
know what to do yeah go after
Nike I
2:13:06
think Nike was the most
egregious
2:13:08
example yeah and and you know
it's true
2:13:11
are you wearing Nike shoes any
of you
2:13:13
complaining any of you if you
got Nike
2:13:15
shoes right now you should
should burn
2:13:17
them should burn them well you
should
2:13:21
know our video if you disagree
with it
2:13:24
what if you don't care like I
don't did
2:13:27
the whole thing to me is
illogical I
2:13:29
advertise it would they do what
they
2:13:31
want to do when they advertise
it I've
2:13:32
never been a big fan of that I
won't
2:13:34
burn my Nike shoes no I don't
2:13:36
particularly like Nike shoes
but I won't
2:13:38
burn him you should burn him
while
2:13:40
you're wearing him when I'm
running man
2:13:43
on YouTube my feet are on fire
hit
2:13:47
anyway thank you very much the
people
2:13:49
who did support the show it is
our value
2:13:51
for value system hopefully we
brought
2:13:53
you the value all we ask is
that you
2:13:54
send us whatever you thought it
was
2:13:56
worth to you for some people
this could
2:13:57
be a million dollar idea that
we had
2:13:59
somewhere for other people it
could just
2:14:01
be keeping you sane keeping you
a little
2:14:03
bit on your toes thinking a
little bit
2:14:04
differently from the herd for
others you
2:14:07
know you don't give a shit you
know
2:14:08
there's a stock ship in there
nobody
2:14:10
noticed I did oh snap I know is
that the
2:14:14
one you're talking about
2:14:15
I don't GSA legally give stop
stock tips
2:14:18
if you're not doing it right
2:14:19
I just I just said snap oh
2:14:22
say that what sort of was know
I know
2:14:25
I'm just saying like oh snap
it's like
2:14:26
oh snap yes it's true there was
2:14:28
something in there yeah Crocs
for
2:14:32
everyone
2:14:32
Crocs we return on Thursday
with another
2:14:37
episode of what we think is the
best
2:14:39
podcast in the universe don't
take it
2:14:41
from us it's what is in the
Muller
2:14:43
report so please remember us at
Vollrath
2:14:45
org slash humble of well
deserved and
2:14:49
requested Karma's
2:14:50
[Music]
2:14:56
[Music]
2:15:02
[Music]
2:15:10
it's also a very low amount of
birthdays
2:15:12
for the counter today this is
the very
2:15:14
last day of June June 30th 2019
we say
2:15:17
happy birthday to Richard vile
he turns
2:15:18
50 today welcome to the club
Richard
2:15:20
Chris Casey celebrated
yesterday and sir
2:15:24
SN which is the simple force 14
certain
2:15:28
in Maryland turns 34 years old
today
2:15:31
happy birthday from all your
buddies
2:15:32
here at the best podcast in the
universe
2:15:35
[Music]
2:15:38
[Applause]
2:15:39
[Music]
2:15:44
we have a title change for sir
Julianne
2:15:47
Moore has upped his standing in
the no
2:15:49
agenda peerage he moves up a
level to
2:15:51
the level of Earl thanks to
another
2:15:54
thousand dollar total donations
sir
2:15:56
Julianne Earl of the South Bay
and
2:15:58
autonomous cars is what he
shall be is
2:16:00
how we shall be known from this
day
2:16:02
forward and then we do have a
very
2:16:05
joyous occasion today which is
a daming
2:16:08
we've got a lady coming in so I
need
2:16:11
well this is this is actually
you should
2:16:13
do this one John and say I
think it's
2:16:15
the sword here you're on you're
on your
2:16:17
you're the best well why don't
you come
2:16:18
up here and run the podium here
we go
2:16:24
it's taken a while but man do we
2:16:27
appreciate your support it
means a lot
2:16:29
to us especially why you really
tuned in
2:16:32
to the program you have reached
the
2:16:34
level of Dame and
2:16:36
here at the round table with
the rest of
2:16:37
the notes nights and the Dames
and
2:16:39
therefore I and John see Dvorak
am very
2:16:41
proud to pronounce the kV Dame
anonymous
2:16:45
lesbian Dame and Lady of the
nodes in
2:16:48
the round table before you we
have
2:16:50
hookers and blow rentboys and
Chardonnay
2:16:52
early times in bf4 Captain
Morgans and
2:16:54
woman's questionable
reputations bro we
2:16:57
got harlots and half tall beer
and
2:16:58
blunts vodka and vanilla bong
hits and
2:17:00
bourbon sparkling cider nests
cords
2:17:02
ginger ale and gerbil and
mutton and
2:17:05
Mead pretty sure you like that
2:17:08
especially the mead head on
over to no
2:17:10
agenda nation.com slash rings
and we'll
2:17:13
get that information out to you
but the
2:17:15
information will get the ring
out to you
2:17:16
as soon as possible just give
Eric to
2:17:20
chill all of the all of the
info that he
2:17:22
needs ring size etc we have one
now
2:17:32
happening on the 4th of July -
actually
2:17:34
in Seattle and in Washington DC
now I
2:17:37
got a note from Dean James
Sheila the
2:17:39
lady of lisboa Adam hope you're
well I
2:17:41
entered a meet-up a couple days
ago for
2:17:44
next Friday July 5th and Lisbon
also
2:17:46
sent an email to me me it wasn't
2:17:48
mentioned on the show I haven't
heard
2:17:49
for me me is it can you check
is it I
2:17:51
can't see it on the list so
I've put it
2:17:53
in the list here I forwarded
this to the
2:17:55
back office Mimi to see if
there's
2:17:59
something wrong with your
submission but
2:18:00
we're gonna keep it on our list
here
2:18:02
July 5th and Lisbon July 6th
and Utrecht
2:18:04
the Netherlands July 9th
Knoxville
2:18:05
Tennessee the 11th is Charles
Charleston
2:18:09
it is indeed South Carolina and
this is
2:18:13
organized mmm I forget which
Dame is
2:18:17
organizing this but they're
doing the
2:18:21
way they're doing their meetups
there is
2:18:23
a six-week cycle so every six
weeks they
2:18:26
do a meet-up which i think is a
great
2:18:28
idea keep it on a six-week
cycle this is
2:18:32
where you can
2:18:33
you really think it's a great
idea
2:18:34
that's a great idea July 13th
Atlanta
2:18:37
Georgia July 19th Colorado
Springs
2:18:39
Colorado July 20th southwest
London the
2:18:41
26 st. Louis Missouri - on the
27th
2:18:44
Buffalo New York and Frisco
Texas and
2:18:46
that is the the 27th that's the
final
2:18:48
one and you can go - no agenda
meetups
2:18:51
calm to find out if there's one
near you
2:18:53
how to get to any of these what
2:18:55
specifics there are or if you
want to
2:18:57
start one yourself and there
was an idea
2:18:59
from brandon from michigan
local one I
2:19:03
notice you saw this email come
in about
2:19:06
peerage for the meetups so the
idea is
2:19:11
well I'll read this note to
John Adam
2:19:13
with the growing popularity of
No Agenda
2:19:15
meetups the question continues
to rise
2:19:16
what do we do with any
collective money
2:19:18
donated to the show his idea is
make the
2:19:20
knowledge and the meetup
community be
2:19:22
credited example imagine at the
next
2:19:24
Michigan local one meetup the
whole
2:19:26
group at the meetup
collectively donates
2:19:27
400 dollars rather than that
money be
2:19:30
not credited to anyone have the
credit
2:19:32
be to Michigan local one to
continue
2:19:34
with this the following is
various
2:19:36
levels applied to Michigan
local one so
2:19:38
it would be a group donation a
group
2:19:42
level and they suggest local
one at
2:19:46
$1,000 level the shanty town
Clubhouse
2:19:49
5,000 the meeting Lodge and
onwards up
2:19:52
to the grandest state of
Michigan local
2:19:55
one and I just thought it was an
2:19:56
interesting ideas I wanted to
you're in
2:19:58
charge of the peerage committee
and all
2:19:59
that so I wanted something
that's an
2:20:03
idea I I prefer if someone's
gonna
2:20:05
collect money that you'd have to
2:20:08
designate a collector and then
it I
2:20:10
would do it the same way we'd
collect
2:20:12
the money normally which is
take notes
2:20:14
on who gave it put it in an
envelope and
2:20:17
then forwarded the envelope to
us and
2:20:19
the post office box with only
with all
2:20:21
the applicable notes if there's
a cheque
2:20:23
this only happened once with
Pittsburgh
2:20:25
and it was a cheque and some
2:20:27
miscellaneous cash but yeah
we'll have
2:20:33
to think about how to do this
so it
2:20:34
works okay I think a lot of
people like
2:20:37
to get to personal credit it
was but it
2:20:40
I think what he's saying is
they get the
2:20:42
personal credit but then
there's a
2:20:43
collective
2:20:45
so everything it might make it
2:20:47
competitive it might be
interesting as
2:20:48
possible do consider how to do
it don't
2:20:53
we don't want to make it too
complicated
2:20:55
only issue enough no and thank
everybody
2:20:59
who came in under $50 for their
2:21:03
subscriptions one-off donations
2:21:06
long-term layaway knight who is
which do
2:21:08
work plenty of people get to the
2:21:10
roundtable that way just thank
you all
2:21:11
very much
2:21:12
it's our value for value system
you can
2:21:14
see why we cannot participate
in any
2:21:16
manner in the in the brand
advertising
2:21:19
space force
2:21:21
we can't participate in that
because
2:21:23
everything we say on every show
is
2:21:25
pretty much off message and
would not
2:21:27
give any brand the idea that
we're a
2:21:30
happy place to advertise unless
there's
2:21:32
shooting range and even that is
2:21:36
questionable so a so I have a
couple of
2:21:41
notes I wanna read hopefully
the one
2:21:43
from the social media spy but
no I don't
2:21:46
have that okay all right I'll
read that
2:21:48
one in a moment I have one from
producer
2:21:52
Ted who is a grouch our favorite
2:21:56
government legislative analyst
has let
2:21:58
us down again I think he asked
you if
2:22:03
sleepy Joe is for student debt
2:22:05
forgiveness recently whether
those debts
2:22:07
could be forgiven is not the
issue the
2:22:09
only way to energize the
younger voters
2:22:11
is to make it part of the
platform
2:22:13
creepy Joe can't be on the
ticket
2:22:15
because he was instrumental in
the
2:22:18
criminal legislation to make
the no
2:22:20
asset back student loans
unforgivable I
2:22:25
didn't realize that but now I
do I thank
2:22:28
you for that note he also made
a common
2:22:30
complaint about when it comes
to this
2:22:32
issue you and crackpot who are
usually
2:22:35
so worldly wise seem quite
oblivious to
2:22:37
the entire American education
scam oh
2:22:41
okay sure have you even
mentioned the
2:22:45
cultural Marxism that's being
2:22:47
indoctrinated into the
permanent debt
2:22:49
slaves no matter isn't half our
show
2:22:53
isn't how our show about that
what is
2:22:55
what is this guy on I don't know
2:22:58
after you admitted you had no
idea what
2:23:00
flight of the conchords was I
realized
2:23:02
you're only human then he goes
on things
2:23:06
the best podcast in universe
alright so
2:23:08
is it but now we have one
that's a Maher
2:23:11
culpa which I think is that
should be
2:23:13
corrected and this is a good
letter from
2:23:15
Joe in Illinois which we talked
about
2:23:19
how they legalized marijuana in
the last
2:23:21
show
2:23:21
Dahmer your information we
voted to have
2:23:25
that as a referendum
legalization on the
2:23:28
most recent ballot we also
voted to have
2:23:31
a term limits referendum
neither made it
2:23:35
on the ballot somehow they
wanted to
2:23:38
control who gets the pot
contracts
2:23:41
legendary somehow we never got
to weigh
2:23:47
in about our asshat career
politicians
2:23:50
longevity Michael Madigan the
Speaker of
2:23:55
the Illinois House is the
2:23:56
longest-serving and most
corrupt state
2:23:58
politician in the United States
the fact
2:24:02
that it was our legislature
that merely
2:24:04
was a means of control we were
supposed
2:24:08
to vote for pot in the midterms
okay ah
2:24:11
interesting
2:24:12
so I gave them a lot of kudos
for the
2:24:14
legislature doing this but then
it turns
2:24:16
out that the kudos were not
deserved it
2:24:20
was a scam yeah and this this
shows how
2:24:24
and shows very accurately how
this
2:24:26
podcast is a network of
producers now
2:24:31
you participate in so many ways
in fact
2:24:33
I would love to hear for some
of our
2:24:35
producers who are in the
advertising
2:24:36
business none of them have
showed up
2:24:38
that the one I had to go to was
the one
2:24:40
I live with who was the best
one I know
2:24:41
one of the best marketers ever
I'm also
2:24:45
married to her we need more of
that we
2:24:51
have a few people huh I just
got an
2:24:53
emergency message here
2:24:54
Darrin owes dad is having hip
2:24:56
replacement surgery surgery on
Wednesday
2:24:58
and he wasn't he didn't he just
found
2:25:01
out he didn't have time to send
him a
2:25:03
health karma so maybe that
2:25:04
you know Mike you've got karma
Darren Oh
2:25:09
works with void 0 running the
2:25:12
infrastructure keeps us on the
air I
2:25:15
have one more ISO to suggest to
him this
2:25:19
is Judy okay hello to both of
you maybe
2:25:26
we could do a combo hello to
both of you
2:25:32
doesn't work you think hello I
like that
2:25:34
hello to both of you
2:25:35
hello to both of you to both of
you it's
2:25:39
good I like it as end of show
this is
2:25:43
what the other one was this one
I do not
2:25:44
believe you are a racist No
Judy's
2:25:47
better I think we'll keep it
with Judy
2:25:48
yeah she's got more she's got
more song
2:25:51
in her voice got a great note
from our
2:25:54
social media spy he is I
believe he's a
2:25:58
knight actually and this kind
of taps
2:26:03
into everything we've ever
thought about
2:26:06
what's going on today I have
worked in
2:26:09
the insurance industry for over
a decade
2:26:11
about five or six years ago the
company
2:26:12
I work for started a program
based on a
2:26:14
product being offered by the
private
2:26:17
investigation companies we used
to find
2:26:18
fraudulent claims company
started
2:26:21
offering a social media search
on our
2:26:23
claimants these searches cost
300 or 500
2:26:25
bucks per search some bigwigs
tried the
2:26:28
service but it was clear their
private
2:26:29
investigators were using
interns with
2:26:31
five minutes to type a few
names into
2:26:33
Google and then send them
search results
2:26:35
clearly a joke just to charge
us extra
2:26:37
as so what happens is they
decided to
2:26:39
take this in-house and he is
the one
2:26:42
that built this this practice
within
2:26:45
their company to find fraudulent
2:26:48
insurance claims through social
media
2:26:50
well the first year we saved
the company
2:26:53
over ten million dollars in
fraudulent
2:26:55
payments so over the last five
or six
2:26:57
years I've been what my wife
jokes a
2:27:00
professional Facebook stalker
there's
2:27:02
not a huge amount of fraudulent
claims
2:27:04
but when they happen the money
in them
2:27:05
is usually significant we do
all this
2:27:08
legally with publicly posted
info online
2:27:10
I have caught dr. selling drugs
2:27:13
illegally people claiming they
are sick
2:27:15
but opening businesses all the
way to
2:27:17
people having their
2:27:18
or husbands calling us and
sending fake
2:27:20
medical records over time I've
seen some
2:27:25
stuff with social media you
might not be
2:27:27
aware of from the outside first
of all
2:27:29
Twitter is useless and serves
no one
2:27:32
anything really useful for all
the
2:27:35
millions of people on Twitter
only about
2:27:38
5% of users actually use their
accounts
2:27:41
we discovered this very early
on in our
2:27:44
research people create accounts
to just
2:27:46
follow celebrities or
politicians they
2:27:49
don't actually tweet anything
just
2:27:51
retweet their favorite people
if they
2:27:53
use it at all this echo chamber
is much
2:27:56
bigger than anyone realizes and
goes
2:27:58
nowhere and this was an
eye-opener to me
2:28:03
and it makes a lot of sense
what do they
2:28:06
claim now 300 million users
Twitter I've
2:28:11
not only talked about this
before but
2:28:13
I've written a column about
this what
2:28:15
I've noticed which is new
Twitter is he
2:28:18
what he says is absolutely
correct
2:28:19
because when Twitter first
started I
2:28:21
just give this story again I've
told it
2:28:23
before when critter first
started and I
2:28:25
had like 10,000 followers
2:28:28
I would tweet a link that was
something
2:28:32
that I could count in other
words it
2:28:36
would be just something about
the blog
2:28:38
or something it had a counter I
could
2:28:39
count and you tweet a link to
10,000
2:28:42
people and you'd get maybe a
thousand
2:28:45
people to click on it right now
I have
2:28:48
over a hundred thousand
followers and I
2:28:53
tweet a link and instead of
getting a
2:28:56
thousand followers you think I
mean
2:28:57
technically I should get 10,000
right
2:28:59
you get less than a hundred if
less not
2:29:03
less than 50 maybe sometimes
ten is raw
2:29:08
it's completely useless hmm
well I I'm
2:29:14
looking at the numbers of its
300
2:29:16
million 5% 15 million it makes
total
2:29:21
sense that all this outrage
it's a very
2:29:22
small group second a lot of
noise
2:29:26
YouTube used to let us pull
videos down
2:29:29
that claimants posted publicly
of them
2:29:30
doing things they clearly
shouldn't be
2:29:32
able to do example someone
claims that
2:29:35
have a bad back but has several
videos
2:29:36
of themselves waterskiing or
lifting
2:29:38
50-pound bags of dirt
2:29:40
what an idiot in the past we
had to stop
2:29:44
doing that YouTube actually
threatened
2:29:45
to block us okay
2:29:47
Facebook is more trouble than
the public
2:29:49
knows or is being reported try
searching
2:29:51
for your friends or family on
Facebook
2:29:53
recently it's almost impossible
to
2:29:55
narrow down to someone in a
large city
2:29:56
or that has a common name face
back you
2:29:59
face bagged facebook used to
have
2:30:01
something called graph search
it was a
2:30:03
back-end hidden thing that
would let you
2:30:05
find out useful info about
anyone using
2:30:08
the service lots of outside
companies
2:30:11
we're using this public
information as a
2:30:13
business model but graph search
was
2:30:15
taken away in the past month
2:30:17
over privacy concerns several
years ago
2:30:20
we used to find people using
just an
2:30:22
email address or phone numbers
but
2:30:24
Facebook remove that for privacy
2:30:26
concerns as well as we do
research on
2:30:29
people we are finding only
older folks
2:30:32
using Facebook 45 to 65 to be
exact
2:30:35
usually people are not tech
savvy
2:30:37
younger people may have accounts
2:30:38
occasionally post but older
people are
2:30:40
the everyday users yes and
Facebook is a
2:30:42
big problem and this was
interesting
2:30:46
last bit from industry articles
I
2:30:48
understand the graph search
being
2:30:49
removed has had some big
problems
2:30:51
Facebook apparently sold itself
to
2:30:53
college researchers businesses
medical
2:30:55
companies etc giving them
publicly
2:30:57
available data they could do
Studies on
2:30:59
for their papers with it now
gone people
2:31:02
are scattering like cockroaches
to find
2:31:04
other vendors of this data the
thought
2:31:07
is if Facebook will come back
with the
2:31:08
service again but a few months
from now
2:31:10
they'll be charging for that
2:31:14
there was some enlightening
stuff first
2:31:16
of all your insurance company is
2:31:19
checking on you oh yeah they
have to be
2:31:23
but people don't really realize
y'all
2:31:25
just post stuff it's fine it's
all good
2:31:27
they're idiots mm-hmm thank you
2:31:32
social media spy it's
appreciated so I
2:31:35
do have the brakes a little
brexit info
2:31:38
oh good are they done yet no
but they're
2:31:42
having this huge problem with
there's
2:31:45
two things going on Boris is
like nuts
2:31:48
and Corben they're trying to
trying to
2:31:52
railroad him aren't they're
trying to
2:31:53
really make him look like a Shh
- all
2:31:55
day they're trying to you know
even
2:31:57
though he's I don't know they
think
2:31:59
there may be a coalition
between the
2:32:01
Liberal Democrats and maybe
labor at
2:32:03
some point cuz Liberal
Democrats gonna
2:32:04
make a huge comeback in this
next
2:32:06
election and then the brexit
party has
2:32:08
their elections coming up in
them what
2:32:10
what elections to parliamentary
2:32:12
elections the big boys the big
ones they
2:32:14
do anything they're doing
another
2:32:15
election what they do elections
whenever
2:32:17
they feel like it apparently
well did I
2:32:18
miss this thing is a
parliamentary
2:32:20
system works I'm sorry did they
just
2:32:22
call a new election I must have
missed
2:32:24
this I think it's a election
that was
2:32:26
already scheduled this is the
leaders
2:32:29
with the leaders no no John in
HoN it's
2:32:31
the leadership election okay
well they
2:32:33
got a leadership election but
they got a
2:32:35
problem with so that means it's
only the
2:32:38
conservative leader it's not
it's not
2:32:40
like no I think there's a
general
2:32:41
election you know I think
you're wrong
2:32:46
it's for its for the this is
what we've
2:32:49
been following I know okay I
just want
2:32:53
to correct you
2:32:54
well you're not correct yet
what I'm
2:32:57
saying the the that we've had
three
2:33:00
rounds the vote the voting will
be for
2:33:02
the leadership of the
Conservative Party
2:33:03
which will be between Boris and
I guess
2:33:08
hunt will be the two of the two
main
2:33:10
ones but I don't think there's
a general
2:33:12
election a general election
coming well
2:33:14
whatever the case they're still
trying
2:33:16
to railroad Corbin and Boris is
a
2:33:18
problem he's getting to be a
promise so
2:33:20
they I was listening to one of
the talk
2:33:23
shows which I unfortunately
thought I
2:33:24
had a clip of but I don't have
been
2:33:26
going over this I don't have
2:33:27
but one of the talk shows was
going on
2:33:30
about Boris and the situation
where as
2:33:34
the police were called to his
2:33:35
girlfriend's apartment and
Boris was
2:33:39
there and the cops went in and
out and
2:33:41
yes not talking about it and
he's not
2:33:43
talking about he's not talking
about it
2:33:44
and everybody's all wondering
what the
2:33:47
hell was going on there and one
of these
2:33:51
commentators said that she
thinks that
2:33:55
the whole thing was staged by
Boris
2:33:58
ditch and I never thought about
people
2:34:01
doing this but I can see it
working
2:34:02
because it would work with
Trump it was
2:34:05
staged by Boris to change his
Google
2:34:08
research results so when you
start
2:34:10
looking for it anything about
Boris this
2:34:13
bullshit thing with the with
the cops
2:34:15
showed up to turn people away
from his
2:34:18
nutball interview I believe it
was a
2:34:23
radio interview or maybe it was
on video
2:34:26
array an interview with Boris
where he
2:34:28
goes off on these buses on his
what he
2:34:31
does for his spare time he
creates buses
2:34:33
he creates buses this is the
craziest
2:34:38
thing you'll ever hear this is
this is
2:34:40
Boris on making what this is an
2:34:43
interview with Boris the
interview asked
2:34:45
him what are you doing your
spare time
2:34:46
and Boris apparently doesn't
know it
2:34:49
doesn't do anything in this
person and
2:34:50
so he starts make it appears to
be
2:34:52
making stuff up and then it
goes just
2:34:54
goes off the deep end what do
you do to
2:34:58
switch off I like to paint oh I
make
2:35:06
things I like to what'd he make
I make
2:35:10
I have a thing where I make
models of me
2:35:17
realizing like where they're
like let me
2:35:18
build a beautiful I make you
make models
2:35:22
the bubbles of what I do i do
me models
2:35:26
but i make his I get I get old
I don't
2:35:32
like wooden crates yeah right
so I paint
2:35:36
them and they they have to why
is it a
2:35:40
box that spin used to contain
two too
2:35:43
wide bottles right right I
think we'll
2:35:45
have dividing thing yeah I turn
it into
2:35:51
a bus right so I put passengers
you'll
2:35:54
know this you know I paint the
2:36:00
passengers enjoying themselves
Wow
2:36:08
so that's it's not really like
model
2:36:11
railroad he's really making him
out of
2:36:13
toilet paper rolls and he's just
2:36:15
stalking people having a
wonderful time
2:36:21
under wonderful bus I mean how
can it be
2:36:24
that all right
2:36:25
Boris is it I don't know how he
got
2:36:27
there how does this work what
was a
2:36:30
really smart kid yeah but is
how it will
2:36:34
got there and he went to the
right
2:36:35
schools you went to Eton yes
yes on on
2:36:40
and he was always one of the
smart kids
2:36:44
if you see there's a good
there's a good
2:36:46
aunts on YouTube there's a good
2:36:47
documentary about his life yeah
I talked
2:36:50
about fascinating and actually
great
2:36:52
painter I don't think is good
as George
2:36:59
Bush huh they seen that League
yeah it's
2:37:03
the same kind of thing but the
Bush Bush
2:37:05
when he got into painting he
you know he
2:37:09
did what you're supposed to do
if you
2:37:10
want to take it serious I'm
serious late
2:37:13
in life
2:37:13
he hired a bunch of very
expensive real
2:37:16
painting instructors to come
over and
2:37:19
tutor him and so that made a
difference
2:37:22
but so this is like become a
problem
2:37:25
this bus's thing he did and
it's being
2:37:28
discussed to an excess he's
open so
2:37:30
that's why they think I so they
wanted
2:37:32
to move away from the easy one
to get
2:37:34
the search results away from
these this
2:37:36
is nut ear interview what a way
to do it
2:37:39
I had trouble finding the
interview
2:37:41
because I heard about the I
heard about
2:37:43
it and it was it's already
almost gone
2:37:45
it's very difficult to find
that clip I
2:37:49
recieved a clip from BBC about
Angela
2:37:55
Merkel and her second bout of
shaking
2:37:57
and we've been interested in
what's
2:37:58
going on it doesn't seem like
that's
2:38:00
hide like another hydration
issue in
2:38:02
fact she was shaking onstage
and it's a
2:38:05
very odd shake it's from her
legs from
2:38:07
her abdomen and down yeah it's
just like
2:38:09
she's freezing to death yeah a
little
2:38:11
bit
2:38:11
and except that the shaking
more is
2:38:14
forward to back very strange
and what is
2:38:17
interesting about this report
is they
2:38:19
really get into it
2:38:20
and then it gets cut off I
don't know if
2:38:24
it was some kind of error but
just when
2:38:26
it gets really kind of meaty
it's done
2:38:29
and and and this is BBC
headline news
2:38:32
reporter Michael Michaels
2:38:33
spokesman had insisted that the
2:38:35
Chancellor is fine she's gone
off as
2:38:37
planned
2:38:37
to the g20 summit of world
leaders in
2:38:40
Japan leaving behind her though
at home
2:38:42
real concerns about her health
mrs.
2:38:45
Merkel always appears to be in
robust
2:38:47
health she has a punishing
schedule
2:38:49
she's seen as a strong leader
who can
2:38:51
deal with that and so this has
come as a
2:38:53
real shock and of course the
fact that
2:38:56
it has happened now twice is
really
2:38:59
adding to those concerns when
mrs.
2:39:01
Merkel appeared to shake
uncontrollably
2:39:02
during a reception last week
she was
2:39:05
stood outside in the hot
sunshine in the
2:39:07
direct glare of the afternoon
Sun and
2:39:09
she said afterwards she'd
simply being
2:39:11
dehydrated what happened this
morning
2:39:13
took place in rather different
2:39:15
circumstances she was indoors
and the
2:39:17
temperature will have been much
cooler
2:39:19
because whilst Berlin has
experienced a
2:39:21
heat wave in the last couple of
days
2:39:22
today actually we've had a bit
of a
2:39:24
respite and the temperatures
have really
2:39:26
calmed down there has yet been
no
2:39:29
official explanation
2:39:30
for what's wrong I wouldn't be
surprised
2:39:32
if he actually don't really get
one I
2:39:35
think mrs. Michael's team will
be very
2:39:37
keen to try and push this away
sweep it
2:39:40
under the carpet because in the
next few
2:39:42
days Germany really pretty much
goes on
2:39:44
holiday mrs. Merkel Parliament
they all
2:39:47
disappear off on their summer
recess and
2:39:51
the reason that her team will
want to
2:39:52
minimize any focus on what's
happened
2:39:55
this morning and it's because
this is a
2:39:56
really tricky time for German
politics
2:39:59
mrs. Merkel some time ago
handed over
2:40:00
some of her power to a woman
called
2:40:02
Annegret cramp
2:40:04
karin Bauer but in recent weeks
and
2:40:06
months she's made a series of
public
2:40:08
gasps she's made some very
controversial
2:40:10
statements and there are a lot
of
2:40:12
question marks out there in
Germany as
2:40:14
to whether she's really a
suitable
2:40:15
candidate to run Germany and
and that's
2:40:20
how that's how just got cut off
Wow I
2:40:23
don't know I don't know if
someone said
2:40:25
pull it that somebody must plug
on it
2:40:29
could we're getting kind of
interesting
2:40:30
about you know that her
replacement
2:40:34
who's messing up a little bit
and you
2:40:37
know I guess they have to keep
her in I
2:40:39
was looking at the pictures of
her that
2:40:41
they showed where she was
shaken and
2:40:43
then there's a close-up picture
of her
2:40:44
face and she has edema
2:40:47
what's edema her face is
swollen hmm
2:40:52
it's puffy you can't see any
wrinkles in
2:40:54
her face and it's just like
she's got
2:40:56
some puffiness in her face that
is the
2:40:58
it's edema you look it up it's
a problem
2:41:02
if you know your swatch it's
got a
2:41:04
swollen head and it's you look
at it you
2:41:07
die I mean there's a really
nice picture
2:41:08
in one of these newspapers it's
a
2:41:10
close-up of her face and she's
got no
2:41:11
wrinkles anymore and her mouth
is real
2:41:14
small this look like a slit and
I was
2:41:17
looking at what is a demon
cause by
2:41:18
heart failure cirrhosis of the
liver
2:41:20
various insufficiencies that
kidney
2:41:23
disease as possible about how
about
2:41:25
she's on prednisone maybe a
lotta cancer
2:41:28
it could be she could be on
some drug
2:41:30
but whatever that but I think
that her
2:41:33
shaking and the ended and the
edema
2:41:36
seems to be connected to me
because I
2:41:39
looked at her sitting this
woman looks
2:41:40
like this doesn't look like her
2:41:42
she doesn't your face is
normally
2:41:43
to get a sagging face nimmy they
2:41:46
circulate some more children's
blood
2:41:48
through hers or that's a
possibility
2:42:01
good because it kind of does
look like
2:42:03
that initial reptile skin
shedding
2:42:06
sequence yeah they can get no
this like
2:42:08
a locust we and she's trying to
suppress
2:42:15
it could be that's I feel
horrible makes
2:42:21
the woman seems the couple of
things
2:42:29
there's a everyone made a big
story
2:42:32
about you know Trump met Putin
it's too
2:42:37
bad no one got the audio how is
that
2:42:39
positive because of all the
stupid
2:42:41
cameras clicking can we stop
with these
2:42:43
camera clicks where's the guy
with the
2:42:47
microphone and the dead cat on
the end
2:42:50
and was sticking it out there
that a
2:42:52
meeting the dead kitten is that
caught
2:42:56
is the technical term for that
fuzzy
2:42:59
ball that you put over the mic
2:43:02
it's ABC did a story on it they
had to
2:43:05
blast tromped and then make
make a
2:43:07
mockery of Amanda but I think
you could
2:43:10
justify it to some extent but
it's not
2:43:11
really much of a story and it
wasn't I
2:43:14
think they overplayed it he
wasn't
2:43:16
joking around that much I mean
it wasn't
2:43:19
like he just just listen to
this this is
2:43:22
a story about about meddling we
had
2:43:26
overseas now tonight President
Trump
2:43:27
making global headlines during
his
2:43:29
meeting with Russian President
Vladimir
2:43:31
Putin at the g20 summit in
Japan the two
2:43:34
leaders joking in their first
2:43:36
face-to-face meeting since the
mullah
2:43:38
report blasted Russia for
sweeping and
2:43:40
systemic interference in the
2016 US
2:43:43
election President Trump
playfully
2:43:45
telling Putin don't meddle in
the
2:43:47
election ABC's chief White House
2:43:49
correspondent Jonathan Karl is
there in
2:43:51
Japan they greeted each other
like old
2:43:53
friends President Trump with a
pat on
2:43:55
the back for Vladimir Putin
later as
2:43:58
they prepared to face the
cameras the
2:44:00
two leaders commiserated about
the news
2:44:03
media
2:44:08
[Music]
2:44:12
I mean this is just not usable
really I
2:44:15
mean I can't believe they went
with this
2:44:18
because it's why even show it
they must
2:44:20
have had some titles subtitles
you know
2:44:23
a share joke
2:44:24
although Putin has been accused
of
2:44:26
having journalists murdered
this is the
2:44:28
first Trump Putin meeting since
Robert
2:44:30
Molyneux released his report
documenting
2:44:32
Russia's quote sweeping in
systemic
2:44:35
interference in the 2016
election an
2:44:37
American reporter asked Trump
if he'd
2:44:40
warn Putin not to do it again
the
2:44:42
president responded with a smile
2:44:53
the two men met behind closed
doors for
2:44:56
nearly an hour the White House
did not
2:44:57
say whether the issue of
election
2:44:59
meddling came up what did come
up a
2:45:02
possible Moscow visit for
president
2:45:04
Trump Putin inviting him to
Russia in
2:45:06
May just months before the
election no
2:45:10
word yet on whether the
invitation will
2:45:12
be accepted yeah well I thought
it was a
2:45:14
very humorous moment and they
all
2:45:16
dropped the ball because the
question
2:45:18
was are you gonna tell the
President
2:45:20
Putin not to meddle in
elections and
2:45:22
Trump looks over and says don't
meddle
2:45:23
in our elections it was fun it
was
2:45:25
hilarious
2:45:26
but now we can't have any jokes
anymore
2:45:28
because of no evil hey there's
one thing
2:45:31
that there's not a lot of
useful audio
2:45:34
on for clips but yesterday this
reporter
2:45:39
for queer let's which is a
reasonably
2:45:41
new entrant into into the
online news
2:45:43
game but I kind of liked it I
think it's
2:45:45
a very small group and the know
his name
2:45:48
NGO no no and no just no and II
know and
2:45:53
he was up in Portland and
anti-shah
2:45:57
through of course milkshakes
Adam and
2:46:01
then beat him up punched him
kicked him
2:46:04
bear spray pepper spray his
stole his
2:46:06
GoPro stole his GoPro
apparently the the
2:46:12
milkshakes now are really quick
drying
2:46:14
cement the Portland Police
tweeted
2:46:22
police have received
information that
2:46:24
some of the milkshakes thrown
today
2:46:26
during the demonstration
contained
2:46:27
quick-drying cement we are
encouraging
2:46:30
anyone hit with a substance
today to
2:46:32
report it to police
2:46:33
you could blind somebody with
that well
2:46:36
first of all I told you that
this
2:46:37
milkshake thing would end
poorly and
2:46:41
it's just unbelievable that
Portland
2:46:43
allows people to roam around
with with
2:46:46
the with hoods on with the mess
what
2:46:50
does go away or some weenies a
wimp
2:46:52
can't do anything about the
pleases or
2:46:54
handcuff doesn't read this is
one of
2:46:56
those situations where you have
a DA
2:46:57
who's a you know wait is this
another
2:47:01
Soros it could be goofy I don't
know you
2:47:04
see seem so it seems so this is
business
2:47:07
style love do nothing da
District
2:47:09
Attorney so what are you gonna
do let me
2:47:12
saw is it who is District
Attorney what
2:47:16
you looking that up I do want
to point
2:47:17
out the top story if you go to
Google
2:47:19
news headlines why'd you know
this
2:47:23
morning or whenever like
yesterday
2:47:25
Trump went to North Korea
actually went
2:47:27
into the country oh he did yeah
oh yeah
2:47:30
what yeah was it was a big deal
yes I
2:47:32
was blasting him for it but
didn't a
2:47:36
headline on CNN instead of the
trunk
2:47:38
Trump and Kim Jong meeting or
they went
2:47:41
with this story White House
press
2:47:43
secretary Stephanie Grisham
bruised amid
2:47:47
scuffle between reporters and
North
2:47:49
Korean guards see this this
makes me
2:47:52
kind of angry because here
here's the
2:47:55
guy's gay to just to me just
you know a
2:47:58
gay guy by himself walking
around
2:48:00
reporting for an actual
publication gets
2:48:04
beat up no coverage this is a
Fox News
2:48:08
of course but no one's covering
it and
2:48:10
this and this is really this is
not a
2:48:14
good situation this is now
we're down to
2:48:16
violence and cement and it has
all the
2:48:19
elements of a great story but
they
2:48:20
refused to cover it just like
this
2:48:22
well they'll cover the
Stephanie Grisham
2:48:25
being bruised so they showed a
video I
2:48:27
watched the report on this it
was like a
2:48:30
crowd of people
2:48:31
Trump is growing off on his own
as he
2:48:33
always does and she's trying to
catch up
2:48:35
she pushes pushes her way
through a
2:48:38
couple of guards and she gets
through
2:48:40
and that's the end of it and
this is the
2:48:41
video they show on CNN
2:48:43
but they make it sound as
though all
2:48:44
hell broke loose and I don't
see any
2:48:46
evidence of it on screen it was
built as
2:48:49
a bullcrap story
2:48:50
remember everybody all media is
is
2:48:53
convincing you something one
way or the
2:48:55
other but right yeah the Andy
thing
2:48:58
should have been reported by
someone but
2:49:01
now know if it was it was the
other side
2:49:03
of the coin it would have been
reported
2:49:04
for sure I mean that's the
other problem
2:49:06
with it with your whole
presentation
2:49:07
about advertising is that the
media has
2:49:10
been pushing an agenda that
makes it
2:49:13
they're very uncomfortable to
advertise
2:49:15
for advertisers to go any
places I think
2:49:17
it's almost like they're doing
it to
2:49:19
protect their inch
2:49:20
wrists so that the whole
anti-trump
2:49:23
thing is like it is part of a
2:49:24
money-making scheme y'all like
anybody
2:49:27
since really hates Trump I mean
I think
2:49:29
a lot of them do because
they've kind of
2:49:31
trained that way but that's not
the
2:49:33
point anyway money makes the
world go
2:49:37
round we all know it you can we
got to
2:49:39
say it it's just true and
everything
2:49:43
pretty much everything is
advertising in
2:49:46
media I mean we got to I mean
Andie's
2:49:51
problem was he wasn't he wasn't
on a TV
2:49:54
show he was gay he was he's not
white by
2:49:59
the way he has a Twitter feed
that's
2:50:01
fascinating this Twitter feed
at one
2:50:06
point you can go back and get
enough of
2:50:08
it is documented every one of
these
2:50:12
phony-baloney you know that the
jesse
2:50:14
smoly kind of thing mm-hmm
2:50:17
outrage tax interest and he
talks
2:50:22
documents and back for years he
must
2:50:24
have a hundred of them and one
after the
2:50:27
other and it's just like you
read him
2:50:29
ego I remember that I remember
that you
2:50:31
know like there's situation
that happen
2:50:33
with Rolling Stone magazine
where the
2:50:34
reporter was suckered by some
woman
2:50:37
crying about being raped and
turned out
2:50:39
she was never even there and
everything
2:50:41
lived in the town and she they
write a
2:50:42
big story about it burning off
some some
2:50:46
fraternity and this kind of
past by the
2:50:48
way it's light he's documented
all these
2:50:50
it's quite interesting the
guy's name is
2:50:53
spelled ng o if anyone's
interested
2:50:56
just a couple other things that
we'll
2:50:58
follow up on Thursday and we
have more
2:50:59
information Wall Street will be
waiting
2:51:01
for more news regarding
meetings between
2:51:04
Trump and Jing ping there's
been some
2:51:08
positive news kind of like well
you know
2:51:11
and it looks like we'll be able
to get
2:51:13
Huawei back well you know we're
working
2:51:16
on stuff that we haven't I
think the
2:51:19
street is really looking for
you know
2:51:21
some some big positive yes
2:51:23
concrete thing you know listen
to anyone
2:51:27
listen the last dhm plugged
andrew
2:51:30
horror was predicted
2:51:32
the meetings over yeah Andrew
Horowitz
2:51:35
predicted this almost to the
letter okay
2:51:38
who was gonna be a nothing yeah
okay you
2:51:41
know kind of an agreement to
agree kind
2:51:43
of meeting didn't you have
anything to
2:51:44
do it didn't really make it
look nothing
2:51:46
robust a little break on on
letting the
2:51:48
problem with the wall he's
having
2:51:50
trouble getting certain parts
that only
2:51:51
had to get from American
suppliers so
2:51:53
that's been loosened and then
so that
2:51:56
has been loosened a little yeah
it's
2:51:58
been loosened a lot yeah well I
think
2:52:03
that that should cause some
shake ups
2:52:05
tomorrow and also this Iran
insects
2:52:07
thing which is I should play
this clip
2:52:11
just so we're on top of it
because this
2:52:12
is this is a real threat to the
United
2:52:16
States our system that is our
system is
2:52:18
the petrodollar the United
States dollar
2:52:21
which we enforce at the end of
the
2:52:23
barrel of a gun and what we
don't want
2:52:26
is people trading oil in other
2:52:29
currencies enter insects
2:52:31
is the deal dead today in
Vienna the EU
2:52:33
three that's France Germany in
the UK
2:52:36
plus Russia and China met an
Iranian
2:52:38
delegation to try and keep it
alive one
2:52:41
of the keys to that they
believe is a
2:52:43
European trade mechanism called
in
2:52:45
stakes that will allow
countries to
2:52:46
continue trading with Iran
without
2:52:49
falling foul of secondary US
sanctions
2:52:51
the EU has confirmed that
insects is now
2:52:54
up and running Iran's deputy
foreign
2:52:57
minister Abbas Karachi gave
that news a
2:52:59
cautious welcome countries who
used to
2:53:02
buy oil from Iran are
considering to buy
2:53:04
Iranian oil in different
mechanisms for
2:53:07
Europeans the case is perhaps a
bit
2:53:10
different what they are trying
to do is
2:53:12
first to establish a banking
channel or
2:53:15
a financial channel for
financial
2:53:18
transactions in sex is now
operational
2:53:20
Isis is now active but the rest
is still
2:53:23
far from our
2:53:25
expectations while Nathalie
tachi is
2:53:28
special advisor to the --use
foreign
2:53:31
policy chief federica mogherini
so how
2:53:33
important is the news that the
insect's
2:53:35
mechanism appears to be up and
running
2:53:37
well I think it's key because
2:53:39
essentially what it is is that a
2:53:42
essentially a state backed
instrument to
2:53:44
allow for you are on trade is
2:53:47
operational and is now
preparing to
2:53:49
conduct its first transactions
2:53:51
I think the second piece of
important
2:53:54
news today is the fact that
seven other
2:53:57
EU member states have committed
2:54:00
essentially to sort of working
alongside
2:54:02
that in curry and the European
external
2:54:04
Action Service in the context
of insects
2:54:07
so I think this really
demonstrates that
2:54:10
Europeans are not simply
committed to
2:54:12
the joint comprehensive plan of
action
2:54:13
in words where they're actually
prepared
2:54:15
to stick out their necks in
inaction as
2:54:17
well so this this cannot stand
of course
2:54:21
I don't know what they're going
to do
2:54:24
about it but we can't have this
this
2:54:26
trading or insects by the way
that
2:54:28
stands for instrument in
support of
2:54:30
trading exchanges been around
for a
2:54:32
while this isn't brand new they
just
2:54:35
never really activated it but I
think
2:54:38
this is a problem I agree
2:54:40
and I don't know what like a
secondary
2:54:42
currency yeah and if they
really start
2:54:46
trading and I there would have
to be
2:54:48
retaliation against Europe the
EU 3 as
2:54:51
we were just told don't you
think I
2:54:53
would absolutely think yes
you're gonna
2:54:56
do anything at all we've got
work around
2:54:59
yeah there's a rule in place
you're not
2:55:02
supposed to trade under these
2:55:03
circumstances and doing a
workaround is
2:55:06
cheating it's just cheating I
don't know
2:55:08
why they even call it don't
call it that
2:55:09
well it's gonna be trying times
for our
2:55:13
president we shall see we'll
see how he
2:55:15
does I don't know he's gonna do
that you
2:55:17
have one last thing all right
this has
2:55:19
got to be it word the
affiliates are
2:55:21
already pissed the they've
always been
2:55:23
pissed
2:55:25
the I have depleted two clips
so I can
2:55:27
play the one clip I think I'm
gonna play
2:55:29
two clips and this is the Jimmy
Carter
2:55:31
comment that took place where
he'd said
2:55:33
that Trump is an illegitimate
president
2:55:35
because the Russians fixed the
election
2:55:37
election and
2:55:39
made this comment on a stage
and it got
2:55:40
a lot of attention I have the
PBS
2:55:43
reproach I thought soft pedaled
it
2:55:45
because I have the original
clip of him
2:55:48
actually saying and how he said
it yeah
2:55:50
and this and PBS kind of I
thought they
2:55:52
were kind of kind to Trump for
a change
2:55:54
because I guess but nobody's
taking
2:55:57
Carter too seriously and they
don't want
2:55:58
to make a big deal out of what
he
2:55:59
actually said which was pretty
pathetic
2:56:02
but let's play the PBS clip
first is
2:56:05
only 51 seconds I'm a
subjective report
2:56:10
on Jimmy Connor got it in a
related
2:56:12
development former President
Jimmy
2:56:14
Carter said he believes
President Trump
2:56:16
actually lost the 2016 election
but
2:56:19
Russian interference won him
the White
2:56:22
House anyway mister Carter
spoke in
2:56:24
Virginia at a discussion on
human rights
2:56:26
historian Jon Meacham asked if
that
2:56:29
means he thinks the Trump
presidency is
2:56:31
quote illegitimate there's no
doubt that
2:56:34
the Russians did interfere in
election
2:56:36
and I think the interference
although
2:56:38
not yet quantified I have fully
2:56:40
investigated would show the
Trump then
2:56:43
actually win the election in
2016 he
2:56:45
lost the election and he was
put in
2:56:47
office because they Russians
interfere
2:56:50
in a 2017 report US intelligence
2:56:54
agencies concluded that Russia
did
2:56:56
interfere in the 2016 election
to help
2:56:59
mr. Trump they did not assess
whether
2:57:01
those actions affected the
outcome which
2:57:05
is objective she has a tell
where she
2:57:08
smacks her lips at the
beginning after
2:57:10
coming out of the clip we need
to listen
2:57:14
to this lipsmack and he was put
in
2:57:20
office because they russians
interfering
2:57:23
in aid it's more of it okay he
does it a
2:57:30
lot yeah she's actually smacks
her lips
2:57:32
more than anybody on the air um
she
2:57:36
should have the new one of a
dead guy
2:57:38
our producer caught us doing it
she
2:57:40
should write her now here's the
whole
2:57:42
clip this is the let me just
review let
2:57:45
me just review what cut what I
heard
2:57:47
Carter say in that clip was
President
2:57:50
Trump did not win the election
2:57:53
he somehow he kept put in by
Putin
2:57:58
yeah well that's pretty much
what he
2:58:00
says in this clip too but this
takes it
2:58:02
a little further and then also
as some
2:58:03
screwball then ending that's
kind of
2:58:06
think it's a big laugh of the
audience I
2:58:08
just found the whole thing to be
2:58:09
disturbing and Carter and
Carter was up
2:58:12
there on the stage with Meacham
and then
2:58:13
there's some guy I don't know
who was
2:58:14
sitting next to Carter who
looked like
2:58:16
he was half-dead and he's just
sitting
2:58:19
there like it like a lump as my
mother
2:58:21
used to say but but let's play
this
2:58:24
Russia has been proven orb our
2:58:27
intelligence community to have
2:58:29
interfered with one of our
human rights
2:58:31
which is the right of free and
fair
2:58:33
elections what truly and how
should we
2:58:36
deal with Russia well the
president
2:58:38
subject condemn it admit that
happened
2:58:41
which are they didn't 16 of
intelligence
2:58:43
agencies have already agreed to
this to
2:58:45
say and there's no doubt that
the
2:58:47
Russians did interfere in
election and I
2:58:50
think the interference although
not yet
2:58:51
quantified I have fully
investigated
2:58:54
which so that from then
actually win the
2:58:56
election in 2016 he lost the
election
2:58:59
and he was put in office
because the
2:59:02
Russians interfere what his
behalf
2:59:05
said you believe President
Trump is an
2:59:07
illegitimate president based on
what I
2:59:12
just said was I can't retract
women
2:59:19
that's a little different than
the way
2:59:21
the report was report was a
little yeah
2:59:26
it didn't take it didn't bring
all the
2:59:28
nuttiness out the report is
pretty
2:59:30
straightforward I thought the
report was
2:59:32
hmm was I thought the report is
okay I
2:59:35
thought it was objective it was
it still
2:59:38
brought him out but it did lose
you to
2:59:39
hear the whole thing what you
just did
2:59:41
it's a little more radical I
thought
2:59:43
well I'm very happy that the
national
2:59:46
news media is completely
obsessed with
2:59:48
this kind of stuff with an old
guy who
2:59:51
was a one-term president by many
2:59:57
considered the worst president
in
2:59:58
history yeah and it's very
important to
3:00:00
have all this going on
meanwhile we have
3:00:02
a domestic terrorist with
3:00:04
ski masks throwing is wet
cemented
3:00:08
people beating up gays and
that's not
3:00:12
covered maybe it's just me
3:00:16
murica baby we are the beacon
of shining
3:00:21
light for all media
manipulation foam
3:00:24
finger number one you can't
beat us we
3:00:26
know how to do it we're number
one
3:00:28
and that will do it for our
3:00:30
deconstruction for today hope
you
3:00:31
enjoyed it if you found any
value in
3:00:33
this let us know one of the
best ways is
3:00:36
to go to Dvorak org slash na
and support
3:00:39
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was a
3:00:41
value today if it's literally
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3:00:44
you sane you know what to do it
keeps us
3:00:47
going
3:00:48
and we thank all of our
producers for
3:00:50
all of their input feedback
even if we
3:00:52
don't like it it's still highly
3:00:53
appreciated and I am coming to
you from
3:00:56
the frontier of Austin Texas
it's FEMA
3:00:59
region number six on the
governmental
3:01:01
maps if you're looking for it
in the
3:01:02
morning everybody I'm Adam
curry and
3:01:04
from northern Silicon Valley
I'm John C
3:01:06
Dvorak coming up next on no
agenda
3:01:08
stream comm grumpy old Ben's
number
3:01:10
thirteen thanks to Jesse coy
Nelson and
3:01:14
sir Chris Williams Chris Wilson
I'm
3:01:17
sorry for the end of show mixes
we'll be
3:01:19
back on Thursday remember us
Dvorak dot
3:01:20
org slash na until then adios
MooMoo
3:01:25
mofos
3:01:26
[Music]
3:01:33
I think most people think of
rape as
3:01:41
being sexy you don't feel like
a victim
3:01:46
I was not throwing on the
ground and
3:01:47
ravish I walked in writing food
and you
3:01:56
shut the door and bang against
the wall
3:02:02
immediately upon walking into
that dress
3:02:05
my attack against the law we
refuse to
3:02:09
grant morning's never stop
you're
3:02:11
fascinating to talk to I think
she was
3:02:23
married as I read I have no
idea Tia's
3:02:25
but she was married to a Johnson
3:02:30
Buffalo the dingus day capital
of the
3:02:32
world you're fascinating to
talk to
3:02:39
[Applause]
3:02:46
[Music]
3:02:57
[Applause]
3:03:03
Basilica
3:03:05
[Music]
3:03:07
I switched to
3:03:11
buddy's gonna watch YouTube
today she's
3:03:14
gonna make them stream Feeny
3:03:18
understand
3:03:20
Coss she was good
3:03:24
and you can see no drooling cuz
there is
3:03:26
no training one reason do you
need to be
3:03:29
loved
3:03:31
[Music]
3:03:33
don't work
3:03:41
don't like you
3:03:43
community strong
3:03:48
the whole side down
3:03:51
[Music]
3:03:54
Oh
3:03:57
this video from your account
has been
3:03:58
disabled for violation of the
YouTube
3:04:00
community guidelines thank you
and have
3:04:03
a nice day ha well guess I
better go and
3:04:06
ask for a manual review
3:04:09
[Music]
3:04:17
[Music]
3:04:24
Popo Dvorak org slash and a
hello to
3:04:31
both of you