0:00
Adam Curry: The carbon is you,
0:01
Unknown: Adam curry John C
Devora.
0:04
Adam Curry: July 16 2023 this
pure award winning combination
0:07
media assassination episode 1573
This
0:10
Unknown: is no agenda
0:12
Adam Curry: not afraid of AI at
all and broadcasting the Texas
0:17
Hill Country here and SEMA
reason number six in the
0:20
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry
0:22
John C Dvorak: from Northern
Silicon Valley words where it is
0:25
actually national AI
Appreciation Day. I'm Justin
0:31
Borak.
0:34
Unknown: It is not it is.
0:39
Adam Curry: Coop is supported by
presidential proclamation
0:42
John C Dvorak: go to what's it
called? whitehouse.gov de.com
0:46
has all the holidays today is
the following national national
0:50
National Corn fritter day
0:52
Adam Curry: well now stop the
press. Okay.
0:57
John C Dvorak: National Ice
Cream day. National a fresh
1:01
spinach day. Oh man of course.
guinea pig Appreciation Day.
1:09
Yes, okay. National Cherry de
cherry national atomic Veterans
1:15
Day.
1:15
Adam Curry: Wait a minute, whose
event of it atomic
1:20
John C Dvorak: exposures to plug
the Oppenheimer movie. Yeah. Oh,
1:23
there you go. rural transit day.
Feast of Our Lady of Mount
1:28
Carmel and world snake day and
artificial intelligence
1:34
Appreciation Day.
1:35
Adam Curry: Well, I'm so happy
we can celebrate that with an
1:39
actor strike. Dudes Oh, dude,
dude, dude. podcast is the
1:47
future. These guys are never
going to resolve this dispute.
1:51
Ever. Too
1:52
John C Dvorak: late. I had a
long chat with Brunetti our
1:56
Hollywood producer.
1:57
Adam Curry: Yes. A hot hot hot
big time hotshot Hollywood
2:01
producing shot
2:02
John C Dvorak: how to
2:02
Adam Curry: shut cards. How's
2:04
John C Dvorak: everything
running radio
2:06
Adam Curry: is brought and who
knows? Yeah, hopefully you know
2:10
we'll because that'll get you
the big part. You've been
2:12
looking for it? No, it won't.
Yeah, okay. So you this is a
2:18
boots on the ground reports
straight from the top of the
2:21
entertainment empire.
2:23
John C Dvorak: First of all, he
goes off on the writers.
2:26
Adam Curry: Yeah, in what way?
2:29
John C Dvorak: Writers all they
do is whine. He says you can
2:33
produce a movie that never shows
the light of day and nobody gets
2:37
paid except the writers. Yeah,
that's true. There's always four
2:41
writers because three of them
couldn't do the job.
2:44
Adam Curry: How many writers
does it take to screw in a light
2:46
bulb? On and
2:47
John C Dvorak: on about the
writer so he doesn't really for
2:50
the writer. Wait a minute,
2:51
Adam Curry: the writers the
writers find themselves to be
2:54
incredibly important. They
create a eyes the AI
2:57
John C Dvorak: thing is a straw
man. Crappy scissors. No way.
3:01
Yes. That is ever going to your
writers have all these specific
3:06
skills that really take a human
is to fine tune for AI to go
3:11
into. But then he goes into the
Screen Actors Guild where he
3:15
signs up sag AFTRA it's now
combined say after Yes, he goes
3:21
after them and he says that for
one thing they've been using,
3:27
you know, using fakes situations
in the background forever. And
3:32
the idea that they're going to
take every screen extra that
3:35
comes in they're going to take
their picture pay him for one
3:37
shot and then use them forever
for free. He says he says
3:42
they're missing the whole point
is this this is it this is a a
3:46
kind of a buyers market with
slower sellers market slowdowns.
3:51
Adam Curry: Explain what that
means I understand it but just
3:54
explain what that means use them
and
3:56
John C Dvorak: the idea is the
sag after one of their
4:00
complaints is they're worried
sick that the extras even though
4:05
I thought that was the screen
extra skilled but okay, I guess
4:08
joined forces. The extras are
going to walk into the guys just
4:13
sit around the background and
sit at the tables are going to
4:15
come in. They're going to
they're going to 3d scan him
4:20
paying for that one day's work
and then use the you know, an AI
4:24
created background and from then
on, and they're never going to
4:28
get paid residuals. You know,
they're going to get screwed.
4:31
Yeah. Now, he came up with what
I thought was one of the most
4:36
brilliant things I've ever heard
I have to say. He says he says
4:40
that they're kind of missing the
point he says you could create
4:44
at any studio, a profit center
using the following tech
4:49
technique. charge people charge
people $100 to come in with
4:58
under the guise Do you want To
be in a movie, they pay 100
5:03
bucks, you scan them 3d scan
them, put them in all these
5:06
movies and say, you're gonna be
in a bunch of movies, we'll send
5:10
you an email letting you know
what movies you're going to be
5:13
in for the next 10 movies, free
tickets.
5:16
Adam Curry: And they don't even
have to do that. And popcorn
5:19
John C Dvorak: was he said that?
They would, you would, you
5:22
would, for example, Adam curry
you give him 100 bucks for the
5:25
service or the, for the
privilege for the privilege of
5:29
being in these movies. And you'd
get an email telling you when
5:33
you're going to be in it, it
would be would people would line
5:37
up by the 1000s. And you can set
up a shop in Hollywood and just
5:40
say be in a movie. Bring your
100 bucks and here we go.
5:44
Alright, let's he's actually
going to present this to a
5:47
studio.
5:47
Adam Curry: I think that's the
dynamite idea. But this, of
5:50
course, is not the problem at
all. This This has nothing to do
5:54
with the core issue. And I have
a couple of clips from around
5:58
the globe. And I'm very, very, I
can listen to Fran Drescher talk
6:02
all day I
6:03
Unknown: have one. Fran
Drescher. I
6:05
Adam Curry: love hearing her
talk. I love it when she's all
6:07
riled up. She still looks
amazingly good.
6:10
Unknown: How old is she supposed
to be
6:11
John C Dvorak: in your 60s 9093?
6:15
Adam Curry: Even without makeup,
she's there without makeup. As
6:18
far as I can tell. She looks
great. I just love how she How
6:22
does she get that gig? Is that
is that voted? Is that? The
6:25
members? Yes.
6:27
John C Dvorak: To get you have
to this is a lot of work to get
6:29
that gig. Well she have to raise
your ear to run you know you've
6:33
just voted in thing Yeah, right
there was the last one it did
6:36
Adam Curry: see the real I'll
just say it up front. The
6:37
problem is the movie business is
now owned by the technology
6:42
business. Big tech owns the
movies. And it's turned from
6:46
theaters Yes, theater still
important. But we can see the
6:49
writing on the wall. theaters
are moving into the home. Soon
6:52
you'll you'll help sit in your
tiny home, you've got your apple
6:55
vision Pro and your enjoy your
tiny home telling you this is
6:58
the future you will be looking
at this huge screen you will be
7:02
enjoying it, can you enjoy it
with friends, you can look over
7:04
and look in their so called
eyes. And it's going to be it's
7:06
going to be great experience.
But as we know, the model for
7:10
Silicon Valley is give me all of
your creative energy. Give me
7:15
your identity, and I'll give you
shit. That is the that's the
7:19
model. That's the Twitter model.
That's the Facebook model.
7:23
That's the Google model. Give me
everything, including your
7:26
actual identity, and I will give
you nothing. So while we're
7:31
doing value for value is the
only way forward, because people
7:35
also can no longer afford to
have all these different
7:38
subscriptions. And guess what?
Even though Fran doesn't want to
7:43
believe it, the magic money
machine is over. There's no more
7:46
cheap free money. Everyone's
losing their ass on streaming.
7:50
Yeah, sure Bob Iger is doing
okay. Bob had them.
7:54
John C Dvorak: A few CEOs are
doing okay. Not to the extent
7:57
the clip I have of her. She
claims they're making hundreds
8:00
of millions of dollars a day.
8:02
Adam Curry: Well, let me let me
play a couple clips here. And
8:03
then and then we'll continue
because I have a few more things
8:06
to say about writers and actors.
First we go to CNN
8:10
Unknown: will also happen in
this morning TV and movie
8:11
production brought to a grinding
for the union representing
8:15
160,000 actors goes on strike
members joining picket lines
8:19
alongside writers who walked off
the job in May, the issues that
8:23
center around pay streaming
service residuals, but also
8:26
things like technology,
especially artificial
8:28
intelligence. Sir Fisher joins
us live now. And Sarah. That's
8:32
the thing that of all the
elements here and they're all
8:35
critical to the negotiations
that are ongoing to the extent
8:38
they are at this point. It's the
AI issue. And I think the
8:41
central nature of it, what
exactly are actors concerned
8:44
about? And how do they actually
want it addressed?
8:46
It's a huge issue, Phil. So
essentially, what the studios
8:50
are trying to say is that an
actor or somebody who's working
8:53
in the background, think about a
stunt double, et cetera, could
8:56
have their image be screened.
And then anytime it's used after
9:00
that the studio would maintain
the name image and likeness,
9:03
meaning that they by the
9:04
Adam Curry: way, this is a stunt
double who of course, looks like
9:07
an existing actor. For the CNN
Montt news model to set Waltham
9:11
This is they could have take a
stump Python ball and they
9:14
again, you know, could they use
them over? You are dumb lady,
9:17
you're dumb benefits.
9:18
John C Dvorak: Hold on a second.
I agree with that. But do you
9:21
notice the use of name image and
likeness which is the term this
9:26
very specific term that was
applied to college athletes?
9:31
Adam Curry: Oh, good catch. Good
catch.
9:34
John C Dvorak: Yeah, because
what happened in college
9:37
athletics is that the because of
some lawsuits starting in
9:40
California and other places,
they started suing the NCAA
9:44
because these poor kids are
getting ripped off for their
9:48
name, image and likeness. Well
and says okay, now the student
9:53
owns it so they can go sell
their own name, image and
9:55
likeness. So there's something
about that phrase showing up in
9:59
this report. It that right there
is kind of a red flag. Well
10:02
Adam Curry: Mind you, this is
the news business and if anyone
10:05
is really afraid of being
replaced by AI it's the news
10:08
models because they know they
know that they are
10:11
John C Dvorak: there. Whatever
happened to naked news? still
10:14
around.
10:15
Adam Curry: I think it's what
stopped the press. Hold on.
10:17
Let's go back. Naked news doc. I
believe it's still in on the
10:21
air. Let me see naked news.com
Yes, it's still on the air,
10:25
John. Oh, yep. Welcome to naked
news. Yeah, let's see, Cecilia
10:31
is still
10:32
John C Dvorak: getting clips
from naked news, Marina
10:34
Adam Curry: Valmont, and Frankie
Kennedy all still on air, naked
10:37
new
10:39
Unknown: image be screened. And
then anytime it's used after
10:42
that the studio would maintain
the name image and likeness,
10:45
meaning that they could benefit
and monetize that person's, you
10:49
know, image, but the person who
is getting actually their image
10:53
scanned would only get paid for
that one day. So that's the big
10:56
sticking point that the actors
are very frustrated about. It's
10:59
a huge issue, though, because AI
is taking over every single
11:01
industry, not just Hollywood,
but the news media, all sorts of
11:05
things. But within Hollywood
itself. It's coming at a time
11:09
where a lot of people feel as
though they're not getting paid
11:12
enough already. So the fact that
they're not going to be able to
11:15
make money off of their name,
image and likeness. Only after
11:18
they do the scan is what's
really this big sticking point
11:21
is coming down to
11:22
Adam Curry: man her English is
horrible. It's like she's a
11:24
European speaking backwards,
like just dumb anyway, from the
11:29
sag after website itself. Let me
read this. What are the sag
11:33
AFTRA strike demands, this is
from their fac, the union is
11:37
demanding increased minimum pay
rates, increased streaming
11:41
residuals, this is the key point
really better working
11:45
conditions, please. And a way to
make royalties be a podcast if
11:49
you want better work included,
look into how well we go
11:51
through, and a way to make
royalties relevant once again,
11:55
this is all about the royalties
conversation. Now, here they
11:59
throw in the red herring since
the streaming model prioritizes.
12:03
Now it's not that this is one of
the true problems I'm sorry,
12:06
since the streaming model
prioritizes shorter seasons over
12:10
longer periods of time, the
actors are running out of jobs
12:14
and opportunities. Yes, this is
part of the real problem. They
12:19
plan to protest against that as
well. Like the WGA strike, the
12:23
guild is also trying to focus on
the artificial intelligence
12:26
aspect of the whole ordeal. No,
the problem here is there are
12:30
too many actors and too many
writers and not enough money to
12:35
go around in the business.
That's the core problem. It's
12:39
market forces. We need less
actors and less writers. Um,
12:44
John C Dvorak: I think the idea
of charging people to be in
12:48
Adam Curry: charge them to be a
writer to now let's listen to
12:51
BBC we get some Fran Drescher.
12:52
Unknown: Hollywood actors are
going on strike over pay and the
12:55
use of AI in the industry,
leaving hundreds of productions
12:59
in limbo. Hollywood writers
walked out weeks ago. And now
13:03
that members of the sag AFTRA
union have joined them, it will
13:07
bring the entire industry to its
knees.
13:09
Adam Curry: Before I continue
this clip, it must irk some
13:12
people who actually know what's
going on, that the news is only
13:16
picking up on the AI aspect of
it. Because that's not what it
13:20
is at all. They want actual
residuals, which is over.
13:24
residuals are over. It's over,
you get paid up front and that's
13:28
it. It's over. That's not coming
back the model of
13:35
John C Dvorak: if you're still
working on Blue Bloods, or
13:38
Adam Curry: John, it's obviously
in the books, it's over. That's
13:42
not the future anymore. And
quite honestly, we have so much
13:46
media so much content out there.
And yeah, in general, it just
13:51
has to, it has to shrink down
some there have to be some
13:54
losers.
13:55
Unknown: The actor, comedian and
president of the Screen Actors
13:58
Guild. Fran Drescher is fuming
she of
14:01
Adam Curry: comedian as well.
14:02
John C Dvorak: She ever a
comedian. She was she was doing
14:04
the anatomy. That's a comic
role. Okay, good point,
14:06
Unknown: the entire business
model has been changed by
14:10
streaming digital AI. If we
don't stand tall right now, we
14:17
are all going to be in jeopardy
of being replaced by machines.
14:22
We are being victimized by a
very greedy entity. I am shocked
14:29
by the way people that we have
been in business with are
14:34
treating us I cannot believe it,
how they believe that they're
14:39
losing money left and right when
giving hundreds of millions of
14:42
dollars to their CEOs. It is
disgusting. Shame on them.
14:48
Adam Curry: That's a true union
voice. You know, that's it.
14:51
She's borderline noodle boy. I
can't believe that the CEO is
14:57
making hundreds of millions of
dollars and worse we make The
15:00
product we are the coffee
15:01
John C Dvorak: shop. Yeah, no,
we aren't. Workers control the
15:05
means of production. Yes. Yeah.
Yeah. Well, that's all the union
15:10
unions do that that's what they
do. Yeah.
15:12
Adam Curry: Well, but it's it's
short sighted because it look
15:17
the thing that if I
15:19
John C Dvorak: had worked in the
past,
15:20
Adam Curry: if I work, yeah, but
that's over these days are over.
15:22
If I was Fran Drescher that I
would say, you know, what we're
15:26
gonna,
15:26
Unknown: I'd be surprised. It
would be interesting.
15:30
Adam Curry: I would say, look,
all the technologies, their AI
15:34
is at your fingertips, you can
create, you can create entire
15:38
screenplays together, you can do
it as a group will support you
15:42
will make sure that you have
fair contracts amongst each
15:44
other. We don't need the studios
here, we got a server is there,
15:47
oh, here's the sag after a
server, go make your own stuff.
15:51
Com movies are being made for $3
million. This is the mistake.
15:58
And this is also a huge
opportunity for non union people
16:02
to get together and do stuff.
It's a huge opportunity. While
16:08
there because this is this will
not be resolved. I don't see. I
16:11
mean, it started with DVDs. And
you know, that was the first
16:15
part of technology that really
started to ruin this.
16:19
John C Dvorak: Videotape, to be
honest about it.
16:21
Adam Curry: Yeah. Okay. But DVDs
made it so much easier. And what
16:24
happened with DVDs is the
studio's they got 75% off the
16:28
top. And that was you know, I
don't know if Fran Drescher or
16:32
was the one who was part of
those negotiations. But that was
16:35
that's where the mistake was
made. So once you give 75% Off
16:39
the top 25% is left to
distribute to everybody else. I
16:43
mean, okay, it's not going to be
great. And she has to recognize
16:47
that Disney is not just Disney
plus, that MGM has not you know,
16:52
it's not just it's Amazon. You
know, Amazon and Amazon is not
16:56
just the movie arm Apple is not
just apple plus. So it's a
16:59
little disingenuous to say the
CEOs are making hundreds of
17:02
millions of dollars. And I don't
want actors and, and writers to
17:06
be mad at me. But you have huge
opportunities now bigger than
17:10
ever get off your ass and go do
something. It means No, I mean
17:15
it get off.
17:17
John C Dvorak: You sound like
you're running parallel.
17:19
Adam Curry: Why? Maybe I am
maybe No, but it's more it's the
17:23
market. There are people who
think that, that there's plenty
17:27
of money in streaming don't know
what they're talking about. So
17:30
streaming, working,
17:31
John C Dvorak: loses. It's not
where money they can't find a
17:34
way to make money with
streaming. It's always been that
17:37
way. Anyone who's looked at the
math of running these servers
17:41
from the early days on? Yeah, at
some point it scales when you
17:45
get to some billions of users
17:48
Adam Curry: even then it's
sketchy at best. Now, and yeah,
17:53
it'd be you know, stock prices
based
17:55
John C Dvorak: on it. You
pointed this out, or one of your
17:57
you gave a speech once where you
made a big board, you made the
18:01
point of difference between the
computer based system is that
18:06
the computer, you know, it sends
out a single copy to a single
18:11
person and that's a one to one
as opposed to broadcasting like
18:14
in radio, where there's an
antenna that can that can
18:18
provide the data to 1000s and
1000s of people with you.
18:22
Adam Curry: Yeah, with every
extra customer. There's extra
18:24
cost. It's not like broadcasts
where every extra customer
18:28
decreases your cost. That's the
point. Unless you use the M bone
18:32
Unknown: which was days or
when's the last time we talked
18:36
about it?
18:37
John C Dvorak: Alright, let's
remember that that was a team
18:41
bone was it it was broadcast
over the internet kind of idea
18:44
Adam Curry: Yes. Multicast over
Oh, and it was over blue you
18:48
couldn't do it today you could
do it today. Anyway let's
18:52
John C Dvorak: let there's also
the bit territory idea where you
18:54
you you could broadcast using
bit torrent technology so
19:00
everyone was like everyone was
serving everyone else.
19:03
Adam Curry: If I may point out
no agenda tube.com uses web
19:06
torrent, and you can upload to
no agenda tube.com In fact, our
19:10
friend Mark Hall has done so
we've got a value for value
19:14
model model rockin and rollin on
that and every person who's
19:18
watching passes on bitch to the
next person. And that's just one
19:22
guy. Just you know, Alice gates
runs that, you know, he's not
19:25
rich. Now he just runs that and
it all kind of works. It's all
19:29
of this can be done all of this
as possible. But but people are
19:33
stuck in the old model and
they're lazy. Hey, man, what's
19:37
what my residuals Well, yeah,
that was okay in 1980. I know
19:41
because I was part of MTV, the
non union shop. Do you think I
19:45
get a single residual from MTV
for anything ever? No. No way.
19:51
John C Dvorak: You're the future
I
19:57
Unknown: tonight for the first
time in 63 years Both actors and
20:01
writers will be on strike. Labor
tension is now set to paralyze
20:05
Hollywood. Sag AFTRA, the union
representing actors voting to
20:10
hit the picket lines after
negotiations with the
20:13
organization that represents
studios and streamers broke down
20:17
early this morning, actor
friends Rescher best known for
20:19
her role in the daddy, now the
president of sag AFTRA, saying
20:23
they were given no choice,
20:25
you share the wealth, because
you cannot exist without us.
20:30
The more than 160,000 sag AFTRA
members demanding better pay
20:35
regulations for artificial
intelligence and increased
20:38
residuals, which for many
members provides access to
20:41
crucial health care.
20:42
26,000 bucks a year is what you
have to make to get your health
20:45
insurance and and there are a
lot of people who residual
20:49
payments are what carry them
across that threshold. The
20:51
Association
20:52
of studios and streamers said
they offer the actors historic
20:55
pay and residual increases and
promises on protecting actors
21:00
digital likenesses from Ai, but
the union says that offer was
21:04
not enough.
21:05
They came back with so little
that I began to feel like we
21:08
were duped.
21:09
What's your biggest concern
right now?
21:11
Well, I feel, you know, a big
weight and responsibility that
21:17
we had to strike. I hope that
the opposition will come back to
21:24
the table.
21:25
Bob Iger, the CEO of Disney, the
parent company of ABC News.
21:29
Today speaking on the side of
the studio is saying the union's
21:32
expectations are not realistic
and could impact 1000s
21:36
There's huge collateral damage
in the industry, to people who
21:40
are you know, who are support
services, I could go on and on,
21:44
it will affect the economy of
different regions, even because
21:49
of this the sheer size of the
business. It's a shame, it is
21:52
really a shame,
21:53
Adam Curry: learn to code,
listen to actors and writers.
21:58
Now that the summer it's going
to be the summer of even less
22:02
crap than we usually have. This
is your tremendous opportunity.
22:06
Take that script you've been
sitting on that no one wants to
22:09
do anything with get some of
your actors, you can do a non
22:12
union low budget you can crowd
fund. It's being done all over.
22:17
You're you're watching you're
watching the future and you're
22:20
not even seeing the future pass
you by. You get you know a Mac,
22:24
and you can do this yourself.
You can have success, right
22:28
people will support you. If you
can make an outstanding product,
22:31
which is the question is what
the opportunity is amazing to
22:38
me. If I had any skills, I'd be
doing it. Now. This is what I
22:43
do. I don't I don't have any
writing or acting skill.
22:49
Although come on swampthing by
the way, I don't get any
22:52
residually
22:54
John C Dvorak: you were okay in
that in that story that boost
22:59
that online? thing with
detectives? whoever the hell it
23:03
was your good net detective.
23:05
Adam Curry: Oh, no, that was one
thing. No, what are you talking
23:09
about online thing with
detectives? Who you confusing me
23:13
with some MVNO
23:14
John C Dvorak: production or
something?
23:15
Adam Curry: Who do you think I
am?
23:17
John C Dvorak: I don't know. I
handle online probably. Forgot
23:21
it just like
23:22
Adam Curry: an acting gig with
in video me.
23:27
John C Dvorak: Wasn't wha is?
23:28
Adam Curry: Was it the was the
amazing adventures of superhero
23:32
Tourette's? Oh, DJ Terrazza. Was
that what you're known
23:34
Unknown: as a good one? No,
let's do it.
23:38
Adam Curry: I don't recall
anything like that. But I'm just
23:42
saying that this is a golden
opportunity to create something
23:46
that people will support you.
People love, love stuff like,
23:50
Okay, I went to see sound of
freedom. Yesterday. An excellent
23:55
example. The movie was
originally crowdfunded for I
23:59
think they $5 million. Not a lot
particularly of have John Paul
24:03
DeJoria. And Tony Robbins, you
know, people chucked in a
24:07
million dollars each here and
there. And they got their money
24:10
together because they had a good
story. They had a good script
24:12
that people had never, they
attach the name to it. The lead
24:18
actor. And now of course,
because Disney just didn't see
24:24
any way to make any money off or
didn't think it was going to be
24:27
a hot ticket item. They just
shelved that which happens to
24:30
all kinds of movies. I like the
marketing angle of saying it's
24:34
because of you know, the elites.
They don't want you to know. Of
24:38
course, that's what you do,
which is which is great
24:41
marketing. Having seen this
movie, by the way, I'm now
24:44
thinking that the AMC stories of
pulling fire alarms that to me
24:49
is Guerilla Marketing.
Fantastic. There's no better
24:52
idea than to make everybody
think that the elites don't want
24:56
you to know about the story
which was perfectly accentuated
24:59
by
25:00
John C Dvorak: I'm reminded of
the marketing for was that black
25:03
and white it was kind of a black
and white film they were they're
25:06
moving out in the woods with a
camera and they were finding
25:09
ghosts layer which story The
Blair Witch Project Blair
25:12
Adam Curry: Witch Project. Yes,
great, great marketing, great
25:16
marketing
25:16
John C Dvorak: using the same
style of guerilla marketing.
25:20
Adam Curry: So I want to give a
quick review and then explain
25:23
what my feelings were after
having seen this movie we went
25:25
to just north of San Antonio, to
watch this not at an AMC movie
25:30
theater. So the air conditioning
work it was full, which was nice
25:34
to see and Indiana Jones Mission
Impossible I think was open in
25:38
the same theater. But this
theater was full. In general, 20
25:45
minutes too long. A very well
done very well acted good story,
25:50
you know, based on a true story.
And if you've seen the
25:53
documentary, then you'll know
that it is based on a true
25:55
story. And this guy's real Tim
Ballard really has saved
25:59
children has put pedophiles in
jail. At no point is any child
26:04
traffic to the United States.
There's no insinuation
26:07
whatsoever of American elites
other than some some really,
26:11
really messed up drunken pedo
sex tourism and to Juana there's
26:17
no Q anon adjacent crap to any
degree whatsoever, it would have
26:21
been a great movie to watch at
home on Netflix honestly, didn't
26:26
necessarily have to see it in
theater. There's a very
26:28
beautiful plea at the end. To
raise awareness of this, and
26:33
unless you are living under
under a rock, you know that sex
26:38
trafficking is trapped sex
trafficking is real. You don't
26:41
really need to see this movie to
believe that trafficking of
26:45
children is real. I've been
aware of this going back to the
26:49
80s in Europe at the do true
affair. The Rolodex files.
26:55
Brussels is filled with with all
kinds of stories of course
26:59
that's where many elites are
Haiti we know Hillary Clinton's
27:04
buddy there who's now in charge
of amber alert was illegally
27:07
trafficking What 12 children
across the border after the
27:10
earthquake me there's example
after example, after example. So
27:15
walking out of the theater, we
looked at each other and when it
27:19
was good movie, but this movie
is while to a degree as a
27:24
parent, traumatizing you know,
when you take your kid to what
27:27
you think is a show business
audition, and you come back to
27:31
collect your kids and the
audition is gone, the sign on
27:34
the door is gone, and your kids
are gone. The only thing that is
27:39
disturbing is the mainstreams
response to it. The very
27:43
disturbing in fact, there is
nothing that warrants what the
27:47
Rolling Stone wrote. What a
Rolling Stone what the Guardian
27:50
wrote, Nothing that warrants the
responses from CNN and MSNBC.
27:56
Other than a they never saw the
movie and they're just all
27:59
jacked up because child
trafficking they're the ones
28:03
that have this q1 on thing in
their head. No child trafficking
28:07
Oh Audrina crow. They that
that's so they're so politically
28:12
motivated that that's all they
can think of that that's the
28:15
angle. That's the story. They
can't even they can't even say
28:19
something compassionate about
children. Even if it was a made
28:22
up story. You could still say,
Hey, man, this really makes you
28:25
think about what might be going
on in the world. That's the
28:28
disturbing part of this. The
movie is not that disturbing.
28:31
The concept is not eye opening.
It is disturbing how the
28:36
mainstream media responded to
this purely political. Trying to
28:43
discredit anyone who even talks
about it. That's the thing that
28:48
is i It's hard for me to rap,
it's harder for me to wrap my
28:52
head around that than around the
actual child trafficking itself.
28:56
It's these people are sick,
truly, truly sick, they can't
29:02
even muster enough to say, hey,
you know, that's kind of a
29:05
problem. Let's let's get some
experts in who know about this.
29:09
And that used to happen.
29:11
John C Dvorak: Actually, that's
a good point. Besides, I mean, I
29:14
agree. Obviously, the show is
about that in some ways, that
29:19
the mainstream media is
dropping, they're not dropping
29:21
the ball, but they're they're
subversive in the normal in a
29:26
normal process, a movie like
this would come out. And you're
29:30
right the main show CNN or MSNBC
would bring someone on to talk
29:36
about about the problem. Yes.
Yes, that's exactly what would
29:43
happen.
29:44
Adam Curry: What a crazy idea.
But no, because a couple things
29:47
one, this this movie did not
follow the traditional Hollywood
29:52
model of paying off, you know,
premiums and junkets and
29:59
everything. Hang for the news
media. I
30:01
John C Dvorak: think that's
really the crux of it.
30:03
Adam Curry: Of course it's it
must be a part of it. There's no
30:06
advertising on the main there's
30:08
John C Dvorak: nothing on
Entertainment Tonight. Doo doo
30:11
doo doo doo doo. There's nothing
extra
30:14
Adam Curry: in addition. I mean,
it's crazy that these Q anon
30:17
people are driving people to
theaters to see this Q anon
30:21
adjacent stupid movie while
there's a perfectly good AI
30:25
movie about the danger of AI our
main story from Tom Cruise
30:31
Mission Impossible. And Indiana
Jones How can this not be the
30:34
blockbuster? This is wrong Q
anon Trump. I mean, it's that's
30:39
really how these people think
they're sick. As Voltaire said
30:44
they are sick as Voltaire said
they're
30:46
John C Dvorak: misled they're
they're I don't know what they
30:48
they're they're adult. Put my
finger on
30:51
Adam Curry: remember those who
can who can make you believe
30:53
absurdities can make you commit
atrocities. That's what these
30:58
people are. They will make you
believe that this is a q anon
31:02
movie that makes you wonder if
they actually saw it
31:06
John C Dvorak: at all. They
didn't obviously see it. Well, I
31:09
think
31:09
Adam Curry: they did. And I
think they sit in the theater,
31:11
and they go, this is done by Q
anon people. They're insinuating
31:16
things that just aren't true.
There's no such thing as Audrina
31:19
Chrome, which I'm still pretty
sketchy on, by the way.
31:23
John C Dvorak: Everybody is
31:24
Adam Curry: no no this funny,
31:26
John C Dvorak: it's a punch line
is what it is. It's not really
31:29
things to take serious. That's
how
31:30
Adam Curry: we use it,
obviously.
31:34
John C Dvorak: It's like John
Stuart, and I think this punch
31:37
line should be brought back.
John Stuart, when he was running
31:40
the Daily Show, he would go on
and on about some operation of
31:44
these and he'd always end it
with a punch line, otherwise
31:47
known as Nambla. Oh, yeah.
31:50
Adam Curry: Well, no, it's real.
But it's but Nambla is real.
31:54
John C Dvorak: Yeah, but Nambla
has been out of the picture with
31:56
all this trans stuff and
everything you think Nambla
31:58
would be brought back into play?
32:00
Adam Curry: No, no, no, no. Now
since you brought us here we got
32:05
a phenomenal email which I want
to share boots on the ground.
32:11
And I have I have a couple of
clips to go along with this.
32:15
Because this does play into what
the mainstream is really up to.
32:20
Don't look at child sex
trafficking don't look at any of
32:22
that. But let's let's make sure
we let's make sure we don't
32:26
offend anybody. Here's a very,
very offensive bid on CNN.
32:30
Unknown: They're not gonna serve
it because they don't like the
32:32
way Dylan Mulvaney was treated
after this whole controversy
32:35
started he courses the
transgender person they were
32:38
going to sponsor and go along
with with Bud Light they didn't
32:42
like how Bud Light didn't stand
by him after all this
32:46
Adam Curry: now did you catch
the problem in this CNN clip?
32:50
But again, okay, they're
32:54
John C Dvorak: prompted me to
look for a problem.
32:56
Adam Curry: I'm sorry. So this
is they're talking about of
32:59
course Budweiser is a sponsor
there's a real problem Budweiser
33:02
is going out of the Budweiser
Bud Light brand has very big
33:05
financial troubles perhaps much
more of and Anheuser Busch and
33:11
CNN is discussing this and they
of course defending that they're
33:16
they're defending the brand
they're there their money
33:19
masters and they're they're
saying hey, you know this people
33:23
were pissed off about dilla
Mulvaney you're not
33:25
Unknown: gonna serve it because
they don't like the way Delvin
33:27
Mulvaney was treated after this
whole controversy started he
33:30
courses the transgender person
they were going to sponsor and
33:35
go along with Bud Light they
didn't like how Bud Light didn't
33:38
stand by him after all this
33:40
Adam Curry: now did you find the
the problem? Yeah, the him Yes,
33:43
of course. It's misgendering
33:45
John C Dvorak: Hello
misgendered.
33:49
Unknown: Want to make an
important note yesterday in a
33:51
segment about transgender
influencer, Dylan Mulvaney who
33:55
was featured in Bud Lights
recent campaign, she was
33:58
mistakenly referred to by the
wrong pronoun and
34:03
be quiet you're Misha, stepping
on all the good stuff.
34:07
She was mistakenly referred to
by the wrong pronoun. And CNN
34:10
aims to honor individuals ways
of identifying themselves and we
34:15
apologize for that error.
34:17
Yes, we apologize. Error.
34:20
John C Dvorak: I thought that
Dylan Mulvaney was they them?
34:26
Adam Curry: No no, no, no, no
Dylan Mulvaney. Okay, so I have
34:32
learned a lot in the past few
days. And that what I will not
34:36
discuss here is the movie what
is a woman? It's a short
34:40
documentary, but half an hour is
not the Matt Walsh documentary.
34:45
It is what is a woman comma,
wrong answers only. And from
34:49
this you will learn that really
this is the biggest misogynistic
34:54
movement ever witnessed in
history.
34:57
John C Dvorak: But we've been
saying that in the show.
34:59
Adam Curry: Yeah, but This
really makes it come come all it
35:02
brings it home particularly
people like Rachel Levine. This
35:07
starts with with young men who
are who are missing a lot of
35:11
things in their life. And let's
face it, what men find
35:17
attractive in women is a lot of
stuff men have made up you know,
35:21
the the clothes that that men
perceive women to be sexy and
35:25
the lipstick, I mean, the high
heels all of this is pretty much
35:29
invented by men. So the ultimate
the ultimate turn on at some
35:33
point for many men, young men in
particular, but a lot of older
35:36
men as well. Is to become a
woman to be that sexy woman.
35:41
It's weird to wrap your head
around, but we
35:43
John C Dvorak: gotta there is a
there is a perversion. Yes.
35:46
Where you are certain men get
excited by dressing as women. A
35:51
lot
35:51
Adam Curry: of men, John, not
just certain, a lot. Yes, yes,
35:56
yes, you have, I don't
35:57
John C Dvorak: know one of them.
And I know more than 10
36:01
Adam Curry: Please watch that
documentary. And I'm going to
36:05
play I'm going to read this
email them play two clips that
36:08
kind of play into it, how the
system works. Because the
36:13
Internet is a is a very big part
of this and Big Pharma medical
36:17
community. So this is one of our
producers. Anonymous, writes in
36:20
you received this well, then a
very, I think, beautiful email.
36:24
Thank you for writing this. I'm
a 25 year old trans woman, male
36:28
to female currently living in
Portland, Oregon. I'd like to
36:31
share information that you and
John will hopefully find
36:33
insightful. I started
transitioning three years ago
36:36
after life of depression and
self exploration. I knew when I
36:40
was around the age of 12, but it
felt that coming out would ruin
36:44
my chances that living a normal
life I have by no means been
36:47
brainwashed by what has been and
is currently happening. I have
36:51
always been crawling the net and
have been interested in
36:53
computers for most of my life.
So I found out about early forms
36:57
of sissy Hypno. We talked about
this. This is the online porn,
37:01
that it's kind of an
overreaching category, but it's
37:06
everywhere. And it is about
force feminization men becoming
37:10
women in pornographic settings
and learned about early forms of
37:14
sissy Hypno from being in trans
spaces all the way back to 2013.
37:19
I'm happy you've been covering
it on the show because it's a
37:22
major problem now. So this is an
important this is coming from
37:25
someone who who has gone through
some of this but but is worried
37:29
about what's happening now. Born
out of the depths of fetishes
37:33
like femdom Female domination
over a man and forced
37:37
feminization, a woman making a
man wear makeup and women's
37:41
clothing by the way, go on
PornHub this 15 of these
37:44
categories about just this.
Sissy has turned into a new age
37:48
and destructive rebirth of the
term crossdresser. Remember that
37:52
John crossdresser there was that
a lot of men were cross dressing
37:56
back in the day. The porn has
had many more than you think.
38:02
Obviously, the porn has
permeated parts of Reddit and
38:06
all the major porn sites tick
tock has a huge role in this
38:10
because a lot of tick tock
inspired Hypno videos have
38:13
started to sweep the main sites
that hosts this type of content.
38:17
The main one I followed is Hypno
tube.com. Don't go look at that.
38:23
Created by a trans woman who
goes by Mia Electra. Her and the
38:27
people adjacent to her circles
are trying to cover all the
38:30
bases by having marketed online
storefronts like Hypno femme dot
38:34
club, even creating fake fantasy
pages like Hypno university.net
38:39
Go look at that one. The thing
that I'd really like to drive
38:43
home is the discord Twitch,
anime, YouTube and gaming
38:46
culture all collide with this.
Discord is full of groomers
38:50
soliciting nude sending hormones
to minors through the mail.
38:53
Twitch is full of degenerates
who play games for 12 hours a
38:56
day that are slowly taking the
roles of friends and parental
39:00
figures to their viewers as a
parasocial relationship. A lot
39:04
of animators porn adjacent
YouTube is the new TV for Gen Z,
39:09
acting as a hub that links to
games that link to discord
39:12
servers to link to Twitch
streamers that lead to being
39:14
involved in ridiculous Internet
communities and example,
39:18
Finster, a British Twitch
streamer that start out playing
39:21
Minecraft and now has gained
massive popularity for losing a
39:25
bet to a friend where he had to
jokingly dress up as a girl on
39:28
Go on. Omegle I don't know what
that is in 2018. He has now
39:33
continued to be a girl for five
years because of the money and
39:38
notoriety he started receiving
and has recently created an only
39:41
fans where he labels himself as
a fanboy like the dealer
39:45
Mulvaney. Like I'm a failed
actor, but if I pretend to be a
39:47
girl, I'm famous. I'm making
millions of dollars. Yeah, these
39:50
are the influences that are
39:52
John C Dvorak: way you would do
that can make sense?
39:55
Adam Curry: Yes, but these are
the influences that are weighing
39:59
on young Kids now it makes all
of this seem very normal. Yes,
40:05
I've been watching this slowly
happen my whole life. Young men
40:08
like my past self and friends
around me being raised on a
40:12
steady diet of video games,
porn, fast food, no real purpose
40:17
in life, no father figures or
any hope for the future gives
40:20
you exactly what you're seeing.
I hope this sheds more light on
40:24
the topic from an insider's
perspective, I will continue to
40:27
be a mole in plain sight for all
the days and nights. So this
40:31
story really made me understand
what is happening. And this is
40:35
from male to female, the girls
have a different story. But here
40:40
now we have the witch trials of
JK Rowling, which is a very
40:44
interesting podcast. JK Rowling,
of course, the Harry Potter
40:48
author, who was very much
against the trans Maoist culture
40:52
and movement. And this broadcast
condemned
40:55
John C Dvorak: by by this
podcast by a lot of people.
40:59
Yeah. As a horrible turf.
41:02
Adam Curry: Yeah. So when you
have this going on, on the
41:08
internet, parental type figures
who are very popular on Twitch
41:12
and they're normalizing it, no,
it's great. You have dinner
41:14
Mulvaney. It's great to be a
girl and I can be so successful,
41:18
I finally feel my feel like
myself. You see people who are
41:22
looking to be loved,
particularly young children. And
41:25
now all of a sudden, if I do
this, I'm like this I can be
41:28
loved. And it plays into an
already existing fetish, which I
41:31
guess is just inside a lot of
men. Anyway, this is the story
41:36
of Noah who became Natalie and I
pulled to Eclipse at 14 Noah was
41:48
not feeling very good in Noah
skin, because that's what
41:52
happens when you're 14. It is I
went through
41:57
John C Dvorak: your 14 year and
if you're a do it your gaki
42:00
during dream
42:01
Adam Curry: you don't you're not
right in your skin, you know,
42:04
you might be get pestered for
how you look or whatever's going
42:07
on. And this is when of course
you need parents and parental
42:10
figures the most. But the
internet was there to take no a
42:14
down a different path. And it
started with an unlikely
42:18
website.
42:19
Unknown: And then when I was in
middle school, I started
42:23
discovering portions of the
Internet where people would talk
42:26
about queer identity issues.
42:28
Adam Curry: Notice queer
identity issues. Okay, so this
42:32
is, these are the creeps out
there pushing the queer
42:35
ideology.
42:36
Unknown: What specifically were
you looking at
42:38
my sort of gateway with
BuzzFeed, because they have a
42:42
ton of viral content did
BuzzFeed. When I was four, I
42:46
just thought I was like any
other boy. As I grew older, I
42:49
started realizing I was
different. Jamie Dodger, whose
42:54
video it was titled dear
BuzzFeed, or something similar,
42:57
I tried to fit in his female
during my early teens, I could
43:00
never find clothes I liked quite
uncomfortable with anything I
43:02
wore and disliked my hair being
long. I must have watched that
43:07
20 times. From BuzzFeed, I
started doing my own research.
43:11
When I was 11. I used to just
read 11 B watch videos, over and
43:17
over of trans men documenting
their journeys online. And even
43:20
before I understood why I was
fascinated with that content,
43:24
that's just all I would do is
just rewatch videos like that.
43:26
But none of it was you should be
trans. It was just this is my
43:31
journey. This is what I just I
want to tell the world about my
43:34
journey and about the community
at large.
43:36
Today, I'm going to be going
over my one month, post up top
43:41
surgery, kind of a general
overview.
43:44
And I took all of that
information in and I came to the
43:48
conclusion I should allow myself
to explore who I am and try and
43:53
use that as an avenue to find
happiness. And something that
43:56
had a really, really significant
impact on me was people who
44:00
portrayed a trans body in
whatever forms that came in as
44:04
beautiful or normal, which
taught me that there was hope
44:09
for me to be happy, and that I
can allow myself to feel joy or
44:16
find some joy in how I look.
44:18
Adam Curry: This is so
understandable. You could you
44:21
could if it was be a giraffe
videos, it might have met or be
44:26
a furry or whatever, that when
you are an unhappy child and you
44:30
don't have your parents or not,
you know you don't have parents
44:34
or you're missing a father
figure in this case or whatever
44:37
it is that you're you're allowed
to be on screens all day long.
44:41
Your parents don't understand
it. And then you have parental
44:45
type figures coming in and
saying hey, I was like you and
44:49
now I feel good. Look at me and
I'm beautiful and and you get
44:52
comments like slay queen. No
wonder these 11 year old child
44:57
is going to be very susceptible
to that. Enter the medical
45:01
community. Because was this
child really confused about his
45:07
gender? Or was it perhaps some
other things going on? And how
45:11
did the medical and
pharmaceutical community play
45:14
into it?
45:15
Unknown: And were you seeing a
therapist or a counselor at that
45:19
time, like when all of this
started,
45:21
I had a lot of mental issues.
Maybe that's not the most
45:25
elegant way to say that, but I
was dealing with a lot of mental
45:28
struggles. Once puberty began,
45:31
you mean aside from your issues
with gender? Yeah, and I
45:35
couldn't really identify that I
had issues with gender. I just
45:38
had all of these abstract
feelings that didn't coalesced
45:41
into gender dysphoria until I
understood what that term meant
45:45
fully, which was later on in my
life. And so I was dealing with
45:48
very severe anxiety disorder,
depressive disorder, obsessive
45:51
compulsive disorder, and
attention deficit hyperactive
45:55
disorder. And so my mom got me a
therapist, who I've been with
45:59
ever since. And when she picked
out that therapist, she picked
46:02
out someone who specialized in
anxiety and gender issues and
46:07
adolescence, which I find
interesting to look back on. And
46:11
I had a psychiatrist as well.
And around eighth grade, I went
46:15
into this really severe
depressive episode. And I ended
46:18
up telling my psychiatrist that
I was debating suicide. And so
46:22
everyone decided we were going
to have to, like keep an eye on
46:24
me. And so I just kept going to
therapy. And like I said, the
46:30
core issue, which we couldn't
figure out what's never
46:32
resolved,
46:33
Adam Curry: do you see what is
happening here? Here's a child
46:37
who was being diagnosed with
anything but gender dysphoria,
46:40
but get him the right thing, a
therapist, you should be a girl,
46:43
that's, that'll make you happy.
46:46
Unknown: And I believe, within a
year,
46:48
John C Dvorak: it's an
industrial complex.
46:50
Adam Curry: It is a total
industrial complex, and it has a
46:53
revenue model. There's, there's
no that's the key. Yes, there's,
46:58
there's websites that that
charge money. There's only fans,
47:03
there's products, lots and lots
of there's masks, there's full
47:07
body suits, as all this is an
entire industry that is being
47:11
created in the media, the same
people who are not interested in
47:15
child sex trafficking. They're
promoting this.
47:18
Unknown: And I believe, within a
year, I joined a support group
47:23
for transgender youth. And my
therapist helped me identify
47:29
that a lot of what I had been
expressing to her for a really
47:31
long time, could be identified
as feelings of gender dysphoria.
47:37
And after at least a year and a
half or two years of those
47:42
issues being present, she
referred me to a gender
47:46
clinician, and talking to my
parents was the first big step
47:50
that was taken. We identified
what I wanted from the gender
47:54
clinic, which was to go on
testosterone and to get top
47:58
surgery. But that couldn't
happen partially because I was
48:01
too young, I believe the limit
was 16 for surgery, and they
48:04
just weren't comfortable at 14.
So
48:08
Adam Curry: I don't even know if
this is a boy or a girl. I'm so
48:11
confused about this story. A my
48:12
Unknown: our tasks that we got
was for me to discuss my gender
48:15
with my parents. And so once or
twice a week for a long time, at
48:20
least a year, my parents would
sit down with me and he would
48:23
have a long talk about how I was
feeling because it had to become
48:26
very clear that not only was my
gender dysphoria, spawning all
48:31
of the other mental issues I was
having, but
48:34
Adam Curry: Okay, now we get to
the crux of it. All these other
48:38
issues you had is because you
have gender dysphoria, man you
48:42
can you can convince people to
shock somebody, you've seen the
48:45
shock the shock experiment,
though don't worry, it's fine.
48:48
And people just shock someone
shock someone keeps giving a
48:51
good job and more jobs you can
commit this is MK Ultra at mass
48:56
scale
48:56
Unknown: that this solution was
medical intervention and that
49:00
was seemingly the only thing
that could help me because we
49:03
had tried pretty much every
other option at that point.
49:07
Adam Curry: It's this is a very
very very troubling time wherein
49:13
what is happening here is the
medical industry is playing into
49:17
this for money. There's all of
these websites it's the Internet
49:22
has screwed up a lot. This is
bigger than I thought it was.
49:28
John C Dvorak: And the media is
it should have been shut down
49:31
years ago I've always said that.
It internet is the problem it
49:36
Adam Curry: is it is a we we
still have tail bones with
49:40
there's no reason we should be
able to handle this and we can't
49:43
and so when you see a parent
with a kid in the stroller or on
49:47
a screen, you know that that's
probably not going to end well
49:51
because there's a lot of ghouls
out there just waiting to pick
49:54
this kid up for something.
Whatever whatever their agenda
49:58
is, and I think that we are in a
mas MK Ultra state and Kamala
50:04
Harris is probably a victim with
her crazy laugh
50:13
John C Dvorak: so the rumor is
now according to some people
50:15
that it was her quote, it was
her coke Yeah. Now, since you
50:20
brought this up this is kind of
a universal problem is showing
50:25
up elsewhere but in different
ways and not quite the way is
50:28
showing up here but there's
something going on as an
50:30
undercurrent and of course the
only commonality here again is
50:33
the internet. And in this case,
I'm referring to the for no use
50:38
movement in China.
50:42
Adam Curry: I'm not familiar
with this.
50:44
John C Dvorak: Yeah, it's it's
something I wasn't familiar with
50:47
either. For no no dating no
marriage no children no home.
50:55
That's the fourth floor notice
the four Wow, it's a bunch of a
51:00
bunch of Chinese as JC I think
correctly asserted these are
51:09
Chinese in sells, okay. And
insulting has to be part of this
51:14
insult into this giant problem.
But But in China, and there's a
51:19
there's a there's a very good
YouTube video on this and you
51:22
just go to wheelchairs in China.
And it's like the top video they
51:27
show because in one of the
provinces, they've banned
51:30
electric bikes, and just pretty
much electric anything to
51:34
scooters are illegal, and they
find you a lot of money for if
51:38
you're driving around is they
want you to be in cars, or
51:42
walking. But it turns out,
there's a loophole, you can go
51:46
around in a high speed
wheelchair. And so now there's
51:49
1000s of kids in wheelchairs,
driving around the cities of
51:54
these areas to go to work and
because their wheelchair is some
51:57
of these wheelchairs have a
pretty decent speed and have a
52:02
range of about 25 kilometers.
So, so this wheelchair story and
52:08
Adam Curry: other and they're
also certified by the FAA to fly
52:10
I think
52:12
John C Dvorak: this story
morphed into a little discussion
52:15
of the no for no use. But this
is the clip is for no use and
52:22
wheelchairs.
52:23
Unknown: Think about it. If
everyone chooses to travel by
52:25
electric wheelchair. It's not
the young people who are sick,
52:28
but the whole society is sick,
and won't it be a sad thing for
52:32
society. Indeed, this is a
helpless choice for young people
52:35
in China. in Guangzhou, for
example, a document has been
52:39
circulating online entitled, The
current phenomena affordable
52:43
youth in our city has risen and
it's recommended the multiple
52:46
measures be taken to strengthen
the construction of youth
52:49
development oriented city. The
document was allegedly issued by
52:53
the Guangzhou municipal
Committee of the Communist Youth
52:56
League of the CCP. The document
claimed following involution and
53:00
life flat and other phrases that
describe the frustration of
53:04
youth due to a variety of social
pressures and the emergence of a
53:07
culture of emotional psychology
and behavioral styles. The topic
53:11
of for no youth is gradually
spreading online as become the
53:15
new buzzword that is no dating
no marriage, no home no
53:19
children. The phrase for no
youth gradually spread online
53:23
and became a new buzzword. The
Guangzhou municipal Committee of
53:26
the Communist Youth League
carried out a special survey on
53:29
the development of youth in
Guangzhou and recovered 15,501
53:34
valid questionnaires. Among them
more than 1200 were college
53:38
students and working youths who
conform to the characteristics
53:41
of the four no
53:42
Adam Curry: AI is going to kill
this show. I'll tell you that
53:45
right now.
53:46
John C Dvorak: What's the guy's
actually credited as a voiceover
53:49
and I've heard that voice in
China real dude, huh? Yeah, I
53:52
think so.
53:53
Adam Curry: What what are those
four knows again?
53:56
Unknown: No dating no dating?
Yeah.
53:59
John C Dvorak: No children no
home? No marriage. Okay.
54:08
Adam Curry: Sounds like fun.
54:10
John C Dvorak: Sounds like fun.
They also a part of this in this
54:13
in the life flats and there was
some other thing which is
54:16
another kind of a youth movement
that was going
54:19
Adam Curry: yeah, these are all
youth movements by children who
54:23
have really been abused by
neglect. Neglect,
54:27
John C Dvorak: you know when I
was a kid, yes. We besides the
54:32
fact that we had long recesses
and in a lot of sports and a lot
54:36
of PE whether you liked it or
not
54:40
Adam Curry: forced forced fit
we've
54:42
John C Dvorak: had we had a
community center where there
54:46
were dances like all generals
every Friday and Saturday
54:50
dancers Yeah, like there's no
dances anymore. They used to be
54:53
sock hops at the in the gym at
least once every month or every,
54:58
every couple weeks. Dance
classes. Everyone would go to
55:02
dance class when I was in fifth
grade. They taught us all the
55:05
dances cha cha cha Mambo, you
name it.
55:10
Adam Curry: I'll bet you can cut
a rug John C. Dvorak.
55:15
John C Dvorak: Give me some
scissors I can. So there are all
55:20
these activities to keep kids
busy and socializing. I don't
55:26
know that they exist anymore. In
fact, this little middle school
55:29
over here where they had a giant
playground the playground has
55:33
been turned into a parking lot.
And there's still a baseball
55:36
field out Well, what happened to
the basketball? We had
55:40
Adam Curry: Boy Scouts and Girl
Scouts and they were separate
55:44
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I had Boy
Yeah, I was in the boy scouts
55:46
and there was also the Cub
Scouts sees something the girls
55:49
had I wasn't like for brownies
brownies brownies brown brownies
55:54
we had wide Dave Dave destroyed
those by you know claiming I've
55:58
never I was in the boy scouts
for quite a while I never had
56:01
ran to a pedophile would have
known him I guess if I had but
56:07
there was things to do. And
there was a lots of lots of
56:11
events that were oriented for
kids it was for the kids the
56:14
dances at the at the community
center ward for adults we all
56:18
was a bunch of teenage we also I
was one of the record spinner we
56:21
Adam Curry: went out and we had
rock fights we throw rocks until
56:25
someone got hit in the head and
like oh crap the guys bleeding
56:28
alright and of rock fight. We
hit a ball around yeah, now let
56:35
me hit my clip to hear of this
no for no youth.
56:38
Unknown: The document emphasizes
that the four no phenomena
56:41
should be transformed into four
wants ie want to date want to
56:45
get married, want to buy a home
and want to have children. These
56:49
four noes are also known as the
four emptiness is on the Chinese
56:52
internet. The four emptiness is
was originally a term from
56:56
ancient cultivation culture in
China, referring to the need to
56:59
eliminate the four attachments
to fame, profit, anger and lust.
57:03
Usually it is a term to describe
the life and mental state of
57:07
monks and nuns in temples.
Nowadays, young Chinese people
57:11
whether you like it or not have
chosen to move closer to the
57:14
state of the for emptiness is
according to the current trend.
57:17
Young people don't need to buy
cars and electric bicycles.
57:21
Instead, they can just buy
electric wheelchairs. The future
57:24
looks great for young people who
get into wheelchairs in advance.
57:28
To borrow the title of a Chinese
media report young people
57:31
driving electric wheelchairs now
is to save them 30 years of
57:35
detours. The CCP may not have
imagined that such a bizarre
57:39
scenario would happen under its
rule.
57:42
Adam Curry: I don't care what
you say that's an AI voice that
57:44
guy is that's not a real guy
that maybe his voice may be
57:46
sampled or something but that's
57:48
John C Dvorak: yeah, what is a
voice and others that's report
57:51
Adam Curry: so so we have all of
these behavioral issues
57:55
including a generation which is
very egotistic egotistical. The
58:00
only think of themselves even
our girls who are kind of you
58:04
know, they're not Zers but some
of them are close. You know,
58:09
they missed what
58:11
John C Dvorak: they said they're
not what
58:13
Adam Curry: Gen Z ears. They're
closed. Okay, yeah. Zers Zoomer?
58:17
Yeah, does Zoomers but here in
the United States we may not
58:21
have the four noes yet but we
have something new
58:24
Unknown: loud quitting. That's
the trend now working overtime,
58:27
with employees becoming
ultimately unhappy on the job.
58:30
And Alexis christoforous is here
with the details. Good morning
58:33
again, Alexis.
58:34
Good morning and God forget
about quiet quitting. Now
58:37
frustrated employees are loud
quitting instead of just doing
58:40
the bare minimum and silently
checking out of their jobs loud
58:44
quitters are actively disengaged
in the workplace, and they're
58:47
not afraid to show it. A new
Gallup Poll finds about one in
58:50
five workers are loudly tossing
in the towel and it goes beyond
58:54
being unhappy on the job. It's
about being stressed out and fed
58:58
up. Loud. quitters are resentful
that their needs aren't being
59:01
met and they're acting out doing
things like sending disruptive
59:05
emails making inappropriate
outbursts at work, undermining
59:08
their company's goals and bad
mouthing their boss on social
59:12
media. The poll finds loud
quitting is not something
59:14
management can afford to ignore.
disengaged workers can be bad
59:18
for company morale, and cost the
global economy $8.8 trillion
59:23
employees revealing they value
talking openly with their
59:26
manager having more control over
their daily responsibilities and
59:29
having a fair shot at being
promoted. Experts say leaders
59:33
should check in with employees
regularly help them find purpose
59:36
in their work and make them feel
valued and connected to their
59:39
team. As for workers, experts
say before you loud or quiet
59:43
quit, take a beat, decide what
you really want from that next
59:46
opportunity and make sure you're
running towards the next job
59:50
instead of running away from the
current one.
59:53
Adam Curry: This is a broken
generation.
59:56
John C Dvorak: There are a lot
of tick tock videos of these
59:59
have These loud quitters. Yeah.
I'm sorry, I
1:00:04
Adam Curry: didn't need to bring
them.
1:00:06
John C Dvorak: I think I did a
couple of shows back but the
1:00:10
I'll get some more of them. I
don't understand it. It's like
1:00:14
mostly women. And they come and
they scream and moan and groan
1:00:20
about they're coming and they're
making a big fuss on Twitter I'm
1:00:23
sorry on Tik Tok. And it's like,
what are you? Why are you doing
1:00:28
this? I mean, what is the point?
What are you trying to
1:00:31
accomplish? What does this prove
1:00:33
Adam Curry: this? This can only
be children who live with their
1:00:38
parents, or their parents are
backstopping, because that's
1:00:41
another thing that my generation
is doing a very poor job of,
1:00:46
Hey, sit on it. Remember, I used
to was that a 50s thing? Sit on
1:00:51
it, sit on it, Fonzie. You, you
you created this, you figure it
1:00:56
out, it's your problem. I'm not
gonna I'm not going to help you
1:00:58
out. I'm not going to pay your
rent. I'm not going to while you
1:01:01
figure out your life of being a
douche at work, our fault, our
1:01:05
fault. And then let's just add,
you know, we already know all
1:01:09
the drugs, all the drugs that
the kids are on, they're all on
1:01:12
it. Because Oh, whoa, the
science says ADHD add
1:01:18
depression. And now let's just
add the food. And we have been
1:01:25
tracking on this show one
ingredient in food for many
1:01:28
years. It goes back to when the
CEO of the company that made the
1:01:33
product at the time entered
government and the the product
1:01:38
had been rejected by the Food
and Drug Administration time
1:01:41
after time after time. But once
that CEO Donald Rumsfeld got
1:01:46
into government, the aspartame
was approved. And we've we have
1:01:52
discussed the the drawbacks of
aspartame on on no agenda for
1:01:56
years. In fact, we got tired of
it after a while Hey, you don't
1:02:00
drink your aspartame. And so now
now we have
1:02:08
John C Dvorak: we burned that
one out like a decade ago I
1:02:10
Adam Curry: was so tired of
talking about it. Like yeah,
1:02:13
it's cancers What does a lung
Rumsfeld love? Blah blah lots of
1:02:17
other things a lot of other
things that aspartame can do to
1:02:20
you and it probably doing a lot
to kids brains. But anyway, it's
1:02:24
hot in the news today. So let's
run the stories tonight
1:02:26
Unknown: the World Health
Organization just out with a new
1:02:28
report involving the popular
artificial sweetener aspartame
1:02:31
found in Diet Coke other diet
drinks.
1:02:33
Adam Curry: What is popular? Is
there anyone who's like oh, it
1:02:36
has aspartame. I'm gonna have
this drink because I like
1:02:39
aspartame. Is that what it means
to be popular? What do you
1:02:43
think?
1:02:46
John C Dvorak: I think that's a
he's using the word popular
1:02:49
correctly, in that it's used a
lot.
1:02:52
Unknown: Okay, you're aspartame
found in Diet Coke, other diet
1:02:56
drinks, gum and other products.
Late today, the World Health
1:02:59
Organization's International
Agency for Cancer Research
1:03:01
classifying aspartame as a
possible carcinogen possible.
1:03:05
It's saying evidence is limited
and more research is needed.
1:03:08
After reviewing the data the FDA
in this country saying it
1:03:11
disagrees, insisting FDA
scientists do not have safety
1:03:14
concerns. It's safe and
effective. There is some concern
1:03:17
that all this data could confuse
consumers so of course we'll
1:03:20
stay on it. Medical experts do
agree on one thing and that is
1:03:23
more study is needed.
1:03:24
Adam Curry: This is the this is
the interesting commonality. It
1:03:28
may confuse consumers. So that's
what the news is telling us.
1:03:32
This may confuse consumer FDA,
you know this World Health
1:03:37
Organization. You're confusing
consumers, not people who want
1:03:44
to know about their health
consumers. Don't confuse
1:03:48
consumers. We need them to
consume our product. Let's bring
1:03:51
in Dr. Jenn Ashton.
1:03:54
Unknown: Okay, we are back now
with our GMA cover story and a
1:03:56
new report about the popular
artificial popular
1:03:59
Adam Curry: there it is. It's
popular. They're reading from a
1:04:01
press release
1:04:02
Unknown: sweetener, aspartame,
and cancer risk. Our CHIEF
1:04:06
MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT Dr.
Jennifer Ashton,
1:04:08
Adam Curry: I'd love to be a
CHIEF MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT
1:04:11
doesn't our chief podcast
correspondent that makes it
1:04:14
sound like such like She's real.
Oh, yeah, she's she's probably
1:04:17
official. She may have a
uniform. She's actually come to
1:04:20
work in a uniform
1:04:21
Unknown: cancer risk. Our CHIEF
MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT Dr.
1:04:24
Jennifer Ashton is here with a
reality check. Great to see you.
1:04:28
This is getting so much
attention especially from diet
1:04:31
soda drinkers. Can you break
this down for us? So
1:04:34
as you mentioned aspartame, it's
been around since the 1980s.
1:04:37
It's in diet soda beverages,
chewing gum, it's in a lot of
1:04:40
things as an artificial
sweetener. The bottom line based
1:04:43
on this newly reported study
that came out yesterday from the
1:04:46
World Health Organization for
the average person consuming an
1:04:50
average amount of this
ingredient. Nothing needs to
1:04:53
change but take a look at this
list because there are numerous
1:04:57
or professional organizations
that have we Get in on this some
1:05:01
finding different you know
bottom lines than others. The
1:05:05
eye the eye aarC which is the
research arm of the World Health
1:05:09
Organization saying it might be
a possible carcinogen causing
1:05:13
cancer that's their second
lowest by the way of
1:05:15
designations,
1:05:16
Adam Curry: by the way, that's
their second lowest. I mean,
1:05:18
it's just like climate change
possibly could be might be, you
1:05:21
know, it could kind of happen,
but it's low. I hope it doesn't
1:05:25
confuse consumers, the FDA
1:05:27
Unknown: saying they do not have
safety concerns, the World
1:05:30
Health Organization saying it's
safe. So they all kind of need
1:05:34
to get on the same page. There's
a lot of controversy there.
1:05:36
There's a lot of qualifying
remarks may be potential
1:05:41
possibility needs more research
will continue to be monitored.
1:05:44
But for right now, nothing needs
to change unless you are
1:05:47
consuming massive, how much what
are we talking about? Well, what
1:05:50
they said is they they're giving
a dose and a calculation kind of
1:05:54
for the average risk for the
average weight person. 40
1:05:57
milligrams per kilogram of body
weight per day. What does that
1:06:01
translate into nine to 14 cans
of 12 ounce cans of soda for the
1:06:05
average size adult weighing 140
pounds, you guys, that's a lot.
1:06:11
That's a lot of soda. And that's
a lot of aspartame. But it comes
1:06:14
down to this basic premise,
premise and principle in
1:06:17
toxicology, which is dose and
frequency. Anything can be toxic
1:06:21
if you take it enough in a
higher dose.
1:06:24
Adam Curry: Oh, thanks, Dr. Jen.
I feel so much better about
1:06:27
giving my child aspartame, by
the way, nine cans of soda a
1:06:32
day. I think there's a lot of
people who drink that much. But
1:06:36
that's not the definitive
number. CNN has different data
1:06:39
Unknown: World Health
Organization has determined that
1:06:41
one of the most commonly used
artificial sweeteners aspartame
1:06:45
should be put in what it
describes as the quote, possibly
1:06:48
carcinogenic to humans category.
Aspartame is of course found in
1:06:53
many products ranging from sugar
free gum to diet sodas, can of
1:06:57
diet soda can typically have
about 100 milligrams of aspirin.
1:07:01
There we go. Can diet soda of
aspartame, and under the WHO
1:07:05
guidelines, someone weighing 184
pounds could safely drink up to
1:07:08
33 cans of diet soda a day
before breaking the threshold?
1:07:14
Like a bad idea. A lot you can
count on. So CNN MEDICAL
1:07:19
CORRESPONDENT Meg Terrell is
going to tell us should you be
1:07:21
drinking? Can we have a reality
check here? Do you realize how
1:07:27
much would be necessary to hit
the threshold? Do people need to
1:07:29
be changing?
1:07:30
Adam Curry: Listen people the
sponsors of called we need to
1:07:33
attack this head on we need to
tell everybody that unless
1:07:36
you're a crazy person and
drinking so much of this stuff,
1:07:39
you have nothing to worry about
1:07:42
Unknown: how much aspartame
they're consuming based on what
1:07:44
was released yesterday. Yeah,
but
1:07:46
also not based on this that is
from the WHO itself actually.
1:07:50
And so aspartame Of course, we
know very common sweetener used
1:07:53
in 1000s of different products
from diet sodas, like the 33 You
1:07:57
just saw on the screen. Things
like tabletop sweeteners,
1:08:00
breakfast cereal, chewing gum,
even, you know medicines, like
1:08:03
cough drops or chewable
vitamins, things and so the who
1:08:07
took a look at this this has
been a decade's long sort of
1:08:09
project that's
1:08:11
Adam Curry: looking Why is she
laughing?
1:08:15
Unknown: Who took a look at
this. This has been a decade's
1:08:17
long sort of project that
scientists have been looking at.
1:08:20
And what Dr. Francesco Branca
the Director of the Department
1:08:24
of Nutrition and Food Safety at
the who said about this review
1:08:27
is that quote, while safety is
not a major concern at the doses
1:08:30
which are commonly used,
potential effects have been
1:08:33
described that need to be
investigated by more and better
1:08:36
studies.
1:08:38
Adam Curry: This is, I mean,
we've heard a lot of these types
1:08:41
of scare stories that are meant
to you know, get you off of eggs
1:08:44
because they want you eating
something else to get you off of
1:08:46
beef because the chicken
industry wants to eat chicken.
1:08:49
This is new. This is a clearly
not a good product. But you know
1:08:54
only if you drink a lot of it
only if you consume a lot. Is it
1:08:57
cumulative. If you take the
cough drops and the vitamins and
1:09:01
the Coca Cola and the toothpaste
and everything. It doesn't add
1:09:04
up. I mean, I haven't Dr. Jen
didn't tell me about that. These
1:09:09
people are ghouls, groups,
ghouls. And then if that was a
1:09:15
theme for today's show, if that
wasn't crazy enough, they now
1:09:20
we're marketing a product
developed in 1966 in Germany,
1:09:28
and we're just slapping a new
name on it which generic as far
1:09:31
as I know. And it's the biggest
news ever.
1:09:34
Unknown: FDA scientists do not
have safety concerns. There is
1:09:37
some concern that all of this
data could confuse consumers so
1:09:40
of course we'll stay on it.
Medical experts do agree on one
1:09:43
thing and that is more study is
needed. That major change here
1:09:46
in the US and reproductive
health care affecting millions
1:09:49
of women in this country. The
FDA approving Oh pill the first
1:09:52
over the counter birth control
pill. It will likely be
1:09:55
available in drugstores
convenience stores online
1:09:58
without a doctor's prescription
early next Hear that decision
1:10:01
significantly expanding access
to birth control for women of
1:10:03
all ages and comes amid heated
debate about the availability of
1:10:06
contraception and abortion
rights following the Supreme
1:10:09
Court's ruling overturning roe
1:10:11
Adam Curry: So you heard how
they went from one into the
1:10:13
other. This is nor gestural or
nor gestural however you
1:10:16
pronounce it, developed in 1966
has been approved in the United
1:10:20
States for years and years and
years. Now of course it's I
1:10:23
guess the birth control pill
used to be something that was
1:10:27
prescribed by your doctor in
consultation with your parents
1:10:31
and you know, like I think
little Tammy should be on the
1:10:33
pill. Well yes, she was going
off to college and going into
1:10:36
high school you know, never know
what could happen. So now it's
1:10:38
just yeah, just over the
counter, but their marketing is
1:10:41
something completely new FDA
approved when the
1:10:44
Unknown: pill called Oh pill
hits drugstore shelves, women
1:10:46
will be able to access hormonal
contraception without needing to
1:10:49
visit a doctor for prescription.
The FDA approval comes amid
1:10:53
renewed legal fights over
women's reproductive rights,
1:10:55
specifically the agency's
authority to approve the common
1:10:58
medication abortion pill myth,
infant Bristow NBC News
1:11:02
correspondent Ann Thompson has
more on this news of the over
1:11:05
the counter pill and and and I
got to ask first one pill does
1:11:10
not fit all women hear so this
is one pill. How soon before you
1:11:17
know because different
1:11:18
Adam Curry: he's you think he's
reading a script? One pill it's
1:11:20
one pill is one pill. It's just
one pill. One pill.
1:11:24
Unknown: Different pills work
better for different for women,
1:11:27
depending? When will we start to
see a variety of this on the
1:11:31
shelves? If
1:11:32
that's what advocates hope that
we will see eventually this is
1:11:36
just the first contraceptive
that we will see on an over the
1:11:40
counter basis, Chuck. But the
key here is really the issue
1:11:44
driving this is all about
access. And the belief is the
1:11:48
this pill called Oh pill which
is a mini pill it's just one
1:11:52
project. It is will it is
approved for women of all
1:11:57
reproductive ages that includes
teenagers. And the hope is is
1:12:02
that this will help reduce the
number of unintended pregnancies
1:12:05
in this country. There are 6.1
million pregnancies every year
1:12:10
in this country, about half of
them are unintended. And the
1:12:13
belief is now that you can go to
the you will be able to go to
1:12:15
the drugstore or the grocery
store or order these pills
1:12:18
online online and help reduce
that number that should happen
1:12:22
at the beginning of next year.
But the big question tonight is
1:12:25
how much will these pills costs
and the manufacturer has not put
1:12:29
a price on it only to say that
they will be affordable.
1:12:35
Adam Curry: This is really
menopausal hormone therapy by
1:12:37
the way. I love how they go so
deep into aspartame. But you
1:12:43
know is this okay? Is this is
this okay? For teenagers? Um,
1:12:47
you combine a keyboard one pill
to mini pill?
1:12:50
John C Dvorak: That must be it
must be good. I
1:12:52
Adam Curry: mean, does it work?
Could it have any long term
1:12:54
effects?
1:12:57
John C Dvorak: But then they
bring an expert on No, no. No
1:13:00
extra no expert knew what you
played was a native ad.
1:13:04
Adam Curry: Thank you. Of
course.
1:13:07
John C Dvorak: Want to get back
to the nutty teen problem? Okay,
1:13:11
they have more.
1:13:12
Adam Curry: This is part of it.
I mean, it's not like that by
1:13:14
the way. You have a buzz today
for some not not like a buzz
1:13:17
like you're buzzing my homeless.
I mean, let me listen to you.
1:13:20
You have a like a ground loop or
something's I can hear it
1:13:26
changed nothing. No, sorry.
Well, the
1:13:29
John C Dvorak: thing could be
something laying on top of
1:13:31
something that always happens I
don't have enough those magnets.
1:13:33
Adam Curry: Wow, it's not now
that I can hear it is really
1:13:36
bad. Is there something there
must be you must be something
1:13:39
laying on top of something. You
got to
1:13:41
Unknown: move things around. Oh,
stop.
1:13:43
Adam Curry: It just went away.
What did you move?
1:13:46
John C Dvorak: A power supply?
No way.
1:13:51
Adam Curry: Did you have it
wrapped around the mic or
1:13:53
John C Dvorak: something? No,
it's next to one of the filters.
1:13:56
Adam Curry: Thank you. It's
gone. It's gone.
1:14:01
Unknown: That was a good one.
1:14:03
John C Dvorak: So and I was
gonna put this earlier because I
1:14:08
because it actually applies to
it. And I was gonna add Mimi's
1:14:11
listening to the show
specifically for this
1:14:13
presentation.
1:14:14
Adam Curry: Oh, it doesn't come
from our favorite source. You
1:14:18
got it. Tick tock tock tick
tock.
1:14:27
John C Dvorak: But I don't know
what order to play me I was
1:14:30
thinking about I'm gonna play it
in the worst order. Now there
1:14:32
was I'm gonna play the best one
first. Because that's the one
1:14:35
that triggered the whole the
other the collection of the
1:14:38
other clips.
1:14:38
Adam Curry: Okay, I've seen
this. I'm very happy. You
1:14:41
brought this to the show today.
1:14:42
John C Dvorak: And it has to do
with it's a new term called time
1:14:46
blind. Yes. And the worst case
example is this. Just I'm
1:14:52
guessing she's a younger
millennial. And she's bitching
1:14:55
about the fact that everyone
should change their way of life
1:14:58
for her which is very common on
tick tock. And this is the Tick
1:15:04
Tock time blind, just a straight
up clip.
1:15:07
Unknown: So I just got yelled
out for asking a very reasonable
1:15:10
question. So I'm flying to go
somewhere. And I just wanted to
1:15:13
know, are there accommodations
for people struggle with time
1:15:15
blindness and being on time, you
know, and then the person I was
1:15:19
with, interrupted and acted
like, I was asking something
1:15:22
else. And then when we were
done, they actually started
1:15:25
yelling at me and saying that
accommodations for time
1:15:27
blindness doesn't exist. And if
you've struggled being on time,
1:15:29
you'll never be able to get a
job, you know, provided you're
1:15:32
trying your absolute best to be
there. And then they're like,
1:15:36
your stupid generation wants to
destroy the workplace. And yeah,
1:15:40
I think that a culture where
workers are just cut off because
1:15:43
they struggle with being on
time, when there's other
1:15:45
solutions that we can look to. I
think that just anybody who
1:15:48
thinks it's okay to just treat
people like that, yeah, that
1:15:51
culture needs to be dismantled.
And then I asked that person how
1:15:55
can you feel good about yourself
upholding this kind of system?
1:15:58
And then to think I'm entitled
know if people think it's okay
1:16:01
to treat others like this?
That's entitlement.
1:16:04
Adam Curry: I watched this clip
I didn't see it on tick tock, of
1:16:08
course, because I refuse. I
watched this three times
1:16:12
thinking, Is this a joke? And I
concluded after three views that
1:16:18
she was serious. Oh, yeah. By
the way, what happened to tick
1:16:23
tock being kicked out of America
How come that hasn't happened?
1:16:25
Hmm.
1:16:26
John C Dvorak: You keep bringing
that up?
1:16:28
Adam Curry: I just want to
remind everybody that was that
1:16:30
was the big news a month ago.
1:16:33
John C Dvorak: It's not even
discuss for some reason. Well,
1:16:35
Adam Curry: no, of course not.
It's great.
1:16:38
John C Dvorak: So this woman
who's who talk about a
1:16:42
privileged jerk really thinks
that everyone should cuz she
1:16:47
can't be on time. Well, why Why
can't she be accommodated She's
1:16:50
Adam Curry: a victim John, she
has a she's neurodivergent
1:16:57
John C Dvorak: now Mimi can
never be on time. But you have
1:16:59
what we do is we trick her and
make her
1:17:02
Adam Curry: 30 minutes earlier.
1:17:04
John C Dvorak: We do all those
sorts of things. And when she
1:17:06
really has to be on time, she is
on time. But that brings us to
1:17:10
the people who are discussing
times blindness.
1:17:15
Adam Curry: I'm sorry, I need to
stop for a second it only
1:17:17
because you brought up Mimi and
I know she's listening. I was
1:17:20
not aware that she is time
blind. was not aware that you
1:17:24
know, y'all trick her into
coming on time come to being
1:17:28
places on time. Because when
Mimi wants something from me on
1:17:32
time, she's a Nazi. She will She
will. She will send me emails
1:17:38
nag nag subject nag nag nag nag.
Yeah. Wow. And Colonel black.
1:17:44
Wow. Okay.
1:17:45
John C Dvorak: Well, you know,
as it did, on time with
1:17:48
documents to the government is a
little different than showing up
1:17:52
for a play on time when you
missed the first act. So, okay,
1:17:58
let's go to the let's go to the
time blind therapist,
1:18:01
Unknown: oh brother, alright,
tick tock, here
1:18:03
are five signs that you are time
blind. Number one, you are
1:18:06
either way too early or way too
late to something. The idea of
1:18:09
being on time is a completely
foreign concept to you. Number
1:18:12
two, you wildly underestimate
the amount of things you can get
1:18:14
done in a short amount of time,
but you wildly overestimate the
1:18:17
amount of stuff you can get done
in a long amount of time. Number
1:18:19
three, all of your stories start
with the other day. It could
1:18:21
have been yesterday, it could
have been 14 years ago. Doesn't
1:18:23
matter the other day. Number
four, you struggle with
1:18:26
emotional object permanence. If
you're not feeling it right now,
1:18:28
it's hard to tell when you felt
it before and sometimes it just
1:18:31
doesn't feel real at all. And
number five, if you have a
1:18:34
meeting or an appointment at
some point later in the day, you
1:18:36
have trouble starting things
because you don't want to get
1:18:38
sucked into them and
accidentally miss your
1:18:40
appointment. Something you've
learned the hard way, if you
1:18:42
relate to this. Hi, my name is
Megan. I'm a mental wellness
1:18:44
coach and I can't help you
perceive time passing better
1:18:47
because people who are timelines
simply don't perceive the
1:18:50
passage of time the same way
that colorblind people don't
1:18:53
perceive color, but I can help
you find tools to make your life
1:18:55
a lot easier.
1:18:57
Adam Curry: Okay, I've just
changed my name from Adam curry
1:18:59
podcast to Adam curry, mental
wellness coach. This is a new
1:19:04
vocation I want I want to be a
mental wellness coach now, is
1:19:08
this not something that college
is supposed to definitely teach
1:19:13
you how to do before you enter
the workplace, regular school,
1:19:16
how to organize your work, how
to get to get your reports done
1:19:20
on time grammar
1:19:21
John C Dvorak: school, high
school college you don't need if
1:19:25
you haven't learned by then
1:19:27
Adam Curry: well then college
you learn how to get things done
1:19:29
on time and get blindly drunk.
That's that's really cool.
1:19:33
John C Dvorak: There's a
socialization exercise. Okay,
1:19:36
I'll take it. Yeah. Let's go
with the that's a therapist. And
1:19:41
then we have a an ADHD girl who
kind of incorporates time
1:19:46
blindness into her problems,
brother. Okay,
1:19:49
Unknown: let's do an ADHD
experiment. Close your eyes. Now
1:19:53
with your dominant hand point to
the future. Open your eyes and
1:19:57
notice where your hand is
pointing. This is an X This is
1:20:00
created by ADHD author Tom
Harmon. Okay.
1:20:04
Adam Curry: I close my eyes and
I pointed upwards, forward and
1:20:07
upward. That was my future. I
just want everyone to know I did
1:20:10
the experiment and it's used to
point forward. I said, I pointed
1:20:14
up forward and upward.
1:20:17
John C Dvorak: Like, like, I
think you're okay, you're you're
1:20:20
neurotypical,
1:20:21
Adam Curry: are you sure? I'm
worried? Well, I don't know.
1:20:23
Let's find out.
1:20:24
Unknown: Let's find it by ADHD
author Tom Hartman. And it's
1:20:27
used to demonstrate
1:20:29
Adam Curry: I pointed forward 45
degree angle with my hand flat.
1:20:32
Is that okay? with
1:20:37
Unknown: ADHD have a different
experience of time, it's pretty
1:20:40
common for neurotypical people
to point in front of them in
1:20:43
reference to the future, whereas
people with ADHD tend not to do
1:20:46
this. People with ADHD are very
present oriented. And
1:20:49
oftentimes, when we have like
life narratives, they're very
1:20:52
nonlinear because our sense of
time is really nonlinear. And
1:20:55
we're not just talking about
like time on your watch. Like,
1:20:58
it's hard for us to tell how
long 15 minutes is, but also it
1:21:01
can be hard for us to tell if
something happened like weeks
1:21:03
ago, or months ago or years ago,
which can contribute to
1:21:05
difficulties in so many areas of
life, like Miss credit card
1:21:08
payments, staying connected with
friends, and preparing for
1:21:10
future needs. Luckily, there's a
lot we can do for this my
1:21:13
personal favorites that one of
my friends does, she keeps a log
1:21:15
of how long it takes her to do
everything. So she has realistic
1:21:18
time expectations for those
simple tasks.
1:21:20
Adam Curry: I think I know why
this happened. I Do I Do you
1:21:23
have a fourth clip? Or do we
have more?
1:21:25
John C Dvorak: The fourth clips,
the same clip play this the
1:21:27
fourth clip? I think it's the
same clip we just listened to
1:21:29
Unknown: let's do an ADHD
experiment. Because
1:21:33
Adam Curry: here's, here's what
I think is happening.
1:21:35
John C Dvorak: Yeah, what is
happening? Because one goes back
1:21:38
again, to me, me and other
people. I've known all my life.
1:21:41
I've known women that can never
be on time.
1:21:45
Adam Curry: Women Women, is this
more women thing than a men
1:21:47
thing? To me it
1:21:49
John C Dvorak: is. And yeah, if
you want to call it misogyny, I
1:21:52
just this observational, okay?
1:21:55
Adam Curry: Well, I can't speak
for me, me, but I think I can
1:21:58
speak for this younger
generation, the minute they gave
1:22:01
up the analog clock, something
that you wear on your wrist
1:22:05
where you can get a feeling by
from time to time glad, you
1:22:09
John C Dvorak: know, this is
genius fan, I'm gonna give you a
1:22:12
points for that points. Start
over because I think this may
1:22:17
have something to do with it.
And I will also incorporate the
1:22:21
fact that they can't write in
longhand, or what they like to
1:22:24
call a cursive. When that's a
continuum. Instead of a black
1:22:28
black black letter letter
letter. It is a continuum, just
1:22:32
like an analog clock when the
analog clock left, so did the
1:22:35
cursive.
1:22:35
Adam Curry: When my grandmother
when I was five, I think four or
1:22:38
five, my grandmother gave me a
Mickey Mouse watch. And I love
1:22:44
it. Because you know, you had
big hand little hand. And I
1:22:47
would wear it all day long. And
you know, my mom would say, you
1:22:51
know, like, you know, be home at
this time used to be when the
1:22:54
street lights were on. Or just
because it's on your wrist. And
1:22:59
you could look at glance at it
like okay, and then you get a
1:23:02
sense over time, you get a sense
of how long 15 minutes is,
1:23:06
because it's always there. When
it's your phone and it's
1:23:09
digital. You just, it's just
numbers, you lose the sense of
1:23:15
the Hour of the circle that
you're completing. It's a
1:23:18
completion of time. And I think
we know that many Zoomers cannot
1:23:25
even tell time from a analog
clock that just not taught
1:23:30
anymore. And I think that is
part of the problem is that
1:23:35
inherent training you receive
and I say training as a kid
1:23:40
wearing a wristwatch just glance
and now you know not everyone
1:23:45
has a has, you know the Apple
Watch or some other version of
1:23:50
it and it's all digital. I mean
yeah, you can you can set them
1:23:53
analog but I must admit most
people don't I'm when I had one
1:23:57
for the short period of time I
had one I had analog. I enjoy
1:24:01
analog. It gives me a what do
you call it sense of time? I
1:24:07
think that's that's where the
problem is. And
1:24:09
John C Dvorak: by the way and
explain to older women that are
1:24:13
Adam Curry: I'm not again, I
can't explain older women and
1:24:15
the only way that
1:24:16
John C Dvorak: phenomenon is
exaggerated currently is like
1:24:18
for doesn't mean you were
1:24:19
Adam Curry: awash in China. And
he says mean you wear a watch.
1:24:23
John C Dvorak: I don't know. I
don't think so. Oh, there you
1:24:25
go. Maybe she has Oh, she has a
clock in her on her cell phone
1:24:30
like Oh, everyone they care that
follow around all the time and
1:24:33
you just look at that boom, you
know what time it is
1:24:34
Adam Curry: maybe give her
Mickey Mouse watch to see if
1:24:36
anything changes. She will wear
it so that is probably what's
1:24:42
going on here with these kids.
And it's it's not something you
1:24:45
can just solve, you know,
learning time the completion of
1:24:50
15 minutes an hour, half an
hour. It's something that takes
1:24:54
a little while for you to get
into it. You know, you you get a
1:24:56
sense of oh, that's how many
minutes pass probably 15 Oh,
1:25:00
yeah. 13 Okay, I was close. You
get a sense of that.
1:25:04
John C Dvorak: Yeah, cuz it's
flowing. Yes.
1:25:07
Unknown: Wow.
1:25:10
Adam Curry: I don't know where
to go from here.
1:25:12
John C Dvorak: Well, I would
like to make one more comment
1:25:14
about the for about the kids
here. And they're being
1:25:18
sterilized and the rest of them
into kids in China and elsewhere
1:25:21
there. And in cells and
scientific lack of dances, and
1:25:26
the lack of socialization and
everything else going on. It's
1:25:30
creating a group of people. And
I think the foreign knows are
1:25:33
the best example of no dating no
marriage. That may be you know,
1:25:38
how we talk about how the
Coronavirus was kind of created
1:25:43
in a lab. And then it was okay,
it was created in a lab. And it
1:25:48
would always kind of deteriorate
into back to bowl fashion
1:25:53
coronaviruses you know, just
kind of a common cold stuff. We
1:25:56
were just is it possible to
societies, which are kind of
1:26:00
created, create, create
situations that deteriorate back
1:26:05
into what is more natural, which
is a bunch of narrative? Well,
1:26:10
males hanging out with each
other. I mean, I've known these
1:26:13
guy kind of guys forever. They
don't care about women, and they
1:26:17
don't, you know, chase after him
if they do us for one night
1:26:20
stands mostly that the original
societies may this may be the
1:26:25
reason for kind of planned
marriages where you owe grab
1:26:33
someone, so you have to marry
this person, because you're not
1:26:36
going to do anything anyway,
otherwise. And so all these
1:26:40
arranged marriages historically,
really stemmed back from the
1:26:44
delay the natural laziness of
humans not to even want to
1:26:48
interact much. Hmm. And we're
deteriorating back toward that
1:26:53
very possible. I like that.
We're already deteriorating. I
1:26:56
think we've concluded that on
this show,
1:26:58
Adam Curry: well, you know what
this all leads to this all leads
1:27:00
to universal basic income. It
does. Yeah, it does. It does.
1:27:06
It's already being trialed all
over the world. I think that 30
1:27:09
states in America are already
trialing universal basic income.
1:27:14
Now and then you can just
anybody can be a gig worker
1:27:18
anybody can if you got it you
can get a driver's license you
1:27:21
can be you can drive for Uber
Eats you can drive for Uber not
1:27:25
for Lyft they're almost broke.
Yeah, you can you can drive for
1:27:28
Amazon. It's going right back to
to snow Crusher rating scale and
1:27:35
right back to Snow Crash the
book went out the only thing on
1:27:38
the street is FedEx and Domino's
Pizza delivery. Everyone else
1:27:42
has just in the metaverse
although that didn't pan out it
1:27:48
is deteriorating, but I think
it's there's a it may even be
1:27:53
this is actually a Mo Mo theory.
Most theory is that the elites
1:27:58
of the world who really run the
show they're keeping an eye on
1:28:01
people who are not buying into
it they that's what they really
1:28:04
want they want the survivors
they want the people who are not
1:28:07
going to buy and all the no
1:28:08
John C Dvorak: agenda listener
yes it is the producers are all
1:28:12
survivors.
1:28:12
Adam Curry: That's right. And
with that I'd like to thank you
1:28:15
for your courage to say in the
morning to the man who put the
1:28:17
sea in the sock hops ladies and
gentlemen please say hello to my
1:28:20
friend on the other end the one
and only Mr. Johnson tomorrow
1:28:29
John C Dvorak: morning to you
Mr. Adam curry also in the
1:28:31
morning all ships as he boots on
the ground feet in the air subs
1:28:34
in the water and all the days
tools and
1:28:45
Adam Curry: I think I got them
all 2434
1:28:50
John C Dvorak: almost dead
average.
1:28:51
Adam Curry: Well, we got a note
from Kendall. I know our
1:28:56
John C Dvorak: petrol station,
no agenda statistician and the
1:29:00
no he's actually the no agenda
troll room statistician.
1:29:03
Adam Curry: Yes. And he says
Thursday's average 1876 Sunday's
1:29:09
average 2200. So we're about 150
above average today. Which is
1:29:16
odd because we have below
average donations.
1:29:20
John C Dvorak: We didn't get any
donations. We did get some but
1:29:23
we got no donations. I don't
understand exactly. Why can we
1:29:26
have 1000s I mean, there's more
people in the troll room, not to
1:29:30
mention to 10,000 or 20 or 30 or
50 or 100 or a million people
1:29:35
that listen to this show that
know about it. And we get 19
1:29:40
Total donations over $50 Today
that's ridiculous. No, I'm
1:29:43
sorry. Make it 18 I always
forget the one is a bunch of it
1:29:47
doesn't have anything in it.
1:29:49
Adam Curry: We have a
spreadsheet. According to the
1:29:51
open source op three statistics
run by John Spurlock, which is
1:29:56
part of the podcasting 2.0
Group. 980,000 monthly unique
1:30:02
listeners. And, and I think
that's about right. In the way
1:30:11
we've done now. So we could
actually do if if we had content
1:30:17
that was brand friendly and
brand suitable, we could
1:30:21
actually do okay with
advertising.
1:30:23
John C Dvorak: Oh, I think we do
a better we're doing today. Oh,
1:30:26
yeah,
1:30:26
Adam Curry: definitely. The but
we chose for a different model,
1:30:30
we chose for the value for value
model. And a lot of people
1:30:33
support us with value. I mean,
we're getting boots on the
1:30:36
ground reports very valuable. We
get artwork from artists very
1:30:40
valuable. We get jingles and of
show mixes, meet up reports all
1:30:45
very valuable.
1:30:46
John C Dvorak: But you got a
small patch today.
1:30:49
Adam Curry: Very valuable, great
value. We love that kind of
1:30:52
value. But if everybody else is
just sitting back and saying,
1:30:55
Well, you know what, and I'm
neurodivergent. And I can't do
1:30:59
anything of any value. And you
can't even spare a couple bucks
1:31:03
for the show that you listen to
six hours a week, which is
1:31:07
almost half it's actually a full
season of some Amazon shows.
1:31:13
John C Dvorak: It is six shows
we're done. And by the way, we
1:31:16
know where's my royalties?
1:31:18
Adam Curry: We're not going on
strike. You know, we we worked
1:31:22
through holidays, we work on the
weekend.
1:31:26
John C Dvorak: Two weeks of this
show is that is which is 12
1:31:31
hours is pretty typical of a
season of most TV nowadays.
1:31:37
Yeah, oh shows 13 shows 1112 13
You see that a lot.
1:31:41
Adam Curry: So I find it hard to
believe that you may only be
1:31:45
able to donate once a year fine.
But not everybody's donating.
1:31:49
Not everybody's doing their
part. A lot of you are hitting
1:31:52
people in the mouth. It's
appreciate that's good. But we
1:31:54
also do need the treasure part.
But it's up to you. It's your no
1:31:59
agenda show. We just put it all
together and create it and bring
1:32:03
your spice. Everything else is
up to you. So we appreciate the
1:32:08
trolls listening now. Yeah,
those are the trolls that were
1:32:10
broke. Okay, sure you're broke?
You can't afford $5. I mean,
1:32:16
that's hard to believe, party
bleep. Some people actually
1:32:20
can't afford $5. But you know
what they do? They go all out
1:32:22
and do other things. And they
know, I know.
1:32:25
John C Dvorak: Don't listen to
the show. Who doesn't listen to
1:32:28
the show? He can't afford $5 I
doubt your listener.
1:32:32
Adam Curry: But people think oh,
my $5 won't make a difference.
1:32:35
It makes a difference. It really
does.
1:32:38
John C Dvorak: Yeah, we just had
nothing but $5 for those
1:32:40
900,000.
1:32:41
Adam Curry: You know, most
people worry most people. Most
1:32:44
people start a podcast and
become very disillusioned
1:32:46
because they don't get value
back. And they're thinking, Oh,
1:32:49
if I only can get 10,000 people
listening, then I can have
1:32:53
enough for ads. And then they
wind up with $40 at the end of
1:32:56
the month. It's true. It's true.
But getting value back from
1:33:01
people who and I'm talking about
real contributions. I mean, send
1:33:05
this even your notes, or it's an
important part, the numerology
1:33:08
you send along those with these
donations are important or
1:33:11
important. And if you haven't
donated in a while and you
1:33:14
haven't contributed with your
other time or talent, consider
1:33:18
it being time to send some
treasure. You don't have to do
1:33:21
it every single show. It doesn't
have to be hundreds of dollars,
1:33:24
whatever it whatever value you
get out of it. We want you to
1:33:28
send that back. That's all we've
ever asked for. It's just this
1:33:31
was a very disappointingly low
show. Is that purely the economy
1:33:35
back?
1:33:35
John C Dvorak: We're lucky we
only had one we only have one
1:33:38
lone executive producer, which
is a first Yeah, we haven't had
1:33:42
that kind of showing for years.
years, maybe we would have we'd
1:33:46
go it'd be like semi five or six
years ago there one show a year
1:33:51
we'd have no executive producer.
We had to bump somebody up. Yep.
1:33:55
I don't know. We have to do
that. Luckily gonna happen today
1:33:57
if that check in to come in.
1:33:59
Adam Curry: I know. But anyway,
so far,
1:34:03
John C Dvorak: we're gonna stand
here and complain bitterly you
1:34:06
don't go to the show is more
interesting than us complaining
1:34:10
so
1:34:10
Adam Curry: far. So far, your
contributions have allowed us to
1:34:13
do the job that we do, which
consists of, excuse me,
1:34:19
continuous work. Day in day out.
We are always doing no agenda.
1:34:25
People say, how many days do you
work on your pocket? I said
1:34:28
seven days a week. What do you
mean? Starts every morning.
1:34:32
Every morning, I go through all
the emails and this is the ones
1:34:35
that are already filtered out. I
usually have if I'm on track,
1:34:38
and I can keep it going. I have
about 60 or 70 that are that are
1:34:44
have been filtered. And that's
real stuff that I know is going
1:34:47
to be something's interesting. I
can't skip a single one than I
1:34:50
have a separate email box.
There's like five people who
1:34:54
send me 15 emails a day and 14
of Those are no good. Or the
1:35:01
repeats? No. But it's that one
gem that I want so, and that box
1:35:08
has 70 a day. So go through the
first I have a an alerts box
1:35:13
which says Tina, John Mimi, you
know, maybe my kids know that
1:35:17
that's it. Then they just
checked out, see if there's
1:35:19
anything important that came in.
Then I go to the inbox. And
1:35:23
there's, we have clip collectors
like Dave Ackerman, on show days
1:35:27
with clip custodian we have Neal
Jones, we have Steve Jones with
1:35:31
the he's another clip collector.
And they're extremely valuable
1:35:37
the work they do. Everything has
to be evaluated every TR t f 24,
1:35:42
Deutsche Avella clip, every
single one has to be looked at.
1:35:45
There's no There's no other
people doing that here. There's
1:35:48
no magic. And people are. Hey,
do you answer your own email?
1:35:52
Uh, yeah, who else? That's the
only way you can make a podcast
1:35:56
work. You can't hire staff in a
podcast. That's why Spotify is
1:36:01
going broke. It hasn't they
failed, they spent $2 billion on
1:36:06
buying these
1:36:06
John C Dvorak: Yes, this model
is not radio.
1:36:08
Adam Curry: No, it's not. And
radio was gonna go broke
1:36:11
eventually, too. That model
doesn't work either. Anyway, and
1:36:18
I'm, I'm very grateful. I'm very
grateful that we can do this,
1:36:21
but I just want you to know that
there will be an end if if
1:36:24
that's the economy, that's the
economy, then I'm gonna have to
1:36:26
go Which reminds me, I'll drive.
1:36:28
John C Dvorak: These assholes
are closing Anchor Brewing. One
1:36:33
of the great the original, you
know, kind of boutique brewery
1:36:37
in the world, or in the United
States or in California at
1:36:41
least. And Anchor Brewing has
been around for 127 years, I
1:36:45
believe. And bought by Sapporo a
few years ago, and Sapporo can't
1:36:50
seem to run an American Brewery
and they, they're going to
1:36:53
shutter it. And the thing is, is
worth about $45 million. And
1:36:59
there's not one Silicon Valley
billionaire. You can't just pick
1:37:05
this thing up and and run it
through, let it run itself or
1:37:09
give it to the employees or do a
million different things.
1:37:11
There's no Elon Musk, or any
number of hyper wealthy in the
1:37:18
Bay Area, which there's tons of
that can can pick up the slack
1:37:22
on this. As soon as gone.
1:37:26
Adam Curry: No, clearly, no one
found that valuable enough. For
1:37:32
him, other things are more
valuable to them, like space
1:37:34
exploration. I don't know. I
don't know. I don't know.
1:37:41
Unknown: Any laws or art?
1:37:42
Adam Curry: Well, no. Before we
do that, I want to remind
1:37:44
everybody that you too can
become a troll for free. No
1:37:47
charge. Go ahead. You can you
could all troll room.io Go
1:37:52
ahead, use whatever you want.
And I love the people in the
1:37:55
troll room who are you know,
bitching and moaning about us
1:37:57
bitching and moaning? I don't
recognize any of these people as
1:38:00
donors by the way. They are.
Their contribution is memes on
1:38:05
no agenda social great their
boners their boners not donors
1:38:09
we've got about that. boners not
donors. The best way to witness
1:38:15
and experience no agenda
livestream is with a modern
1:38:19
podcast app. And even if you're
not able to listen live, you get
1:38:23
20 new features, we have
transcripts you can search on we
1:38:26
have chapters, you can see all
the images from the artists,
1:38:30
many, many cool features that
that are included in those and
1:38:34
there are hundreds of 1000s of
podcasts are already using this.
1:38:37
If you're not using a modern
podcast app, go to podcast
1:38:40
apps.com. In that you you like
give us pod verse, you'll get
1:38:44
alerted when we go live the bat
signal, you tap on that it's the
1:38:48
same place you get all your
other podcasts which you can
1:38:50
import from your legacy app.
Just get one already. It's good.
1:38:56
You can support the whole
ecosystem, you can support the
1:38:59
app developers too, because if
you just want to stick with
1:39:02
Google and Apple, good luck.
Great talent is contributed by
1:39:08
the artists of the no agenda
show and they contribute that at
1:39:11
no agenda, art generator.com We
find that to be a fabulous
1:39:15
contribution
1:39:16
John C Dvorak: is also somebody
before you go into the art.
1:39:18
Yeah. As you brought up Google,
we have a PSA. There's a song I
1:39:23
guess it's a classic. Coming up
at the end of the show about
1:39:27
Bing and Google and how the
world can't live without one go.
1:39:32
Yeah, can't live without
Google's name of the song. And
1:39:34
then Bing comes up in the
conversation. And I was thinking
1:39:37
I was that song, I think and you
know, what would happen if
1:39:41
Google actually just stopped and
ceased existence? You couldn't
1:39:45
use Bing. Now because Microsoft
would cancel it. They would
1:39:51
shutter it overnight. Why there
would be nothing. This is what
1:39:55
they do. They had this project
where they were scanning library
1:39:59
books You know, along with
Google When Google finally said
1:40:02
we're sick of it, because we're
getting sued left and right,
1:40:04
Microsoft continued for a while
they looked left. They look
1:40:07
right. Google wasn't doing it.
So they stopped. Yeah, it's a
1:40:11
terrible company. Anyway, I just
thought I'd get that out of the
1:40:16
way, because I couldn't do it
after the show. No, no, no,
1:40:18
that's in the show.
1:40:22
Adam Curry: We want to, we want
to thank Nico Syme. It was I
1:40:27
have to say the contributions in
art are off the chart at the
1:40:32
Arts off the chart, man. That's
it in the past couple of
1:40:36
episodes have been dynamite. And
it's very hard for us to choose
1:40:40
to choose a winner. Nico Syme
got the nod. Thought he had a
1:40:45
brilliant piece of art which was
and what I thought was brilliant
1:40:49
about it what it was basically
it was the fasten seatbelt sign
1:40:51
except that said, no agenda,
climate turbulence warning and
1:40:55
have the little buckle your seat
by fasten your seat belt.
1:40:59
Graphic, it was exactly like an
illuminated sign on the 737 from
1:41:05
about 1985 Somehow it was just
there was perfect.
1:41:09
John C Dvorak: You the one that
promoted this, right. Like the I
1:41:13
had liked the piece by Sir Paul,
who did the very nice piece of
1:41:20
arch, which was just below it. I
thought the art was superior
1:41:24
than Ecocide stuff was kind of
simplistic, but at the same time
1:41:28
when you brought up that it
looked like illuminated sign and
1:41:31
it did have motion it showed and
it got the point across and the
1:41:35
gag was there.
1:41:36
Adam Curry: What was the one?
What was the one you wanted?
1:41:39
John C Dvorak: The one the Sir
Paul Couture's fly the turbulent
1:41:44
skies with the stewardess all as
an art px the art well the
1:41:49
proper use it for the new Oh,
1:41:50
Adam Curry: I had a different
issue with that is that curry
1:41:53
DeVore AK was very, very tiny.
1:41:55
John C Dvorak: Yeah, you didn't
like that part of it. And then
1:41:58
when I started thinking about
it, I think that the opportunity
1:42:02
was missed. To have the
stewardess flying in the air are
1:42:07
somehow a little flex yeah
tumbling or something active
1:42:10
something moving. Because the
star all the stories that we put
1:42:14
played about the turbulent skies
involve some stewardess flying
1:42:19
around like you know just in the
bumping her head or just flying
1:42:22
through the air and I thought
that would have been a nice
1:42:24
thing nobody picked up may I
1:42:26
Adam Curry: add since since this
is the donation segment and only
1:42:29
people who listened get to hear
the extra content and the magic
1:42:32
number. We received a very
beautiful email from Brandon
1:42:38
future sir homebound separator
of Baton Rouge airspace. An air
1:42:42
traffic controller isn't an air
traffic guy DTC guy. And he said
1:42:46
Oh, yeah. Oh, he first of all,
he confirmed I also have the
1:42:48
link if you'd like to see the
fuel saving arrival route which
1:42:55
takes you right through the
turbulence he said there's also
1:42:59
within the last decade, the FAA
has tightened the the spacing
1:43:07
between aircraft because modern
aircraft can handle wake
1:43:11
turbulence better now wake
turbulence is it's really a
1:43:15
spiraling air of flow of air
that comes from turbine engines.
1:43:20
So it used to be five miles
separation now it's three and a
1:43:24
half miles. The result of that
is a pretty much consistent
1:43:30
layer of wake turbulence because
it's there's always a pace.
1:43:35
Yeah. So ever
1:43:36
John C Dvorak: was getting a
bump. Yeah, like it or not,
1:43:39
you're getting a bumpy ride in
what it's
1:43:41
Adam Curry: not is climate
change. It's not climate change.
1:43:45
That's a lie. A lie a lie a lie.
But I do like that some stupid
1:43:50
Zoomers in Germany, went on the
runway and glued their hands to
1:43:57
the runway and they had to chop
a piece of the runway out of the
1:44:00
asphalt to get them from the
runway because they use epoxy
1:44:05
and some cement and there's
these two two girls two dipshit
1:44:12
girls with their hands glued to
this piece of asphalt that
1:44:16
they're not going to have to
have surgically removed and
1:44:20
they're and they're they're
crying
1:44:26
John C Dvorak: to dipshit girls
yes neurodivergent
1:44:30
Adam Curry: girls so for some we
looked at a lot of the pay pigs
1:44:35
but we really felt that you know
unless you knew pay pig that it
1:44:39
could be easily misunderstood
what what the pay pig was I kind
1:44:45
of in a weird way like comic
strip bloggers but fart that
1:44:49
look like Yeah, you did
1:44:50
John C Dvorak: like that for
some unknown reason, which now
1:44:52
just encourages him. Thanks for
that comment.
1:44:55
Adam Curry: I love the i By
1:44:57
John C Dvorak: the way, I did
like Nico Simes paper bunny den
1:45:00
also then Kenny bends they did
the competitive pay pigs using
1:45:04
the same clipart.
1:45:05
Adam Curry: And yes, they did
that which was interesting. We
1:45:09
didn't we didn't think the pay
pig in the PayPal logo was a
1:45:13
good idea. No for obvious
reasons. I liked Baron of BNS
1:45:21
glide path although, you know,
esoteric No, but only pilots
1:45:24
would understand what you were
looking at a glide right into
1:45:27
the tropisms that was funny for
sure. What else did we I think
1:45:32
that was kind of it wasn't it?
But everything is so it's, I
1:45:38
mean, not everything hits the
mark, but everything is quality,
1:45:41
this quality art and we're very
appreciative that we love our
1:45:43
artists and that we
1:45:45
John C Dvorak: there's at least
five to six pieces we could have
1:45:47
easily picked without regret.
1:45:49
Adam Curry: And already for
today's show we have 1214 pieces
1:45:55
already uploaded. I mean this
this this race is on man this is
1:46:00
this is good stuff. Thank you
very much. To our artists of
1:46:03
course, thank you, Nico Syme. No
agenda are generated are calm if
1:46:06
you want to check it out in real
time, or use that modern podcast
1:46:09
app from podcast apps.com Dred
Scott does also a great provider
1:46:14
of value. He does the chapters
for us and adds a lot of the art
1:46:18
from the artists from the
current episode, especially when
1:46:20
we're talking about them which
makes it actually
1:46:22
John C Dvorak: there's 26 pieces
on right and that's insane
1:46:25
Adam Curry: All right, let's
thank our executive producer and
1:46:29
our what four or five Associate
Executive producers we kick it
1:46:34
off with Dame T J of the side
eye, and she sent in a note
1:46:39
which I have here that she said
Dear Adam didn't even add you to
1:46:44
the list was what's up with
that?
1:46:47
John C Dvorak: hates me.
1:46:49
Adam Curry: She She doesn't hate
you? No, because he actually
1:46:52
refers to you and she is from
where she from home on a second
1:46:56
do we have been our Haysville
hates $302 True new story
1:47:02
listener colong. When I was a
new listener, I had a completely
1:47:06
wrong theory for why your wife
was called the keeper. I figured
1:47:09
since she had a job and you were
a podcaster she made all the
1:47:12
money for the household.
Although that is not the genesis
1:47:17
of her story of her name. Yes,
she had a real job that made you
1:47:23
a kept man and her your keeper.
The True Story is probably as
1:47:27
romantic as JCD gets.
1:47:30
John C Dvorak: Oh,
1:47:32
Adam Curry: boy she's cater to
spices you if there's any travel
1:47:37
agents out there, please add to
your info. Add your info to the
1:47:42
no agenda marketplace so I can
hire you. Oh there you go.
1:47:45
Here's here's a gig everybody
marketplace.ya know agenda.com
1:47:52
What is this? Did I miss
something? The young No
1:47:56
agenda.com Is that I know is
that it? No. But is that a is
1:48:00
that a marketplace that I was
unaware of? Ever heard of it? I
1:48:04
guess so. Anyway, looking so if
you're a travel agent, you could
1:48:08
be you could be hired. Asking
for jingles. Eats or bugs. Do we
1:48:17
have an eat there's no eats eats
of bugs is there it's not just I
1:48:19
love bugs. Eat the bugs. Let me
see. There is
1:48:23
John C Dvorak: a there is eats a
jingle is about I found will eat
1:48:27
the bugs. I found
1:48:29
Adam Curry: it. I found it. I
found it the bugs. And along
1:48:34
with that. Look at that juice
and beautiful yum. Okay. Hiring
1:48:40
karma pleases I'm having
problems building a sales team.
1:48:43
If anyone wants a b2b sales job
with a mellow boss. And you're
1:48:47
neurodivergent and time blind.
Please email me at T Johnson at
1:48:52
otter and mule.com otter and
mule.com sine t j of the side i
1:48:59
The Christmas Dame Joe Williams.
Oh my gosh. Can you see that
1:49:04
Jews? Beautiful. You've got
Carmen for being a hater. That
1:49:14
was a pretty good sequence.
Yeah,
1:49:16
John C Dvorak: give
1:49:16
Adam Curry: her that one guy was
a good sequence. We liked that
1:49:18
one.
1:49:19
John C Dvorak: Christie Zeiss in
ham. Chin Bay's New York is our
1:49:23
Associate Executive Producer at
$250. And she said rongke, which
1:49:28
is one of our podcasts couple
shows ago. Bronk was the goat I
1:49:32
listened to x thanks. I mean,
she listened twice, not at 2x is
1:49:36
different. She listened two
times. Yeah, very good. Listen
1:49:39
two times as six hours never
ever time. Here's a great
1:49:42
Adam Curry: example of someone
who understands value. DS laughs
1:49:47
who always Now very often sends
us an end of show mix did not
1:49:51
send one today. Instead, these
laughs from Toronto, California,
1:49:55
Canada, sent us some value $241
appreciate that. No jingles keep
1:50:00
it short and sweet. As a black
man as a black man, I got some
1:50:03
questions about Black Pete.
Hopefully no pics of you dressed
1:50:08
in Trudeau face come out and I
don't think so. Everyone should
1:50:11
become an executive producer one
time at least thank you for the
1:50:14
material to get me to start
rapping. Thank you very much DS
1:50:18
laughs appreciate that
1:50:19
John C Dvorak: a whole show on
Black Pete some years back Yes,
1:50:23
Adam Curry: it was before it was
on Vogue even was just kicking
1:50:27
off and now they have a slave
museum as well. well on their
1:50:31
way to what the whole point what
it all was all about. They
1:50:35
started with the Black Pete and
now there's reparations on deck
1:50:39
for Suriname's. Okay. All right.
Everybody has nothing to do with
1:50:43
Black Pete by the way, but there
you go.
1:50:46
John C Dvorak: Emily Shay, I
know that's the joke of it.
1:50:49
Yeah. Emily shade in Beaverton,
Oregon. She says hi John and
1:50:55
Adam, Adam and John actually
when she puts it finally check
1:50:59
my accounting and realize I was
practically a dame a perfect
1:51:03
birthday present for myself
accounting attache request to be
1:51:05
knighted Dame Emily and you're
on the list and ask for a
1:51:09
cappuccinos and fruit fruit
tarts at the round table I'm
1:51:14
also requested a biscuit for my
birthday 31st Birthday. Thank
1:51:19
you for that right now. They
always give me a biscuit on my
1:51:22
birthday. Tomorrow July 14 And
second is second meant second
1:51:28
meant second meant I don't think
she wants Second Amendment
1:51:31
karma. Second Amendment Okay
second amendment karma as I plan
1:51:35
to pursue a rotation from the US
to the UK was in my accounting
1:51:38
firm that second amendment
thanks you all Emily shade
1:51:45
throwing some shade from
Portland Oregon,
1:51:47
Adam Curry: but what do you
think it is? Because I have
1:51:48
second amendment karma well that
well I'll just give her this
1:51:50
John C Dvorak: code Second
Amendment got to do with the UK
1:51:52
and I don't know second. What
second meant what a second
1:51:55
minute second two minute second.
You want to look that up? Maybe
1:51:58
it's an actual word. Well, I'm
1:51:59
Adam Curry: gonna give her some
gunfire karma.
1:52:03
Unknown: You've got karma.
1:52:06
Just go.
1:52:08
Adam Curry: I mean, maybe
something can hurt right. can
1:52:11
hurt. Let me just add her
request to the roundtable. Have
1:52:14
that cappuccino and fruit tarts?
Yay. We got Todd from Northern
1:52:19
Virginia. Virginia. Nice
Palindrome to one 2.12. Same for
1:52:25
this backward. Set in the
morning, John Adam. I had to
1:52:28
thank the two of you and send
some treasure back your way you
1:52:31
always say to never skip the
donation segment and my
1:52:34
listening paid off. A small
windfall came my way when I
1:52:39
matched all the secret numbers
to hit the jackpot and because
1:52:42
my numbers were Palindrome I
even hit the douchebag Davao
1:52:46
Wow, this is what this is what
the show does. Could you please
1:52:50
send me some rental property
buying karma so I can get
1:52:53
another piece of the pie before
BlackRock and Vanguard buy up
1:52:56
all the country's real estate
and Sam prices into the
1:52:58
stratosphere. Thank you for your
courage love is lit Todd from
1:53:01
Northern Virginia Of course, and
congratulations on douchebag
1:53:05
karma.
1:53:08
John C Dvorak: So going back to
Emily shade, yeah. Second meant
1:53:14
second is what we're supposed to
be doing. A second meant is an
1:53:19
arrangement where a company
temporarily assigns an employee
1:53:23
to a new position. The new
position may be within the
1:53:27
organization or with a separate
business such as a client or
1:53:31
supplier. Who the hell ever use
that word in their life?
1:53:35
Unknown: I don't know.
1:53:39
John C Dvorak: Hence, it's also
considered a temporary
1:53:41
assignment. Interesting. Okay.
Wouldn't we learn something
1:53:46
today?
1:53:48
Adam Curry: Yes, thank you.
1:53:49
John C Dvorak: And we'll learn
something else from Sure.
1:53:53
malinovski in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana. Hey y'all. This
1:53:58
donation brings me to Baron
status accounting is attached
1:54:01
I'd like to my title upgraded to
serve malinovski Baron of South
1:54:06
Louisiana. Today's show was a
banger. Let's see to John tried
1:54:15
to process the information about
pay pigs in real time had
1:54:19
cracked meat had been had me
cackling I figured it was high
1:54:26
time to be a paid pig once again
for my favorite podcast is for a
1:54:29
jingle can I get Atlas Shrugged
followed by any Biden gaff ISO,
1:54:35
thanks for all you do and keep
it up.
1:54:38
Adam Curry: Yeah, we got you. By
iron Rand is a dead dog on my
1:54:45
lawn. It was not really a gaffe.
But that's that's what I thought
1:54:50
was funny to listen to.
1:54:51
John C Dvorak: was the winner is
a dead dog on his lawn. Wow,
1:54:54
that
1:54:54
Adam Curry: was that was one of
his that was one of his. His
1:54:57
things while back is now
1:55:00
John C Dvorak: Get the last one
here. Thank you. Because it's
1:55:02
Linda loop Atkins, Lakewood,
Colorado. Yes of course and she
1:55:06
gets my attention because she
writes jobs karma for all you
1:55:10
job hunters out there ask for a
competitive edge as for one to
1:55:14
add and for one, go to Image
makers inc.com For all your
1:55:20
executive resume and job search
needs, or just find Linda
1:55:25
Lubetkin under the show's
producer list and run a search
1:55:30
jobs jobs jobs jobs jobs Job
Bank thank you that reaches I
1:55:39
guess forever. Thank you very
well now we have the rest of
1:55:42
Adam Curry: the limit. Let me
just thank thank the Executive
1:55:44
Associate Executive Producers
very much for supporting seven
1:55:47
of them the all seven but the
seven get titles. These titles
1:55:50
are official anywhere, credits
and titles are recognized, which
1:55:56
would be on the picket line, or
at IMDb or even on your resume.
1:56:01
Or if you're looking to get one
of those non union gigs. You can
1:56:06
say I've got a non union credit
right here, and they're good
1:56:09
forever and you can tout them
anywhere and if anyone questions
1:56:12
them, we'll be happy to vouch
for you. Thank you very much for
1:56:15
producing episode 1573 of the
best podcast in the universe.
1:56:19
John is going to take us through
the 50s Won't take long either.
1:56:23
John C Dvorak: And he came in
Columbus, Ohio 169 69 David
1:56:26
Fukase odour but in Gladstone,
Missouri is the Duke of many men
1:56:30
Baron or the somewhere in
1:56:32
Adam Curry: America for America,
America's heartland and the
1:56:35
Arabian Peninsula.
1:56:36
John C Dvorak: 152 12 Reading
Harrington sparks Nevada went
1:56:40
5212 Priscilla O'Leary and
Ramona California 147 Or neither
1:56:47
the East Side 133 33 in
Maplewood, Minnesota, here's a
1:56:51
switcheroo. This is the Cape
Coral meetup in Cape Coral,
1:56:56
Florida. My wife attended the
first no agenda meeting in Cape
1:57:00
Coral. Cannabis got together as
a great time. Please de douche
1:57:05
Linda Baxter de deuced
1:57:11
Adam Curry: sir Dan, the man
Baron of Southwest Florida
1:57:14
protector of Cape Coral on the
islands of Sanibel and Captiva
1:57:17
John C Dvorak: Silvana Gentile
in Orland hills, Illinois 100.
1:57:23
Lucas Williams in Roswell, New
Mexico 100 QQ Q. QQ. Just QQ in
1:57:30
Key West Florida 100 Karen
Strickland Littleton, Colorado
1:57:35
100.
1:57:36
Adam Curry: Mentioned QQ
unsubscribe from all services
1:57:39
Amazon, Netflix, Google, Apple,
etc. Made a monthly subscription
1:57:43
to no agenda. money better spent
today. Donating is because our
1:57:47
company is slowly getting back
on his feet the effects of Biden
1:57:50
in the mafia, but he canceled
all of his douchebags
1:57:54
subscriptions to support the
best podcast in the universe,
1:57:57
just saying.
1:58:00
John C Dvorak: There's a lot of
douchebag subscriptions there he
1:58:02
listed. Chris deacon in burnt
ranch California 9999. Aaron why
1:58:09
Bergen robbers Wisconsin 808
Kevin McLaughlin dairy is in
1:58:14
Concord, North Carolina 808.
Boobs. Mike McCoy in Schaumburg,
1:58:21
Illinois. 808. Short, Kevin's
dedication to breasts is an
1:58:26
inspiration to us all. And he
writes indeed. Sir Jheri curl in
1:58:33
Raleigh, North Carolina 7140.
1:58:35
Adam Curry: This was their
emotion. This was the promotion.
1:58:38
Oh, sorry.
1:58:39
John C Dvorak: It is yeah, this
1:58:40
Adam Curry: was the Bastille Day
promotion.
1:58:42
John C Dvorak: Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Great idea. Yes. But so he was
1:58:48
bored. He
1:58:51
Adam Curry: rocked, man.
1:58:52
John C Dvorak: I got one guy.
Jheri curl, bearing a BA Well,
1:58:57
you know that here's a joke of
it. I sent a newsletter on the
1:59:01
15th. Bastille Day was the day
before and I had the dates mixed
1:59:05
up. You thought and I said it
was today. And it wasn't the
1:59:10
maybe that's why it failed. No,
no. Maybe Baron BNA is up next
1:59:16
in Nashville, Tennessee. 5993.
James Edmondson in South
1:59:20
Plainfield, New Jersey, at 510
Richard Futter in London UK 5510
1:59:26
Pete Lockwood in San Francisco
California with a birthday 55
1:59:30
And for his in is a biscuit
first or do they always give me
1:59:35
a biscuit on my birthday John?
Know why these hours
1:59:40
Adam Curry: what are you doing?
Don't don't go to work. I had to
1:59:42
move it. Come back to the mic.
Come back to the mic and I'm
1:59:45
John C Dvorak: trying to get
this thing straightened out. I
1:59:47
don't want to put it by the
thing again.
1:59:49
Adam Curry: What what do you
have to do what
1:59:51
John C Dvorak: where was
bugging? Yes.
1:59:53
Adam Curry: Very barren of bna
24. Oh,
1:59:57
John C Dvorak: in Nashville,
Tennessee. He came in with 15 I
2:00:00
93 James Edmondson in South
Plainfield, New Jersey, 55, and
2:00:03
no I did all these 55 ends. I
did Peter Lockwood and San
2:00:07
Francisco for his birthday.
2:00:10
Adam Curry: You're right. I'm
confused.
2:00:13
John C Dvorak: Three funderburk
in Spokane, Washington Darrow
2:00:16
and for 95 Darryl Keck, Dubuque,
Iowa 5110.
2:00:22
Adam Curry: Are you are you are
you not talking into the mic?
2:00:25
You're definitely something
happened.
2:00:26
John C Dvorak: Oh, yes, this
mic. Ah, the mic has moved on
2:00:28
me. Hold on. I'm gonna move it
back.
2:00:30
Adam Curry: You didn't see that?
2:00:32
John C Dvorak: No, I'm not
looking at it. There we go.
2:00:34
Okay. Thanks for catching that.
Yeah. This little nub needs to
2:00:40
be tightened tighten your knob.
Ah, I can't you know, it's like
2:00:44
you know, they put these little
things on there and there's not
2:00:48
enough leverage to do any real
tightening through notices with
2:00:52
his with his gear.
2:00:54
Adam Curry: I don't have that
2:00:54
John C Dvorak: economic hitman.
Okay, sorry, economic I'm sorry,
2:00:57
I'm complaining. Sure. Economic
Hitman in Tomball, Texas 5001.
2:01:01
And here we go into $50 donors.
And it looks like I was wrong in
2:01:05
my analysis. By the way, I want
to apologize. Kevin deals in
2:01:09
Huntersville North Carolina.
Christian Freeman in San Marcos,
2:01:13
Texas. Big Papa productions in
Minneapolis Chris Lewinsky in
2:01:16
Sherwood Park. Easy, easy
landscapes in North Stonington
2:01:21
Connecticut. Michael Thompson a
new Brownsville, Texas. Dilip
2:01:27
blue in Louisville, Kentucky,
Kelly MacDill and Mission Hills
2:01:30
Kansas. Michael perote parrot
parrot in Salem, Oregon. Todd
2:01:36
Hendrickson in Woodstock,
Illinois, switcheroo for as long
2:01:40
as youngest brother Chad
Hendrickson, and he does it
2:01:43
again. 50 bucks Woodstock,
Illinois for his brother Kyle
2:01:48
Hendricks and a Carpentersville
How cool. Oh, wait a minute. He
2:01:52
does it one more time. Is this a
massage? No Anderson brothers
2:01:57
should ever be known as a
douchebag. So we need dee doo
2:02:00
dee doo
2:02:03
Unknown: dee doo stickers of
course. Of course we did.
2:02:06
Douche.
2:02:07
John C Dvorak: Do another one.
All right. You've been de deuced
2:02:13
Sara Gordon in Tucson, Arizona.
50. Rick lob LaMancha. In hope
2:02:19
Rhode Island. And so Mitra
Saravana. in Fredericksburg,
2:02:24
Fredericksburg, Fredericksburg,
Virginia, or Virginia. There's
2:02:29
never been a donation from
Fredericksburg.
2:02:32
Adam Curry: You know? That's a
good point. And I know there's
2:02:34
people listening. And quite
frankly, I'm disappointed in
2:02:38
y'all. Y'all notice I've done
y'all to speak to the locals
2:02:41
here. Y'all know.
2:02:43
John C Dvorak: Last on the list
is windy Brahmin, in Saginaw.
2:02:47
Yeah, Michigan.
2:02:49
Adam Curry: Everybody's
listening here. But the whole
2:02:51
town listens to no agenda.
2:02:53
John C Dvorak: They don't like
us. Listen possible.
2:02:56
Adam Curry: It's just hatless.
And it's possible. It's very
2:02:59
possible. You never know. The
douchebags. Well, that
2:03:02
John C Dvorak: was I'm sorry,
there's 46 People 45 People, not
2:03:05
19. I was wrong. But I was
looking at is I didn't know what
2:03:09
I was looking I was a different
spreadsheet. I'm not sure.
2:03:12
Adam Curry: Thank you to all of
our donors, of course, those who
2:03:15
did step up and who do deliver
the value back to us, which
2:03:18
makes us happy. It makes us feel
good about what we're doing. And
2:03:23
of course, people come in under
$50. We will not mention
2:03:26
anything. Therefore anonymity,
just in case you know, you can
2:03:30
be sure that we'll never
mentioned under 50. But there's
2:03:32
a lot of subscriptions. You can
do your own numbers, your own
2:03:35
subscription you can go to well,
we have a website where you can
2:03:38
find out exactly what kind of
subscriptions are already pre
2:03:41
programmed for you for.org/and A
is is code monkey working on the
2:03:48
new donation site is that I mean
seriously, I'm not composed I
2:03:51
can tell. Okay, just want to
make sure. Thank you all very
2:03:55
much. Thank you again to our
executive and Associate
2:03:57
Executive producers we really
appreciate appreciate you
2:03:59
producing 1573 Our formula is
this. People in the mouth
2:04:26
we have a couple of birthdays to
celebrate and Casey celebrate on
2:04:30
the 29th Happy belated birthday,
Dame Emily turned 31 on the 14th
2:04:35
to Lockwood with his brother
John a happy birthday turning 51
2:04:39
tomorrow and Derek by the way,
says Happy Birthday to a smokin
2:04:43
hot wife Danielle and human
resource Mason. They both will
2:04:46
be celebrating on the 20th Happy
birthday for everybody here at
2:04:49
the best podcast in the
universe. Tonight
2:05:00
I don't want to be whenever I
have that speed just rockin and
2:05:04
rollin you always
2:05:06
John C Dvorak: you write it over
yourself so you don't allow me
2:05:09
that you know,
2:05:10
Adam Curry: because this is what
we call steam baby we're
2:05:13
steaming full steam. This is
where we congratulate sir
2:05:16
malinovski As he has now become
a barren sir malinovski Baron of
2:05:21
South Louisiana, thanks to his
additional support and a total
2:05:25
of $1,000 for the no agenda show
we thank you very much. And
2:05:28
congratulations with your barony
sir malinovski Yes, John, you
2:05:32
had a question?
2:05:34
John C Dvorak: No, I have an
apology. Oh, okay. I have an
2:05:37
apology to make to Dame TJ of
the side I have after writing
2:05:43
her for being a hater. Oh, okay.
It turns out she wrote a card
2:05:47
which was scanned I'm sure.
Specifically to me
2:05:52
Adam Curry: Oh, and she's a
lover not a hater.
2:05:54
John C Dvorak: Yeah, she says
love you John. Oh wow. Wow,
2:05:59
you're all that and more you
need to repent fee podcast day.
2:06:04
She had to say happy birthday
card she's repurposed its
2:06:07
podcast day planner No
2:06:09
Adam Curry: How can it be
podcast day one it's artificial
2:06:11
intelligence day
2:06:13
John C Dvorak: well same thing
so
2:06:16
Adam Curry: same difference
she's
2:06:17
John C Dvorak: she says she has
and she's she's want to put a
2:06:19
little patch in there. Says
awesome dad great guy you got to
2:06:23
pack right
2:06:24
Adam Curry: Oh man you what you
repent.
2:06:26
John C Dvorak: I do she writes I
especially like it when you use
2:06:31
rare words like close close that
I've read but never heard. How a
2:06:41
minor
2:06:42
Adam Curry: point but no but
people love you for your
2:06:44
vocabulary
2:06:45
John C Dvorak: for all you do.
She writes so I was a bomb CAD I
2:06:49
was literally a CAD to her
2:06:51
Adam Curry: I would say douche
but okay, CAD CAD
2:06:55
John C Dvorak: we're like close
better like close it's just more
2:07:01
douche we use too much on the
show
2:07:02
Adam Curry: we have Emily
standing by here Emily shade
2:07:05
would like to receive her Dame
hood so if you can
2:07:08
John C Dvorak: oh well I've got
the special Dame blade here nice
2:07:12
blade
2:07:12
Adam Curry: has Oh pop on up
here because you are about to
2:07:17
become game of the no agenda
show no agenda roundtable is
2:07:21
where you shall sit Thank you
very much for your support to
2:07:24
the no agenda show Dame Emily I
mean Emily because now I'm going
2:07:27
to officially pronounced the que
vas Dame MLA dame of the no
2:07:31
agenda roundtable end of the
show. And for you deem Emily by
2:07:35
request we have cappuccinos and
fruit jars but maybe you'd like
2:07:38
some rent boys and Chardonnay. I
don't know we do have montage
2:07:41
just in case. Also for you. We
have pepperoni rolls and pale
2:07:45
ales, we got redheads and Rhys,
we've got organic macaroni and
2:07:48
plasticizers blir a beer and
blondes gingerale and Jerboas
2:07:51
breast milk and pablum baguettes
and bourbon or maybe just the
2:07:55
mutton and meat it goes well
with your aspartame dose. So
2:07:58
head on over to no agenda
rings.com Take a look at that
2:08:02
beautiful Dame ring that we have
on display there and if you send
2:08:05
us an address, we'll get it off
to you along with your ring
2:08:08
sizes a handy ring sizing chart
there and thank you again, Dave
2:08:11
Emily for supporting the best
podcast in the node in the
2:08:14
universe your no agenda show.
2:08:16
Unknown: No one.
2:08:23
Adam Curry: A lot of producers
are providing value to the
2:08:28
community that is the no agenda
show people who go to meetups
2:08:31
they pretty much always donate
I've noticed that so that's very
2:08:34
much appreciated. We got a
report from the Dayton Ohio
2:08:37
meetup from Sir Egghead Night of
the Long shadows of trash
2:08:40
mountain. He says it was a spur
of the moment many meet up this
2:08:44
past Friday night at Dublin pub
in the heat on the patio in
2:08:47
Dayton, Ohio and attendance me
sir Egghead sir Nick Lucas
2:08:50
Deaton from Dayton, mousy bear
and Abel Kirby's are able Kirby
2:08:54
from rare encounter and Carolyn
from hog story who I didn't
2:08:57
realize were local ish, as well.
I'll say I said it before I'll
2:09:00
say it again. Go to a meet up or
start one yourself. It's like a
2:09:03
partay good people that I was in
Ohio, Dayton, Ohio. Good people.
2:09:10
interesting conversation. No
buts hurt even when asking if
2:09:14
black people get the hiccups? Is
this all right, thank you very
2:09:21
much for that report. We have
more reports. Here's one from
2:09:25
Fort Worth.
2:09:26
Unknown: In the morning, this is
serotonin and here is the meetup
2:09:29
report for the fourth word meet
up we're going to pass the
2:09:32
foreigner on and thank you want
to thank everybody for showing
2:09:36
up. Hey, John
2:09:37
and Adam sir turbo here. Fort
Worth meet up in the morning.
2:09:43
This Sir Tim from the Terrance
wall plans in the morning. Make
2:09:46
sure to go to a meet up it's a
great time.
2:09:49
Sir le fonts here from North
Idaho Post Falls. I'm here to
2:09:56
meet up and Fort Worth. Awesome
beep I'm glad I came up
2:10:04
Adam Curry: you see a lot you
can hear it there's always days
2:10:06
and nights at these things as
these are people who really
2:10:08
support the show and they know
connection is protection while
2:10:11
you always have to attend a meet
up regularly let's go to Leo
2:10:14
Bravo flight of the no agenda.
2:10:17
Unknown: Hi everyone, it's Leo
pravo find out the no agenda
2:10:20
meetup number 42. I'm passing
the phone around. Some folks
2:10:23
have words to say
2:10:24
definitely don't miss out on the
next no agenda meetup great
2:10:27
conversation, great people great
weather you got to find more
2:10:30
community and will make you feel
good. So come back. Hey guys,
2:10:32
this
2:10:33
is Slick Rick and great time at
the meetup at the proud bird
2:10:37
with Lele the spook
2:10:39
in the morning. This is Reina
from Glendora sir milkman in the
2:10:43
morning. This is Raquel from
Arcadia in the morning and be
2:10:47
digital from Altadena
2:10:50
Adam Curry: beautiful one more
to go.
2:10:53
Unknown: We don't like to foster
a competitive atmosphere but we
2:10:56
laugh a lot now everyone can
share a secret
2:10:59
in the morning get donations
with center here and in the oh
2:11:04
Adam Curry: I'm sorry this is
the Switzerland meetup the
2:11:06
Credit No Credit Suisse meetup,
which was quite large I think
2:11:11
there was 10 people all handsome
and pretty
2:11:15
Unknown: in the morning getting
donations sent out here and in
2:11:19
the evening to all the Korean to
keep for listeners.
2:11:23
This is causing me FM Zurich in
the morning and trust me much.
2:11:28
Sir Richard Barbarossa in the
morning show. This is Marty the
2:11:36
matrix has you in the morning
Hello this is for Sir Luca and
2:11:42
we're having a great time.
2:11:44
Hi everybody. I am I'm Oscar
reporting from Zurich. We had a
2:11:48
nice time today.
2:11:50
You should do it you
2:11:51
ATM from Wally. So from getting
like keep nomination form to
2:11:55
cheese. We had a lovely meeting
in Zurich. And yeah if anyone
2:12:01
has any questions about solar
panels hit me up on this
2:12:09
you Scott
2:12:13
Adam Curry: Okay. You don't need
to produce it like that. But
2:12:19
thank you. It just blows me away
that we got a group of people
2:12:23
who meet in Zurich to just
hanging out connect with each
2:12:26
other, find their community and
and just be part of no agenda
2:12:31
nation and get my nation fondue
cheese. Thank you so much. I
2:12:33
love that. We have a promo for a
Texas Baron Scott checking in
2:12:37
for us.
2:12:38
Unknown: This is gern Scott here
to let you know it's that time
2:12:40
of the year again. The third
annual Central Texas float meet
2:12:43
is set for Sunday, August 13.
This year we'll be on the
2:12:46
springfed San Marcos River.
We'll meet at the rail yard Bar
2:12:50
and Grill for each and libations
after a three hour float. Good
2:12:53
and no agenda meetup.com for
details and your RSVP to both
2:12:57
the morning float in the
afternoon meetup. Connection has
2:13:00
protection on the river
2:13:03
Adam Curry: on the river indeed.
Thank you very much Baron Scott.
2:13:06
Coming up. Today we have the
Tucson Wild West Side meet up
2:13:10
that's underway. I think Arizona
whiskey roads Tucson. We have
2:13:14
hunters deviated septum Memorial
all so sad his septum has
2:13:18
deviated Miller's Ale House in
Mount Laurel Township, South New
2:13:23
Jersey. I think it's underway on
Thursday or next show day North
2:13:27
Idaho sanity brigade five
o'clock it's in. It's so Kirk
2:13:30
Abbey and Post Falls Idaho. The
South Mississippi testing the
2:13:34
turnout meet up that's the
second one Kagan barrel at 630
2:13:37
in Haiti, Hattiesburg MS is
Missouri. No Mississippi. MS is
2:13:44
Mississippi. Yes, you're peeing.
I got you. And
2:13:49
John C Dvorak: I'm not I'm
sitting here and yes it is. It's
2:13:54
okay I wouldn't be doing I'm
just supposed to be but you're
2:13:58
gonna pull that stunt.
2:13:59
Adam Curry: And then finally
Charlotte's thirsty Third
2:14:02
Thursday monthly meet up seven
o'clock edge Tavern in
2:14:04
Charlotte, North Carolina man we
have a lot of meetups going all
2:14:08
the way through. August we have
Nyborg, Denmark on July 21,
2:14:15
Maastricht the Netherlands on
the 21st just looking for the
2:14:19
international ones. We have done
nang Vietnam on July 29, Habbo
2:14:24
Vietnam, we didn't we and of
course, Vilnius, Lithuania on
2:14:31
August 26, which is just in time
for the next NATO meeting.
2:14:35
Apparently. We appreciate all of
these organizers. It's so good.
2:14:40
It's so important. This is
something that everybody can
2:14:43
benefit from. It really will
complete your no agenda
2:14:47
experience if you go to a
meetup, no agenda meetups.com
2:14:51
Thank you, sir Daniel, for
keeping that website up and
2:14:53
running. Thank you Mimi, for
coordinating it all. If you
2:14:56
can't find one near you start
one no agenda meetups.com It's
2:14:59
easy. You
2:15:01
Unknown: go hang out with Bom
Bom you won't be triggered you
2:15:12
to be weird everybody feels
2:15:14
the same do bom bom like
2:15:22
John C Dvorak: before we get to
the ISO since you mentioned
2:15:24
Vietnam I want to play a cat I
clipped it came off of was sent
2:15:31
in by a producer came off of C
span about cameras visit visited
2:15:38
Vietnam in a kind of a gaffe
2:15:43
Adam Curry: camo Vietnam okay
got
2:15:44
Unknown: it flowers at the site
where John McCain was shot down
2:15:48
in Vietnam. What the know
nothing millennials who set
2:15:51
camallo schedule didn't know
that had the site that she's
2:15:55
laying those flowers out it's a
celebration of those who shot
2:15:59
McCain's plane out of the sky
and in passing him, delivering
2:16:03
him to the VC for his long stay
and torture at the Hanoi Hilton.
2:16:09
The stunning ignorance of Kamala
Harris and her team was noted by
2:16:13
y'all when you a journalist
based in Beijing, she tweeted
2:16:17
this Harris No, this monument
honors the people who shot down
2:16:22
John McCain's plane, Vietnamese
people who view him as a war
2:16:25
criminal. So in essence, Harris
was paying tribute to those who
2:16:31
were shot down John McCain. It'd
be like Harris laying a wreath
2:16:35
at Pearl Harbor honoring the
brain Japanese pilots who sunk
2:16:39
the USS Arizona.
2:16:41
Adam Curry: Wow, wow, wow, hold
on a second. I had no idea that
2:16:45
that's a better gaffe than the
stupid population thing. This is
2:16:49
a clip of the day job. Now we
might as well play the one that
2:16:54
everyone's laughing about, which
is the population gaff, and I've
2:16:57
got it right here about the
2:16:58
Unknown: impact on something
like public health when we
2:17:01
invest in clean energy and
electric vehicles and reduce
2:17:04
population. More of our children
can breathe clean air and drink
2:17:09
clean water.
2:17:12
Adam Curry: Clean Water MK Ultra
victim.
2:17:15
John C Dvorak: Well, you know, I
know what day she was meant to
2:17:18
see. pollution, pollution but of
course population came at us
2:17:23
command
2:17:24
Adam Curry: had to come up
because that ultimately is
2:17:26
exactly what it's about. Reduce
the population. The carbon is
2:17:30
you people. The carbon is you.
ISOs
2:17:35
John C Dvorak: I have three What
do you got?
2:17:37
Adam Curry: I got four. Oh, hmm.
Well, you go first.
2:17:41
John C Dvorak: There might be
okay. This time. Okay. Okay.
2:17:43
Start with Think.
2:17:44
Adam Curry: Think. Think about
it. Not bad.
2:17:49
John C Dvorak: Okay, then we'll
go to water. Water.
2:17:51
Unknown: I have a drink of
water.
2:17:56
Adam Curry: Let me hear that
again. A drink of water. Drink
2:17:59
of water. It's pretty good.
Pretty good. I like it's funny.
2:18:03
John C Dvorak: We got Yes, yes.
Yes.
2:18:06
Adam Curry: Wow. Cute. Where's
that from?
2:18:09
John C Dvorak: I remember some
some NPR
2:18:13
Adam Curry: I have for let's see
if anything's any good.
2:18:15
Unknown: But just because
they're crazy. doesn't mean
2:18:17
they're stupid.
2:18:20
John C Dvorak: That's insulting.
2:18:21
Unknown: I think we want more
balls. Dude, we'll get my boys.
2:18:28
Adam Curry: I like this is the
last one I have. This may be the
2:18:31
one.
2:18:31
Unknown: I think they're
fantastic. Come on. Yeah, that's
2:18:35
it. Jen
2:18:35
Adam Curry: Psaki baby. Jen
Psaki. She's the best. Our Jen
2:18:40
is? Well, well, well, let's see.
Oh, I had something. Just a
2:18:46
brief one. I'm sure you have
some other stuff. But I just
2:18:49
wanted to play this clip,
followed by a Redux clip. This
2:18:53
is ABC
2:18:54
Unknown: one day after getting
some good news about the
2:18:56
inflation rate some troubling
news about the federal deficit
2:18:59
and nearly tripled in the last
nine months. Government spending
2:19:03
on Medicare and Social Security
went up while tax revenue went
2:19:06
down. The bank bailouts back in
March also contributed
2:19:09
Adam Curry: the bank bailouts
back in March contributed to the
2:19:13
deficit the deficit? If I'm just
so I understand. Is the deficit
2:19:18
is that something that gets put
on the taxpayers ultimately?
2:19:25
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I think
blood Yeah, sure. Why not? I
2:19:28
mean, who also get to stick it
to exactly get it from someone.
2:19:31
Corporations are all taxpayers.
If you
2:19:33
Adam Curry: spend money you
don't have so you have to borrow
2:19:35
it. That is a deficit. And that
again, while tax
2:19:40
Unknown: revenue went down, the
bank bailouts back in March also
2:19:44
contributed.
2:19:45
Adam Curry: So the bank bailouts
contributed to the deficit,
2:19:49
which is a burden for the
taxpayers.
2:19:51
John C Dvorak: But also they
also mentioned that the tax went
2:19:55
down. In other words we had
2:19:56
Adam Curry: let me get to a
point let me get to my point.
2:20:00
But the bank bailouts went into
the deficit which gets put on to
2:20:05
the taxpayers. Let's go back in
time this morning,
2:20:09
Unknown: Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen is expected to face
2:20:12
some grilling over the banking
system on Capitol Hill.
2:20:14
According to prepared remarks,
Yellen will reassure that
2:20:17
taxpayer money is not being used
or put at risk in the Fallout
2:20:21
and that Americans can feel
confident their deposits will be
2:20:23
there when they need them.
2:20:25
Adam Curry: We were assured that
this would not be put on our
2:20:27
shoulders.
2:20:29
John C Dvorak: But no, she was
specifically referring to the
2:20:31
specific banks that they did.
FDIC picked up they already had
2:20:34
they already had to take your
money. Are
2:20:36
Adam Curry: you defending Janet
Yellen? Yeah, that's an outrage
2:20:42
John C Dvorak: for what she said
there. Yeah. Because all she
2:20:44
said was $1 We got this cover.
We're not going to stick to
2:20:47
sticking to the taxpayers
because they've already been
2:20:49
stuck.
2:20:49
Adam Curry: So apparently Janet
Yellen, when she was in, in
2:20:53
China, concert consumed four
servings of John HSU queen, a
2:21:00
type of wild mushroom, which
some say are hallucinogenic. Are
2:21:08
you familiar with this?
2:21:09
John C Dvorak: I'm not familiar
with the story that she had four
2:21:13
servings four servings that
probably tastes the mushroom.
2:21:16
Adam Curry: The media coverage
was quite enthusiastic and even
2:21:19
praised Yellin chopsticks
skills. However, these
2:21:23
particular mushrooms are
notorious in their native
2:21:25
province of Yunnan for their
unpredictable psychedelic
2:21:29
effects. The Jin Jin Hua state
news agency published a report
2:21:37
about the mushrooms potent
powers only after Yellin had
2:21:41
left that were one connoisseur
shared. Hmm. You thought you
2:21:44
were walking straight but you
just fell sideways. Dr. Peter
2:21:48
Mortimer professor of the coming
Kunming Institute of botany
2:21:52
informed CNN, he knew someone
who mistakenly consumed these
2:21:55
mushrooms and experienced
hallucinations for three days.
2:22:00
John C Dvorak: About that she
notice
2:22:03
Adam Curry: no one noticed from
her behavior either oddly stupid
2:22:09
Jarrett Jarom. Wow. How about
that, huh?
2:22:12
John C Dvorak: Yes, that means
this should have been planned.
2:22:14
And on CBS.
2:22:16
Adam Curry: I got a lot of
people warning me about my
2:22:18
kratom experiment.
2:22:20
John C Dvorak: Like a lot. And I
want to hear about it.
2:22:23
Adam Curry: Well, I got emails
saying y'all you shouldn't do
2:22:25
that. I know guys who are strung
out. It's highly addictive that
2:22:29
and they got boom, said his mic,
and they got gastrointestinal
2:22:33
issues. And you know, so Stephen
are our kratom. Producer. He
2:22:38
says, Yeah, okay, sure. People
use the toss and wash micro
2:22:43
powder flour. Yeah, if you're
using that, that you buy at some
2:22:47
hedge shop. Yeah, but he brews
it from red and green kratom
2:22:51
leaves. He says a very
different, we're not talking
2:22:54
about the same stuff. And most
of the stories about by the way,
2:22:58
I haven't consumed any since I
mean, I will have a bottle He
2:23:01
sends us six so it's not like
I'm gonna get strung out on
2:23:05
kratom that'd be a good one. But
he says most people use kratom
2:23:10
to try and get off of real
opioids. And so you know, when
2:23:13
do you get the FDA with a kratom
death list? And they don't
2:23:17
actually test to see if anyone
has any other addictive
2:23:21
addictions. I'm not trying to
say like, I'm not trying to
2:23:25
defend my kratom intake because
I just it does give you a buzz
2:23:31
it's a nice little buzz for
sure. I doubt that it'll
2:23:35
John C Dvorak: but does it give
you energy? I thought that was
2:23:37
the point. Oh, no, it
2:23:38
Adam Curry: does not give me
energy. No, it just makes me
2:23:40
feel kind of groovy for a bit
while watching friends you know
2:23:46
it's nice it's really I'm
feeling groovy that Elijah
2:23:52
feeling groovy All right, why
don't you go ahead No go ahead
2:23:59
go ahead go
2:24:00
John C Dvorak: Yeah, we could
2:24:03
Adam Curry: we need to do coke
gate
2:24:05
John C Dvorak: we don't have any
I have no coke anything I have
2:24:08
nothing but Colgate Okay, well,
let me play this little funny
2:24:11
clip first. Your funny clue. So
another tick tock clip is this
2:24:17
is UCLA students two times oh
wait, wait this man on the
2:24:21
street UCLA students being asked
questions two times
2:24:24
Unknown: two times one two,
which ocean is on the east side
2:24:31
of the United States? The East
one you from you're from New
2:24:39
Pacific. You guys know this?
2:24:41
I know this. I don't know this
Pacific. No, I can't do the
2:24:48
oceans. I don't do the Pacific.
2:24:51
What is the capital of the
United States? So I knew I was
2:24:55
gonna do we I didn't want to
think because I don't want to
2:24:59
sound down It just there's no
capital via literally is there
2:25:03
no capital? Correct
2:25:07
you guys are UCLA go to UCLA
2:25:13
Adam Curry: Wow divorce
California just saying yeah well
2:25:17
just divorce they sound
neurodivergent at best. Colgate
2:25:26
everybody Coke a does some weird
things in these reports that I
2:25:29
do want to want to highlight
some some commonalities. Let's
2:25:34
start with NBC.
2:25:36
Unknown: Tonight the Secret
Service coming up empty after
2:25:39
days of investigation and
sophisticated forensic testing.
2:25:43
Officials cannot identify who
left a small baggie of cocaine.
2:25:48
Okay,
2:25:49
Adam Curry: small baggie. What
are these people regular Coke
2:25:54
users that they use terms like
small baggie just a bag of
2:26:00
cocaine a small bag but why
small baggie? Is that what you
2:26:04
used to
2:26:05
John C Dvorak: call it which is
an old term from the 60s 70s 80s
2:26:10
for a baggie of marijuana says
there's fat you know there's hot
2:26:14
smokers relating to pot smoking
weird ag weird never been
2:26:20
cocaine in a
2:26:21
Adam Curry: bag a baggie. It's
like
2:26:23
John C Dvorak: as values it's
2:26:25
Adam Curry: it's sold in ounces.
It's an ounce of cocaine a half
2:26:28
ounce a quarter ounce a teeny
weeny bit of rounds, but they
2:26:32
all
2:26:32
John C Dvorak: they're all us I
thought it was in grams.
2:26:35
Adam Curry: While I'm talking
Europe, I don't know. I mean, we
2:26:39
do everything big in Texas.
2:26:43
John C Dvorak: Oh, good point.
Good comeback.
2:26:44
Unknown: Officials cannot
identify who left a small baggie
2:26:48
of cocaine, kilos kilos keys
baby keys in a storage cubby
2:26:54
used for electronic devices near
this West Wing entrance. House
2:26:58
Speaker Kevin McCarthy raising
doubts but if
2:27:01
they can't tell us who brought
it, what else is happening in
2:27:05
the White House they can't tell
us about what else is coming
2:27:07
into the White House they can
tell me about that even concerns
2:27:10
me more now.
2:27:11
Lab tests conducted at the FBI
crime lab did not develop latent
2:27:16
fingerprints and insufficient
DNA was present for
2:27:19
investigative comparisons.
Officials said they use video
2:27:23
and entrance logs to compile a
list of more than 500
2:27:27
individuals who had access to
the entrance in the days before
2:27:31
it was found July 2. But without
physical or video evidence,
2:27:36
officials could not connect the
drug to any suspect
2:27:39
it's complete failure. I mean,
this thing is is ridiculous.
2:27:43
The White House said it is
reviewing the findings.
2:27:46
Democrats acknowledged despite
law enforcement efforts. The
2:27:50
mystery remains a
2:27:52
Adam Curry: mystery. Mystery.
Let's listen to CBS if they have
2:27:56
any more clues to this mystery
2:27:58
Unknown: got any other big story
today. They said it has closed
2:28:02
its investigation into that
mysterious bag of cocaine that
2:28:05
was found in a White House work
area earlier this month.
2:28:10
Adam Curry: We have what's your
name is Nora. No, this is no
2:28:13
This is Nicole. That's Nora
knows Nicole. is Nicole. This
2:28:17
Nicole's younger
2:28:18
John C Dvorak: person that's
just reading that right there.
2:28:21
Adam Curry: I think so. Play it
again. Now we'll continue.
2:28:24
Unknown: So why wasn't a suspect
ever identified? We hit CBS News
2:28:29
Ganga at the White House in
2:28:30
Adam Curry: this Nicole scan
goes at the White House. Come on
2:28:33
in Nicole
2:28:33
Unknown: after the Secret
Service discovered cocaine in
2:28:36
the West Wing of the White House
press secretary Kareem Jean
2:28:39
Pierre said President Biden
expected a thorough
2:28:43
investigation.
2:28:44
The President it's very
important to get to the bottom
2:28:47
of this that's but after
2:28:48
just 10 days the Secret Service
closed its investigation unable
2:28:53
to identify whose cocaine it was
and how it got inside the White
2:28:57
House. The small baggie
containing
2:28:59
Adam Curry: bag a small baggie
Why are they all using the term
2:29:02
baggie
2:29:03
Unknown: roughly point two grams
of the drug was found July 2
2:29:07
Just inside the guest entryway
to the West Wing. In a cubby
2:29:11
used by visitors to store
cellphones steps away from the
2:29:14
situation room. FBI analysts
examining the bag look for
2:29:18
traces of DNA and fingerprints
but found no definitive results.
2:29:22
The Secret Service which briefed
the House Oversight Committee
2:29:25
this morning scoured video
inside and outside the building
2:29:29
and said no surveillance footage
provided investigative leads.
2:29:34
I don't know who it is and they
it's complete failure.
2:29:37
Some Republicans left the
briefing demanding answers
2:29:41
How can in the White House 24/7
security. They find cocaine but
2:29:48
now they just closed the
investigation.
2:29:50
In its statement. The Secret
Service cited the difficulty in
2:29:53
singling out a person among the
hundreds of individuals who pass
2:29:57
through the area where the
cocaine was discovered. The
2:30:00
Secret Service has a canine unit
that screens for explosive
2:30:04
devices and biohazards but not
illegal drugs. And for some
2:30:08
lawmakers this incident now
raises questions about security
2:30:12
protocols at the White House.
2:30:14
Adam Curry: This is very
disturbing. We cannot find who
2:30:18
of these 500 people who pass
through that entrance drop their
2:30:21
baggie that baggie of cocaine.
Let's go to PBS.
2:30:24
Unknown: The Secret Service has
finished investigating how a
2:30:27
baggie of cocaine
2:30:29
Adam Curry: even PBS is using
baggy what is up with baggy?
2:30:33
Come on. I need answers. Why is
this called a baggie
2:30:37
Unknown: gating how a baggie of
2:30:39
John C Dvorak: coke is some
buddy whoever sent out the press
2:30:41
release used it no that must be
hurting the press release.
2:30:45
Unknown: A baggie of cocaine got
into the White House with No
2:30:49
leads and no suspects. The
powder drug turned up in a lobby
2:30:53
area used by staff and tour
groups are like a secret service
2:30:56
reports as tests found no
fingerprints and no DNA and
2:31:00
video of the lobby entrance was
no help.
2:31:03
Adam Curry: So there were no
fingerprints and no DNA on the
2:31:06
baggy. Bo crap. Bo Come on. Your
wiped your baggie. Let's listen
2:31:16
to see if if Chuck Todd should
chip Chuck Chuck Todd Todd cast
2:31:21
is on the same type of baggy
Meet the
2:31:24
Unknown: Press Welcome back to
the investigation into that nine
2:31:27
bag of cocaine
2:31:28
Adam Curry: dime bag
2:31:30
John C Dvorak: doc did he say
2:31:30
Adam Curry: that? He said
Dimebag there's no such Dimebag
2:31:34
as weed even I know that's a
weed you saying? Yeah. You know,
2:31:38
he's saying Dimebag This is
ridiculous.
2:31:42
John C Dvorak: Well be that wait
a minute, maybe there this is
2:31:44
code number a different idea.
2:31:47
Adam Curry: Okay, well what's
the what's the why is he using
2:31:49
different code is code for
2:31:51
John C Dvorak: marijuana because
they found Camela stash and
2:31:58
they're just making it clear to
her that we know we're careful
2:32:01
it's
2:32:01
Adam Curry: you Kamala we know
what you
2:32:03
Unknown: welcome back to the
investigation into that non bag
2:32:05
of cocaine that was found at the
White House earlier this month
2:32:07
is over, but there's no
conclusion on who is responsible
2:32:10
the Secret Service announced
this morning the no forensic
2:32:12
grams that
2:32:13
John C Dvorak: wouldn't be a
dime bag anyway a
2:32:15
Adam Curry: dime is a price it's
$10 so it'd be two bucks or
2:32:19
John C Dvorak: or 100 depending
on what street are got.
2:32:22
Adam Curry: I wouldn't know
because I can only afford nickel
2:32:24
bags,
2:32:25
Unknown: but there's no
conclusion on who is responsible
2:32:26
the Secret Service announced
this morning or video evidence
2:32:29
we're able to clearly identify
anyone who tends to be
2:32:31
responsible for bringing this
done sighs baggie of the drug
2:32:35
and
2:32:35
Adam Curry: dime size baggie now
he throws the size of a dime
2:32:40
John C Dvorak: a dime sized bag
that's there you got you got
2:32:44
your your your your you nailed
one there.
2:32:47
Adam Curry: What is this dime
size baggie?
2:32:49
John C Dvorak: That's this
little BPD Beedie Beedie Beedie
2:32:52
thing
2:32:53
Adam Curry: it's so what's the
size of a dime?
2:32:56
John C Dvorak: Well, that's what
he said he the way he described
2:32:58
it. This guy's this guy's got
one foot out the door. He's not
2:33:01
even being careful.
2:33:02
Adam Curry: I've never seen
cocaine in his life apparently.
2:33:06
For weed. No wonder he's getting
fired
2:33:08
Unknown: clearly identify anyone
potentially responsible for
2:33:11
bringing this Don sighs baggie
of the drug into the White House
2:33:14
ticket service did briefed
members of the House today.
2:33:16
Three sources familiar with that
briefing tell NBC News that they
2:33:19
had narrowed down the list of
individuals who were in the area
2:33:22
in question 40 hours before the
cocaine was found to between
2:33:25
506 100 People
2:33:27
Adam Curry: now, the only person
who has the right idea about
2:33:30
this also played this next one.
So what are they going to do
2:33:33
with these 500 people?
2:33:34
Unknown: Did they interview
anybody?
2:33:36
Now that we know of and
basically what we've been told
2:33:39
is they looked at the
surveillance video, they went
2:33:42
through the visitor logs. And I
suspect they would have done
2:33:46
interviews if they had had some
sort of forensic evidence that
2:33:49
they could try to match to
someone but no one has talked
2:33:52
about interviews. In the time
that I've been working on this
2:33:54
over the last 10 days.
2:33:56
Adam Curry: I've been working
for 10 days on this dime size
2:33:58
baggie gate. So
2:33:59
Unknown: the surprising thing is
people would expect of course
2:34:02
they can solve it. The FBI crime
lab was involved fort Dietrich,
2:34:05
which does very sophisticated
testing for
2:34:10
Adam Curry: calling the Dietrich
boss
2:34:11
John C Dvorak: depresses.
2:34:18
So I have to assume that they
mentioned a fort Dietrich had to
2:34:23
do with the fact that they
thought it might be anthrax. And
2:34:27
we know that that's where it
would have come from.
2:34:32
Adam Curry: Oh, this is so good.
2:34:34
Unknown: Expect Of course they
can solve it. The FBI crime lab
2:34:37
was involved fort Dietrich which
does very sophisticated testing
2:34:41
of things that could be anthrax
or rice in or biological Asian.
2:34:45
In this case what they're saying
is it was a very small plastic
2:34:48
baggie they could not get
2:34:49
Adam Curry: a very small plastic
baggy, baggy, baggy baggy,
2:34:53
they're
2:34:53
Unknown: saying is it was a very
small plastic baggie, they could
2:34:55
not get fingers in a ziplock
2:34:58
John C Dvorak: I've got to throw
on a second. Where's the report?
2:35:00
Yeah,
2:35:00
Adam Curry: I've got to think
all these people are do coke.
2:35:04
John C Dvorak: Where except
where is the reporting and
2:35:07
whether it's a Ziploc bag or a
GLAAD bag? What kind of bag is
2:35:11
it?
2:35:11
Adam Curry: Well, they all know
what it means because they're
2:35:13
all using the baggie code. Hey,
you got a baggie on you. Yeah,
2:35:15
make music Give me some coke.
I'm about to go on air except
2:35:18
chip Todd. Chuck Todd. He
doesn't know anything.
2:35:22
John C Dvorak: No. He never.
Well, that's fair for the
2:35:25
course. Sure. He's square,
square man do coke.
2:35:29
Adam Curry: He doesn't do we're
just like no, get rid of that
2:35:32
guy. He's not partying in sales
2:35:34
Unknown: of things that could be
anthrax or rice in our
2:35:36
biological Asian. In this case,
what they're saying is it was a
2:35:40
very small plastic baggie, they
could not get fingerprints that
2:35:43
were usable off of that they did
some advanced testing, expensive
2:35:47
process.
2:35:48
John C Dvorak: expensive
process. Oh, that's the process
2:35:51
where they do the that
sublimation process is kind of
2:35:54
expensive,
2:35:55
Unknown: some advanced testing,
expensive process, and DNA
2:35:59
didn't have enough material to
do a comparison. If they had
2:36:02
found something then you would
need to figure out well, how do
2:36:04
you compare it? And if you're
talking about visitors, people
2:36:08
who are coming in on a tour, a
staff lead tour, not opposed
2:36:11
just
2:36:11
gonna say we should remind
people this is this is why I'm a
2:36:15
little skeptical of whether they
could find it or not. Because
2:36:18
this is not the most trafficked
entrance and this is the VIP
2:36:22
entrance in some form or another
as
2:36:24
VIPs goes through there. They're
our ally get
2:36:27
John C Dvorak: their story
straight. It's first it was
2:36:29
carpenters only went through
there. It was by the parking
2:36:32
lot.
2:36:34
Adam Curry: It's Camelus. I'm
sure this is not
2:36:37
Unknown: the most traffic
entrance and this is the VIP
2:36:40
entrance West exactly in some
form or another as
2:36:43
VIPs go through there. But there
are a lot it. I call it a
2:36:47
working entrance meaning not
2:36:49
to go. I mean, I've only been
through there if I've been
2:36:52
escorted. Yes. It's not a
presidentially, it
2:36:54
Adam Curry: is not a
presidentially if I've been oh
2:36:55
it's not the press isn't we may
know everything about baggies
2:36:58
but it's not us it's not our
it's not our not our skank not
2:37:01
art not our not our blow, not
our powder, not our snow babies,
2:37:05
not us. Certainly not chip togs
but those who just said, It's
2:37:10
not us. It's not us if we didn't
Well, we're all cool kids here
2:37:13
because we all talk about
baggies. By the way. I love how
2:37:15
fast you're
2:37:15
Unknown: talking, not a press
entry. It
2:37:17
is not a press entrance. But
those who are
2:37:20
Adam Curry: it's the drug
dealers entrance. We all know
2:37:22
that's where the dealers come in
entry. It
2:37:24
Unknown: is not a press
entrance. But those who are
2:37:27
right now there's a lot of
construction being done some
2:37:29
remodeling being done.
Contractors, contract personnel,
2:37:34
Adam Curry: the damn carpenters,
you're right, John,
2:37:35
Unknown: staff will go through
there, the President will go
2:37:37
through they're going over to
the EOB. But in terms of
2:37:40
visitors, it was a holiday
weekend. And there are a lot of
2:37:43
staff led tours that happen
after work hours and on the
2:37:46
weekend. And so we've some
officials are saying the leading
2:37:49
theory it was as a visitor,
2:37:51
Adam Curry: no. Marjorie Taylor
Greene has the right idea.
2:37:55
Unknown: This is why I'm a
little skeptical of whether they
2:37:57
could find it or not. Because
this is not the most trafficked
2:38:00
entrance, and this is the VIP
entrance.
2:38:03
John C Dvorak: This is not what
I wanted. Can I make a comment?
2:38:07
Just coming to me she wants to
do is drop a drop point. I think
2:38:10
that was a secret. That's why
there is no fingerprints or
2:38:14
anything on it because the guy
literally did a wipe down and he
2:38:18
dropped it there for someone
else to pick up. Possible. I
2:38:24
guess it was it was the dealers
drop point he got somehow
2:38:27
involved with the carpenters.
Whoever's going in there, you
2:38:29
got through, got through the
interest dropped it there for
2:38:33
someone Camela or Hunter come to
mind to pick it up. When they
2:38:39
didn't pick it up. Who else
doesn't pick stuff up? Well,
2:38:43
then there must be a Venmo
laptop anybody is example of the
2:38:48
past not picking up a laptop not
picking up your drugs?
2:38:52
Adam Curry: I think the I think
this is a duplicate clip. I
2:38:54
think because Marjorie Taylor
Greene, let me see if it's here.
2:38:57
Hold on a second. We don't know
2:38:58
Unknown: that's the most likely
thing is somebody that was
2:39:02
there's a drug policy and drug
testing requirements for
2:39:04
employees of the White
2:39:06
House, you still do drug
testing. And it's randomized
2:39:08
drug test. Yes,
2:39:09
they do. And so one of the
congresswoman Marjorie Taylor
2:39:12
Greene was saying well test all
500 of the names. Yes, of
2:39:15
course, you need probable cause
to do that. Massively test
2:39:19
people might have visitors. So
it's an unsatisfying answer for
2:39:22
a lot of people.
2:39:23
Adam Curry: You can't just
massively test Yes. If you were
2:39:25
in the White House. I think you
you can be tested. You can mass
2:39:29
we tested
2:39:30
John C Dvorak: millions of
people for Kobe. No, it's a
2:39:32
waste of time.
2:39:33
Adam Curry: Well, the view had
more more interesting data than
2:39:38
these jokes.
2:39:39
Unknown: Here's what I'd say. Is
this the most important story of
2:39:41
our time? Yes, it is. No, does
it matter? Yes. So this entrance
2:39:45
where it was found is the West
exec entrance into
2:39:49
John C Dvorak: the library.
2:39:50
Adam Curry: Now, everyone's
lying. That's why it's so funny.
2:39:53
When which
2:39:53
Unknown: is not one that is used
for more ceremonial events. It's
2:39:56
really where senior staff who
have blue badges that allow them
2:39:59
access For the West Wing going
to senior staff you have to be
2:40:02
escorted in if you're a guest by
somebody who has a bad show, and
2:40:05
it's literally 10 steps from the
Situation Room, which I believe
2:40:08
is under renovation, but just so
you get a sense of like where it
2:40:11
is in the building,
2:40:12
Adam Curry: maybe it was one of
the the generals, or the, you
2:40:15
know, the five star generals,
all jacked on Coke, the VP.
2:40:20
Ooh, the VP.
2:40:24
Unknown: The VP vice president
Harris walks in that entrance
2:40:27
every day because her motorcade
drops her off there
2:40:29
Adam Curry: every day. That's,
that's your that's your drop
2:40:32
point.
2:40:34
John C Dvorak: That's the rumor.
Hey, VP,
2:40:35
Adam Curry: a VP. I'll drop it.
And you will know when you come
2:40:38
in tomorrow, through this
entrance as you do every day,
2:40:40
just send me a Venmo
2:40:41
Unknown: it's foot traffic of
senior staff and every person
2:40:44
visitors to and their little
cubbies because you have to be
2:40:48
escorted by seniors to be
invited. And you have to be
2:40:50
excited have gone through the
waves program and be escorted by
2:40:53
someone.
2:40:54
Adam Curry: The waves program
you see everyone who goes in as
2:40:56
part of the White House, access
something restriction, whatever.
2:41:01
Obama put that in place,
everyone that we went through is
2:41:03
known.
2:41:04
Unknown: But it gets
interesting. Yeah, everyone who
2:41:07
works on the White House camp
PIs has to get a drug test
2:41:10
before they're ever eligible to
work there. And you're subjected
2:41:12
to random screenings. I actually
got one once after having kidney
2:41:15
stones and then tested positive
for the painkillers. I went on
2:41:19
and had to get medical records.
But
2:41:21
Adam Curry: why were you going
through that entrance? You know,
2:41:24
I think a lot of these people
all know about this, they go
2:41:28
through this entrance all the
time to get their briefings, not
2:41:31
the you know, not press
briefing, but actually from you
2:41:33
know, senior staffers, this is
what you're going to say. And
2:41:36
you'll tell us from sources
close to the matter. People
2:41:39
familiar with the President's
thinking here's your coke go
2:41:41
away
2:41:41
Unknown: long story short people
in those positions cannot be
2:41:44
doing drugs. Our adversaries
could exploit it. It's it's not
2:41:47
a small deal. I don't think did
it. So
2:41:50
the thing is, like cocaine gate.
We don't know who did this. I'm
2:41:53
thinking maybe it's a tourist. A
stupid tourist, I guess somebody
2:41:58
like that. Like
2:41:59
Adam Curry: she doesn't have
tees. This woman tourists.
2:42:01
John C Dvorak: I guess that's
that's what's her name? Yeah,
2:42:05
the x again, check the lawyer. A
Republican. No, no, no, this is
2:42:10
Anna. What's her name? No,
2:42:11
Adam Curry: it's not Anna. This
is the lawyer. No cane
2:42:14
Unknown: gate. We don't know who
did this. I'm thinking maybe
2:42:17
it's
2:42:17
Adam Curry: a story right? It is
Anna Anna Navarro who's on
2:42:20
ozempic.
2:42:21
Unknown: We don't know who did
this. I'm thinking maybe it's a
2:42:23
tourist a stupid tourists, I
guess some money like that. And
2:42:28
you've got to put your phone
there. He's got to put your bag
2:42:31
there. You gotta you gotta put
stuff there. And so somebody
2:42:34
just
2:42:37
Adam Curry: noticed notice the
absence of the term baggy,
2:42:41
Unknown: listen, marks down
everything you have to do to be
2:42:43
in that part of the White House.
I wonder why it seemed to be a
2:42:46
blind spot for a security
camera. We can't go to a
2:42:49
Broadway show. We can't go. We
can't fly without taking our
2:42:52
shoes off. Yet. You have this
very private part of the White
2:42:55
House and they don't have
cameras on the cubbyhole. I'm
2:42:57
surprised because they do have
peeping wrecks. When we talk
2:43:00
about the security problems.
They had the breaches the
2:43:03
warnings, and then you look at
the classified documents, again,
2:43:05
people on both parties having
them. There's some stuff that
2:43:08
needs to be tightened up ASAP.
When you're kids, you know those
2:43:13
cubbies where you put shoes when
your kids come in, that's what
2:43:15
these cubbies look like. Right?
So they're tiny, these cubbies?
2:43:18
So if you're taking your phone
out of your pocket, not that
2:43:21
I've brought anything into the
White House that I wouldn't like
2:43:24
seen. But if you're taking your
Yeah, and you put it in the
2:43:26
cubby and this, you there's no
way that they know it's 50 if
2:43:30
they have a video, whoever's in
cubby don't have a video. They
2:43:35
have it's a blind spot of
Beckham, I have to say no, that
2:43:38
hubby and there were cameras on
there. You'd know who was in
2:43:41
that lock
2:43:42
on the Hunter Biden of it
because of course it became
2:43:44
memes. And everyone's like, of
course, it's hunters. I don't
2:43:46
think there's any evidence that
Biden family wasn't there. I
2:43:48
think it's a bigger deal. If
it's a White House staffer,
2:43:50
though they are the ones who are
forbidden you're subject to
2:43:52
random drugs, drug screenings,
in security clearances, you're
2:43:55
not even eligible for a top
secret clearance if you've done
2:43:58
drugs in the last 10
2:43:59
Adam Curry: years. They know a
lot about it, but they don't use
2:44:03
the term baggie Yeah,
2:44:05
John C Dvorak: I'm now thinking
when I listen to this clip in
2:44:08
particular since that's a real
conduit for false or
2:44:11
disinformation show I'll say I
am pretty sure you know first I
2:44:16
was like Hunter Hunter as you
obviously as Hunter but they
2:44:19
kept moving the baggie back from
the library to the east wing or
2:44:24
to the West Wing library which
is okay start from the East Wing
2:44:27
went to the West Wing Dan went
to this entrance and then it
2:44:31
then all of a sudden is where
terrorists parks or car and
2:44:34
where Harris goes in and out
every day they brought that up
2:44:36
in that clip. They're trying to
be this was planted this was
2:44:41
done to besmirch Harris because
they don't want her even
2:44:45
thinking about running for
president are gonna this is
2:44:48
gonna happen we're gonna see
more and more bisb merging of
2:44:51
her I think that that read of
her saying the lower population
2:44:55
probably read that on the bright
off the prompter. She didn't
2:44:58
miss read pollution It was
written population.
2:45:02
Adam Curry: The whole right is
to discredit her as an moron.
2:45:05
cokehead Yep. I'm with you.
That'll be used later. Yeah,
2:45:10
you're right and
2:45:11
John C Dvorak: then there was a
we'll see more of this in other
2:45:12
words,
2:45:13
Adam Curry: I think so. I think
we will we will we will within
2:45:16
there's only one news report
that mentioned it that this is
2:45:19
and that was the ladies ladies
of the EU who mentioned that's
2:45:23
when
2:45:23
John C Dvorak: I get a note from
one of our producers saying from
2:45:26
I think he works there
somewhere. He says that the
2:45:29
rumor is it's her it's her coke.
He said the right I'm not
2:45:35
thinking that rumor is part of
the system to rumor her out
2:45:39
she's not getting they're not
going to take any chances with
2:45:42
this woman they're they're
afraid of her she please
2:45:44
Adam Curry: notice our producer
said the room Inte R u m i n t
2:45:48
which is rumor Intel. Yeah,
rumor intel that meet and of
2:45:52
course, which is made up as far
as I can tell. But that's
2:45:56
someone who's in the know.
2:45:58
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I agree.
And that probably is the room is
2:46:02
probably saying it's her but
that doesn't mean it's not hers.
2:46:05
She's not being set up. We're
always have to be aware of this
2:46:08
setup, the misdirection and I
think that's what we're dealing
2:46:12
with.
2:46:12
Adam Curry: Thank you. Right.
Thank you. Right.
2:46:15
John C Dvorak: So she's she's a
target she's out. Gavin's got to
2:46:18
be cut. Cut off at the knees
too. He's no good they can do
2:46:21
it. I can let him get in this
RFK Jr. You watch you heard it
2:46:26
here first. Yeah, he is the
nominee.
2:46:30
Adam Curry: Yes. And then it's
amazing what he's saying and
2:46:33
what he's getting away with? No,
we actually we had a rare chat
2:46:36
about this after the show.
Because I want to make sure
2:46:40
everyone knows that as your idea
that that RFK Bobby The K is an
2:46:45
OP. And he and I if I'll
paraphrase your theory, which I
2:46:50
like the CIA is preparing to put
him in and it's a it's a mate
2:46:56
good. And the mate good goes
like this. Hey, man, we're sorry
2:47:00
about your dad. Sorry about your
uncle. I really suck. I know. I
2:47:03
know. We're gonna make good when
they let you be President. First
2:47:06
thing you got to do is go stop
this annoying Big Pharma dare
2:47:10
kill our job to kill people not
theirs. So you're gonna get rid
2:47:14
of them. There's a couple of
deep state people we want out
2:47:17
we're going to straighten some
stuff out. But you'll be our boy
2:47:22
that I paraphrase them correctly
is
2:47:24
John C Dvorak: part of it. Yeah,
I think that's it that
2:47:25
summarizes things they they need
to get back on track and that
2:47:30
ended pharma thing is out of
control. They got to pull those
2:47:32
that advertising thing Kennedy's
all in on that.
2:47:36
Adam Curry: And they've got the
military industrial complex is
2:47:40
also a pain on their ass. And I
think this latest released video
2:47:45
from Bobby The K which the New
York Post titled as RFK Jr. Says
2:47:52
COVID may have been ethnically
targeted to spare Jews, which is
2:47:57
not at all he said. What but I
so this was a a very noisy clip.
2:48:05
I pulled it through the Adobe
2:48:08
John C Dvorak: AI as a miracle
worker.
2:48:10
Adam Curry: Now, it didn't do
that great of a job.
2:48:14
Interestingly, it straightened
out his speech. See if I see
2:48:18
what you think and if that's
interesting, if you don't think
2:48:21
it's any good, I'll stop it
because it's still pretty noisy
2:48:23
but it's straighten out his
speech to a certain degree and
2:48:26
we need to talk about bio
weapons. Weapons because you
2:48:32
can't hear that at all. Can you
2:48:34
John C Dvorak: It's terrible.
What ended Adobe didn't get that
2:48:37
noise out of there. And
2:48:38
Adam Curry: let me see if it got
better here, hold on.
2:48:41
Unknown: Two and a half years
and
2:48:44
Adam Curry: now it doesn't work.
It doesn't work. You know,
2:48:46
John C Dvorak: I'll bet you his
speeches. So here's the problem.
2:48:51
Adobe looks for the tries to
find a vocal, it found it fixed
2:48:56
it was in the noise. And he
speaks with noise built into his
2:49:00
voice.
2:49:01
Adam Curry: I think the problem
is well there's one thing I
2:49:03
could try honestly, I think the
problem is because I'm pulling
2:49:06
it through my compressor. Let me
see if I turn the compressor
2:49:09
off. Let me see what happens on
one second. compressor off let's
2:49:13
see. And we need to talk about
bio weapons. Weapons because No,
2:49:21
it doesn't work at all. I don't
2:49:23
John C Dvorak: talk about bio
weapons. Yeah, we don't CIA is
2:49:25
all jacked up about what
2:49:27
Adam Curry: he's what he's
saying is he's saying there's
2:49:29
evidence from research that the
AC two receptors responded to
2:49:35
white people and black people
but spared Asians and Ashkenazi
2:49:39
Jews. And he says everyone is
making make a China. He says
2:49:46
we're the US we're making
genetically targeted bio
2:49:51
weapons. That's what he said.
Yeah, he didn't say ethnically
2:49:56
targeted despaired Jews. Which
is funny, but he didn't say
2:50:02
that. So, so your theory is I
like it and it's interesting
2:50:08
because I'm listening to you
know we got Magga everywhere
2:50:12
here this this is this is Maga
country What are you drinking?
2:50:16
John C Dvorak: Ah well this is
not going to get this anymore.
2:50:20
This is boo bleh Michael boob
Leigh Yes What do you think but
2:50:24
as bu bu ly was bubbling it up
with one
2:50:28
Adam Curry: that he promotes
that stuff he's he does.
2:50:31
John C Dvorak: Here's why I'm
not buying it anymore. And it
2:50:33
says unfiltered sparkling water
with electrolytes does have
2:50:39
aspartame as well. No just
electrolytes. It's gotta check
2:50:42
it out as calcium chloride and
potassium chloride which are two
2:50:46
salts and you know potassium
chloride is something that is
2:50:50
has people some some people have
issues with and it supposedly
2:50:54
add some tastes but I'd rather
buy mineral water which is
2:50:58
natural or just plain seltzer. I
don't want electrolytes in my
2:51:02
drink.
2:51:03
Adam Curry: No, I agree. It's no
good. Where was I? Oh, Bobby,
2:51:10
the K. So here Maga country? You
know, we talk we listen, we talk
2:51:17
to people. And that people you
know they DeSantis is out.
2:51:22
There's no There's no quick
question. Yes.
2:51:26
John C Dvorak: So I go to Costco
I go to especially someplace
2:51:30
like Monterey foods or some
crunchy places. And it's like
2:51:33
Monterey foods every 30% people
are wearing masks. Costco at
2:51:38
least one in 10. Like they're
gonna go the rest of their lives
2:51:42
wearing these stupid masks.
2:51:44
Adam Curry: I guess. I mean,
2:51:47
John C Dvorak: what do you got
there? You got anybody wearing
2:51:50
these masks at the Costco? No.
2:51:53
Adam Curry: We don't have
Costco. Here. We have heb if you
2:51:56
see anything, sometimes a
Mexican person. You might see
2:52:03
them with a mask.
2:52:05
John C Dvorak: They're going to
rob the place.
2:52:08
Unknown: Wow. Wow. Wow. So
2:52:11
John C Dvorak: the first thing
that goes
2:52:15
Unknown: with it casing the
joint. No, we love our Mexicans
2:52:20
here.
2:52:22
Adam Curry: So no, but this is
this is Maga country this is
2:52:27
what do you call it? Mom's for
Liberty country. This is people
2:52:30
who don't mess around. They they
love Trump. Trump's getting a
2:52:34
raw deal now. DeSantis no good.
Don't let that was it was a
2:52:39
little bit of DeSantis for a
minute for a moment there that
2:52:42
went away. You bring up Bobby to
K. And they are taking note. But
2:52:47
right now the only thing is
there's two things. There's two
2:52:50
push backs. One is he wants to
jail. All people who are anti
2:52:54
climate change. Yeah, but that's
kind of that's kind of been
2:52:59
debunked. Now it's at this
debunk
2:53:00
John C Dvorak: about there all
this stuff is going to come out
2:53:02
is going to be missed.
Misinformation misdirection.
2:53:05
That can be debunked. I had a
here's an interesting one. You
2:53:08
want me to if you don't mind? My
Oh, can I interject? I'm at
2:53:12
dinner. And I've got my RCA and
Brennan are seated and I bring
2:53:19
up they're all in on all the
Democrats stuff is unbelievable.
2:53:23
Adam Curry: Especially since
they came from your loins and
2:53:26
all the
2:53:26
John C Dvorak: trans stuff
they're all in
2:53:28
Adam Curry: no no this on them.
2:53:32
John C Dvorak: So just material
here, you're nuts. You're right.
2:53:36
Bring up the Bobby Kennedy and I
send they go on you guys a
2:53:41
crackpot do the whole thing.
Just all the stuff that you're
2:53:43
supposed to say? Yeah, I said
facts denier, and they're gonna
2:53:49
they're gonna go no, they don't
say that. But they say it
2:53:51
besides that Trump's gonna get
the nomination
2:53:54
Adam Curry: of the think is a
Republican.
2:53:57
John C Dvorak: I said, why? I
said you think he's a
2:54:00
Republican? RFK. Yeah, they both
in agreement? Yeah. Oh, yeah.
2:54:06
Wow. And then I said, Are you
too nuts? He's a he's a Kennedy.
2:54:12
For one thing. He's a Democrat.
He's been born and raised the
2:54:16
days that he's part of the
democratic monarchy. Are you
2:54:19
kidding me? He's Democrat
royalty. Yeah. And so they both
2:54:23
pull out their phones. Both of
them at the same time. They got
2:54:27
their phones out.
2:54:29
Unknown: Oh, go go. Go. Go, go
go.
2:54:31
John C Dvorak: Almost
simultaneously, their jaws
2:54:34
dropped.
2:54:34
Adam Curry: No way.
2:54:36
John C Dvorak: He is a Democrat.
2:54:40
Adam Curry: Wow. Wow. That's a
great story. Wow. It was
2:54:45
John C Dvorak: like Holy
mackerel. This is an interesting
2:54:47
app.
2:54:48
Adam Curry: This is a great app.
Hmm. So that's working very
2:54:52
well.
2:54:54
John C Dvorak: It's working
great. Who's ever running this
2:54:56
one? Well, it's work buddy.
2:54:58
Adam Curry: I'll tell you this
or gal If Trump becomes
2:55:01
president again, Bobby The K for
attorney general.
2:55:05
John C Dvorak: Well, yeah,
that'd be funny. But that but
2:55:07
Adam Curry: that would not be
the opposite would be to have
2:55:09
the Republicans vote for him.
2:55:12
John C Dvorak: Well, that's what
the OP is, is to get the
2:55:14
Republicans who like Trump like
your Fredericksburg people to
2:55:18
take at least a look at Kennedy.
And then as time goes by is
2:55:22
going to be the way it works is
that you very soon roll off.
2:55:28
Yeah. When the mainstream turns
the other way, which they will
2:55:31
Adam Curry: well hold on. So
here's the news. DeSantis. We're
2:55:35
now having Ken Griffin he's the
billionaire the bit one of the
2:55:39
backers. He is quote
reconsidering his support for
2:55:43
DeSantis Murdoch has is now on
record as saying yeah, Ronnie's
2:55:48
not doing so well out in the
field. These guys if they start
2:55:54
backing Bobby The K off his arm.
So it would really only it would
2:55:59
only take it would only take a
small percentage of the of the
2:56:04
Maga people to turn and go to
Bobby The K Hmm. Anyway, the
2:56:10
other the other objection this
if I were advising Kennedy be to
2:56:14
have to work on this. The only
other objection I hear is yeah,
2:56:18
now it Kennedy. He's a
globalist.
2:56:22
John C Dvorak: Yes, this comes
up in the conversation then I
2:56:25
think he might be. Yeah, of
2:56:27
Adam Curry: course he is. Kelo.
It's all kinds of problematic
2:56:31
stuff with him. Absolutely. And
I said problematic.
2:56:37
John C Dvorak: That's okay. It
doesn't work doesn't bother me
2:56:39
as much as it bothers you.
2:56:41
Unknown: too. Good filler.
2:56:43
Adam Curry: I just want to do
quick boots on the ground
2:56:47
reports. We have a full time
driver for UPS anonymous, of
2:56:50
course, been with the company
for five years now ups, I think
2:56:54
they deliver something like 15%
of our entire GDP. UPS is a big
2:57:00
deal if they go on strike and
we've been talking about this,
2:57:03
but the news has dropped it
because you know, Coke baggy?
2:57:08
Yesterday, Friday are part time
supervisors on any shift and
2:57:12
full time supervisors were told
to get department of
2:57:14
transportation cards. Any
supervisor full or part time but
2:57:19
hasn't driven before is getting
orders to go to driving school
2:57:22
they are planning says the rumor
are if part and full time union
2:57:25
employees strike the pilots and
feeder drivers are striking to
2:57:30
fantasies of strike are becoming
a reality. There's a lot more to
2:57:34
this note. But I did just want
to point out that it seems like
2:57:38
that could actually happen. That
could cripple a lot.
2:57:43
John C Dvorak: So that may be
necessary to make sure Biden
2:57:45
doesn't run again. They may
actually be a necessary evil,
2:57:49
that we're all gonna have to
suffer through.
2:57:51
Adam Curry: Good one. Good one.
And then something that you
2:57:55
know, because
2:57:56
John C Dvorak: there has been
talk I should mention there has
2:57:57
been talked positive talk about
both the inflation rate is down
2:58:01
to 3%. Which of course is on top
of everything else. Yep. 3%. And
2:58:04
you know, they one guy literally
said on one of the I think it
2:58:08
was on a PBS or an NPR show he
said that is ruining the
2:58:13
Republicans talking points is
inflation thing. So you're gonna
2:58:19
do something despite the fact
that
2:58:20
Adam Curry: people are so broke,
they can't even donate to the
2:58:22
show tells me inflation is real
and is a real problem with the
2:58:26
economy. But yeah, if the if if
the media goes away for the
2:58:31
media decides to pull the rug on
that, oh, everything's great.
2:58:36
Because they don't make it real.
They make a truth then, well,
2:58:41
it's interesting. Meanwhile, if
you're in the United States of
2:58:44
America, may I humbly submit
that you take a look at your
2:58:47
school board your city council
and focus on that because the
2:58:51
President of the United States
is not Emperor is not King and
2:58:54
doesn't control everything?
That's the real psyop here your
2:58:59
local government your governor,
these are the things that are
2:59:02
important not the president we
shouldn't just being sigh opt
2:59:05
into talking about for the next
year and a half
2:59:09
Unknown: tired of it?
2:59:11
Adam Curry: And I'm gonna have a
heat report. Hate report. All
2:59:14
right. Let me see. Where's your
report? Oh, you have quite the
2:59:17
report actually. Do you want to
do Oh,
2:59:20
John C Dvorak: yeah, this short
though. Short. All right.
2:59:22
Adam Curry: Cool. All right.
What's what's up? Oh, heat
2:59:26
report. NPR.
2:59:27
Unknown: Here we go.
Temperatures in parts of the
2:59:28
Southwest are expected to top
120 degrees Fahrenheit this
2:59:32
weekend. There's even a chance
that forecasts are accurate that
2:59:35
Death Valley which currently
holds the record for the hottest
2:59:38
air temperature ever recorded on
the planet Earth at 134 degrees.
2:59:43
could see that record matched or
broken. Wow. I mean, just how
2:59:46
dangerous is this? It's
extremely dangerous for people
2:59:49
and wildlife study published
last week estimates that more
2:59:53
than 61,000 people died during
heat waves in Europe last year.
2:59:58
And we're looking at similar
temperatures there Right now, in
3:00:01
the US, you know, public health
officials are warning people to
3:00:03
limit activity outdoors and to
check up on neighbors,
3:00:06
especially elderly people, folks
with pre existing conditions.
3:00:10
And people that live in low
income areas who might not have
3:00:12
access to a C or to even shade.
Here's the director of
3:00:16
California Department of Public
Health, Dr. Tomas was briefing
3:00:19
yesterday,
3:00:20
the symptoms that we become more
concerned about is when your
3:00:24
internal core temperature starts
becoming elevated. So you may
3:00:30
develop a fever. It could be
impacting any organ, but the
3:00:34
organ that we become most
concerned about is when it
3:00:36
starts impacting your brain.
3:00:41
Adam Curry: Oh, my goodness,
they're so happy in Holland. The
3:00:45
kids are back. It's beautiful
here. Nothing like Texas, but
3:00:48
it's nice. They get good at
memories. Well, they're alive,
3:00:54
their brain has not been
affected yet.
3:00:57
John C Dvorak: They haven't been
listening to NPR enough. Well,
3:01:00
no, of course
3:01:00
Adam Curry: not. I shield them
from that unlike whatever you
3:01:02
did to your kids. You let it
seep in
3:01:07
John C Dvorak: peer groups, I
can't do anything about it. Here
3:01:09
we go with heat report to
3:01:10
Unknown: so that when a person's
judgment could be compromised,
3:01:14
so they might not even recognize
that they're in a dangerous
3:01:17
situation or confused to take
the steps they need to die down.
3:01:21
I should add here to Scott that
public health officials warn
3:01:23
this applies to everyone. You
know, California looked at
3:01:26
deaths associated with a
heatwave in the state last year,
3:01:29
and found that many of the
people who died were younger
3:01:32
Latinos who were working
outdoors, or even physically fit
3:01:36
people who just did their
regular exercise routines like
3:01:39
going for hikes or runs, do
they?
3:01:41
Adam Curry: Do they warn anyone
in California but with this type
3:01:45
of heat, that you probably
shouldn't wear a mask outside
3:01:49
because that could impair your
breathing?
3:01:52
John C Dvorak: That is never
cropped up in the conversation.
3:01:54
Adam Curry: I think it's an
important point people should
3:01:56
know. I'm not going to argue I
think you're right. Let's
3:01:59
John C Dvorak: go with heat
report three.
3:02:00
Unknown: So average temperatures
on the planet have already
3:02:02
increased nearly two degrees
Fahrenheit, the industrial
3:02:06
revolution where we really
started adding co2 into the
3:02:09
atmosphere. Oh, yeah. And when
average temperatures go up, the
3:02:12
highs become higher as we're
seeing right now. The last eight
3:02:15
years were the hottest years on
record for the always
3:02:20
Adam Curry: this is pissing me
off.
3:02:21
John C Dvorak: How much can you
hear over and over? They keep
3:02:24
hounding us with this
information it's going part for
3:02:27
Unknown: preliminary data shows
that the first week of this
3:02:29
month of July was the hottest
the world has ever 1000s and
3:02:33
1000s and 1000s. And all these
records are expected to continue
3:02:40
to be broken as we continue to
release more fossil fuel
3:02:42
emissions into the atmosphere.
That's NPR state rot.
3:02:46
Adam Curry: Yeah, all right.
Yeah, yeah, no, I do have a
3:02:49
kicker. I
3:02:49
Unknown: have a kicker now
brother.
3:02:51
Adam Curry: You're gonna kick me
in gas with this stuff.
3:02:54
John C Dvorak: By the way,
10,000 years hottest ever had a
3:02:57
heat wave kicker
3:02:59
Unknown: much of the San
Francisco Bay area is under an
3:03:02
excessive heat warning this
weekend. Temperatures in some
3:03:05
cities are forecast to reach 106
degrees from member station KQED
3:03:10
azul Dahlstrom. Ekman has more
3:03:12
county officials throughout the
Bay Area are opening cooling
3:03:16
centers and directing people to
limit outdoor activities. Dial
3:03:20
hyung is a meteorologist with
the National Weather Service. He
3:03:24
says while many are accustomed
to the heat, it's important to
3:03:27
look out for the most vulnerable
in these situations
3:03:30
and to check on the elderly the
young, the sick and anyone else
3:03:35
who might the masks have a
elevated risk of heat related
3:03:40
illness.
3:03:40
The region is expected to see
cooling by Wednesday. The
3:03:43
heatwave is affecting much of
California. Luckily, the state's
3:03:47
power grid says it has adequate
reserves to keep the power on
3:03:53
whether we ever have a
3:03:55
John C Dvorak: power reserve
report did last time that was
3:03:59
was when Gray Davis was the
governor.
3:04:03
Adam Curry: I'm not gonna let
you get away with this divorce
3:04:04
duck because if you're going to
do this, I have to play my three
3:04:08
clips. My heat related clips and
these are all of John Kerry
3:04:17
watermelon head himself our
climate czar. Former
3:04:21
presidential candidate former is
the former senator is he still
3:04:24
listen Is he still Senator
3:04:27
John C Dvorak: knows nothing now
he's no he
3:04:29
Unknown: our climate czar
climate czar. being ripped a new
3:04:37
Adam Curry: orifice by Scott
Perry Representative Scott
3:04:41
Perry. Then it was just
enjoyable to see this douche
3:04:45
knuckle
3:04:45
Unknown: squirm.
3:04:47
Adam Curry: Let's start off with
let me see what is number one
3:04:50
here. The clip number one is
concerning the amount of Scioto
3:04:58
secretary
3:04:58
Unknown: in 2015 At the Paris
Climate Conference, you said
3:05:01
that if all industrial nations
go to zero emissions, it
3:05:05
wouldn't be enough. And then at
the White House is climate day
3:05:07
in January of 21, you said
almost 90% of the planet's
3:05:11
emissions come from outside the
US, we could go to zero
3:05:14
tomorrow, and the problem isn't,
isn't solved. And in April 21,
3:05:18
you told The Washington Post
that even the US and China going
3:05:22
to zero emissions tomorrow won't
solve the climate problem. Then
3:05:26
in April 21, you said that
global net zero is not enough
3:05:29
and that co2 must be removed
from the atmosphere? How much is
3:05:34
the correct amount of co2? Let
me explain to you if I can say
3:05:38
you understand exactly what I
said. That's close. But it's not
3:05:43
quite exactly what I was saying.
When I say what, let me tell you
3:05:47
what it says, I'm going to tell
you what the here's how it
3:05:49
works. Because we have put, I'd
forget the exact number of tons,
3:05:55
millions of tons of co2 and
other greenhouse gases are now
3:05:59
in the atmosphere, they're
there. And every day, we're
3:06:02
adding more. And so every day
the heat is going up. And we
3:06:05
have to figure out how we're
going to, you know, tame the
3:06:09
monster here. The only way to do
that is to reduce emissions on
3:06:14
an ongoing basis to get control
and the current level of
3:06:19
emissions that we have created,
but was then but actually
3:06:23
sucked, sir. With all due
respect. You've been through
3:06:26
this for what is the correct
amount? I don't want to spend a
3:06:29
bunch of time about a history
lesson about things that people
3:06:31
don't care about.
3:06:32
Adam Curry: No, of course, he
had no correct amount. I love
3:06:34
this. When what is the correct
temperature for the earth? What
3:06:36
is the correct amount of co2?
There's no answer from these
3:06:39
dishes. Let's blame it on the
humans, though. What changes
3:06:43
Unknown: every day? I can't tell
you directly without changing.
3:06:46
Yes, it does. So Secretary, you
probably know that for
3:06:50
approximately 200 million years.
What's What's the parts per
3:06:54
million now? That 400? Right.
Can we agree over 400? All
3:06:58
right, so that 400 million years
2000 parts per million? Did
3:07:02
mother nature get it wrong for
200 million years? Here's the
3:07:05
difference, Congressman, the
difference is yes, there were
3:07:09
Matt, there are periods which
all the scientists who deal with
3:07:12
climate acknowledge that there
have been moments on the planet,
3:07:16
which is billions of years old,
in which there were greater heat
3:07:21
and there was great, I mean, the
difference quickly I've got a
3:07:24
difference is human beings.
That's the difference all human
3:07:29
1000 years old, but but during
these periods of time, where it
3:07:33
was 2000 parts per million. life
existed as a matter of fact, not
3:07:38
people, not human beings walking
around the lowest periods of
3:07:43
carbon in the atmosphere, and
not only recorded history in the
3:07:46
history of life existing on the
planet, in December of 2022, you
3:07:51
told The Washington Post, we
need to remove 1.6 trillion tons
3:07:55
of carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere via direct air
3:07:58
capture the cost for that as
about $1,000 per tonne, or 1.6
3:08:04
quadrillion dollars. Now I said
you said you didn't know. But
3:08:07
since 2015, since the last time
Lenio, about 500 billion tons
3:08:12
have been have been emitted into
the atmosphere during that same
3:08:16
period of time. 2015. If you
look at the temperature graph,
3:08:20
this is from NOAA, the
temperature has gone down to the
3:08:24
next slide. This is from NASA
satellite data, temperature has
3:08:27
gone down.
3:08:28
Adam Curry: So he's just gonna
hound him on the 1.6 quadrillion
3:08:32
dollars, you
3:08:32
Unknown: want to have the have
the American taxpayers, my
3:08:36
constituents that are having a
hard time afford their
3:08:38
groceries, pay for a car, buy a
new home spent 1.6 quadrillion
3:08:43
dollars to fix a problem that he
doesn't exist. And as a matter
3:08:47
of fact, you might be
exacerbating because it's
3:08:51
unknown. It is unknown at this
time, the low level that of
3:08:55
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
that might actually destroy
3:08:59
life. Because plant life all
depends, as you know, Secretary
3:09:03
plant life all depends on co2.
And when we kill it, then we're
3:09:08
done too. I yield the balance
carbon. Let me just say that. I
3:09:12
don't agree with what you're
saying out there for any number
3:09:15
of reasons. I don't have time to
go into all of that. But I just
3:09:17
tell you that the difference
between the periods you're
3:09:22
looking at in terms of heat
cetera and human human input is
3:09:27
night and day. Number one,
number two, why do you think 195
3:09:32
countries in the world their
prime ministers their president
3:09:37
because they're grifting? Like
you are sir. Yeah. This that's
3:09:42
pretty shocking
3:09:42
statement that you believe who
is the scientists in the
3:09:45
Adam Curry: world? This is
Representative Scott Perry.
3:09:49
Let's hear that one again.
3:09:51
Unknown: Because their Prime
Minister's their president
3:09:54
because they're grifting like
you are sir.
3:09:58
Oh, that's pretty good. Fight
towards you
3:10:01
believe that all the scientists
in the world are all not all
3:10:05
scientists agree with you, Mr.
98% of all the science and
3:10:09
science isn't about agreement.
It's not about consensus. You
3:10:12
know, that Chair now
3:10:13
John C Dvorak: recognizes Mr.
Feuless McCormack well that was
3:10:17
an excellent clip that was a
good guy, right? Like yeah, we
3:10:21
got to follow him. Yeah. And on
his mailing list
3:10:26
Adam Curry: he's a grifter like
all of them.
3:10:29
John C Dvorak: Exactly. Guess
the bully explanation I can come
3:10:32
up with it's all
3:10:33
Adam Curry: a big grift don't
fall for it people. But don't
3:10:37
wear a mask outside either in
the summer and have show mixes
3:10:42
we have the fabulous Sir Chris
Wilson answer seat sitter
3:10:46
actually was cool. Chris Wilson,
who did the Google song it's
3:10:50
starseed sitter does the Q anon
man both
3:10:53
John C Dvorak: classic Q anon
Mansur grace,
3:10:55
Adam Curry: both of the classic
end of show mixes we appreciate
3:10:58
them. And coming up next bowls
with butts are Spencer Dane
3:11:03
DeLorean and cold acid as guests
make sure you check that out
3:11:08
listen to it on no agenda
stream.com Troll room.io and we
3:11:13
will return on Thursday with
another lengthy deconstruction
3:11:17
of your mainstream media who by
the way are idiots coming to you
3:11:21
from the heart country here And
reason number six in the morning
3:11:24
everybody I'm Adam curry
3:11:26
John C Dvorak: and for Northern
Silicon Valley where at least
3:11:30
this is not hot this guy
actually quite tempered is
3:11:34
perfect around at least where I
am I'm Jhansi Dvorak
3:11:36
Adam Curry: we return on
Thursday remember us at
3:11:38
devora.org/na Send us some value
back everybody till then adios
3:11:43
mofos who ends
3:11:46
Unknown: a lot of surprises
Melissa
3:11:48
but I just want to put something
in perspective of the world
3:11:51
cannot live without Google we
can't live without Facebook but
3:11:54
Google is part of the fabric
oxygen of the internet
3:11:57
Adam Curry: this is completely
disturbing we can't live we
3:12:00
can't live without can easily
live without Google
3:12:04
Unknown: know I can forget this
evening when I spend my time
3:12:10
just being and oh my wasted life
on data I showed you
3:12:34
will face back saying tomorrow
you know what but we'll all be
3:12:43
better off if it works
3:13:04
again
3:13:12
I can I can being in
3:13:17
a mall
3:13:36
John C Dvorak: being by the way
does work. You don't need Google
3:13:40
necessarily the one you can't
live without and I've written
3:13:43
about this too is Amazon
3:13:49
Unknown: it's the ninth of
December 2019 to big report
3:13:55
drops any minute there's so much
excitement on fuel the
3:14:01
indictment is can't wait to see
HILLARY IN PRISON
3:14:16
big report dropped suddenly. And
Russia was solid and I've left
3:14:30
his show. bar bar by bar another
retired.
3:14:46
Long Mr. Man, bring us a string
of love for eternity. So we
3:14:57
never rise up above you either
3:15:15
out Sean Brennan may be the law
any clapper Mayo is running free
3:15:23
because we still might get paid
but we'll all be good slaves
3:15:27
because you will always be bad
Solow eight Band Aid will be
3:15:44
trained human and non man Nom
nom nom nom rise up to skinny
3:15:55
struggling
3:16:02
to bring us along Mr. Man tell
us to trust the plan because
3:16:11
otherwise we might resume things
in YouTube
3:16:33
vorak.org/in A I think they're
fantastic