Cover for No Agenda Show 1815: Attunement
November 9th • 3h 14m

1815: Attunement

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0:00
That's not interesting.
0:02
Adam Currie, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:04
It's Sunday, November 9th, 2025.
0:06
This is your award-winning Gimbal Nation media
0:08
assassination episode 1815.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Providing our public service.
0:15
And broadcasting live from the heart of the
0:18
Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No.
0:20
6.
0:20
In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Currie.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley where Kristi Noem's
0:26
in trouble, I'm John C.
0:27
Dvorak.
0:28
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
0:30
In the morning.
0:32
Why is she in trouble?
0:33
What has she done?
0:34
Oh, she bought jets without engines.
0:39
Without engines?
0:40
Oh no!
0:41
Do you have a clip of this incredibly
0:43
interesting story?
0:45
No, I don't have a clip because it
0:47
just showed up this morning in the feed.
0:49
And it's an article on, I'll just read
0:52
you the headline from The Guardian.
0:53
DHS head, reportedly, just the head by the
0:58
way.
0:58
Just the head.
1:00
Reportedly authorized purchase of 10 engineless Spirit Airlines
1:04
planes that the airline didn't own.
1:09
Oh, that sounds like something horribly bad.
1:12
Sounds like, what kind of a story is
1:16
this?
1:16
It is not abnormal to purchase an airframe
1:22
and engine separately depending on what you're doing.
1:26
It's not completely, I mean they are separate
1:28
items.
1:29
They have separate time between overhaul and everything.
1:33
So it's not crazy.
1:36
It's not crazy.
1:37
No, what's crazy is Spirit supposedly authored the
1:41
purchase of the Spirit Airlines planes that Spirit
1:45
Airlines didn't own.
1:46
How does that work?
1:48
I don't know.
1:48
Where did you find this?
1:50
It's The Guardian.
1:52
They're trying to make a smear out of
1:54
it.
1:54
The Guardian.
1:55
The Guardian is the worst.
1:57
She can't fly them anyway.
1:59
We're shutting down baby!
2:00
We're shutting down everything!
2:01
We're shutting it down!
2:03
Shutting it down.
2:05
This is not good.
2:08
In fact, this really is kind of a
2:10
problem.
2:11
You think?
2:13
The shutdown.
2:14
Well, it is if you want to travel.
2:17
Yeah, here's a little update.
2:19
Chaos in U.S. airports with delayed flights
2:21
and endless queues at security control.
2:24
The government shutdown has not just left severe
2:26
staff shortages, but some 13,000 air traffic
2:30
controllers and 50,000 security agents working unpaid.
2:34
The Federal Aviation Administration decided to stabilize the
2:38
situation by cutting 10% of air traffic
2:41
across 40 airports, which could further affect travelers.
2:44
Airlines have 36 hours to slash flights after
2:48
the U.S. Transportation Secretary announced cuts to
2:51
transport hubs across 24 states.
2:54
Among them are the busiest airports like New
2:56
York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Dallas.
2:59
There'll be frustration.
3:01
We are working with the airlines.
3:03
They're going to work with passengers.
3:05
But in the end, our sole role is
3:08
to make sure that we keep this airspace
3:10
as safe as possible.
3:12
The FAA's reduction plan, which excludes international flights,
3:16
will begin at a 4% cut on
3:17
Friday before escalating to a 10% cut
3:20
next week.
3:21
While airlines like Delta Air and American Airlines
3:24
moved to reassure panicked passengers by offering refunds,
3:28
the White House took a different approach.
3:30
President Trump stated on Thursday that despite the
3:33
reduced air traffic, it is still safe for
3:36
Americans to fly.
3:37
Yeah.
3:38
So if they actually get to next Friday
3:41
with 10%, that will be chaos.
3:44
And the main reason is our system doesn't
3:48
allow for that type of reduction.
3:51
You can't get the crews to the next
3:53
airport, so they can take the next.
3:56
It'll screw up everything.
3:57
Absolutely everything.
4:01
Which is interesting because the way that your
4:05
gal, Katie Porter there in California, because this
4:07
is all politics, of course, and we'll get
4:14
into it.
4:15
Katie Porter, I guess she's no longer in
4:17
the running.
4:17
Did she cancel herself out of becoming governor
4:20
of California?
4:21
I thought you said that some other person
4:24
was the lead now, that she had screwed
4:26
it up.
4:26
I've never said any of this thing of
4:28
the sort.
4:29
Oh, that's odd.
4:31
And the next is not till next year.
4:33
So it's just, you know, you've got plenty
4:34
of runway here.
4:37
Oh, I see what you did there.
4:39
You should work at MSNBC.
4:41
It's great.
4:43
So here is Katie Porter, either grossly misunderstanding
4:47
what's going on or perhaps lying.
4:50
Here's a question for Donald Trump, as he
4:52
forces airlines to cancel thousands and thousands of
4:55
flights.
4:55
Okay, so I don't think the president is
4:58
forcing any airlines to cancel any flights.
5:02
Okay, let's keep it going.
5:04
Why is he starting first with the commercial
5:06
planes that we all use to go visit
5:08
our families or get where we need to
5:10
for work?
5:12
Every day, thousands of private jets take off
5:15
carrying CEOs, billionaires, and the 1%.
5:18
And they take up the work of the
5:20
air traffic control system too.
5:22
Wouldn't it make more sense to cancel the
5:24
planes that carry the fewest passengers first?
5:27
It's just another example of who Donald Trump
5:30
really cares about.
5:31
And it isn't us.
5:33
So first of all, of all the people
5:35
I know who own private jets or fly
5:38
private, a lot of them are Democrats.
5:41
Maybe the majority.
5:43
I would guess the majority.
5:45
Everyone I know who has a private plane,
5:48
well, actually, they tend to not have them
5:51
anymore.
5:52
They're in pools.
5:52
Yes, of course.
5:54
Who fly private?
5:56
Democrats.
5:58
But what is happening here is because of
6:02
air traffic controllers and TSA agents calling in
6:06
sick, and I can't blame them, in order
6:10
to keep the airspace safe, they had to
6:11
reduce IFR traffic, so that's instrument traffic, to
6:17
airports around the country.
6:19
What they actually did in the first pool,
6:23
we've got Newark, JFK, we've got Dallas-Fort
6:27
Worth, we've got Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland,
6:32
Seattle, New York, Portland, everybody.
6:35
But they also did that to Teterboro.
6:39
And I thought that was a good move,
6:41
because Teterboro is the private plane airport for
6:46
the tri-state area, mainly for New York.
6:48
That is probably one of the busiest for
6:51
jet travel of billionaires.
6:54
So, you know, I think everyone kind of
6:56
gets affected equally.
6:58
And I thought that was a good one
6:59
to put Teterboro into the mix, because maybe,
7:02
maybe, someone would call the Democrats and say,
7:04
hey, dude, I can't land my G5, baby!
7:08
Stop this, knock it off!
7:11
So, she's just a liar.
7:12
She's a horrible person.
7:14
She's not a good person.
7:16
No, and she looks like a horrible person.
7:18
The more she puts herself out there, like
7:20
in that tweet, the less likely...
7:23
She loses votes.
7:24
She's making a huge mistake.
7:26
Yeah, well, as I told you, she's not
7:29
going to be the governor.
7:30
I already told you that.
7:32
Remember?
7:32
Told you.
7:33
No, I don't remember you telling me that.
7:35
I didn't tell you that.
7:37
So now we have a new development, just
7:39
to reiterate the situation.
7:41
Before you leave that topic, let's go to
7:44
the...
7:45
I have some ATC reports.
7:47
Oh, I didn't...
7:48
Yes, you do.
7:48
I actually didn't even look at your list
7:50
today.
7:51
Well, you should.
7:53
You know what?
7:54
Can I just say something right off the
7:55
bat?
7:55
You sound grumpy today.
7:57
You sound grumpy today.
7:59
Well, yeah, because you immediately passed over my
8:01
clips.
8:02
No, you sounded grumpy before you even said,
8:04
hit it.
8:05
I know you.
8:06
Oh, okay, you can go ahead and try
8:08
your psychological torture, which all the women have
8:11
observed over the years and have noticed.
8:14
I'm gaslighting him again.
8:16
There you go, ladies.
8:18
Psychological torture.
8:19
That's what I'm calling it.
8:22
Psychological torture.
8:22
Okay, yes.
8:26
You have three clips.
8:28
I do.
8:28
The simple one is from NPR and then
8:30
there's a two-parter from PBS.
8:33
All, you know, all slanted.
8:36
Oh, good.
8:37
Because it's Trump's fault and it's just, I
8:42
don't know, it's hard to do these clips
8:47
with these outlets.
8:49
With these liars.
8:51
Let's go with NPR.
8:53
More than 1,400 flights around the country
8:55
have been canceled after the Trump administration ordered
8:58
airports to cut flights as the FAA deals
9:01
with a shortage of air traffic controllers who
9:04
are working without pay.
9:05
The FAA says the flights at 40 airports
9:08
will be cut 10% on a phase
9:09
-in basis as the government shutdown, now on
9:12
its 39th day, continues.
9:14
Nick Delucanal has more from the Charlotte Douglas
9:18
Airport in Charlotte.
9:19
Inside the Charlotte terminal here, Jessica Lamuscio and
9:22
her one-year-old daughter are trying to
9:24
rebook after their flight to Manchester, New Hampshire
9:26
was canceled, leaving them scrambling to get to
9:28
a family wedding.
9:29
It just makes it more complicated, right, especially
9:32
with her, just to figure out what's our
9:35
plan?
9:35
How long do we stay here?
9:36
How long do you wait it out?
9:38
If you book again, is it going to
9:39
get canceled again?
9:41
The Charlotte airport says this morning's ground stop,
9:44
which lasted about an hour, was caused by
9:46
staffing issues in the air traffic control tower.
9:49
Well, there you go.
9:50
I like the little nat pop of the
9:51
baby.
9:53
Did you hear that in there?
9:54
Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of wait until
9:56
we get to the Thanksgiving turkey nat pops.
9:59
They're going crazy.
10:00
Crazy.
10:01
My favorite one, which I don't have, which
10:03
was on a local news story, was these
10:04
people from Australia trying to get back to
10:07
Australia.
10:08
So they're in San Francisco and their flight
10:11
is leaving today or tomorrow to Australia, but
10:14
it's in Los Angeles and the connecting flight
10:17
has been canceled.
10:19
Well, hop in the car.
10:21
Drive fast.
10:24
Well, you know, it depends on the date.
10:26
You can actually make it to LA from
10:28
San Francisco in a rental and do a
10:30
drop-off at the airport, and you could
10:33
probably do that within eight hours.
10:35
Yeah, that's my suggestion.
10:37
But they'd be on the wrong side of
10:38
the road.
10:40
Ah!
10:41
Okay.
10:44
Woo!
10:45
There you go.
10:46
Okay, here we go.
10:47
This is the PBS reporting.
10:48
More national public media.
10:51
I can't wait to hear it.
10:52
On the second day of reduced flights at
10:54
40 airports, the aviation data company Sirium said
10:58
nearly 4% of flights were canceled, and
11:01
about 2.5% have been canceled for
11:04
tomorrow.
11:05
Randy Babbitt was FAA administrator in the Obama
11:07
administration.
11:08
Mr. Babbitt, is this working?
11:10
Are reduced flights reducing delays?
11:12
Okay, stop, stop a second.
11:13
So they bring, you know, you know how
11:16
they book people.
11:17
We gotta get somebody in here that maybe
11:19
can slam the Trump administration.
11:21
Let's get Obama guys.
11:23
But it didn't work out because the Obama
11:26
guy's pretty reasonable.
11:27
He's just a normal guy.
11:29
Randy Babbitt was FAA administrator in the Obama
11:32
administration.
11:33
Mr. Babbitt, is this working?
11:35
Are reduced flights reducing delays?
11:38
No, they're reducing the flights for the primary
11:41
purpose and a good purpose of making the
11:43
system safe.
11:44
They're suffering a loss of controllers at the
11:47
various stations.
11:47
They're not interchangeable.
11:49
And to ensure the system operates safely, you
11:51
just have to reduce traffic down to the
11:53
level of the number of controllers you can
11:54
put up.
11:55
Is this sustainable?
11:57
No, it's actually gonna continue to accelerate in
12:01
the wrong direction.
12:02
The longer we ask people to work without
12:04
a paycheck, the longer we ask people to
12:06
work 10, 12, 14 hour shifts.
12:09
You just can't sustain that.
12:11
People are calling in sick.
12:12
They're tired.
12:13
It's an intense job.
12:14
The controllers are well trained.
12:16
And there's a lot of stress in that
12:17
job.
12:18
And you can't keep doing it.
12:19
You know, we have the staffing levels where
12:21
they were for a good reason.
12:23
And we're not achieving that level of controllers
12:27
on site and on their stations.
12:31
I want to go back to the point
12:31
you made about controllers not being interchangeable.
12:35
It's not that you can sort of see
12:37
how many controllers are working nationwide.
12:39
It depends on each airport, each air traffic
12:41
control center.
12:43
Oh, absolutely.
12:44
There's a big difference between being an in
12:46
-route controller or a tower controller or an
12:49
approach control person.
12:52
Those are different jobs.
12:53
And they're not interchangeable.
12:54
Someone who's working in-route cannot go the
12:57
next morning and be in the Richmond Tower.
13:00
You know, it takes months of training to
13:02
make those transitions.
13:03
That was a good comment from a troll
13:05
in the troll room.
13:07
Like, the answer should be from the U
13:10
.S. officials like the president and who's our
13:14
boy there at the FAA?
13:15
What's his name?
13:17
Duffy?
13:18
Duffy, yeah.
13:19
Department of Transportation.
13:21
Well, this is a preview of what socialism
13:25
is like.
13:28
Just say that.
13:29
Whether it's true or not, just say it.
13:31
Just say it.
13:33
That's a good bit.
13:34
Okay, troll guy.
13:35
Well, this is a preview of socialism, so
13:40
your socialist representatives are making this happen, so
13:44
this is what New York can look forward
13:46
to.
13:46
No flights.
13:49
Okay, part two of this is kind of
13:51
his little tidbit.
13:53
Controllers, you're talking about how they're sort of
13:55
being stressed now.
13:56
No pay.
13:57
Many of them having to call out to
13:58
work other jobs to get pay.
14:00
They were already stressed.
14:01
Even before this began, the system was already
14:03
stressed, wasn't it?
14:05
Yes.
14:05
We're still recovering post-COVID.
14:07
You know, like a lot of companies did,
14:09
they let people go because the system was
14:12
only operating at 30% at the peak
14:14
of COVID.
14:14
But you don't just call them back.
14:17
A lot of them are already retired.
14:19
And second, if you have to hire them,
14:20
it takes several years to train a controller
14:22
to be fully up to speed and be
14:25
able to go into the different control positions.
14:28
Former FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt, thank you very
14:30
much.
14:31
Oh, thank you.
14:32
Good luck.
14:33
I like his voice.
14:35
He's got a great voice.
14:37
He should do a podcast.
14:39
That would be a great follow-up.
14:40
He should.
14:41
He's got a better voice than I do.
14:42
So the they never mentioned, of course, they
14:46
had, yeah, the traffic was way down during
14:49
COVID, but they also laid people off who
14:50
refused to get the vax.
14:52
Well, why would they do that now?
14:54
That doesn't behoove anybody.
14:56
You don't think they would mention that because
14:57
it's a fact?
14:59
Ah.
15:04
I was like, I needed this guy.
15:07
Where's my guy here?
15:09
Oh, good lord.
15:10
Yeah, that's my guy.
15:11
You know, you're doing this constantly now.
15:18
Because it is kind of exasperating.
15:21
And the thing is, it's always a health
15:24
care, no, this is about insurance companies who
15:27
are basically banks and all I know is
15:30
that throughout my life, I have heard that
15:33
in Congress you just, no one discusses health,
15:37
no one discusses insurance, period.
15:41
You don't mess with the insurance companies.
15:43
It's out of control.
15:44
We used to be tough on insurance.
15:47
It was a point of fact that in
15:49
states like California that has an insurance commissioner,
15:53
they crack down on illegal, oh, let's just
15:57
raise it because we can.
15:59
There's no competition, let's just gouge everybody and
16:03
too bad if they don't like to pay
16:04
it, what are they going to do?
16:06
This is interesting that you bring up California
16:08
specifically because I think you got an email
16:11
too this morning from one of our producers
16:13
who emailed, I got it from Jay from
16:17
the back office and he had called the
16:21
crowd health outfit that we've been talking about.
16:24
First of all, he says, it was amazing.
16:25
I got someone with an American accent calling
16:27
me back.
16:28
He was blown away by that.
16:30
That would be a big deal.
16:31
He's like, whoa, what just happened?
16:33
He says, it turns out, well, he says,
16:36
I can't do that.
16:38
Well, he can, but he says, I can't
16:40
do it in California because, and I don't
16:42
know if this is true, apparently it's illegal
16:44
in California to be without healthcare?
16:49
I don't know that to be true or
16:51
not.
16:51
And that you have to pay a $900
16:53
annual fine if you don't have healthcare in
16:57
California?
16:59
I don't know this.
17:00
Well, this is what our producers said.
17:02
I didn't get the note.
17:04
Oh, well, you were copying.
17:05
I probably got the note, but I didn't
17:07
read it this morning.
17:09
I understand.
17:12
I'll look into it.
17:13
I'm not psychologically torturing you.
17:15
You're psychologically trying to torture me.
17:17
Just reading a note.
17:19
Since we're talking along these lines, you have
17:22
to play this clip.
17:23
By the way, there's tons of these clips
17:25
with different kinds of stories, and I'm going
17:27
to start collecting them because I like them.
17:29
And it's disgusting.
17:32
It's a disgusting, this is the anecdote clip.
17:35
These are disgusting stories, and you talked about
17:39
it, I've talked about it, we all talk
17:41
about it, but it's still disgusting.
17:43
So I don't normally jump on that insurance,
17:46
health insurance is a scam, but today it
17:49
is absolutely a scam and I swear it's
17:50
fraud.
17:50
I need an MRI on my back because
17:52
I hurt my back.
17:54
My clinic sent it over to a hospital.
17:57
They ran it through my insurance.
17:58
They called me and said, your portion of
18:00
it that you're going to have to pay
18:02
after insurance is $5,100 for this MRI.
18:05
So I'm like, wow, okay.
18:08
Before we do that, just wait.
18:10
$5,100 just seems wild.
18:13
I called another place who was also waiting
18:15
for my insurance to go through to see
18:16
how much it was going to be.
18:17
My insurance was still on hold with them,
18:19
but I asked them, if I just cash
18:21
pay this, how much is it going to
18:23
cost for this MRI?
18:24
$35.
18:25
And they're like, well, if you just want
18:26
to cash pay it, not run anything through
18:27
insurance, it's $700.
18:29
So I'm like, sounds a lot better than
18:31
$5,100.
18:32
So I called the original hospital back and
18:34
said, hey, if I don't run this through
18:36
insurance, what is the cost if I just
18:39
decide to self-pay it since I know
18:41
the other place is $700?
18:42
The lady's like, I'll rerun it under you
18:45
being self-pay and I'll call you back
18:46
with your total.
18:47
So a few minutes go by, the lady
18:49
calls me back and she goes, hey, I
18:51
talked to my supervisor, since you have insurance,
18:55
we are not going to let you self
18:56
-pay it, so we won't give you that
18:58
number.
18:58
How is that not a scam?
19:01
Isn't it my choice if I want to
19:03
self-pay something versus running it through my
19:06
insurance?
19:07
I should get to decide that, not you,
19:10
but they're like, nope, since you have insurance
19:12
and you've already done it that way, we
19:13
are not going to allow you to self
19:15
-pay it.
19:15
And I think that's because they probably were
19:17
going to give me a self-pay price,
19:18
kind of like the other place, maybe $700,
19:20
maybe up to $1,300, still way less
19:23
than $5,100 that it was going to
19:26
make me pay.
19:27
And I just think what if I wouldn't
19:30
have called around and I would have been
19:31
stuck with this $5,100 bill?
19:34
Insurance is such a rip-off.
19:36
I don't know how in the world this
19:37
hospital is telling me that I now can't
19:39
self-pay it.
19:40
What is it, Matt?
19:41
I'm going to go to the other place,
19:42
but I don't know how this hospital is
19:43
allowed to now tell me, hey, yeah, you
19:44
can't self-pay something if you have already
19:47
had us run it through your insurance.
19:49
I haven't even had it yet.
19:50
Yeah, yeah.
19:51
And I'll remind all of the socialists out
19:53
there that having lived under the fabulous, fantastic,
19:57
£5 a visit national healthcare system in the
20:02
United Kingdom, the choice was, and Christina needed
20:05
an MRI on her knee because it popped
20:07
out a couple times, the choice was, oh,
20:10
of course, of course the national healthcare system,
20:13
the NHS, it's our pride and joy.
20:15
In 18 months you can get your MRI.
20:18
And I call up the MRI place, and
20:20
I say, hey, can I just come to
20:21
you and pay directly?
20:22
Well, of course.
20:23
I go there, there's no one there.
20:25
No one.
20:26
No one.
20:27
I pay cash, good to go.
20:30
It's, and so...
20:32
There was no one there?
20:34
No one was there.
20:35
I think that, well, we were doing the
20:36
show, I believe.
20:37
We may have discussed it back then.
20:38
I vaguely remember this story.
20:40
You've told it at least twice.
20:41
Yeah, I'll have to look it up at
20:42
bingit.io. But the point is, is no
20:45
one was there.
20:45
No one was there.
20:47
In other words, yeah, whatever, you know.
20:49
So they put you on the 18-month
20:53
waiting list on purpose to torture you.
20:56
Yes.
20:57
Talk about torture.
20:59
Psychological torture.
21:02
Yeah.
21:04
Well, it's more than psychological in this case.
21:06
You got a bad knee, you know.
21:09
But the whole point is that insurance companies,
21:12
they're just banks, right?
21:15
I mean, is it or...
21:17
Well, the question about this last anecdote is
21:20
the insurance company plus her $5,100, how
21:24
much money is the hospital getting?
21:26
Oh, they're getting $700.
21:29
They're getting $700.
21:31
The insurance company takes the rest.
21:33
This is why they all want to go
21:35
outside of the system.
21:36
This is why you can go to any
21:37
doctor, any healthcare provider, and say, what's your
21:42
deal for cash?
21:43
And they will say, oh.
21:44
You'll see them go, oh, thank you.
21:46
We don't have to do all those forms.
21:47
This is great.
21:48
Yeah, here's your price.
21:51
Because they don't want, they have to fight.
21:53
They have to fight with the insurance company
21:54
to get their measly $700, which is what
21:57
it was in the first place.
21:59
It's theft.
22:01
And the media branding it as healthcare, this
22:04
is healthcare, and politicians, healthcare.
22:07
Well, healthcare, it's not healthcare.
22:09
It's theft.
22:11
And the whole shutdown, and this is what,
22:13
this is the irksome part, is while they
22:16
keep talking about healthcare, healthcare, is this was,
22:19
this subsidy for the insurance company slash financial
22:25
institution.
22:26
Let's call it that.
22:26
Warren Buffett, by the way.
22:28
Can we just say Warren Buffett?
22:30
Isn't he the big insurance guy?
22:32
He's got a lot of insurance companies, although
22:34
he's going heavily, he's moving his finances heavily
22:38
into cash.
22:39
Yes.
22:40
But, by the way, Warren Buffett, Democrat, private
22:44
jet, Omaha.
22:46
Exactly.
22:47
The Oracle of Omaha.
22:50
But the whole point is it's big finance
22:55
that is in this game, and the politicians,
22:58
and I'm sure that the payoff, if we
23:00
really go and look, and if we go
23:01
to opensecrets.org, I'll see.
23:03
No, all these Democrats are loaded to the
23:05
gills with the financing from these guys.
23:07
Not just the Democrats.
23:08
Republicans too.
23:09
Republicans too, obviously.
23:11
And the reason, and this is why the
23:12
Republicans, they don't want to, and you'll disagree
23:14
with me, they don't want to use the
23:16
nuclear option and end the filibuster to open
23:19
up the country again because they will get
23:21
penalized by their backers as well.
23:24
So they don't want to do it.
23:25
I don't want to lose my money, you
23:28
know, my re-election campaign, my million dollars
23:30
to get me on the committee.
23:32
The whole thing that people should, I think
23:34
we need pitchforks this time.
23:38
Pitchforks.
23:38
Pitchforks and AR-15s.
23:40
Seriously.
23:41
And so President Trump, he sees this, he's
23:45
already tried to convince the Republicans, hey, just
23:49
do it, you'll be a hero if you
23:51
go, no, no, no.
23:53
You only need five Democrats to vote yes.
23:56
And they would be heroes.
23:58
No, no, you can't get them to do
23:59
that either.
24:00
So the president, he just goes, he's starting
24:03
his own nuclear option campaign as he posted
24:05
today on Truth Social.
24:08
President Trump is out with a proposal on
24:11
healthcare, would eliminate Obamacare and send money directly
24:15
to people to buy their own healthcare.
24:18
My question for you, Senator, do you support
24:20
President Trump's plan to eliminate Obamacare and send
24:23
money directly to the people?
24:24
His statement wasn't to eliminate Obamacare.
24:27
His statement was very clear.
24:28
It was, why are we sending money to
24:29
insurance companies?
24:31
Right now, the Democrat proposal they put out,
24:33
which Chuck Schumer put out this past week
24:34
was, let's continue to send billions of dollars
24:37
to insurance companies and hope insurance companies will
24:40
bring down premiums.
24:41
That's not worked.
24:42
That's not worked for years now.
24:44
You go back to Obamacare when it was
24:46
first released, it was, it's going to bring
24:48
down rates 25%.
24:49
Can anyone tell me that their rates have
24:51
gone down 25% anywhere in this?
24:54
And so the president's proposal was pretty straightforward.
24:56
Stop sending money just to insurance companies.
24:57
Hope it gets better.
24:59
Give Americans freedom of choice.
25:00
If we're going to allow subsidies to get
25:02
out there, get them to people, not to
25:03
insurance companies.
25:04
You're saying something really interesting.
25:05
I want to make sure I understand.
25:07
Whoa!
25:08
Stop!
25:12
He said, he's not saying anything.
25:16
This is like, this is as bad as
25:18
the, that's a great question.
25:19
You're saying something interesting there.
25:22
He said nothing interesting.
25:26
We need to come up with a better
25:27
interlude.
25:28
That's not interesting.
25:30
That's not interesting.
25:33
Give Americans freedom of choice.
25:35
If we're going to allow subsidies to get
25:36
out there, get them to people, not to
25:38
insurance companies.
25:38
You're saying something really interesting.
25:40
I want to make sure I understand.
25:42
Is the Republican proposal not to repeal Obamacare,
25:46
which has been the long-held position?
25:47
Yeah, right now, Obamacare is healthcare in America.
25:50
What Democrats did 15 years ago was they
25:52
radically changed all healthcare in America.
25:54
They moved all physicians under hospitals.
25:57
They changed all the reimbursement programs.
25:59
They shifted everything in.
26:01
So, it is healthcare in America.
26:02
So, the challenge is what we have now
26:04
has to be fixed.
26:06
It was only Democrats.
26:08
Okay, sure.
26:09
It was only Democrats.
26:11
You're all in on it.
26:12
Hillary Clinton tried this the first time around
26:15
the Clinton administration.
26:16
They all, this theft game was always the
26:20
plan.
26:21
Always.
26:21
And it's just so much money.
26:25
What do you think it is?
26:26
Hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars a
26:28
year.
26:29
It's got to be.
26:29
It goes right into the insurance companies.
26:32
Finance companies.
26:33
Warren Buffett.
26:35
What's his stock price at?
26:36
What's his stock price?
26:38
$147,000 a share?
26:40
Something like that, right?
26:42
Yeah, I know.
26:42
Quite that.
26:43
I know.
26:43
Who's there?
26:44
All the rich people.
26:45
He's the oracle.
26:47
Sure.
26:48
She also talked to Hakeem Jeffries about this.
26:51
Leader Jeffries, President Trump floated what he believes
26:55
is a potential solution to this online.
26:57
Let me read it to you.
26:58
He says, quote, I am recommending to Senate
27:00
Republicans that the hundreds of billions of dollars
27:02
currently being sent to money-sucking insurance companies
27:06
in order to save the bad healthcare provided
27:09
by Obamacare be sent directly to the people
27:12
so that they can purchase their own much
27:14
better healthcare.
27:16
Would you ever support giving subsidies directly to
27:20
the American people instead of Obamacare?
27:22
Yes.
27:22
I think that's an interesting question.
27:25
We have a broken healthcare system.
27:27
But the Affordable Care Act has been part
27:29
of actually providing health insurance to tens of
27:33
millions of Americans.
27:35
Of course, there's always opportunity to improve current
27:38
policy that exists.
27:40
But Republicans aren't operating in good faith as
27:43
it relates to doing anything to actually make
27:45
healthcare more affordable.
27:46
And we've seen that repeatedly over the last
27:49
several weeks.
27:50
Now, if Donald Trump is changing his tune
27:52
and is actually willing to sit down and
27:54
negotiate a bipartisan path forward, of course we
27:57
are interested in doing that.
27:59
We've been making that point for the last
28:02
several weeks.
28:03
What do you make of that proposal online,
28:05
though?
28:05
Does it sound like he's interested in doing
28:06
that?
28:09
I mean, it's hard to take these online
28:12
things seriously.
28:13
There's no actual legislation.
28:14
There's no text.
28:15
There's no policy documents to be able to
28:18
review.
28:19
If that exists, if that somehow materializes and
28:22
manifests itself in the next day or so,
28:24
we look forward to reviewing it in good
28:26
faith.
28:28
It seems like parties are rather far apart
28:31
at this point.
28:32
It doesn't seem like anyone's getting any closer.
28:37
You know?
28:39
Well, I mean, one side is the Republicans
28:44
want to open the government.
28:46
The Democrats don't.
28:48
And they call it leverage.
28:50
And they think they've got the Republicans over
28:53
a barrel and they think they can get
28:54
the money back to their insurance buddies because
28:57
the insurance buddies have all paid the way
29:00
for most of these Democrats to get in
29:03
office and stay in office, as you just
29:06
said.
29:07
And so they're doing the best they can
29:09
to get this over.
29:10
And then they got this latest with one
29:12
of these guys.
29:13
I forgot which one of the congressmen said,
29:15
well, now that we've won in the blue
29:17
states, we won our governorships.
29:19
Now we have to make sure that people
29:22
don't think we're going to knuckle under to
29:23
the Republicans.
29:24
We're tough guys now.
29:26
So being tough guys, we got to stay
29:28
the course.
29:30
So I don't know.
29:32
But I just want to say again, I
29:34
mean, you say it's a non-starter never
29:36
going to happen, but Republicans also have a
29:38
one second solution to this.
29:42
I mean, just say, okay, we're just done
29:44
with the filibuster rule, and then we open
29:48
it back up.
29:48
Republicans can also do it.
29:50
It's all political.
29:51
They think it's bad because, well, then the
29:53
Democrats can use it.
29:55
Okay.
29:55
To get the filibuster across the line, they're
29:59
still going to have to get the Democrats
30:01
because it's still that new 60 votes.
30:02
That's not true.
30:04
I looked this up.
30:04
No, it is true.
30:06
I don't think so.
30:07
It is true.
30:08
Absolutely.
30:09
Okay.
30:09
I looked it up.
30:10
I looked it up.
30:12
And the nuclear option the nuclear option is
30:18
a procedural workaround to bypass the two-thirds
30:22
cloture requirement and change the rules with a
30:25
lower threshold.
30:26
It involves raising a point of order.
30:28
And if the presiding officer rules against it,
30:31
appealing that ruling, overriding the president's officer requires
30:34
only a simple majority.
30:36
That's the nuclear option as I understand it.
30:41
Okay.
30:42
Well, I mean, it's possible that what you
30:43
read there is exactly right.
30:45
And that would do the trick, but it's
30:48
not my understanding.
30:50
And the way they present it, at least
30:52
the way I heard it, is that you
30:54
still need the 60 votes, and Democrats will
30:56
vote for it, knowing that it's going to
30:58
benefit them in the end, and they can
30:59
still vote against the final proposal and look
31:03
like the good guys.
31:05
Well, and they have actually used this method
31:08
in the past to eliminate certain parts of
31:11
filibuster in 2013 for most executive and judicial
31:16
nominations, and in 2017 that was the Democrats,
31:19
and in 2017 to extend Well, it's still
31:23
in play, by the way, for those processes
31:25
that still exists.
31:27
What do you mean?
31:29
Well, they put it in 2013, 2017, whatever
31:31
the dates were you had, that is still
31:35
in play.
31:35
You still don't need 60 votes to pass
31:38
a court guide.
31:39
But that's what I mean.
31:40
So they use the same Yeah, they use
31:42
it, but once it went in play, it
31:44
stayed in play.
31:45
Yes, of course it does.
31:46
That's the point.
31:48
So it's all just, it's a power game.
31:50
No matter which way you look at it,
31:51
it's a power game.
31:53
Well, I know it's hurting the show.
31:57
It is.
31:57
It's definitely hurting the show.
31:59
No doubt.
32:01
And then I think President Trump...
32:03
No, we have a lot of government workers
32:04
that can't afford to donate to the show.
32:07
We have a lot of people that are
32:09
affected by the downturn in the government work.
32:13
Yes.
32:13
I know.
32:15
Buckle down.
32:16
Bear down on it, brother.
32:17
Tighten your belt.
32:18
No agenda show's in trouble.
32:21
With every...
32:21
Not in trouble, but it's not good.
32:24
It's not good.
32:25
Hence your mood this morning.
32:27
I getcha.
32:27
I gotcha.
32:29
The president, though, I think is making a
32:32
mistake.
32:34
Now, it was really the Republicans running for
32:37
governor and for different state positions who all
32:42
ran on woke and the border and did
32:48
not run on the president's economic plan, which
32:52
is pretty clear if you see what he's
32:54
doing, bringing back manufacturing, doing deals, getting investments
32:59
in.
32:59
But they didn't.
33:00
They ran on yeah, those guys have trannies
33:03
and...
33:04
That works on the national level.
33:07
Yeah, it was a political mistake because right
33:10
at the moment when people were starting to
33:11
feel it, they're sending the wrong message.
33:14
Democrats go, we'll give it to you.
33:15
Yeah, it's no problem.
33:16
We'll freeze the rents and free buses, government
33:20
grocery stores.
33:21
So now the president has an affordability problem.
33:28
Affordability.
33:28
And the Democrat media, well, the Democrat-influenced
33:32
and occupied media, mainstream, they are using it
33:37
to an extreme.
33:37
So when I hear this little supercut of
33:40
the president, he knows it too.
33:42
It's no good if we do a great
33:43
job and you don't talk about it.
33:45
And I don't think they talk about it
33:46
enough.
33:47
They have this new word called affordability and
33:49
they don't talk about it enough.
33:50
The reason I don't want to talk about
33:51
affordability is because everybody knows that it's far
33:54
less expensive under Trump.
33:56
So I don't want to hear about the
33:58
affordability because right now we're much less.
34:00
It was a conjob, affordability they call it.
34:03
But we just lost an election, they said,
34:04
based on affordability.
34:06
You know, I saw that they kept talking
34:07
about affordability.
34:08
So we talk about affordability.
34:10
We should be talking about it because they
34:13
talk about affordability.
34:14
The affordability is much better with the Republicans.
34:17
We are the ones that have done great
34:18
on affordability.
34:19
So we are the victors on affordability.
34:22
So no one cares when the president says
34:25
that.
34:26
They're looking at their wallet and going, no,
34:28
something's wrong.
34:29
It's not affordable.
34:31
And NBC slash MSNBC, when are they going
34:35
to be MS now?
34:36
I can't come soon enough.
34:38
November 15th.
34:39
They set a trap.
34:42
They set a trap for him and he
34:44
walked right into it.
34:46
Here's the setup.
34:47
Well, I haven't heard that.
34:48
You're telling me.
34:49
Who are you with?
34:50
Who are you with?
34:51
Fake news.
34:53
You're fake news.
34:56
NBC's gone down the tubes along with most
34:58
of the rest of them.
34:59
Well, they feel better about our country right
35:02
now, other than the shutdown obviously, which is
35:04
caused by the Democrats.
35:05
Could be ended by the Democrats in two
35:06
minutes.
35:07
They feel much better.
35:08
We have more jobs.
35:10
We just set a record on jobs.
35:11
You do know that we have more investment
35:13
in our country than any country in history.
35:16
We're over $18 trillion as of this moment,
35:19
and we're going to be maybe a 20
35:20
or 21 trillion by the time I finish
35:23
up my first year.
35:25
And there's been no country, China, no country
35:28
in the world that's done anywhere even close
35:29
to that number.
35:31
Your friend Biden, as an example, in four
35:34
years was less than a trillion.
35:37
We'll be at 21 trillion in one year.
35:39
So there's no country that was even close
35:42
to that.
35:42
And our country was a laughing stock all
35:44
over the world.
35:45
We have more jobs.
35:47
We have more potential than any other country.
35:49
And frankly, we're the hottest country right now.
35:52
Victor said to me before, we're the hottest
35:54
country anywhere in the world.
35:55
Think of it.
35:56
We'll have 2021 trillion dollars invested.
35:59
We have auto plants pouring back in.
36:01
We have AI pouring back in.
36:03
We're leading China in AI by a lot.
36:06
We're leading everybody in every category.
36:09
There's no category that we're in second place.
36:12
So I just heard this yesterday that Walmart
36:16
said that the Thanksgiving was 25% more
36:21
expensive under Biden.
36:24
To me, that's a big number because Walmart's
36:27
respected.
36:29
I mean, Walmart is Walmart.
36:30
And they're giving you prices.
36:32
So that would mean that the whole series
36:36
of pricing and costs, you know, the groceries
36:39
and everything else, it was a con job.
36:42
Affordability, they call it, was a con job
36:44
by the Democrats.
36:46
The Democrats are good at a few things,
36:48
cheating on elections and conning people with facts
36:51
that aren't true.
36:52
So he walks right into the Walmart trap.
36:56
He should have known that Walmart is a
36:59
bunch of crazy Democrats who are setting him
37:02
up because if you listen to the full
37:04
question, it was about Walmart.
37:07
And he goes off, and it's all true,
37:10
all this investment, of course, but it's not
37:12
going into people's pockets for Thanksgiving.
37:15
Here's the setup, paid off in this case
37:18
by Jen Psaki.
37:19
Since you brought up the Walmart Thanksgiving meal,
37:23
and it is cheaper, but it also contains
37:26
less.
37:27
Well, I haven't heard that.
37:29
You're telling me.
37:29
Who are you with?
37:30
I'm with NBC News, sir.
37:32
Fake news.
37:33
NBC.
37:34
You're fake news.
37:36
That's right.
37:37
The Walmart Thanksgiving meal that Trump has been
37:40
touting as proof positive that he has made
37:42
the country more affordable is cheaper this year
37:46
because it has less stuff, like a lot
37:48
less stuff.
37:49
I mean, for days now, Trump has been
37:50
pushing the fact that the prepackaged Walmart Thanksgiving
37:53
dinner is 25% cheaper than it was
37:56
last year.
37:56
But he has been conveniently ignoring the fact
37:59
that this year's Walmart Thanksgiving package is missing
38:02
a bunch of items it had last year,
38:05
like onions, celery, sweet potatoes, chicken broth, seasoning,
38:09
muffin mix, marshmallows, whipped topping, and pecan pie.
38:12
I mean, those are all pretty key, delicious
38:14
parts of Thanksgiving, right?
38:16
The meal also downgraded certain items, like swapping
38:19
Hawaiian rolls for cheaper dinner rolls.
38:21
So, yeah, surprise, surprise.
38:22
His claim is completely misleading.
38:25
But he was pushing this whole Thanksgiving meal
38:27
narrative for a reason.
38:29
I mean, since Democrats swept Tuesday's election, the
38:31
right has all of a sudden woken up
38:33
to America's affordability crisis.
38:35
I think this was a trap set by
38:37
Walmart.
38:38
They went, Mr. President, it's great.
38:40
It's great.
38:41
It's 25% cheaper.
38:43
And people are going to get their packages
38:44
and then they'll open up and like, what
38:47
is this?
38:48
I'm like Tiny Tim here.
38:50
I think it was a purposeful trap.
38:53
I mean, you're telling me that Jen Psaki's
38:56
team went to Walmart.
38:57
Oh, let's go investigate the package.
38:59
Oh, there's no pecan pie.
39:00
I'm not going to say that you're wrong
39:01
about that, but I don't think the impact
39:03
is the way you're making it out.
39:04
Nobody listens to Jen Psaki.
39:06
She's got zero ratings.
39:08
She is just...
39:10
I said this is an example of the
39:12
NBC payoff.
39:13
I think you're going to see this, because
39:15
he's been saying this for a week.
39:17
Oh, it's cheaper.
39:18
It's cheaper.
39:19
I think they set him up.
39:20
You watch.
39:20
You're going to have NBC nightly news.
39:23
Oh, the Walmart packages.
39:25
If it shows up on nightly news, then
39:27
I'm totally agree.
39:29
All right.
39:29
I think it was a setup.
39:31
I think he was too prideful.
39:36
He wasn't on watch.
39:38
He's missed a lot of things.
39:40
He's busy.
39:42
Yeah, he is busy.
39:43
That's true.
39:46
And of course, we've got to sneak in
39:48
some other things here.
39:49
But I think this is an opportunity.
39:51
This is ABC.
39:52
Well, I will say that I'm going back
39:53
on this, on what you said, because the
39:56
question was about Walmart specifically to trigger the
39:59
Walmart reaction, and then Psaki follows up.
40:02
But again, it's small potatoes, because it's like
40:05
nobody listens to Jen.
40:07
Nobody watches her show or her.
40:09
This is just happening.
40:11
I think we...
40:12
Okay, well, I'm just saying it's just that
40:14
they could have been...
40:17
If it was rolled out by NBC, they
40:20
skipped the Psaki step.
40:22
It would have been better.
40:26
ABC's on it, but they have a different
40:27
bent.
40:28
This morning, with less than three weeks until
40:30
Thanksgiving, new concern that turkey and egg prices
40:34
could rise once again.
40:37
That's because...
40:38
Nat pop of the week, ladies and gentlemen.
40:42
And that turkey and egg prices could rise
40:44
once again.
40:46
That's because bird flu cases are rising again,
40:49
as more wild birds head south.
40:51
What?
40:52
Bird flu cases are rising again.
40:54
This is news to me.
40:55
Yeah, well, they're tying it into Walmart.
40:57
Don't worry.
40:58
That's because bird flu cases are rising again,
41:00
as more wild birds head south.
41:03
Within the last month, nearly 70 poultry flocks
41:06
nationwide have been hit with the virus, killing
41:08
more than 3.5 million turkeys, chicken, and
41:12
ducks.
41:12
Hold on a second.
41:13
Shouldn't we just open up shooting at wild
41:17
birds then?
41:18
Isn't that the solution?
41:19
Shouldn't we all just be in our backyards
41:21
and just shoot any birds that go over?
41:23
Solve the problem?
41:25
There's enough guns.
41:26
Shoot all the birds.
41:27
Wild birds are really the carrier for the
41:30
avian influenza virus, especially migratory waterfowl.
41:34
Experts fear the government shutdown and staff cuts
41:36
at the CDC and Agriculture Department could weaken
41:39
the federal response.
41:41
One virologist telling NPR, a network of researchers
41:44
used to be in constant contact with federal
41:47
agencies to monitor cases, but she says that
41:50
communication has been scaled back, saying, we're not
41:53
in a great position for monitoring things.
41:55
I'm finding myself in a very uncomfortable place.
41:58
The number of turkeys in the U.S.
42:00
has already dropped to its lowest size in
42:02
nearly 40 years.
42:03
With limited supply, wholesale turkey prices are up
42:06
75% in the last year.
42:09
Retail prices up about 25%.
42:12
Egg prices may also suffer, but there are
42:15
Thanksgiving deals to be had.
42:17
Walmart says it's lowering the cost of its
42:19
Thanksgiving meal bundle by 25% this year.
42:23
And Target is offering a Thanksgiving dinner for
42:25
four for just 20 bucks.
42:27
Yeah, you wait.
42:27
You wait until we're going to have, it's
42:29
going to be.
42:29
Well, they didn't say anything about the shrinkage,
42:31
shrinklation on the Walmart.
42:33
Not yet.
42:33
Not yet.
42:34
I think we're going to see the Thanksgiving
42:36
reports and it's going to be sad children
42:40
going, Mommy, what's this?
42:44
There's no marshmallows in my sweet potatoes.
42:47
Where's my pecan pie?
42:48
I'm sorry, Tiny Tim.
42:51
I'm sorry, Tiny Tim.
42:53
That's President Trump.
42:54
He shrunk your Thanksgiving Day package.
42:57
You know, I don't want to move these
43:01
things into place because of this grand conspiracy
43:06
like you're saying.
43:07
But that brings me to this bird test
43:09
nonsense because it involves birds.
43:12
I got it again.
43:14
It's that time of year.
43:15
Oh, I have one of those around here
43:16
somewhere, too.
43:17
It's that time of year.
43:20
I got to go find my...
43:22
I just found mine.
43:23
I got to find mine.
43:24
All right, yes, bird test.
43:26
So I didn't make this connection that because
43:30
birds, birds, birds, turkeys, turkey dinner, and then
43:35
there's this stupid, the stupidest story that I've
43:38
heard on PBS forever.
43:40
I don't know if you're even aware about
43:42
the bird test.
43:43
I'm not sure.
43:44
I don't know.
43:46
Well, I got some clips about it.
43:48
It's ridiculous.
43:50
But here it is.
43:51
One of the latest relationship tests on social
43:53
media to go viral is the bird theory.
43:57
It starts with a casual comment.
43:59
You know, when you were inside, I saw
44:01
a really pretty bird.
44:02
A bird?
44:03
I saw a bird today.
44:04
I saw a bird today.
44:06
I forgot to tell you that I saw
44:07
a bird today.
44:09
The test is how the partner responds.
44:11
Wait, I saw a blue jay the other
44:13
day, too.
44:13
No, literally, I saw one on my run.
44:16
Do they engage pointed beak, rounded beak, or
44:19
not?
44:20
Why are you telling them that?
44:21
These tests have racked up millions of views.
44:24
They're based on a theory developed by couples
44:27
researcher John Gottman about the importance of engaging
44:30
with partners when looking for a connection.
44:32
But what do they really tell us?
44:35
Alexandra Solomon is a licensed clinical psychologist, an
44:38
adjunct professor at Northwestern University, and the host
44:41
of a podcast called Reimagining Love.
44:44
Alexandra, how valuable is this test?
44:47
What does it really reveal?
44:48
You know, these tests come and go, and
44:50
I tell you what, this one is particularly
44:52
sneaky because it does have Gottman's research behind
44:55
it.
44:56
And there's a wish that all of our
44:58
relationships could boil down to one little test
45:01
like that.
45:01
So although there's validity, it's putting too much
45:04
weight in one little micro moment.
45:07
Wow!
45:08
Folks, this is a four-parter from PBS
45:12
about some tests to see if you should
45:14
divorce your spouse based upon how they answer
45:18
the question or a statement that you make
45:20
about a bird that you saw.
45:22
I saw a bird.
45:25
Yeah, so what?
45:26
I'm divorcing you!
45:29
Did you shoot it?
45:30
It might have bird flow.
45:33
Wow!
45:34
And it has science behind it, apparently.
45:37
Yes, this guy, look at this guy, this
45:38
John Gottlieb character.
45:41
He's like the most gosh-awful-looking person
45:44
there is.
45:44
I mean, he's one of those, you know,
45:45
very ugly, ugly effer.
45:47
Perfect face for science.
45:49
And it's just like, okay.
45:52
But I guess it caught on on TikTok.
45:55
This is the kind of thing that we,
45:56
as oldsters, we can't keep up because it's
45:59
going too fast for us.
46:00
This is your boomer moment, people.
46:02
All right, here we go.
46:03
So I had to extract this from PBS
46:06
and made a whole segment out of it.
46:07
By the way, this is not the whole
46:09
thing.
46:09
It goes on and on and on.
46:11
This is part two, which is the yuck
46:13
part of it.
46:14
Well, tell us about Gottman's theory.
46:16
Tell us about that.
46:17
What Gottman says is that romantic relationships are
46:20
not made up of the grand sweeping gesture,
46:23
you know, the rose petals on the bed
46:26
and all of the sort of fairytale ideas
46:29
that we grow up with.
46:30
In fact, romantic relationships, the healthy ones, are
46:34
made up of a series of thousands and
46:36
thousands and millions of micro-moments of connection
46:40
that build trust and safety and authenticity between
46:44
partners.
46:45
That's what this test is about.
46:47
It's a bid for connection.
46:49
You know, the New York Times calls this
46:50
social media's relationship yardstick du jour.
46:53
And you talked about how these come and
46:54
go.
46:55
Why are we so drawn to this?
46:57
We're drawn to it because there are a
46:59
few things in our lives that make us
47:01
feel quite as vulnerable as our intimate relationships
47:04
do.
47:05
The stakes are high.
47:06
The consequence of losing the person that we
47:08
love, you know, through a breakup, through divorce,
47:10
certainly through death, those consequences are very, very
47:13
big.
47:14
You know, we risk heartbreak.
47:15
And so I think we are forever looking
47:17
for evidence to answer the question, are we
47:21
okay?
47:21
You know, are we okay?
47:22
Are you with me?
47:23
Do you have my back?
47:24
Do you see me?
47:25
Do I matter to you?
47:26
I saw a bird.
47:26
Hold on.
47:27
Please tell me you have a clip of
47:28
the actual test and how it works because
47:31
I can't wait to try this right after
47:32
the...
47:33
In fact, I might call Tina during the
47:34
show.
47:36
It's simple.
47:37
It's just you say, I saw a bird.
47:39
And then you get the reaction of the
47:41
other person.
47:41
It goes on.
47:42
They kind of explain it.
47:43
Let it play out.
47:44
But the only...
47:46
Here, we'll do it.
47:47
This is how two people who have been
47:50
together in a relationship for 18 years do
47:54
this test.
47:55
Go ahead, John.
47:56
Ask me.
47:57
In fact, I have this planned for the
48:00
end.
48:01
Oh, okay.
48:02
All right.
48:03
And what is the motivation for people to
48:05
put these online and have strangers discuss it?
48:08
Well, John, here's where the rubber hits the
48:10
road.
48:10
I do think that, especially in these scenarios
48:12
we're seeing where people have taped their partner
48:14
without their consent.
48:15
That's a kind of boundary violation.
48:19
What?
48:22
What's the boundary violation?
48:25
Taping someone without their consent.
48:28
You know, the way the kids do it,
48:29
the cameras with their little phone.
48:30
You bring your phone out and you record
48:32
someone.
48:33
But I'm going to use this.
48:36
Darling, that's a boundary violation.
48:39
It's a boundary violation.
48:41
People have taped their partner without their consent.
48:44
That's a kind of boundary violation.
48:47
I think that if somebody is tempted to
48:50
test their partner in this way, the first
48:52
step is to check in with themselves.
48:56
What's going on here?
48:57
We really have normalized that we live these
49:00
two lives.
49:00
We live the flesh and blood life of
49:03
ours and we live this online life.
49:05
I think we really have normalized it.
49:06
It seems kind of, you know, ordinary or
49:09
no big deal right now to be showing
49:11
little windows into our world online.
49:14
But I think it's a problem and I
49:15
think we ought to be careful.
49:16
This does show a willingness to sort of
49:19
let the other partner's world in, something that
49:23
they value in the world, they found interesting.
49:25
Does that tell us anything?
49:27
Absolutely.
49:28
It feels really good when we notice something
49:32
or we raise something and our partner turns
49:34
toward us.
49:35
Is she in a relationship currently?
49:38
No, she's a single mom at best.
49:41
Instead of, you know, looking at their phone
49:44
and saying uh-huh or not responding at
49:47
all.
49:47
It's really painful.
49:48
Those breaks in connection are really painful for
49:51
us.
49:52
Those moments of attunement where our partner turns
49:56
their attention toward us feel really good.
50:00
That's where the validity is.
50:01
The validity is that our desire to connect
50:05
with our partner in these small, seemingly insignificant
50:09
ways, those matter.
50:11
It makes sense that people want, you know,
50:13
to have the partner ask follow-up questions
50:15
about this little bird that we saw.
50:17
First of all, the term attunement is a
50:21
possible show title.
50:23
This is attunement.
50:24
Okay, put it on the list.
50:26
I think that was the last clip.
50:28
No, there's a bird test for retort clip.
50:32
Yes, that's what we're going to do the
50:34
test.
50:34
You're going to ask me I found a
50:36
script for how to answer this correctly so
50:38
you pass the test.
50:39
Well, I know the answer too.
50:41
Don't play it.
50:42
It's clip 4.
50:43
You're going to ask me you saw a
50:47
bird and then you play clip 4 because
50:49
that will be my answer.
50:51
Then you're going to ask me the question
50:53
and I'll give my answer.
50:56
Okay?
50:57
Can we play?
50:58
Ask me to play.
50:59
Okay.
51:00
I ask you and then I hit clip
51:02
4.
51:03
Now, isn't it just a statement like, I
51:05
saw a bird today.
51:07
I'm not supposed to ask a question.
51:09
Could you pretend to be on your phone
51:10
for a second because I think that's part
51:12
of the test.
51:12
I'm on the phone.
51:13
I saw a bird today.
51:14
I saw a bird
51:24
today.
51:29
Everybody's talking about the bird.
51:31
Bird, bird, bird.
51:33
The bird is the word.
51:34
Yes.
51:35
Question for you.
51:36
Yes.
51:37
Name that group.
51:41
Everybody's talking about the birds.
51:43
It's the surfers?
51:46
...
51:46
Trashman.
51:46
Trashman.
51:47
I should have known.
51:49
Okay.
51:50
And it was based on another song called
51:52
Birds of the Word.
51:54
Yes.
51:55
But by another group.
51:56
Name that group.
51:58
You've got me.
52:00
The Rivingtons.
52:01
Very good.
52:02
Is that available on 78?
52:05
No, but I'll tell you everyone should go
52:06
look up the Trashman presentation of Birds of
52:10
the Word or Surfer Bird on YouTube and
52:15
watch this guy.
52:17
And then you realize where Mick Jagger got
52:19
all his moves.
52:20
Yeah, yeah.
52:20
Okay, so now I'll be on my phone
52:22
and then you say, I saw a bird
52:24
today.
52:25
Hold on, let me get on my phone.
52:26
Okay, I'm on my phone.
52:28
I saw a bird today.
52:31
Hey man, birds aren't real.
52:36
That's reasonable.
52:37
That's my answer right there.
52:39
Everybody knows birds aren't real.
52:42
They're spy drones.
52:45
So I have seen people do a version
52:49
of this and it's, and really what's, if
52:52
I understand this abbreviated version of this very
52:57
long report that was apparently on public broadcast
52:59
systems.
53:01
He was.
53:03
And this is noticeable, especially if in a
53:07
group setting where someone is on their phone
53:10
and you'd be talking and, or even if
53:12
it's just two people and they're texting something.
53:15
It's typical if they're texting and you know
53:18
they will, it's interesting to see they'll actually
53:21
be, you might have seen this yourself with
53:22
the kids, maybe, maybe not.
53:23
You probably forbid phones at the table.
53:26
No, I bitch about it a lot.
53:28
Yeah, then they will answer you but it'll
53:32
be when they have a break in their
53:34
typing.
53:35
So it's like a delayed response.
53:37
They hear what they're saying.
53:38
Oh, that's an interesting, you're right.
53:39
I've seen this happen.
53:40
Yeah, it's a delayed response.
53:42
Yeah, they're, you say something, they're still typing
53:44
and they can't lose the train of, the
53:46
train of thumb typing.
53:48
Yes.
53:48
And then once they finish and you see
53:50
them finish, then they say something.
53:52
Yeah, that's what it is.
53:53
And, and so some people will say something
53:55
like, oh, we almost crashed.
53:58
You know, just to see if their friend,
54:01
partner, spouse, whatever is listening, which of course
54:03
they aren't.
54:04
They are, they're hearing, but they're not listening.
54:07
And this is, I blame, there's only one
54:11
reason.
54:12
In fact, the whole bird test, the whole
54:14
thing is really, it's all about one thing,
54:16
which is the addiction to the phone.
54:18
Phones, yeah, that's what it is.
54:20
So, okay, you know, I'm against this.
54:26
I think it's a bad idea.
54:28
What?
54:28
I'm against tricking, this is a boundary violation.
54:33
Oh, you're against the tricking, the tricking concept
54:37
itself.
54:38
I mean, you might, why don't you just
54:39
say, I saw a bird.
54:41
Why don't you just say, hey, you suck.
54:44
You know, you can say whatever you want,
54:46
because the whole intent is to make the
54:49
other person feel crappy because they, what?
54:53
You say what?
54:54
I saw a bird.
54:55
You know, oh, and just, and then of
54:57
course the follow up is, you weren't I
54:59
mean, that that's pretty much what this is
55:01
about.
55:02
It's, well, it's a pretty good shout.
55:04
It's not, it's not a good, it's not
55:08
a, it's not a good, it's, it's a
55:10
boundary, boundary violation.
55:13
You should have an adult conversation and say,
55:16
hey, you know, when we're talking, you know,
55:18
let's just put the phones down.
55:21
That's it.
55:23
How about just grabbing the phone out of
55:24
their hands and stomping it on the floor?
55:29
Wow.
55:30
Wow.
55:30
That that's well, you know, it's basically a
55:34
double shaggy dog story.
55:36
Yeah, no, I like it.
55:37
I like that.
55:37
Bring it in the, the, uh, the surf
55:41
and surf and bird was good.
55:42
It is unfortunately that time of the year
55:45
again.
55:46
Do you know what time it is?
55:47
You know what time it is?
55:49
You don't know what time it is.
55:50
Do you?
55:50
You don't go time.
55:51
Yeah.
55:51
I wish it's cop time.
55:54
Cop, brother.
55:56
You've got clips from this.
55:58
Oh yes.
56:00
Well, it's not so much yours.
56:01
It's not.
56:02
So I'd have a setup clip from the
56:04
opening of cop 30.
56:05
All the elites are in Brazil.
56:07
Woo.
56:07
Party time.
56:08
Let's fly our jets.
56:09
They all flew in their private jets and
56:11
you can have a lot of party time
56:12
to Brazil is the place to be party
56:15
town central.
56:16
The president of Brazil, Lula da Silva greeted
56:18
heads of state from all over the world
56:20
as they arrived for the UN's cop 30
56:22
climate summit in the Brazilian Amazon.
56:25
The leaders from the planet's three biggest polluters,
56:28
China, the U.
56:29
S.
56:29
And India were nowhere to be seen.
56:32
In his opening address, Lula urged countries to
56:34
actively fight against climate disinformation.
56:37
That's the theme for this year's cop 30.
56:39
It's climate disinformation, which, funny enough, is coming
56:43
from themselves.
56:47
Extremist forces fabricate fake news to obtain electoral
56:51
gains and imprison future generations in an outdated
56:55
model that perpetuates social and economic inequalities and
56:59
environmental degradation.
57:02
A message echoed by French President Emmanuel Macron.
57:07
Climate disinformation today threatens our democracies, the Paris
57:11
agenda and therefore our collective security.
57:16
But it's a tough sell when the leader
57:18
of one of the world's largest carbon emitters,
57:20
Donald Trump, is the source of that disinformation,
57:23
climate change, a hoax and a con job
57:26
and refusing to send anyone to the meeting.
57:29
For its part, China will send its deputy
57:31
prime minister, while Argentina's president, a Trump ally,
57:34
has also boycotted the summit.
57:37
In his speech, the U.
57:38
N.
57:38
Secretary General tore into countries for their failure
57:40
to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius,
57:44
a key aim of the 2015 climate summit
57:46
in Paris.
57:47
Every fraction of a degree means more hunger,
57:51
displacement and loss.
57:53
You gotta listen to what he says.
57:55
Every fraction of a degree 2015 climate summit
57:58
in Paris.
57:59
Every fraction of a degree means more hunger,
58:02
displacement and loss, especially for those least responsible.
58:07
It's horrible.
58:07
Every fraction of a degree to climate change.
58:11
Now we know that there's a scandal brewing
58:13
in Denmark, but that doesn't matter because it's
58:15
cop 30.
58:16
We've got to promote killing the cows, man.
58:19
As climate change worsens and fossil fuels run
58:22
out, finding new green energy sources is of
58:24
the essence.
58:25
Oh, wait, this isn't the cows clip.
58:27
This is even funnier.
58:29
The U.
58:29
S.
58:29
A.
58:29
Chemists slash industrialists will like this gambit.
58:33
The world's first large scale e methanol facility
58:36
in Casa Denmark is trying to foster the
58:39
green transition.
58:40
E methanol.
58:41
Do you know what e methanol is?
58:44
E methanol.
58:45
Uh, I'm trying to come up with environmentally
58:48
friendly ethanol.
58:50
Yes.
58:50
And how would you make or methanol?
58:52
How would you make e methanol?
58:53
This is great.
58:55
I was stick a tube up a cow's
58:57
butt.
58:58
That was no, that's wrong.
59:01
E methanol is made using renewable energy by
59:04
splitting a water atom with an electrolyzer and
59:07
then combining the pure hydrogen and a reactor
59:09
tower with biogenic carbon dioxide.
59:12
European Energy, the company that co owns the
59:14
facility, intends for e methanol to be a
59:17
green alternative to traditional methanol.
59:19
So they're doing hydrolysis with solar panels, hydrolysis
59:27
with solar panels and windmills and then some
59:30
cow burps.
59:31
And oh, it's really good.
59:33
This report proves it with fossil fuels.
59:36
The world market today is 100 million tons
59:38
of methanol.
59:40
And part of the consumers of that wants
59:43
to green their supply chain.
59:45
So it can be in shipping for fuel,
59:48
which is actually new for methanol, even an
59:50
additional use of methanol.
59:52
Decarbonizing the shipping sector, which has grown to
59:54
account for about 3% of global emissions,
59:57
is a focus for global leaders and an
59:58
issue set to be discussed at COP 30
1:00:01
in Belém, Brazil on Monday.
1:00:03
E methanol could help green the industry by
1:00:05
replacing the large amount of fossil fuels used
1:00:07
by vessels to transport cargo across the globe.
1:00:10
European Energy CEO Eric Anderson says the company
1:00:14
expects price parity with fossil fuels by 2030.
1:00:18
Even so, the facility's current e methanol production
1:00:20
capacity is 40,000 tons annually, a ways
1:00:24
away from replacing the 100 million ton global
1:00:26
market for methanol.
1:00:28
40,000 tons, but we only need 100
1:00:32
million thousand tons by by 2030.
1:00:35
We can make it boys will be able
1:00:36
to make it no worries.
1:00:38
Bring and crank up the windmills.
1:00:40
Because of course what's happening now is now
1:00:42
that COP 30 is taking place.
1:00:44
This is the money summit.
1:00:46
This is where everybody puts their proposals in.
1:00:49
I need some money for my research.
1:00:52
I need some money for my e methanol.
1:00:54
It's a big money suck.
1:00:57
And here's the killing the cows clip.
1:00:58
When cows eat the grass ferments in their
1:01:01
stomachs and produces methane.
1:01:03
Methane is over 80 times stronger than carbon
1:01:06
dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere in
1:01:09
the short term.
1:01:11
A single cow can release more than 100
1:01:13
kilos of methane a year now multiplied by
1:01:17
the world's billion cows and the number gets
1:01:20
wild due to climate change.
1:01:23
The number gets wild everybody.
1:01:26
But scientists are testing fixes like seaweed feed,
1:01:30
which in some trials has cut methane by
1:01:33
up to 80% garlic additives have also
1:01:36
been found to change a cow's gut microbes
1:01:38
and reduce gas production.
1:01:40
So get to the point get to the
1:01:42
point you really want to sell us.
1:01:44
And then there are even cow vaccines to
1:01:46
block methane making microbes in the stomach solutions
1:01:50
scale up the payoff could be massive dead
1:01:53
cows cutting methane from livestock is one of
1:01:56
the fastest ways to slow global warming.
1:01:59
releasing wind can be pretty funny.
1:02:01
Sure.
1:02:01
But from cows, they are no laughing matter.
1:02:05
I mean, yes, this will work.
1:02:07
This will absolutely work.
1:02:09
If you kill the cows with your silly
1:02:11
vaccine, there will be less methane in the
1:02:14
in the atmosphere.
1:02:16
Absolutely.
1:02:17
So that that's the vaccine guys.
1:02:19
So I'm so I since I'm where I'm
1:02:21
sitting in this office, you see, I have
1:02:23
an overview of a freeway.
1:02:25
Yeah.
1:02:26
And there are 1000s and 1000s and 1000s
1:02:29
and 1000s and 1000s of cars that go
1:02:31
by all pumping out, you know, moderate amount
1:02:34
of co2 out the tailpipe.
1:02:36
Yes.
1:02:37
And I'm thinking I haven't seen a cow
1:02:39
for months.
1:02:40
But yet somehow the cows are going to
1:02:42
be response.
1:02:43
This is a bunch of vegan meat haters.
1:02:47
Yes.
1:02:48
blaming the cows for no change when there's
1:02:51
no such thing as bullcrap.
1:02:53
No, this is the vaccine people trying to
1:02:55
make money, right?
1:02:56
There's that too.
1:02:57
Okay, we have a combination of lethal cons
1:02:59
of the lethal combination of vegans and vaxxers.
1:03:04
It's unbelievable want to just give the vaccines
1:03:06
to the vegans.
1:03:09
There's a solution that I saw a bird
1:03:12
today.
1:03:18
Everybody's talking about the bird.
1:03:20
Okay.
1:03:21
So if you're a scientist, how I need
1:03:24
more money for my research.
1:03:26
I need I need more money for my
1:03:29
research.
1:03:30
I must come up with a term that
1:03:32
gets me money for my research.
1:03:35
Put it into a report for me, please.
1:03:37
2025 has not been a good year for
1:03:40
glaciers.
1:03:41
A series of reports all appear to confirm
1:03:43
that climate change is melting these bodies of
1:03:46
ice at an alarming rate.
1:03:48
Since 2000.
1:03:49
The world has lost more than 7 trillion
1:03:51
tons of ice from mountain glaciers.
1:03:53
Signs of melting evident here on the Italian
1:03:56
side of the mont blanc.
1:03:58
Now see if you can if you can
1:04:00
spot the term the scientists is going to
1:04:04
use to get more money for research.
1:04:08
We have observed over the years is that
1:04:10
the glacier is slowing down.
1:04:13
And this is a sign that there is
1:04:14
less input of mass to the glacier from
1:04:18
snowfall.
1:04:19
Now scientists are rushing to recover.
1:04:23
Don't worry.
1:04:24
Where the ice has created a natural archive
1:04:27
full of important information about rainfall, volcanic eruptions,
1:04:32
and other climate events.
1:04:34
So the point is that because the glaciers
1:04:37
are melting, we're losing it.
1:04:40
We're losing history.
1:04:41
Yes, we're losing critical data.
1:04:43
But what can happen as the warming progresses,
1:04:47
he will have very hot summers even up
1:04:49
there will very hot meaning above the melting
1:04:52
point of ice, which means that water can
1:04:55
percolate into the firm, that's the compacted snow
1:05:00
that is on top of the of the
1:05:03
firm ice, and and therefore contaminate the climate
1:05:07
signals.
1:05:09
It's a critical mission to secure the first
1:05:12
the climate signals john climates is we're losing
1:05:17
climate put a Boeing right after the word
1:05:20
you wanted me to identify.
1:05:21
Yeah, I kind of did that.
1:05:22
Yes, kind of did that.
1:05:23
It's the climate signals.
1:05:25
But you know what, let's get Japan in
1:05:28
on this scam because they're there.
1:05:30
Everyone's at the COP 30 except for America,
1:05:33
Russia and China, arc and India.
1:05:36
Oh, India.
1:05:37
I think India sent a dude though.
1:05:41
I think they sent a dude a representative
1:05:42
climate represent climate dude.
1:05:44
And I sent somebody and I think China
1:05:46
also sent a dude, but an insignificant dude.
1:05:49
Because you know, all the all the big
1:05:51
wigs are there.
1:05:52
Anyway, Japan.
1:05:54
Ah, we got a problem with climate change,
1:05:57
holes in walls, chairs scattered about refrigerator doors
1:06:02
ripped from their hinges.
1:06:04
This is the aftermath of a bear probably
1:06:06
looking for food in a hot spring onsen
1:06:08
in northern Japan.
1:06:09
The authority like this all the time at
1:06:12
the climate summit.
1:06:12
Is it a library?
1:06:14
And they have to speak like this when
1:06:16
they talk about Oh, oh, we're talking about
1:06:18
climate.
1:06:18
So we have to be quiet.
1:06:19
It's very, very serious business.
1:06:22
You know, this is about death of the
1:06:23
entire planets.
1:06:25
But in Japan, the authorities killed it soon
1:06:27
after the ins owner called the authorities.
1:06:30
This 68 year old was taken by surprise
1:06:32
when he opened his garage and he found
1:06:34
a bear sitting inside a bear.
1:06:38
It's over for me.
1:06:39
This is how I'm going to die.
1:06:41
I thought that I was going to be
1:06:43
killed by that bear.
1:06:45
This map shows the number of non fatal
1:06:46
bear attacks in yellow and bear attack deaths
1:06:49
in red.
1:06:50
With a stark uptick in October.
1:06:52
We've got a bear attack map going bleep
1:06:54
bleep bleep bleep bleep.
1:06:55
A record setting 13 people have died in
1:06:57
bear attacks since April, more than doubling the
1:07:00
previous record set in 2023.
1:07:02
More than 100 people have been wounded in
1:07:04
attacks across the country.
1:07:06
According to experts, a warming climate has produced
1:07:08
an abundance of food for bears in the
1:07:10
mountains, creating an ideal environment for them to
1:07:12
thrive due to climate change.
1:07:14
It's all climate change.
1:07:16
Everything is believable.
1:07:18
You're gonna be killed with this for the
1:07:19
next week.
1:07:21
I think the way it was interesting to
1:07:23
me is that the same time they're reporting,
1:07:25
even though not all the networks are doing
1:07:27
it, they're reporting that because of this cold
1:07:29
snap that's coming in from the Arctic, that's
1:07:33
gonna hit us, you know, this week is
1:07:35
hitting us now.
1:07:35
A lot of people aren't listening to what
1:07:37
it's called.
1:07:38
The isn't it?
1:07:39
No, it's not the bomb.
1:07:40
It's the now something else.
1:07:42
But whatever it's whatever it is, they've now
1:07:44
predicting 200 year records are gonna be broken
1:07:48
for all time lows.
1:07:49
How does that work?
1:07:51
Well, it's due to climate change, climate change.
1:07:55
Don't you understand anything?
1:07:59
And then amidst all of this, the people
1:08:02
who actually get it right, they're going out
1:08:06
of business.
1:08:07
After more than two centuries, the farmers almanac
1:08:10
announcing it is ending production after the 2026
1:08:14
edition.
1:08:15
That's after it releases.
1:08:16
The publication says rising costs and a changing
1:08:19
media landscape made it impossible to keep going.
1:08:22
The website will also slowly shut down along
1:08:25
with its social media posts.
1:08:28
Staff say they're thankful for the sport that
1:08:30
they've had over the years, and they are
1:08:31
proud of the legacy they leave behind.
1:08:33
This is a travesty.
1:08:36
Yeah, not to mention it.
1:08:37
The farmers almanac was it was the last
1:08:40
time you bought what copy?
1:08:42
Probably there's reason.
1:08:44
This is what happens when when people neglect
1:08:47
things like the farmers almanac or even the
1:08:49
no agenda show for that matter.
1:08:50
Yeah.
1:08:51
And they just take it for granted.
1:08:53
Oh, there it is.
1:08:54
Yeah, it's predicting the weather again.
1:08:55
And there you have it.
1:08:56
No, blah, blah, blah.
1:08:57
And there they go out of business because
1:08:59
you didn't buy a copy.
1:09:00
Well, I feel really bad now.
1:09:02
You should.
1:09:04
What?
1:09:04
Let me see what?
1:09:06
Let me see.
1:09:07
Because I think, yeah, there's a 20.
1:09:09
So we should buy the 20.
1:09:11
If everyone on mass buys the 2026 almanac,
1:09:14
they might be able to keep the website
1:09:17
going.
1:09:18
Well, I think we should all buy a
1:09:19
copy.
1:09:20
Let me see.
1:09:21
$4.79 people.
1:09:24
It's cheap.
1:09:24
No wonder they went out of business.
1:09:26
It should have been eight bucks by now.
1:09:29
Well, the real problem is that they only
1:09:31
released they didn't release it.
1:09:32
Did that risk every year?
1:09:33
The farmers?
1:09:34
Yeah, they did.
1:09:35
Yeah.
1:09:37
Yeah, they should have farmers almanac monthly.
1:09:41
Well, their website is no good.
1:09:43
I mean, they should have done V for
1:09:46
V, baby.
1:09:48
They should have value for value.
1:09:50
But yeah, you're right.
1:09:51
Your point is well made is because everyone
1:09:53
just kind of expected the news to tell
1:09:56
us what the farmers almanac said.
1:09:57
And we didn't support them.
1:09:59
I mean, me included.
1:10:00
I stick my hand on my own breasts.
1:10:03
Me included.
1:10:05
Now they're going away.
1:10:07
And who are the people behind it?
1:10:11
Work?
1:10:13
They're they're FAA controllers.
1:10:15
Was it farmers?
1:10:18
There was a farmer involved.
1:10:20
Asking for a friend.
1:10:22
Yeah.
1:10:22
So yeah, so that will be will be
1:10:25
absolutely obliterated with this nonsense for the next
1:10:28
next next week, at least at least.
1:10:32
So some ice couple ice clips.
1:10:35
Yeah, the ice thing is I do have
1:10:38
some local boots on the ground stuff about
1:10:40
the ice stuff.
1:10:41
Oh, good.
1:10:41
Well, let's get to that.
1:10:42
Right.
1:10:42
These clips are interesting.
1:10:44
This is the wild ice.
1:10:46
There's a kick.
1:10:47
This wild ice app to get some apps
1:10:50
they're using.
1:10:50
And everyone was stunned by these apps.
1:10:52
Yeah.
1:10:53
Oh, this thing's crazy, crazy things in this
1:10:56
app that like, you know, do facial recognition.
1:11:00
And it's just a scandal as immigration and
1:11:03
Customs Enforcement.
1:11:05
I forgot.
1:11:06
Yeah, it says SS on there means Scott
1:11:08
Simon.
1:11:08
Well, how I mean, okay, that is that
1:11:11
now the code?
1:11:11
Is that the I'm sorry, I should have.
1:11:14
I've been doing this for a while with
1:11:15
the code, but I forgot to tell you
1:11:16
the suffering succotash.
1:11:18
I'm Scott.
1:11:22
Sorry, that's my fault.
1:11:23
Simon, as immigration and Customs Enforcement or ice
1:11:27
strive to deport more immigrants, it is increasing
1:11:29
its surveillance tools.
1:11:31
Critics warn these new technologies can violate privacy
1:11:35
and civil liberties.
1:11:37
And as Jude Jaffe block joins us now,
1:11:39
Jude, thanks so much for being with us.
1:11:41
Thank you.
1:11:41
What are some of the tools that ice
1:11:44
agents are using these days?
1:11:46
Well, they've got new contracts to monitor social
1:11:48
media and help find people's locations.
1:11:51
He wanted to overrun us and poison us
1:11:53
and take our families.
1:11:54
I says also revived a contract with a
1:11:57
company called Paragon Solutions, which is known for
1:12:00
making spyware that can hack into cell phones.
1:12:03
We're all gonna die.
1:12:04
But one big thing that's new is an
1:12:06
app ice and Border Patrol agents have in
1:12:09
the field.
1:12:10
Social media videos show they're using it to
1:12:12
scan people's faces during encounters on the street.
1:12:15
No way.
1:12:16
Are you an idiot?
1:12:17
In an attempt to identify them and figure
1:12:19
out if they're deportable.
1:12:21
Jude, how does this app work?
1:12:23
Well, there's still a lot that's unknown.
1:12:25
But one of these videos that was first
1:12:26
reported by 404 media was shot outside of
1:12:29
Chicago, and you see Border Patrol agents approaching
1:12:33
two young people.
1:12:39
Young man filming the encounter says he doesn't
1:12:41
have I.
1:12:42
D.
1:12:42
And then the agent turns to his colleague
1:12:44
and asks, Can you do facial?
1:12:46
Can you do facial?
1:12:48
He says, and his colleague pulls out his
1:12:50
phone and holds it up and appears to
1:12:52
scan his face, though it's possibly took a
1:12:53
photo.
1:12:54
The video was posted by someone claiming to
1:12:56
be the cousin of one of the boys
1:12:58
who was stopped.
1:12:59
The poster didn't respond to a request about
1:13:01
the post, but NPR was able to verify
1:13:03
exactly what the video was about.
1:13:04
It was a video of a young man
1:13:04
who was taken.
1:13:05
We did get a statement from ice, and
1:13:07
they didn't answer questions about this app, but
1:13:10
said nothing new here.
1:13:11
For years, law enforcement across the nation has
1:13:14
leveraged technological innovations to fight crime.
1:13:17
Yeah, I do have a problem with this.
1:13:20
I mean, we could make fun of it,
1:13:21
but we do live in a constitutional republic
1:13:27
where papers please.
1:13:28
And if you don't give your papers, you
1:13:30
get a facial is not cool.
1:13:33
I'm against that.
1:13:35
I don't care what's going on.
1:13:38
Yeah, well, they have the, you know, you
1:13:41
ask for your driver's license all the time.
1:13:43
You have to have a light.
1:13:45
You know, you have to have real I.
1:13:47
D.
1:13:47
To get a plane.
1:13:49
Yes, I know.
1:13:50
And then somebody's got a guy in front
1:13:52
of you that you want to deport.
1:13:54
You want to I think my voice you're
1:13:57
choking up, man.
1:13:58
You're falling apart.
1:13:59
You're choking up, not choking up.
1:14:01
I'm choked.
1:14:03
And so they take a picture of the
1:14:05
guy's face and it shows up as who
1:14:06
it is.
1:14:07
I mean, we've been watching.
1:14:08
We've been primed for this.
1:14:09
If you watch television mysteries and dramas over
1:14:13
the last five years, we've been primed for
1:14:16
it.
1:14:17
Here's the problem.
1:14:18
And they do it on Facebook.
1:14:20
Yeah, that's the problem.
1:14:22
It's like you should not have a Facebook
1:14:24
profile.
1:14:25
This is problem number one.
1:14:27
I don't even have a Facebook account.
1:14:29
Do you?
1:14:30
No, I gave mine up at least 11
1:14:32
years ago.
1:14:34
At least.
1:14:36
And people still it's it's amazing that people
1:14:38
still send me, hey, you got to see
1:14:40
this post.
1:14:41
And it's Facebook.
1:14:42
And I can't see the post was actually,
1:14:45
you know, recently, I don't know when this
1:14:47
started.
1:14:47
Sometimes you can you got to click the
1:14:49
Facebook login thing.
1:14:52
But then if you scroll, then right away
1:14:54
pops up.
1:14:55
Oh, yeah, if you scroll, but if it's
1:14:56
just a video, you can see it.
1:14:59
That's true.
1:15:00
That's true.
1:15:03
Anyway, we'll play the second clip.
1:15:04
And then the second clip hasn't got no
1:15:07
gimmicks.
1:15:07
It is no gimmicks.
1:15:08
It's gimmick free.
1:15:09
Do we know if this technology except for
1:15:11
Scott Simon, which is gimmick by itself?
1:15:14
Do we know if this technology can be
1:15:16
used to identify essentially everybody?
1:15:19
U.S. citizens?
1:15:21
Well, a group of Democratic senators has been
1:15:23
trying to get answers to that question and
1:15:25
others about this app since September, but haven't
1:15:29
gotten them from ice.
1:15:30
They've called on ice to stop using this
1:15:32
technology and reiterated that demand.
1:15:34
On Monday, my colleague Martin Casti spoke to
1:15:37
Democratic Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey.
1:15:40
This type of on demand surveillance is harrowing
1:15:43
and it should put all of us on
1:15:46
guard.
1:15:46
It chills speech.
1:15:47
It erodes privacy.
1:15:48
It ultimately undermines our democracy.
1:15:52
He expressed concern that this tool could be
1:15:54
used against people who criticize the government or
1:15:56
protesters.
1:15:57
What safeguards exist to try to ensure that
1:16:01
these technologies are not abused?
1:16:03
Well, I asked that to ice and DHS
1:16:04
and we didn't hear back.
1:16:06
I also spoke with legal and privacy experts
1:16:08
who told me that our current legal and
1:16:10
regulatory framework just isn't robust enough to ensure
1:16:13
that these kinds of new tools are used
1:16:15
with the appropriate oversight and accountability that's really
1:16:17
needed.
1:16:18
Emily Tucker is with Georgetown Law School Center
1:16:21
on Privacy and Technology.
1:16:23
Immigration powers are being used to justify mass
1:16:26
surveillance of everybody.
1:16:28
And she says it's a mistake to think
1:16:29
this doesn't affect every one of us.
1:16:31
Okay, so my opinion remains the same.
1:16:33
And yes, I'm okay with tools, tools for
1:16:38
immigration, but there's here's the process.
1:16:41
This needs to be very clear who can
1:16:43
use this and under what circumstances.
1:16:47
Just so if you're pulled over, then showing
1:16:51
your driver's license, which you don't even have
1:16:53
to hand off, I don't think technically you
1:16:55
can just hold it against the glass.
1:16:57
But you can also try doing that in
1:17:00
Texas.
1:17:01
It will work in Texas.
1:17:03
It will work in Texas.
1:17:04
Just give them your license.
1:17:06
What difference does it make?
1:17:08
Yeah, listen, you have less road ahead of
1:17:10
you than you have behind you.
1:17:12
But there's a lot of young people.
1:17:14
I don't want them living in a society
1:17:16
where cops just come up to you and
1:17:18
just scan your face to see who you
1:17:19
are.
1:17:19
I don't want that.
1:17:20
I don't.
1:17:22
Now, what's the problem with the immigration enforcement
1:17:25
right now in our sleepy little town of
1:17:28
Fredericksburg?
1:17:29
20 minutes, 15 minutes up the road, we
1:17:31
have boot ranch, boot ranch, you should look
1:17:34
it up, boot ranch, poor house.
1:17:36
No boot ranch is a gated community.
1:17:40
I don't know how many houses a lot
1:17:42
of houses that you cannot buy a house
1:17:44
there for under $2 million.
1:17:46
Most of them are three to $7 million.
1:17:49
It's crazy.
1:17:50
They got private golf course and everything.
1:17:52
It's fine.
1:17:52
But it's perfect.
1:17:54
But they have maid service.
1:17:58
And this is how I know about it.
1:18:00
Because the maids stop showing up.
1:18:02
You know why?
1:18:03
Because ICE came into Fredericksburg and they're not
1:18:06
looking for criminals.
1:18:08
They're just looking for numbers.
1:18:09
Like we got to have numbers.
1:18:11
We have quotas.
1:18:12
We got to arrest people.
1:18:14
And yeah, guess what?
1:18:15
A lot of the maids who have been
1:18:17
here maybe 20 years, they've been arrested and
1:18:20
deported.
1:18:21
So they're not just kicking out.
1:18:24
They weren't technically arrested.
1:18:27
No, they wouldn't.
1:18:28
What do you mean they were taken into
1:18:29
custody?
1:18:30
Yeah, but that's different than being arrested.
1:18:32
Oh, be a dick about it.
1:18:33
You know what I mean?
1:18:34
No, I'm not being a dick about him.
1:18:35
He's trying to your words matter.
1:18:37
You're the one that says that all the
1:18:38
time.
1:18:42
So they have been deported.
1:18:45
Yeah.
1:18:46
And yes, they were here illegally.
1:18:49
But this is no longer just looking for
1:18:51
criminals.
1:18:51
There's there are ICE patrols.
1:18:55
I understand why people get freaked out about
1:18:57
this, particularly in Boot Ranch, because who's going
1:18:59
to clean their homes?
1:19:00
And this is a real problem.
1:19:01
Poor people.
1:19:03
Yeah.
1:19:04
But, you know, it's it's gotten a little
1:19:07
bit beyond we're kicking out criminals.
1:19:10
They're just doing quotas now.
1:19:11
Chicago, I don't know.
1:19:13
But when you're in Fredericksburg trolling for for
1:19:16
cleaners, which Yeah, you're going to find a
1:19:19
lot of that.
1:19:20
And yes, they should be replaced by American
1:19:22
citizens.
1:19:23
But, you know, when you're just walking around
1:19:25
and face scanning everybody, it's I don't like
1:19:30
it.
1:19:31
Well, you should be like this woman, then.
1:19:35
This is the talk anti-constitution said Jen
1:19:39
Zetter.
1:19:40
All right, here's my hot take of today.
1:19:42
I don't think that a society governed by
1:19:44
a document that was written in the seventeen
1:19:46
hundreds by a bunch of drunk white guys
1:19:48
in their 20s who couldn't even conceive of
1:19:49
the existence of the majority of the United
1:19:51
States of America should be used to this
1:19:54
day.
1:19:55
And I don't think that we are going
1:19:56
to have a successful society until we get
1:19:58
rid of the thing and restart because the
1:20:00
founding fathers could not have conceived of my
1:20:02
existence.
1:20:03
They just could not have.
1:20:05
They couldn't conceive of it.
1:20:06
Their brains would have exploded.
1:20:07
So how could that document possibly serve me?
1:20:11
How could it?
1:20:11
We need a new one.
1:20:12
We need to restart.
1:20:13
We need to start over.
1:20:14
This one's trash.
1:20:16
We need to revamp it and get a
1:20:17
new one.
1:20:18
Well, going from what I said to what
1:20:21
she says and saying I should be like
1:20:23
her is rude and just uncalled for.
1:20:26
There's no psychological.
1:20:28
That's OK, because I'm not a baby like
1:20:30
you and whine about it.
1:20:31
I just tell you.
1:20:32
And by the way, I just tell you
1:20:34
straight up.
1:20:35
And by the way, they the founding fathers
1:20:38
were aware of people like her.
1:20:41
Yeah, they were called witches.
1:20:44
I was right there with you.
1:20:46
But this but all of this facial recognition
1:20:50
and digital identity, this is really happening.
1:20:55
Although in France, they're kind of downplaying it
1:20:57
right now because there was a bit of
1:20:58
a fracas.
1:20:59
I got a Euronews debunk report, although sounds
1:21:04
like it could kind of happen anyway.
1:21:06
A claim is circulating online that France is
1:21:08
entering an era of total traceability amid allegations
1:21:12
that the country's digital ID will be directly
1:21:15
tied to personal social media accounts.
1:21:17
This post on X says that the measure
1:21:19
would on paper allow authorities to fight against
1:21:22
the bad guys, but that unofficially it would
1:21:25
be one more step towards a society where
1:21:28
words and opinions are policed.
1:21:30
It attaches a video of Paul Midi, a
1:21:32
member of the French Parliament and of President
1:21:35
Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance Party, giving an interview in
1:21:38
which he says that the measure would prevent
1:21:40
complete anonymity online to help tackle impunity for
1:21:43
online harassment and other illegality.
1:21:46
However, the caption is wrong.
1:21:48
While French MPs did consider linking the digital
1:21:50
ID to citizen social media, these proposals were
1:21:53
rejected, and the country is not currently poised
1:21:56
to introduce the measure.
1:21:57
The idea first emerged in 2023, as part
1:22:00
of the discussion on the law aimed at
1:22:02
securing and regulating the digital space or SREN
1:22:06
law.
1:22:06
At the time, Midi and others tabled an
1:22:09
amendment that would have required a certification by
1:22:11
a state-approved third party, such as the
1:22:14
digital ID, when creating new accounts on social
1:22:17
media.
1:22:18
The video of Midi attached to the social
1:22:19
media post is from an interview with French
1:22:22
radio station RTL.
1:22:23
It's around the time that politicians were discussing
1:22:26
the proposed amendment, so it's not new.
1:22:28
Ultimately, the amendment faced fierce opposition and was
1:22:31
withdrawn, and the final law came into force
1:22:34
in May 2024 without the measure linking digital
1:22:37
IDs with social media accounts.
1:22:39
As things stand, the digital ID can be
1:22:42
used to verify someone's age when creating a
1:22:44
social media account, for example, but you're not
1:22:47
required to do so, and the digital ID
1:22:49
is not automatically linked to your social media
1:22:52
accounts.
1:22:53
Yeah, I give them one year before that's
1:22:55
required in Europe.
1:22:56
One year max.
1:22:59
That is definitely happening, because they have the
1:23:02
digital ID.
1:23:03
Everybody's got digital ID in Europe, and the
1:23:06
BRIT card, it's going to be tied to
1:23:10
it.
1:23:11
I wish I'd, now I'm irked that I
1:23:13
didn't get this clip of this French woman
1:23:16
who's floating around, attractive lady, floating around telling
1:23:20
people to, some guy got arrested in France
1:23:22
for posting, this is getting like England, posting
1:23:25
pictures of a bunch of migrants just hanging
1:23:27
around, you know, the bakery and, you know,
1:23:30
harassing ladies, and got thrown in jail, this
1:23:34
guy, for posting it.
1:23:36
And so she came out with a video
1:23:37
saying we got to start posting this stuff,
1:23:39
because it's bullcrap what's going on.
1:23:42
But digital ID and facial recognition out of
1:23:45
the blue is different.
1:23:46
Yeah, it's different, but it's all going to
1:23:51
be tied together.
1:23:52
Palantir, man, don't you know, don't you know
1:23:54
Palantir?
1:23:54
Palantir's going to do it.
1:23:55
Palantir, Elon Musk or Palantir, Peter Thiel, they're
1:24:01
all going to kill us.
1:24:02
And they might, they just might.
1:24:06
Hackers will save the day.
1:24:09
Okay.
1:24:11
Meanwhile, oh boy, we've got another drone scaring
1:24:15
people in Brussels.
1:24:18
They're showing video, literally a drone with red
1:24:21
blinking lights saying, I'm a drone.
1:24:24
I'm a drone.
1:24:25
Brussels Zaventem airport is still feeling the aftershock
1:24:29
of Tuesday's drone sightings, which forced the city's
1:24:32
main airport to close and left dozens of
1:24:35
flights grounded.
1:24:36
The country's defense minister told local media that
1:24:40
the incident appeared to be carried out by
1:24:41
professionals intent on destabilizing the country.
1:24:45
All departing and arriving flights Professionals.
1:24:48
I mean, I don't understand a drone.
1:24:51
Someone's flies a drone with a red flashing
1:24:53
light.
1:24:54
It's not, it's not a Reaper drone.
1:24:56
It's just a drone flying around the airport,
1:24:59
which should of course be completely illegal.
1:25:02
Jokers is some teenagers.
1:25:03
Yeah, but the payoff is in the report.
1:25:06
Intent on destabilizing the country.
1:25:08
All departing and arriving flights were temporarily suspended,
1:25:12
forcing hundreds of passengers to spend the night
1:25:14
at the airport, Lees airport used principally as
1:25:18
a cargo hub was also closed due to
1:25:20
drone sightings on Tuesday.
1:25:22
Both airports have now reopened, but officials have
1:25:25
warned that disruptions are expected to continue and
1:25:28
that passengers should be prepared for delays.
1:25:31
Both NATO and the European Union have been
1:25:33
on high alert recently following a string of
1:25:36
airspace violations thought to be carried out by
1:25:39
Russia.
1:25:40
Of course it's Russia, but this is Russia,
1:25:46
but this is no longer drones, a red
1:25:48
flashing light.
1:25:49
That's why.
1:25:50
Yes, but it's no longer drones.
1:25:51
It's hybrid.
1:25:52
This is what we call this.
1:25:54
This is hybrid.
1:25:55
It's hybrid.
1:25:56
And when you're talking hybrid, there is no
1:25:58
one better.
1:25:59
But Mark Ritter to come in and tell
1:26:01
you about the hybrid.
1:26:02
Well, you know, when it comes to two
1:26:04
hybrids and the word is a bit strange,
1:26:06
it's a very strange word.
1:26:08
Because on the hybrid, we have seen assassination
1:26:09
attempts.
1:26:10
We have seen the assassination attempts at John.
1:26:14
Have you seen an assassination attempt in a
1:26:16
hybrid?
1:26:18
Who was except for Trump and Charlie Kirk
1:26:21
was not an attempt was the real one.
1:26:23
In some countries, the jamming of commercial airplanes,
1:26:27
jamming of commercial planes with commercial ever jammed.
1:26:31
Which ones?
1:26:32
Oh, Ursula's.
1:26:33
Okay.
1:26:34
Which could pose great risks, of course, commercial
1:26:38
aviation.
1:26:39
Yes.
1:26:40
We assume an attack on the NHS in
1:26:42
the United Kingdom.
1:26:43
What attack on the NHS in the United
1:26:45
Kingdom?
1:26:46
I don't have the report.
1:26:47
Do you know it?
1:26:49
Can I ask a question?
1:26:50
Yes.
1:26:53
We have people that can hit a target
1:26:56
at, oh, I don't know, 600 yards, you
1:26:59
know, with a scope and the laser spotting
1:27:03
gear.
1:27:06
Why can't we just shoot?
1:27:07
Why don't we have just one sharpshooter at
1:27:10
the airport?
1:27:11
These things aren't that high up.
1:27:13
They're not at 30,000 feet.
1:27:15
You are missing the point, man.
1:27:16
And just shoot the drone.
1:27:18
I don't understand why they let these drones
1:27:21
fly around.
1:27:22
We might need to make the people scared.
1:27:25
Don't you understand this to make the people
1:27:27
scared?
1:27:28
So I don't like the word hybrids.
1:27:30
I do.
1:27:31
I love it.
1:27:31
Okay.
1:27:31
It is.
1:27:32
It is the, uh, uh, it is the
1:27:34
accepted language.
1:27:35
Okay.
1:27:36
It is the birds.
1:27:36
We're just going to, the bird is the
1:27:38
birds.
1:27:38
We use the hybrids.
1:27:39
Clearly, this is something where within NATO and
1:27:42
within our allies, we are working extremely actively
1:27:45
to make sure that.
1:27:46
Oh yes.
1:27:47
We are on the case.
1:27:48
People, NATO is good.
1:27:50
Get your money ready.
1:27:51
Get your tax money ready.
1:27:52
It's all good.
1:27:53
We counter whatever is necessary.
1:27:55
I mean, you take, for example, the situation,
1:27:59
uh, Christmas time last year when the undersea
1:28:01
seacale was cut between Estonia and Finland, we
1:28:07
immediately launched a Baltic Sentry.
1:28:09
And that was launched to make sure that
1:28:14
we would be able to use in the
1:28:15
latest technologies, et cetera, to, to counter what
1:28:18
happened there.
1:28:18
So sometimes it is big, what we do.
1:28:20
Sometimes it is smaller.
1:28:22
Sometimes you cannot see it.
1:28:23
Sometimes it is invisible what we do with
1:28:26
your money.
1:28:27
It's complete.
1:28:28
Don't worry.
1:28:29
It's good.
1:28:29
What we're doing with your tax money.
1:28:31
It's invisible.
1:28:32
But we are working very hard collectively to
1:28:35
make sure that we defend against any threat,
1:28:38
including hybrid threats.
1:28:39
And Russia.
1:28:40
And Russia.
1:28:41
It's always about Russia.
1:28:42
Oh man, these guys.
1:28:48
So Orban, Orban was at the white house,
1:28:52
the president of Hungary.
1:28:54
And this was, this was really interesting because
1:28:58
I'm confused now.
1:29:00
What power does the president have?
1:29:02
Because Hungary is a part of the EU,
1:29:05
no?
1:29:05
Yes.
1:29:05
They're part of the EU.
1:29:07
They are an EU country.
1:29:08
And NATO too.
1:29:09
Yes.
1:29:10
So, but somehow the president of the United
1:29:12
States has jurisdiction over their use of Russian
1:29:16
oil.
1:29:17
I'm a little confused about this.
1:29:19
It was smiles and compliments as U.S.
1:29:21
president Trump welcomed Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban.
1:29:24
Meeting in Washington, the two men discussed economic
1:29:26
cooperation and Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
1:29:29
And just weeks after imposing what Trump called
1:29:32
tremendous sanctions on Russian oil and gas, the
1:29:35
U.S. president has given Hungary a one
1:29:37
-year exemption.
1:29:38
Orban, who's a longtime Trump ally and critic
1:29:40
of Western support for Ukraine, made his case
1:29:43
and welcomed the decision.
1:29:44
It is not possible to secure Hungary's energy
1:29:47
supply and to provide affordable energy to Hungarian
1:29:49
families and businesses if sanctions continue to be
1:29:52
imposed on two key pipelines.
1:29:55
We looked at the issue and we asked
1:29:56
the president to lift the sanctions.
1:29:58
We asked for two pipelines to be exempted
1:30:00
from all sanctions.
1:30:02
International monetary fund figures show Hungary relied on
1:30:05
Russia for 74 percent of its gas and
1:30:08
86 percent of its oil in 2024.
1:30:11
It warned that an EU-wide cutoff of
1:30:13
Russian natural gas alone could force output losses
1:30:16
in Hungary exceeding four percent of GDP.
1:30:18
Trump agreed that Hungary needed reprieve from the
1:30:21
sanctions because of its landlocked position.
1:30:24
He also accused other European countries of buying
1:30:26
Russian oil and gas for years.
1:30:28
It's a great country.
1:30:29
It's a big country, but they don't have
1:30:30
sea.
1:30:31
They don't have the ports.
1:30:33
And so they have a difficult problem.
1:30:35
But when you look at what's happened with
1:30:37
Europe, many of those countries, they don't have
1:30:39
those problems.
1:30:40
And they buy a lot of oil and
1:30:42
gas from Russia.
1:30:43
And as they know, I'm very disturbed by
1:30:45
that because we're helping them.
1:30:47
Shortly before Friday's exemption announcement, Ukraine's President Zelensky
1:30:51
said they cannot let Russia profit from energy
1:30:53
and said they would find a way to
1:30:55
ensure no Russian oil was in Europe.
1:30:58
How does the president of the United States
1:30:59
get to exempt Hungary from from taking Russian
1:31:06
energy through the pipelines?
1:31:08
Is that our sanctions?
1:31:10
Well, no, but Europe has sanctions.
1:31:13
We don't have sanctions on Europe other than
1:31:16
we'll put tariffs on you.
1:31:18
Is it is it exemption from our tariffs
1:31:19
on that?
1:31:21
What, Hungarian salami?
1:31:23
What do we get?
1:31:25
What do we get from Hungary?
1:31:27
Yeah, that's a good question.
1:31:29
There's got to be something from Hungary.
1:31:31
Probably get something from them, you know.
1:31:36
It's just that we run in the show.
1:31:38
I don't know.
1:31:39
You know, this is not a shock to
1:31:40
you.
1:31:41
I was just I was just curious.
1:31:43
It's like maybe the Israelis told us to
1:31:46
do this.
1:31:47
Yeah.
1:31:48
Hey, Scott Besant was on with George Stephanopoulos
1:31:51
this morning.
1:31:53
And I thought it was kind of a
1:31:54
fun exchange.
1:31:57
Because Scott Besant, he can he can get
1:32:00
in people's faces.
1:32:01
Have you noticed this?
1:32:03
He does it in his own with his
1:32:04
own style.
1:32:05
It's a he's a stylizer.
1:32:07
He had a stylist.
1:32:09
He does it.
1:32:11
He's very calm.
1:32:12
He's a stylist.
1:32:14
She's a stylist in more ways than one.
1:32:17
And he's quite calm and he's sharp witted.
1:32:22
And yeah, I think I think I like
1:32:25
Rubio style the best.
1:32:27
Yes.
1:32:27
Yeah.
1:32:28
Rubio wasn't on the morning shows.
1:32:30
It was Rubio's been out of the picture
1:32:32
for a while for some reason.
1:32:33
And for sure.
1:32:34
Well, he's going to.
1:32:36
Oh, well, while you're talking about that, the
1:32:40
Rubio, the stands are back in the picture.
1:32:43
The stands.
1:32:44
The stands.
1:32:46
The stands.
1:32:46
Yeah.
1:32:47
The stands.
1:32:48
Yeah.
1:32:49
The stands.
1:32:50
Kazakhstan.
1:32:51
Tajikistan stands.
1:32:53
The stands.
1:32:54
And this this is a great little clip.
1:32:56
Well, I've just several issues were on the
1:32:58
table at the summit between U.S. and
1:33:00
several Central Asian heads of state, among them
1:33:03
rare earth minerals, the sale of Boeing airplanes
1:33:05
and the Abraham Accords.
1:33:07
U.S. President Donald Trump announced soon after
1:33:09
that Kazakhstan, the largest country in the region,
1:33:12
would join them this evening.
1:33:14
I'm also delighted to report that Kazakhstan has
1:33:18
officially agreed.
1:33:21
What country, Mr. President?
1:33:23
Kazakhstan, dude, you heard me.
1:33:26
Kazakhstan is joining in.
1:33:28
Delighted to report that Kazakhstan has officially agreed.
1:33:32
And that's official now.
1:33:34
As of about 15 minutes ago, a tremendous
1:33:38
country with a tremendous leader has officially joined
1:33:42
the Abraham Accords.
1:33:44
At first glance, the move seems hollow.
1:33:46
Kazakhstan has had diplomatic relations with Israel for
1:33:49
decades, a contrast to countries such as Morocco
1:33:52
and Bahrain that only opened them up as
1:33:54
part of the accords.
1:33:55
For his part, the Kazakh president said that
1:33:58
before the summit, such cooperation would yield economic
1:34:00
dividends.
1:34:01
After the meeting, he expressed his willingness to
1:34:03
maintain strong relations with Washington.
1:34:06
My political will to seize all those unique
1:34:10
opportunities, and I have no doubts that we
1:34:13
have a very bright future as it comes
1:34:16
to our bilateral cooperation.
1:34:18
It could also be that Central Asian countries
1:34:20
in the meeting, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and
1:34:24
Kyrgyzstan, in addition to their abundance of rare
1:34:27
earth minerals, are sandwiched in between Russia and
1:34:29
China, and the U.S. is vying for
1:34:31
favor over its adversaries.
1:34:33
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has
1:34:35
announced visits to those countries in 2026.
1:34:38
Rubio's going to the stands.
1:34:40
Oh, he should go to the newest stand.
1:34:42
What's the newest stand?
1:34:44
New York-istan.
1:34:48
New York-istan.
1:34:50
I had a boots on the ground report
1:34:54
from W, let me see, WABC, I think.
1:34:59
Let me see.
1:35:00
Yes, ABC New York.
1:35:02
This is the voters, boots on the ground
1:35:06
in Astoria, Queens.
1:35:08
This is Mamdani's home turf.
1:35:11
It looked like a New Year's Eve party,
1:35:13
but this was an election night celebration.
1:35:17
This is citizen app video of overjoyed Zorin
1:35:21
Mamdani supporters who filled 24th Avenue in Astoria
1:35:24
last night to mark the historic results of
1:35:27
a groundbreaking victory.
1:35:29
Young voters, energized by the campaign promises of
1:35:32
a 34-year-old Muslim state assemblyman born
1:35:35
in Uganda, hit the streets to mark the
1:35:38
dawn of a new era.
1:35:40
That's great.
1:35:41
We've got to remember that rundown.
1:35:43
Hold on, let me hear it again.
1:35:44
Young voters, energized by the campaign promises of
1:35:48
a 34-year-old Muslim state assemblyman born
1:35:51
in Uganda, hit the streets to mark the
1:35:54
dawn of a new era in New York
1:35:56
City politics.
1:35:57
I think that it's really amazing that we
1:36:00
have like a nose ring, a movement that
1:36:05
everyone was excited about that was able to
1:36:08
prevail over something that we were all really
1:36:10
worried about.
1:36:11
Mamdani supporters crowded the bohemian hall and beer
1:36:14
garden to watch the election night returns, returns
1:36:16
that quickly confirm what pre-election polls reveal
1:36:19
time and time again.
1:36:21
A sizable lead for the front runner who
1:36:24
saw winning projections about an hour after the
1:36:27
polls closed.
1:36:29
In Mamdani's home district this morning, the excitement
1:36:32
and energy of last night's epic win looms
1:36:35
large.
1:36:36
Astoria resident Hannah Lieberman is also a small
1:36:39
business owner.
1:36:40
I really like that he wasn't bought by
1:36:41
anyone.
1:36:42
I think like those kinds of grassroots campaigns
1:36:45
are so inspiring and what we need.
1:36:50
I mean, I think the big thing is
1:36:51
having better access to housing, expanding the availability
1:36:55
of housing and some of the rent control
1:36:58
that they can pursue.
1:37:00
Affordability, Mr. President.
1:37:02
Affordability.
1:37:03
That's what did it.
1:37:05
So we got a note from one of
1:37:07
our more famous executive producers.
1:37:10
Oh, that was in the business.
1:37:13
Brunetti.
1:37:14
Yeah.
1:37:14
Oh, that guy.
1:37:15
Yes.
1:37:17
So a subject, Mira Nair, Nair, N-A
1:37:20
-I-R, Mira Nair.
1:37:21
Mira Nair.
1:37:22
Mira Nair.
1:37:23
Yeah.
1:37:24
You know who she is?
1:37:25
No.
1:37:27
She is the famous Hollywood director who's Brunetti's,
1:37:32
who's Mamdani's mom.
1:37:35
And he writes this note, haven't heard much
1:37:38
in the press about her or mention of
1:37:39
her on the show.
1:37:41
Okay.
1:37:41
No, we noticed that too.
1:37:45
She's a sought after director after Monsoon Wedding.
1:37:48
Don't know what the angle is, but there
1:37:51
seems to be something here considering it's not
1:37:54
getting much, if any, play.
1:37:57
If anything, maybe that's why Mamdani is good
1:38:00
with his TikTok videos, question mark.
1:38:02
Not saying she has anything to do with
1:38:05
making them, but maybe.
1:38:09
Just odd that she hasn't been mentioned.
1:38:13
Just odd more hasn't been made of her
1:38:16
being his mom or the lack of attention
1:38:18
to it, especially everyone seems to be love
1:38:21
everything Hollywood.
1:38:22
Now, so I went back and looked at
1:38:24
his videos, the really good ones, like the
1:38:26
Valentine's Day one, and the one he's on
1:38:29
the street.
1:38:30
Two things I noticed.
1:38:31
One, he uses a Hollywood movie style microphone.
1:38:34
He doesn't use a normal microphone.
1:38:36
This is equipment gear from, you know, they're
1:38:38
extended or like a shotgun mic.
1:38:40
They're used, people hold them underneath the actor.
1:38:43
Wait a minute.
1:38:43
What you're saying, he's not using a DJI
1:38:45
mic with a big fuzzy thing on it?
1:38:48
He's not using a DJI mic.
1:38:50
He's not using any normal mic that you
1:38:52
would use if you were doing man on
1:38:54
the street stuff.
1:38:55
It's a Hollywood movie mic that nobody uses.
1:38:58
So his gear.
1:39:01
And if you watch his videos, there are
1:39:03
three and four camera shoots.
1:39:06
They're beautifully edited.
1:39:10
Overlays and all kinds of fade ins, fade
1:39:13
outs.
1:39:13
It's slick.
1:39:14
It looks like the old TV show, Homicide,
1:39:18
Life on the Streets.
1:39:19
The shaky cam comes and goes.
1:39:22
And there's a shot of him talking to
1:39:23
somebody with the camera crew.
1:39:25
Part of the camera crew behind him, and
1:39:27
you see two people next to each other.
1:39:29
One guy with extremely high-end gear and
1:39:32
another woman right next to him filming with
1:39:36
an iPhone next to each other.
1:39:39
So you can intersperse the slick look with
1:39:42
the shaky cam look or with the iPhone
1:39:44
look.
1:39:45
And you go back and look at these
1:39:47
and think of them as being produced by
1:39:48
Hollywood.
1:39:50
You go, oh yeah, duh.
1:39:53
And so this was rigged.
1:39:55
People were scammed.
1:39:58
Rigged?
1:39:58
That's not rigged.
1:39:59
That's great.
1:40:00
That's smart.
1:40:01
Oh, it is great.
1:40:01
I mean, if you look back on it
1:40:03
as professionally done, they are slick.
1:40:06
But it's a scam.
1:40:08
People have gotten taken to the cleaners in
1:40:10
New York by this guy and his mom.
1:40:13
Hold on a second.
1:40:14
You mean Hollywood-style production has convinced people
1:40:18
of something, has tricked people?
1:40:20
You don't say.
1:40:22
I know.
1:40:22
I was stunned.
1:40:23
Stunned.
1:40:25
Shocked.
1:40:26
Shocked, I tell you.
1:40:27
Clearly, Brunetti should have been producing Andrew Cuomo's
1:40:31
videos.
1:40:32
What a misser.
1:40:35
Cuomo did have some videos that came out
1:40:37
at the end that were all done by
1:40:38
AI.
1:40:39
His AI videos, yeah, they were pretty funny.
1:40:41
His AI videos.
1:40:41
They were very funny, but it was a
1:40:43
little too little too late.
1:40:44
But Cuomo has no personality.
1:40:46
And what the first lady said, the first
1:40:48
nose ring said, is exactly what went down.
1:40:51
Well, at least there's someone we could get
1:40:53
behind.
1:40:54
He's our age.
1:40:55
He's, you know, they're not really, something, something,
1:40:58
rent-free.
1:40:59
Okay, whatever.
1:41:00
Yeah, something, something, rent-free.
1:41:02
Something, something, free.
1:41:03
Something, something, free.
1:41:04
Something, free, fast buses.
1:41:05
Yeah, something free.
1:41:06
And he's young.
1:41:07
He's attractive.
1:41:08
He's got cool videos.
1:41:09
And then they've got the sex, you know,
1:41:12
the guy accused of sexual abuse.
1:41:16
Creepy, creepy old guy.
1:41:18
That's what it was.
1:41:19
There was just no candidates.
1:41:22
No candidates.
1:41:25
Well, they had plenty of opportunities to bring
1:41:28
up candidates.
1:41:28
The Republicans gave up on the city.
1:41:31
Well, you can't blame them.
1:41:32
And then the Democrats had a bunch of
1:41:34
stiffs.
1:41:35
Yeah, yeah.
1:41:36
So this kid comes in with his professionally
1:41:39
produced videos.
1:41:40
But even Sliva, I mean, man, the amount
1:41:43
of archive footage, but it's still, it's not
1:41:47
what people, people want, don't want to see
1:41:48
guys coming in, kicking ass, cleaning up the
1:41:52
subways.
1:41:52
No, they want free.
1:41:54
That's just, that's what these millennials want, free.
1:41:58
I can't afford to live here.
1:42:00
Have you considered booming somewhere else?
1:42:02
No, I want to live in New York.
1:42:03
I want to live here.
1:42:04
We've got bodegas.
1:42:05
I don't want you to pay for it.
1:42:06
We've got bodegas.
1:42:07
Yeah.
1:42:09
I am, I'm telling you, I'm very much
1:42:10
looking forward to the day when daughter number
1:42:14
three says, ah, I'm a little short this
1:42:17
month.
1:42:17
I'm like, call your boy.
1:42:19
It's city hall.
1:42:20
Mom, Tommy, call him.
1:42:23
Yeah.
1:42:23
She voted for him.
1:42:24
She definitely did.
1:42:26
Yeah.
1:42:26
She was.
1:42:27
But who else you're going to vote for?
1:42:28
She, she was sending us memes.
1:42:31
I love her dearly and we can, we
1:42:34
can have our disagreements.
1:42:35
That's what I love so much about her.
1:42:37
Uh, she doesn't go all nuclear, you know,
1:42:39
she just grown up in that regard.
1:42:41
She sent a, it was a meme.
1:42:44
It was like a, a pride flag with
1:42:46
in shape, like a gun pointing at someone's,
1:42:49
I think it was, was it maybe even
1:42:51
a Trump head?
1:42:52
Let me see.
1:42:53
Um, no.
1:42:56
Uh, so it was, uh, an arm.
1:42:58
I should, I should send this to you
1:43:00
for the newsletter.
1:43:00
It was an arm with a gun pointed
1:43:03
at a black silhouetted head, not looking like
1:43:05
anybody that had really who's bent forward.
1:43:07
So the guns at the back of the
1:43:08
head and it's pride colors and says, now
1:43:11
put the pronouns back in email.
1:43:15
And this is exactly what they care about.
1:43:18
Yeah.
1:43:19
I had a, Oh man, I didn't get
1:43:20
that clip.
1:43:21
Another one I passed on, uh, of some
1:43:25
tech talker going nuts about how great it
1:43:28
is that woke his back.
1:43:31
None of you saw that.
1:43:32
No, no, no.
1:43:33
I G didn't hit my newsfeed.
1:43:36
Yeah.
1:43:36
Yeah.
1:43:37
All right.
1:43:37
Let's go to Besant because Besant's a grown
1:43:39
up and he's funny and he's sparring with
1:43:41
Stephanopoulos and throwing stuff in his face.
1:43:44
It was cute.
1:43:44
And we're joined now by the treasury secretary,
1:43:46
Scott Besant.
1:43:47
Mr. Besant, thank you for joining us this
1:43:48
morning.
1:43:49
We've just tried to play this.
1:43:51
Hold on.
1:43:52
You know, I'm surprised as Stephanopoulos is a
1:43:54
little more humorful and, uh, and quick witted
1:43:58
and says, and has funny material because you
1:44:01
know, he's married to a comedian.
1:44:03
I did not know this.
1:44:04
Who is she?
1:44:06
Oh, I can't remember.
1:44:07
Who is he?
1:44:07
I'm sorry.
1:44:08
I messed up the punchline.
1:44:11
That would have been funny.
1:44:13
Yeah, you're right.
1:44:13
You blew it.
1:44:15
Uh, we can judge, you know, we can
1:44:17
do it in post.
1:44:18
Um, so, uh, I can't remember her name,
1:44:21
but she used to be on a lot
1:44:23
of stuff.
1:44:23
She's, um, mostly a skit comic.
1:44:26
Her name is Allie Wentworth.
1:44:30
Yeah.
1:44:30
Allie Wentworth.
1:44:31
Yeah.
1:44:32
Hmm.
1:44:34
And she's very, like all female comedians, she
1:44:38
must be tough at the dinner table.
1:44:41
And so far as, you know, having the
1:44:43
one niner, the retort pick up something she
1:44:46
was on in living color, which was, uh,
1:44:49
yes, she was one of the actresses.
1:44:51
Wow.
1:44:51
She did impressions of Cher, Amy Fisher, Hillary
1:44:55
Clinton, princess Diana, Brooke Shields, Sharon Stone.
1:45:00
Huh.
1:45:02
It's interesting.
1:45:02
He has one of those cute faces because,
1:45:05
but because she's a comedian, every picture makes
1:45:07
her look odd.
1:45:09
You know, she has to make a face.
1:45:12
Yeah.
1:45:12
Yeah.
1:45:13
Um, they met on a blind date in
1:45:15
2001.
1:45:16
Yeah.
1:45:17
It's a Mary Stephanopoulos.
1:45:18
She must've been blind.
1:45:20
November.
1:45:21
Yeah, there it is.
1:45:22
You got one in, you got one in.
1:45:24
I'm back.
1:45:25
I'm back.
1:45:25
I'm back, everybody.
1:45:27
Finally.
1:45:27
Back to Besson.
1:45:28
And we're joined now by the treasury secretary,
1:45:30
Scott Besson.
1:45:30
Mr. Besson, thank you for joining us this
1:45:32
morning.
1:45:32
We've just heard about all these impacts from
1:45:34
government shutdown right now.
1:45:36
Are we starting to see, see a permanent
1:45:38
impact on the economy?
1:45:40
Uh, sure, George.
1:45:41
And good, good to be with you.
1:45:43
And he's already got something ready.
1:45:45
You know, good to be with you.
1:45:47
And you know, it's possible that, that tough
1:45:50
at the dinner table that he, and, uh,
1:45:52
and what's her name.
1:45:53
I forgot her name already.
1:45:55
Uh, Wentworth alley Wentworth.
1:45:57
They're like, ah, you got to get this
1:46:00
best and you got to get him.
1:46:01
You got to get him good.
1:46:02
I'll get you some one lines, but Besson
1:46:04
came prepared.
1:46:05
We've seen an impact on the economy from
1:46:07
day one, but it's getting worse and worse.
1:46:10
Uh, we had a fantastic economy under president
1:46:12
Trump the past two quarters.
1:46:14
And now there are estimates that the economy,
1:46:17
uh, economic growth for this quarter could be
1:46:20
cut by as much as half if the
1:46:23
shutdown continues.
1:46:24
And what's your correspondent didn't talk about there,
1:46:27
George was there's of course the human costs
1:46:29
and we're going to have the busiest travel
1:46:31
day of the year, the day after Thanksgiving.
1:46:34
And you know, Americans should look to five
1:46:37
democratic senators to come across the aisle to
1:46:40
open that.
1:46:41
But on the other side, there's also cargo
1:46:43
is being slowed down.
1:46:44
So, you know, we could end up with
1:46:46
a shortages, whether it's in our supply chains,
1:46:50
whether it's for the holidays.
1:46:52
So, you know, cargo and people are both
1:46:54
being slowed down here and that's for safety
1:46:57
sake, George.
1:46:58
Okay.
1:46:58
So he kept his powder dry.
1:47:01
President continues to post about ending the filibuster.
1:47:03
Is that, is that the best way to
1:47:05
the end of shutdown right now?
1:47:06
Is that what the administration position is?
1:47:08
No, George, the best, the best way to
1:47:10
do it.
1:47:10
And look, you were involved in a lot
1:47:12
of these in the nineties.
1:47:13
And you basically called the Republicans terrorist.
1:47:18
And you said that it is not the
1:47:21
responsible party that keeps the government close.
1:47:26
Wow.
1:47:26
Oh wait, it gets better.
1:47:27
It gets better.
1:47:28
And so what we need is five brave,
1:47:31
moderate democratic senators to cross the aisle because
1:47:34
right now it is 52 to 3, 52
1:47:38
to 3, five Democrats can cross the aisle
1:47:41
and reopen the government.
1:47:43
That's the best way to do it, George.
1:47:45
I can disagree with you about the history
1:47:47
there, but we don't have a history lesson
1:47:48
right now.
1:47:49
Let's talk about, let's talk about what's happening
1:47:53
right now.
1:47:55
I've got all your quotes here.
1:47:56
I've got all your quotes here.
1:47:57
I am sure.
1:47:58
I'm sure you do.
1:48:00
But let's talk about the situation.
1:48:02
So you got one, one purchase on Amazon
1:48:05
this week.
1:48:06
And that's very much what you said.
1:48:08
The best way is for five democratic senators
1:48:11
to come across the aisle.
1:48:13
What are we on vote 13, 14, 15.
1:48:17
Mike Johnson got the reopening out of the
1:48:20
house very quickly.
1:48:22
And what's changed since the spring, George, is
1:48:25
Chuck Schumer's poll numbers.
1:48:27
He had a clean continuing resolution in the
1:48:31
spring.
1:48:32
And why are Democrats doing this now, George?
1:48:34
Again, you've been involved with this.
1:48:37
Explain what's changed.
1:48:40
Senator Chris Murphy gave the game away this
1:48:43
week when he said, well, now it's our
1:48:45
advantage to keep the government closed.
1:48:48
They have turned the American people into pawns.
1:48:51
I feel the best of just really running
1:48:53
the tables on Stephanopoulos with this one.
1:48:57
You know, pulling up his books, saying this
1:49:00
is what you said when you called the
1:49:01
Republicans terrorists.
1:49:04
Yes, Stephanopoulos is not very good at defending
1:49:06
himself.
1:49:07
He starts to.
1:49:09
Yeah, exactly.
1:49:10
Stumbles.
1:49:11
He fumbles.
1:49:12
He stutters.
1:49:13
He tries to push back.
1:49:14
He doesn't take.
1:49:15
He never takes the guy on.
1:49:17
No, no, he would.
1:49:19
If he was any good, he would say,
1:49:22
yes, this in the past, I have said
1:49:23
that you're correct.
1:49:24
In fact, you can quote me if you
1:49:25
want.
1:49:26
But the way I see it now, it's
1:49:28
different.
1:49:28
No, it's all you have to say.
1:49:30
You just say they were what I said
1:49:32
is all you have to say.
1:49:34
And then the guy with the best report,
1:49:36
because best and always you had this rehearsed.
1:49:38
The best he could say was, well, what's
1:49:41
different about it?
1:49:42
And then if Stephanopoulos was keeping up, he
1:49:46
said, there's a lot different about it.
1:49:48
It's a different circumstance.
1:49:50
We were they pulled the plug with a
1:49:52
very there's a pushback against the big, beautiful
1:49:55
bill, which was something they didn't want.
1:49:57
And then he could start to bore him
1:49:58
with bullcrap.
1:50:00
And then Bessett would have to back up.
1:50:02
Bessett could lose this.
1:50:03
But no, he knows that Stephanopoulos is lousy.
1:50:07
All he had to say was, I saw
1:50:09
a bird today.
1:50:12
President has also come forward with a new
1:50:14
proposal overnight saying it's time instead to do
1:50:16
away with Obamacare and said to have the
1:50:18
money go directly to the people.
1:50:20
Do you have a formal proposal to do
1:50:22
that?
1:50:22
We don't have a formal proposal.
1:50:24
But what I have noticed over time is
1:50:27
that the Democrats give all these bills or
1:50:30
Orwellian names, the Affordable Care Act, the Inflation
1:50:33
Reduction Act, Patriot Act, Republicans, and we end
1:50:37
up with just the opposite.
1:50:38
The Affordable Care Act has become unaffordable.
1:50:43
And the Inflation Reduction Act set off the
1:50:46
greatest inflation in 50 years.
1:50:48
He was well prepared for this.
1:50:50
Well, I'm a little confused because the president
1:50:51
been posting about that overnight and into this
1:50:54
morning.
1:50:54
But you're not proposing that to the Senate
1:50:56
right now.
1:50:57
We're not proposing it to the Senate right
1:50:59
now.
1:51:00
No.
1:51:01
Then why is the president posting about it?
1:51:03
Because he's trolling you, George.
1:51:06
George, the president's posting about it.
1:51:08
But again, we have got to get the
1:51:11
government reopened before we do this.
1:51:14
We are not going to negotiate with-
1:51:18
Terrorists.
1:51:18
The Democrats until they reopen the government.
1:51:21
It's very simple.
1:51:22
Reopen the government, then we can have a
1:51:24
discussion.
1:51:25
By the way, the word around town on
1:51:27
the shutdown, and when I say the word
1:51:29
around town, you know what I'm talking about.
1:51:32
Yeah.
1:51:34
90 days.
1:51:37
What?
1:51:37
90 days.
1:51:39
Okay, so that's good news.
1:51:40
That means it won't be 90 days.
1:51:44
That's funny because that's the first thing I
1:51:46
said.
1:51:46
Oh, well, it'll be over next week then.
1:51:48
Yeah, that's the word around town.
1:51:50
That's the whisper number.
1:51:52
Oh, no.
1:51:52
And it goes like this.
1:51:55
Uh, yeah, it's going to be the Trump's
1:51:58
going to keep it shut down for 90
1:51:59
days so he can really find out what
1:52:01
we really need to pay and get rid
1:52:03
of all the other stuff we don't need
1:52:04
to pay for.
1:52:05
Yeah.
1:52:05
The problem, of course, with the 90 days
1:52:07
theory is that that's way past Thanksgiving.
1:52:11
People, even though the comedians joke of the
1:52:15
day, all of them are using the same
1:52:16
line.
1:52:17
Bill Maher even used it on his monologue,
1:52:20
which is that, oh, Thanksgiving, we're not going
1:52:23
to be able to travel, so we won't
1:52:24
have to see our lousy relatives.
1:52:26
This is good news, not bad news.
1:52:28
Oh, yeah.
1:52:28
Okay.
1:52:28
So that's the joke.
1:52:29
And the fact is that there's enough weak
1:52:34
-kneed Democrats that are moderates that are going
1:52:37
to be worried and are going to have
1:52:39
to because they're going to take it up
1:52:40
to 20 percent.
1:52:41
And like you said, which has not been
1:52:43
discussed, the fact is you can't just knock
1:52:47
it down 10 or 20 percent without causing
1:52:49
scheduling issues across the board, making things terrible.
1:52:53
Oh, it's going to be horrible.
1:52:55
So you so demise will shut down the
1:52:57
whole system.
1:52:58
And and by the way, that shuts that
1:53:00
shuts down cargo.
1:53:02
It shuts down Amazon.
1:53:04
It shuts down everything.
1:53:06
Hey, and explain this to me just while
1:53:07
we're on the topic.
1:53:09
So our UPS guy, I know our people,
1:53:11
I know our mail, our mail carrier.
1:53:12
I know the UPS guy.
1:53:14
I know them all because it's the same
1:53:15
people.
1:53:15
So he drops off a package for and
1:53:18
he's got another guy with him with a
1:53:20
with like an orange vest on with, you
1:53:23
know, all he missed was a hard hat
1:53:26
and a clipboard.
1:53:26
Like, what's this going on?
1:53:28
He rings the bell.
1:53:29
Hey, how are you doing, UPS guy?
1:53:32
He said, hey, good.
1:53:33
Yeah, I just want to introduce you to
1:53:34
this guy for the holidays.
1:53:37
We have a lot of civilians.
1:53:39
It's funny.
1:53:40
He said civilians.
1:53:41
He said civilians.
1:53:42
He said civilians.
1:53:42
Yeah.
1:53:43
Well, that means he won't have the full
1:53:45
uniform, but he'll have the vest on.
1:53:47
I saw the vest.
1:53:48
It was a orange reflective vest that had
1:53:51
UPS on it.
1:53:52
He said, and they'll just be in there.
1:53:54
So basically a door dash guy was an
1:53:55
older gentleman.
1:53:57
He actually had his head bowed a little
1:53:58
bit.
1:53:59
I was like, hey, hey, civilian, how are
1:54:02
you?
1:54:04
Hey, civilian, how are you doing?
1:54:05
I shook his hand.
1:54:06
Yeah, I just want you to know that,
1:54:07
you know, so if you see someone with
1:54:09
a regular car driving up, you don't get
1:54:11
freaked out.
1:54:12
You come out guns blazing, dogs loose.
1:54:16
I just thought it was interesting.
1:54:17
Didn't they fire like 30,000 people, and
1:54:19
now they're hiring civilians to jump in for
1:54:24
the Christmas rush?
1:54:26
I don't know what's going on.
1:54:27
Okay.
1:54:27
Anyway, final clip from Besant.
1:54:30
I'm skipping over everything.
1:54:31
And now we go to the dividend.
1:54:34
Everybody gets money.
1:54:35
Do you have a proposal, a formal proposal
1:54:37
to give a $2,000 dividend to every
1:54:38
American?
1:54:39
I haven't spoken to the president about this
1:54:43
yet.
1:54:44
But the $2,000 dividend could come in
1:54:48
lots of forms, in lots of ways, George.
1:54:51
It could be just the tax decreases that
1:54:55
we are seeing on the president's agenda.
1:54:57
No tax on tips, no tax on overtime,
1:54:59
no tax on Social Security, deductibility of auto
1:55:03
loans.
1:55:04
So, you know, those are substantial deductions that,
1:55:07
you know, are being financed in the tax
1:55:09
bill.
1:55:10
I want a check.
1:55:11
No, that's chicken.
1:55:13
That's exactly what he said.
1:55:15
He gave it away.
1:55:17
You're not getting a check.
1:55:18
That's what you're getting.
1:55:19
Yeah, I want a check.
1:55:20
You're getting a deduction on your loan for
1:55:25
your car.
1:55:26
That's no good.
1:55:26
I want a check with President Trump's face
1:55:28
on it and his signature, happy smiling.
1:55:31
Here you go, citizen.
1:55:32
Here's $2,000.
1:55:34
That's what I want.
1:55:35
Yeah, that would be a good promotion.
1:55:38
Well, that's what he should be doing, you
1:55:40
know, because we're taking in billions and trillions
1:55:42
and gazillions of money.
1:55:45
So anyway, I sincerely hope, because you're right,
1:55:51
a lot of our producers work in government.
1:55:54
And I have to say, most of them
1:55:56
are pretty upbeat still because, of course, they're
1:56:00
no agenda listeners and they were prepared.
1:56:03
You know, they save some money because they,
1:56:06
huh, this is probably going to happen somewhere
1:56:08
down the road.
1:56:09
So they made sure they had, you know,
1:56:10
contingency to run this when this happened.
1:56:15
But it's, you know, it's hurting a lot
1:56:17
of people.
1:56:18
It's getting real now.
1:56:19
And boy, it's by this coming Friday when
1:56:23
we're up to 10 percent, I think you're
1:56:26
pretty much going to see passenger travel at
1:56:28
a standstill.
1:56:30
I, you know, you did the right thing
1:56:31
by not traveling.
1:56:33
Yeah.
1:56:34
Yeah.
1:56:35
Yeah.
1:56:35
We canceled our vacation.
1:56:37
And Tina's immediately like, oh, we can do
1:56:39
this.
1:56:39
We can go here.
1:56:40
We can go there.
1:56:41
I need a new MacBook.
1:56:42
Like what?
1:56:44
What?
1:56:45
She doesn't need to take a vacation.
1:56:47
I got an idea.
1:56:48
Yeah.
1:56:49
Take a vacation in Dallas.
1:56:54
Dallas is a great town.
1:56:56
We actually have discussed that about going up
1:56:59
to Dallas because Dallas has this new.
1:57:02
Now, what was it called?
1:57:04
How far is it to drive to Dallas
1:57:05
for you?
1:57:06
Five hours.
1:57:07
About five.
1:57:07
That's not that bad.
1:57:09
It's like me going to Reno.
1:57:12
I'm trying to think the name of this.
1:57:15
They have this new thing called Cosm.
1:57:19
Cosm Dallas, C-O-S-M dot com.
1:57:24
And you can well, you can see sports
1:57:27
games there.
1:57:28
It's kind of like a miniature sphere in
1:57:32
Vegas.
1:57:34
Only it's much smaller for a couple hundred
1:57:36
people.
1:57:37
And you can see they have a couple
1:57:39
of movies that you can see and they
1:57:41
have games.
1:57:43
I think the Matrix is playing.
1:57:44
They have a special version of it.
1:57:46
It's a complete immersive experience.
1:57:48
And with the games, I'm not, as you
1:57:50
know, not a sports ball guy, but man,
1:57:53
I mean, they have you literally sitting on
1:57:57
the 50 yard line and the switches and
1:57:59
the whole thing swivels around and then you're
1:58:01
behind the goalposts and then you're in.
1:58:03
I'm looking at it now.
1:58:05
It's super cool.
1:58:06
My buddy Vic told me about this.
1:58:08
I'm like, wow, you should go to this.
1:58:10
I might go to it.
1:58:11
We might go spend it.
1:58:12
You go to the.
1:58:14
There's a couple of great hotels in Dallas.
1:58:17
You can spend the night.
1:58:18
Yeah, I could.
1:58:19
And there's some good restaurants in Dallas.
1:58:21
Yes.
1:58:22
The only problem with Dallas, in my opinion,
1:58:24
is the people that live there.
1:58:26
No, they're fun to watch.
1:58:28
They got high hair.
1:58:29
They're arrogant.
1:58:30
They think that Dallas is the greatest place
1:58:32
in the world.
1:58:33
They wouldn't live anyplace else ever.
1:58:35
I wouldn't even consider it.
1:58:37
Yeah.
1:58:37
They're self absorbed.
1:58:39
A lot of pretty girls and they're all
1:58:40
self absorbed and they're all Dallas girls.
1:58:43
What I've always liked about Dallas, you go
1:58:45
in the restaurant.
1:58:46
It's much more.
1:58:47
I mean, we're white.
1:58:48
We're a white town.
1:58:50
You go to Dallas.
1:58:51
There's just all kinds of good looking people
1:58:54
of all colors.
1:58:55
You immediately realize, wow, we live in a
1:58:57
really white town in Fredericksburg.
1:59:00
It's enjoyable.
1:59:01
And I got friends up there.
1:59:02
So you're right.
1:59:02
Maybe we'll do that.
1:59:04
We might have a boots on the ground
1:59:06
from Dallas.
1:59:11
Yeah.
1:59:12
Yeah.
1:59:13
Yeah.
1:59:14
Yeah.
1:59:14
Yeah.
1:59:14
Hey, with that, I want to thank you
1:59:15
for your courage.
1:59:16
In the morning to you, the man who
1:59:17
put president Trump's picture on the $2,000
1:59:20
check.
1:59:20
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:59:22
end.
1:59:23
Mr. John C.
1:59:28
Yeah.
1:59:30
In the morning, he was in the morning.
1:59:31
I should see most of the in the
1:59:35
morning to the trolls in the troll room.
1:59:36
Stop right now.
1:59:43
1930 still a little bit low, but we're,
1:59:45
we're crawling back.
1:59:46
We had a lot of a DNS issues
1:59:47
and stuff for a while there.
1:59:49
And I think a lot of people are
1:59:50
just going to give up.
1:59:53
It's going to give up.
1:59:55
Yeah.
1:59:56
Yeah.
1:59:57
Yeah.
1:59:57
It happens.
1:59:58
Mimi's complained a couple of times about right
2:00:00
in the show.
2:00:01
It goes to a different show and then
2:00:03
comes back.
2:00:04
Well, that's a network issue.
2:00:07
It's amazing.
2:00:08
Any of this stuff works at all, man.
2:00:10
I'm really, I know.
2:00:11
I always say that when I say it,
2:00:12
she says, you're right.
2:00:13
Yeah.
2:00:13
When you, when you remind people of that
2:00:15
and say, remember when you used to call
2:00:17
me from a roof, Hey, we're doing this
2:00:19
over, over the internet.
2:00:22
I'm in California.
2:00:23
He's in Texas.
2:00:25
We don't have much latency.
2:00:26
Almost none.
2:00:28
No, not with the system we're using.
2:00:30
And we have a, uh, and it works.
2:00:34
It works.
2:00:35
Do you remember do it for three hours
2:00:36
or plot?
2:00:37
Uh, actually more than three hours, unfortunately, but
2:00:39
it was just long.
2:00:40
Uninterrupted yak, yak, yak, yak, yak.
2:00:43
And, and, and fidelity's good.
2:00:45
I used to have a whole 19 inch
2:00:47
rack filled with gear and wires and patch
2:00:49
cables.
2:00:51
And now it's just one box.
2:00:53
It's got it all in there.
2:00:55
The same names I used to have 19
2:00:57
inch rack thing.
2:00:58
Ampex.
2:00:59
Yeah.
2:01:01
Ampex used Apex.
2:01:02
I'm sorry.
2:01:03
Apex used to have, yeah, that was a
2:01:05
big bottom.
2:01:06
Yeah.
2:01:06
Yes.
2:01:06
Right.
2:01:07
The Apex big, but I still have the
2:01:08
big bottom 19.
2:01:09
I have the big bottom.
2:01:11
I have, I have one of them in
2:01:12
the closet.
2:01:12
We got big bottoms.
2:01:13
Yes.
2:01:14
I had my Warsanis, uh, sound processor.
2:01:18
Uh, I mean, all kinds of stuff we
2:01:20
did.
2:01:20
And now, I mean, it's amazing.
2:01:21
It's amazing.
2:01:22
I remember back in, what do you remember
2:01:25
there, Jim?
2:01:26
Back in the mid nineties, when I had,
2:01:29
we had the think new ideas, my company,
2:01:31
we were going all over the country.
2:01:33
And I mean, then you didn't have zoom.
2:01:36
You don't, you needed to pitch something to
2:01:39
Budweiser, Anheuser-Busch.
2:01:40
You went to St. Louis, you got on
2:01:42
a plane granted.
2:01:45
There was no TSA.
2:01:46
You just walked to the gate and there
2:01:48
was fine.
2:01:48
You, you got to go through that little
2:01:49
metal, a couple of ladies standing there with,
2:01:52
with wands.
2:01:53
Let me wand you.
2:01:54
Okay.
2:01:55
You threw your keys in a, in a
2:01:57
little box.
2:01:57
Okay.
2:01:58
Yep.
2:01:59
Yeah.
2:01:59
Wand you.
2:02:01
Uh, and then you just walked to the
2:02:02
gate, but you need to do pitch.
2:02:04
You had to fly places and now we
2:02:07
just do zoom, zoom, baby, just zoom.
2:02:09
You do a pitch on zoom is fantastic.
2:02:11
So this is when Christina was four or
2:02:15
five years old.
2:02:17
And I got one of the first video
2:02:20
telephones, man, I wish I still had it.
2:02:24
And I don't even remember what it was,
2:02:26
what brand it was, but it was a,
2:02:28
it was a white phone.
2:02:30
It had a receiver.
2:02:31
I pick up the receiver, you know, push
2:02:33
buttons to call.
2:02:34
And it had a little screen on it,
2:02:36
which had tilt up.
2:02:37
And then you'd connect to the phone on
2:02:39
the other end.
2:02:41
And then you'd get like one frame per
2:02:44
every three seconds.
2:02:45
Like, Hey, it's dad.
2:02:50
Now it's just as general.
2:02:51
It's just a FaceTime right from the palm
2:02:54
of your hand.
2:02:55
If people don't realize this is amazing.
2:02:59
Now you want a song.
2:03:01
You just say, give me a song.
2:03:03
Your phone gives you a song or you
2:03:05
say, Hey, make me some art.
2:03:08
Now, strangely enough, you still have to have
2:03:11
some funny in you to tell the computer
2:03:13
what to do, but at least you can
2:03:15
do it.
2:03:16
Hey, just give me some art.
2:03:17
That's the world we live in.
2:03:19
Appreciate it.
2:03:20
You know, I was looking, this is your
2:03:21
bonus content.
2:03:22
I was looking at the cost of running
2:03:25
my own AI model at home because the
2:03:29
biggest problem with, you know, as, as we
2:03:31
discussed on the last episode is getting consistency.
2:03:35
So if I wanted to clone my voice
2:03:36
and have it consistently sound the same after
2:03:40
some tweaking of the model and training, you
2:03:46
can do that, but not when you're in
2:03:48
a cloud type scenario where you might be
2:03:51
hitting another machine or literally the temperature changes
2:03:55
in the data center.
2:03:56
I mean, there's all kinds of variables that
2:03:58
make it impossible for these cloud-based AI
2:04:02
models to consistently deliver you the same results.
2:04:05
I mean, you can type in the same
2:04:06
prompt.
2:04:07
You'll get something different every single time.
2:04:10
Yeah, you will.
2:04:11
And now I've been watching a lot of
2:04:12
these YouTubers and they've got, they've got huge
2:04:15
Nvidia stacks.
2:04:19
They're doing comparisons with the top end Nvidia
2:04:24
GPU and the, the Mac G, what is
2:04:30
it?
2:04:30
The M4 Super Pro, which has 512 gigs
2:04:40
of RAM, which you can use for either
2:04:41
CPU or GPU.
2:04:44
And the results are very similar to what
2:04:47
you get out of ChatGPT or Grok.
2:04:49
The cost, $10,000 to $15,000.
2:04:55
That's actually not that bad.
2:04:57
I know, but is it, so is that
2:05:00
what this is costing?
2:05:01
Like to have Adam Vibecode at home, are
2:05:05
they running like a $10,000 install for
2:05:07
me?
2:05:09
Yeah.
2:05:10
No wonder they're going, they're going out.
2:05:12
I mean, well, they're not going broke.
2:05:14
They're not going broke.
2:05:14
That's the joke of it.
2:05:15
Yeah.
2:05:15
Cause people keep shoveling money in.
2:05:18
Yeah.
2:05:18
It's a Ponzi scheme.
2:05:20
It's amazing.
2:05:21
It's a Ponzi scheme.
2:05:23
They always work.
2:05:25
Well, until they don't.
2:05:26
Until they don't.
2:05:27
Until they don't.
2:05:28
Yeah.
2:05:29
Well, and, and I see there's a big
2:05:31
discussion now about, well, Sam Altman is basically
2:05:34
saying we're too big to fail.
2:05:36
So, you know, if, if Nvidia, well Nvidia
2:05:38
is okay, but if chat, if open AI
2:05:41
starts to stumble, can't get money, then maybe
2:05:44
just go to the government and say, well,
2:05:45
you know, Mr. Trump and Mr. President, this
2:05:47
is a, you know, this we're in a
2:05:49
race.
2:05:49
Yeah.
2:05:49
The problem with that theory is, is simple.
2:05:53
Elon Musk.
2:05:56
Cause Elon Musk has got Trump's here.
2:05:58
Trump is going to say, what do you
2:05:59
think about these guys too big to fail?
2:06:01
Elon Musk, who has a feud with the
2:06:04
chat GPT guys is going to say, no,
2:06:07
let him sink.
2:06:07
Who cares?
2:06:08
Here's the bonus clip.
2:06:09
Since we're talking about him, love him or
2:06:11
hate him.
2:06:12
Elon Musk boldly goes where others don't dare
2:06:15
in space, inserting himself into politics and social
2:06:19
media with his takeover and rebrand of Twitter
2:06:22
as X he's had just as many failures
2:06:25
as he has had successes.
2:06:27
His latest success convincing 75% of Tesla
2:06:30
shareholders to approve a record $1 trillion pay
2:06:34
package.
2:06:35
$1 million is a big pile of cash.
2:06:38
The equivalent of nearly a century of work
2:06:40
for the average human 1 billion is a
2:06:43
hefty pile.
2:06:44
And the number of stars in our Milky
2:06:45
way galaxy $1 trillion, one with 12 zeros.
2:06:50
Think of it as row upon row of
2:06:52
bills, filling a football field completely.
2:06:55
The monster payout is contingent on Tesla's autonomous
2:06:57
vehicles, robo taxis, and humanoid robots, all seeing
2:07:01
incredible success.
2:07:03
Profit needs to skyrocket along with Tesla stock.
2:07:06
The fact that one in four shareholders wanted
2:07:08
to go in another direction, I think is
2:07:10
telling.
2:07:11
There was some concern that Elon Musk might
2:07:13
quit as CEO if he didn't get what
2:07:16
he wanted.
2:07:17
An endorsement of Elon's ability to steer the
2:07:19
EV maker, even as sales and profit tumble.
2:07:22
It was a referendum on the very future
2:07:25
of technology.
2:07:26
A vote of confidence in Musk's vision for
2:07:28
the future of robotics and AI.
2:07:30
Analysts say this record compensation sets a precedent,
2:07:34
pushing other tech CEOs to ask for more.
2:07:37
The deal was so controversial that even the
2:07:39
Pope weighed in voicing concern about rising income
2:07:42
inequality at a time when many warned the
2:07:45
AI bubble could come crashing down.
2:07:47
Yeah, what a publicity stunt.
2:07:50
That's great.
2:07:51
He's not getting a nickel.
2:07:53
And in this guy, by the way, if
2:07:57
you hear the word, there's two words I
2:07:59
always look at as a code.
2:08:02
Telling.
2:08:02
Oh, it's telling.
2:08:03
It's telling.
2:08:04
It's telling.
2:08:04
Telling.
2:08:05
It's called for your left winger.
2:08:07
Chilling is another one.
2:08:09
If you see that, anyone using it.
2:08:10
Oh, it's chilling.
2:08:11
Oh, what he did was chilling.
2:08:14
Left wing code.
2:08:15
These are communists.
2:08:18
You know, increasingly good Texas boys, good friends
2:08:23
of mine who drive trucks, trucks like a
2:08:31
periodontist, a dentist.
2:08:32
These are good friends of mine.
2:08:34
Born and raised in one in El Paso,
2:08:37
one here in Fredericksburg.
2:08:40
Sixth generation Fredericksburg German.
2:08:44
He lives on the compound with a family,
2:08:46
400 acre ranch, buying Teslas.
2:08:52
And they're kind of like, oh yeah, I
2:08:54
bought a Tesla.
2:08:55
I'm like, what?
2:08:57
Are you a communist?
2:08:58
What are you doing?
2:09:00
He said, you're buying battery cars?
2:09:03
And they say, yeah, I got to admit,
2:09:05
I just really like being able to drink
2:09:07
that extra beer and have the car drive
2:09:09
me home.
2:09:11
These things are outrageous.
2:09:14
They do indeed drive you complete self-drive,
2:09:18
no hands on the wheel, no touching it
2:09:20
every 30 seconds.
2:09:21
They drive you all the way home.
2:09:24
It's, it is compelling.
2:09:27
I have to say.
2:09:29
What are you going to get one so
2:09:30
you can have a beer?
2:09:31
How about this for an idea?
2:09:34
Don't drink and drive.
2:09:35
Hello?
2:09:36
I think it's cheaper to get a driver.
2:09:38
That's my, I'm like, yeah, and those Teslas
2:09:40
are expensive.
2:09:41
Yeah.
2:09:42
Once you get a guy with a hat
2:09:43
to drive you, that's cheaper.
2:09:45
I got Robert's garage blows up.
2:09:48
You'll know the reason why.
2:09:50
I'm just, I'm just amazed.
2:09:52
I'm amazed.
2:09:52
Well, you know, Elon Musk is now saying,
2:09:54
oh, the next Tesla might fly.
2:09:56
If he builds a car that flies, I'm
2:09:59
in.
2:10:00
Yeah.
2:10:00
Okay.
2:10:01
He said this about that.
2:10:02
What you were referring to there is the
2:10:04
Roadster 2.
2:10:05
The Roadster 2.
2:10:06
Yes.
2:10:07
At which some people have already put their
2:10:08
down payment on for 200 grand or whatever
2:10:10
it is.
2:10:12
And yes, he made that he, this guy
2:10:15
is a master of promotion.
2:10:17
Oh yeah.
2:10:17
And you know, he's seen as an industrialist
2:10:19
and all these other things and he's smart.
2:10:21
He's not a dumb guy, but, but his
2:10:23
real skill is in promotion and he does
2:10:25
it like falling off a log.
2:10:27
It's so easy for him.
2:10:28
The trillion dollar deal and gets the Pope
2:10:31
to say something.
2:10:32
Give me a, what's the Pope got to
2:10:34
do with it?
2:10:34
I would love the Pope to say, what
2:10:36
is up with this podcast?
2:10:37
There's on no agenda.
2:10:38
This is, this is, please Pope, please, please.
2:10:43
I beg of you say that.
2:10:46
Yeah, no, he is the master.
2:10:48
There's so many flying car scams out there
2:10:51
and, and yeah, sure.
2:10:54
They'll fly for 20 minutes.
2:10:57
You can't go anywhere.
2:10:58
Yeah, it has to be electric because it
2:10:59
would, it may, it's compounded by the fact
2:11:01
that he's electric only.
2:11:03
Yeah.
2:11:04
This is the problem.
2:11:05
If it gets in the air, I mean,
2:11:06
maybe a good, you can fly over a
2:11:07
traffic jam and land again and get back
2:11:09
on the road.
2:11:10
Maybe that, that would do it.
2:11:12
And you always, when these Tesla guys said,
2:11:14
have you, did you go to Dallas in
2:11:15
your Tesla?
2:11:16
Yeah, I did.
2:11:17
Well, how did it go?
2:11:18
It went great.
2:11:20
I said, did you have coffee?
2:11:22
Yeah, I love, you know, we had like,
2:11:24
you know, 30 minutes of coffee break on,
2:11:26
Oh, because you were charging.
2:11:29
Brunetti drove his cyber truck to Hollywood.
2:11:34
Yeah.
2:11:34
He must've stopped along the way.
2:11:37
Yeah.
2:11:38
He has a long story.
2:11:39
Yeah, he did a couple of times and
2:11:40
apparently they have it set up.
2:11:42
The, the truck itself sets you up so
2:11:45
you can have these short stops along the
2:11:47
way.
2:11:48
Yeah.
2:11:48
The navigator tells you 10 minutes here, 10
2:11:51
minutes there, 10 minutes there.
2:11:52
Like, like a douche.
2:11:56
Get, get, get your, get, listen, get Alex,
2:12:00
get yourself a Corvette, you know, maybe a,
2:12:04
maybe get a 67, you know, cool looking
2:12:06
one.
2:12:07
Actually the newest Corvettes are the coolest looking
2:12:09
ones.
2:12:10
The mid-engines are beautiful.
2:12:12
Yeah.
2:12:12
The mid-engines are beautiful, but they're just
2:12:15
gorgeous.
2:12:16
But I'm talking to a movie guy, a
2:12:18
Hollywood guy, get yourself a 67 Corvette red
2:12:21
with that white panel on the side and
2:12:25
have her put it.
2:12:25
Well, you're thinking 57 with the white panel.
2:12:27
I'm sorry, 57.
2:12:28
You're right.
2:12:29
Get a scarf for Alex.
2:12:30
You know, her head's in the scarf.
2:12:32
The scarf is flying.
2:12:33
You got your shades on James Dean.
2:12:35
Her scarf gets caught in the wheels and
2:12:38
she, and she has her head.
2:12:39
No, a lot of publicity.
2:12:42
Well, that is true.
2:12:43
That would be good for his next movie.
2:12:46
Hollywood producer, wife killed in freak accident.
2:12:50
Killed in the Corvette.
2:12:50
In the Corvette.
2:12:51
But that's romantic.
2:12:54
Driving that ugly box and stopping 10 minutes
2:12:57
everywhere along the road.
2:12:58
That is the antithesis of America, my friend.
2:13:02
That is not who we are.
2:13:04
You tell him.
2:13:05
I'm going to tell him.
2:13:07
I may have to, I may take a
2:13:08
vacation out to the ranch, but you know,
2:13:13
if I drove, if I drove my buddy's
2:13:14
Tesla, it would take me three weeks.
2:13:16
It'd take you three weeks to get there
2:13:18
for sure.
2:13:18
All right.
2:13:20
So back to the AI.
2:13:22
Of course, this is a value for value
2:13:24
podcast.
2:13:25
And I do want to mention that you
2:13:27
probably want to try out one of those
2:13:28
modern podcast apps.
2:13:30
Podcast gurus is my daily driver.
2:13:32
I really love it.
2:13:33
Just as one of them that you can
2:13:34
find at podcastapps.com.
2:13:36
And there's great strides being made.
2:13:40
They're doing more with value for value.
2:13:42
Now strides, it's called strides.
2:13:45
Hey, strides, it's strides.
2:13:48
It's value for value.
2:13:50
You can boost us.
2:13:50
You can boost right into the show.
2:13:53
It shows up through Stripe.
2:13:54
You can leave a message even.
2:13:56
It should work.
2:13:57
We'll get the money.
2:13:58
Maybe the message.
2:13:59
Send us an email to make sure.
2:14:02
And this is groovy.
2:14:05
So get one of those.
2:14:06
Don't buy a Tesla.
2:14:08
Boost the show.
2:14:10
And value for value.
2:14:12
V for V, also known as vaccines for
2:14:15
vegans.
2:14:15
But we say value for value.
2:14:18
That means whatever value you get out of
2:14:20
the show, just send it back to us.
2:14:22
You can do it with time, talent, or
2:14:23
treasure.
2:14:24
Now the talent, we do have a lot
2:14:26
of talented people.
2:14:27
In fact, the artwork for episode 1814.
2:14:33
Hold on a second.
2:14:34
Let me get my shownotes.com.
2:14:36
We titled that Needle Drop, which a lot
2:14:39
of people thought was very funny.
2:14:40
And then I explained for 20 minutes what
2:14:42
that was.
2:14:42
And I think some people appreciated it because
2:14:45
they didn't know what needle drop was.
2:14:47
Or taping your spouse as a boundary violation.
2:14:53
Who knows what taping is anymore?
2:14:55
Yeah, that's true.
2:14:56
Now, by the way, the needle drop thing
2:14:58
came up at the dinner conversation.
2:14:59
And when you said the first thing that
2:15:02
came up was like, oh, it's so silent,
2:15:04
you could hear a needle drop.
2:15:07
Oh, interesting.
2:15:08
But that's a pin.
2:15:10
That's a pin drop.
2:15:11
Yeah, I realize it's a pin.
2:15:12
That's what they're saying is.
2:15:14
But that's the first thing that came to
2:15:15
mind.
2:15:15
Really?
2:15:16
They didn't think about a vinyl disc?
2:15:20
Not immediately.
2:15:20
Well, actually, then once I explained it, they'd
2:15:23
say, oh, yeah, that's what we were thinking.
2:15:24
It needed explaining.
2:15:25
That's the point.
2:15:27
Right there.
2:15:27
It needs explaining.
2:15:28
So the artwork, which is always very important.
2:15:31
No agenda.
2:15:32
Artgenerator.com is where you can upload all
2:15:34
of your AI slop.
2:15:35
Came to us from Nestworks, a real artist.
2:15:37
And this was an artist at work.
2:15:40
I don't know what tools he used, but
2:15:43
this Gigachad with the vinyl and then the
2:15:47
C prompt go to toe tapper.
2:15:50
The way the robot Gigachad was positioned in
2:15:55
front of the no agenda letters.
2:15:57
This is high quality work here.
2:15:59
I don't think this was 100 percent A
2:16:02
.I. Do you?
2:16:03
No, not at all.
2:16:04
It may not.
2:16:04
In fact, it may be zero way that
2:16:06
I could even come close to this.
2:16:08
The one thing that thing at the top
2:16:09
go to toe tapper, this is never going
2:16:11
to produce that and be misspelled.
2:16:16
By the way, Gitmo jams dot com, everybody,
2:16:18
it's up and running.
2:16:19
Gitmo jams dot com.
2:16:21
All your A.I. slop all the time.
2:16:23
Twenty four, seven end of show mixes A
2:16:25
.I. slop soon.
2:16:26
It will be the place to get your
2:16:27
A.I. music.
2:16:32
So go to toe tapper was perfect.
2:16:34
That was the deal clincher right there.
2:16:37
Yeah, that was perfect.
2:16:38
And Nestworks.
2:16:39
Thank you.
2:16:40
Thank you, brother.
2:16:40
Good job.
2:16:41
Let me just see what else was there
2:16:43
that we looked at that generated.
2:16:45
Let's take a quick little.
2:16:46
I like the piece next to the slop
2:16:47
thing from Coach Joe, but it was not
2:16:50
going to be used because you couldn't read
2:16:51
anything on it.
2:16:52
But I thought it was a cute piece.
2:16:55
We didn't talk about it.
2:16:56
I use the dawn of a better day
2:16:58
from Jeffrey Ray.
2:16:59
Yeah.
2:17:00
Which one for the newsletter with the New
2:17:02
York or with the sunrise?
2:17:05
The New York with the sunrise in the
2:17:06
back.
2:17:07
Yeah.
2:17:07
Yeah.
2:17:08
It was very orange.
2:17:09
Of course, it's Jeffrey Ray.
2:17:10
You know, we see orange.
2:17:12
You don't think Trump wasn't that bad.
2:17:14
It didn't bother me so much.
2:17:15
Even the letters are orange.
2:17:17
This should be why you like Jeffrey Ray
2:17:19
also did the Tucker two and the letters
2:17:22
are white.
2:17:23
She's actually a white in there somehow.
2:17:25
But look how washed out that thing is.
2:17:29
What Tucker to Tucker to it's washed out.
2:17:34
It doesn't look washed out to me.
2:17:35
That may be you.
2:17:38
We have to remind people that you're colorblind.
2:17:41
That's washed up.
2:17:42
That's not washed.
2:17:43
That's washed up.
2:17:44
Not washed out.
2:17:44
You have to understand.
2:17:45
That's the email I get at least once
2:17:47
a day.
2:17:48
You washed up, Vijay.
2:17:52
Luckily, Mossad is paying.
2:17:54
You should say, yes, I shower daily.
2:17:56
Luckily, Mossad is paying the bills.
2:17:58
We're all good.
2:18:00
Yeah, we're not paying the bills.
2:18:02
We're not.
2:18:03
We're not good.
2:18:04
In fact, man, we got we got worse.
2:18:06
Our intelligence money.
2:18:07
We haven't seen that for a while.
2:18:09
No, no, I don't know.
2:18:10
Well, they're all furloughed.
2:18:13
No.
2:18:13
Oh, yeah, they're probably all.
2:18:15
Yeah, that's probably that's the problem.
2:18:17
That's the problem.
2:18:18
So keep keep trying, everybody.
2:18:20
Once again, it still takes creative thought, good
2:18:25
ideas.
2:18:26
I don't care what tool you use.
2:18:28
Good ideas result in good products.
2:18:32
And there were some some.
2:18:35
Now, there weren't a lot of good ideas,
2:18:37
honestly.
2:18:38
Just a few.
2:18:40
No, this piece one.
2:18:42
One hands down, hands down.
2:18:44
So now we go to the treasure portion
2:18:47
of our value for value model.
2:18:50
This is where we thank everybody.
2:18:51
Fifty dollars and above.
2:18:53
So we're very transparent.
2:18:55
Can't get more transparent than that.
2:18:57
And we tell you exactly who sent it
2:18:59
to us.
2:18:59
And we have a special segment for those
2:19:01
fortunate enough to be able to send us
2:19:05
two hundred dollars or more.
2:19:07
In that case, we'll we'll thank you.
2:19:09
Of course, we'll read your note as a
2:19:11
thanks.
2:19:12
And we will also give you an official
2:19:14
Hollywood title.
2:19:15
You, too, can be just like Brunetti and
2:19:18
be an associate executive producer of the best
2:19:21
podcast in the universe.
2:19:23
Now, you can't be Brunetti because if you're
2:19:26
three hundred dollars and we become an executive
2:19:27
producer, that's a much bigger deal than Brunetti.
2:19:29
And you can even stand next to him
2:19:31
proudly at IMDb Dotcom.
2:19:34
And we will read your note.
2:19:36
So right off the bat, saving, saving our
2:19:39
bacon, literally saving our bacon is Sir Kevin
2:19:43
Keeper of the Spee, which I think is
2:19:45
his dog from Portland, Oregon.
2:19:48
He comes in with a rubberizer boost.
2:19:53
India.
2:19:54
Stand by.
2:19:57
Thirty three.
2:19:59
Thirty three.
2:20:00
Thirty three.
2:20:01
Rubberizer out.
2:20:03
That's right.
2:20:04
He comes in with three thousand three hundred
2:20:06
and thirty three dollars and thirty four cents,
2:20:09
which is one extra penny.
2:20:13
Which let me see what he says here.
2:20:15
ITM Goods, sirs.
2:20:17
With this rubberizer donation duly modified by one
2:20:20
penny.
2:20:20
There it is.
2:20:21
One penny to observe all proper and official
2:20:24
customs.
2:20:25
I would like to hereby be known as
2:20:27
Sir Kevin Keeper of the Spee, Secretary General
2:20:30
and Duke of Portland.
2:20:33
You got it.
2:20:34
Title change, everything all set.
2:20:35
And he also gets an international peace prize
2:20:38
with your blessings as always.
2:20:41
Long live payments sent by by.
2:20:45
What is this?
2:20:49
Square.
2:20:50
What does it say here, John?
2:20:52
I have to look at it.
2:20:53
Long live payments sent by.
2:20:56
We look forward.
2:20:58
Long live his payment by squirk, by squire,
2:21:03
it says.
2:21:03
Squire.
2:21:03
OK.
2:21:04
Long live notes of brevity.
2:21:07
Oh, yes.
2:21:07
And long live with no agenda.
2:21:09
Your humble servant, producer Sir Kevin Keeper of
2:21:12
the Speed.
2:21:13
Thank you.
2:21:13
Thank you, sir.
2:21:14
Kevin.
2:21:15
Really appreciate it.
2:21:16
This was needed, as you'll hear.
2:21:19
Short.
2:21:19
Well, it would have been a short donation
2:21:21
segment if some people hadn't sent in long
2:21:24
notes.
2:21:26
The I will say that he sent this
2:21:29
in a while back.
2:21:30
1031.
2:21:31
Notice the date.
2:21:32
Oh, yes.
2:21:33
What is up with that?
2:21:35
Well.
2:21:36
It's been good.
2:21:37
We've got good back and forth.
2:21:38
Where's how come this hasn't shown up?
2:21:40
He's wanted this to show up forever.
2:21:42
So here we are.
2:21:43
November 6th or 7th, 8th, 8th, 9th.
2:21:48
It took over a week, week and a
2:21:50
half or something.
2:21:50
I guess a week.
2:21:51
Was there a check?
2:21:53
Yeah.
2:21:53
Oh, OK.
2:21:55
Was a check in two notes.
2:21:56
He has a second note, which you may
2:21:58
have a copy of, but it wasn't meant
2:22:00
to be read.
2:22:00
I don't have a second.
2:22:01
No, no, I don't know.
2:22:02
I should have just got a copy.
2:22:04
Sorry.
2:22:05
Don't have it.
2:22:06
Was it personal?
2:22:09
Oh, I was just saying what a great
2:22:10
guy I am.
2:22:11
You you're mean to me.
2:22:12
Oh, yeah.
2:22:12
Well, that's personal, obviously.
2:22:15
So it was something like that.
2:22:17
Oh, so this next note is a request
2:22:19
for me to read it in my best.
2:22:21
Mark, this is your note to read because
2:22:22
he wants you to read it as Mark
2:22:24
Rutte.
2:22:25
I think it's a she.
2:22:26
She is Loes van Opzeland-Kolhoff from Heilo
2:22:29
in the Netherlands.
2:22:30
333.33. L-O-E-S is a
2:22:33
female's name in Holland.
2:22:35
Loes.
2:22:36
Loes is a female name.
2:22:37
Heilo is.
2:22:38
L-O-E-S.
2:22:39
Loes.
2:22:39
Loes.
2:22:40
Yes, that's a very, very female Dutch name.
2:22:42
Loes.
2:22:43
Hoi, Adam.
2:22:44
Please read this in your best Mark Rutte
2:22:46
voice.
2:22:47
Dear Adam and John, I'm listening to your
2:22:49
show since the end of 2018 after being
2:22:52
hit in the mouth for many, many times
2:22:54
by my husband.
2:22:55
Oh, it hurts.
2:22:56
You have been the voice of reason and
2:22:58
kept me sane during the vape wars.
2:23:01
I worked in a vape shop.
2:23:03
A vape shop?
2:23:05
That is amazing that you worked in the
2:23:08
vape shop.
2:23:09
That is fantastic.
2:23:11
She goes on to say, I wanted to
2:23:13
be a dame for my 40th birthday on
2:23:15
the 9th of November.
2:23:18
Please put me on the birthday list.
2:23:20
But inflation and other financial setbacks don't make,
2:23:23
didn't make it possible.
2:23:25
It's possible now, ain't it?
2:23:26
Yes, it's very good.
2:23:28
Still, I wanted to donate.
2:23:30
You give me a lot of value, more
2:23:33
than I can ever pay you back.
2:23:34
Every time I doubted if I should donate
2:23:37
it, I saw a lot of 33s, 1111s,
2:23:41
8008s coming by the supermarket I work.
2:23:44
So the universe is telling me to donate.
2:23:46
So please de-douche me.
2:23:49
You've been de-douched.
2:23:53
Jingles.
2:23:54
Vape wars.
2:23:55
Look at that use.
2:23:56
And it's true.
2:23:58
Please give my husband, Pelosi, jobs karma.
2:24:01
He starts a new job in January and
2:24:03
a travel karma for us because we're going
2:24:05
to visit friends in America during Christmas.
2:24:08
Four more years.
2:24:09
Grootjes, grootjes, from Luz.
2:24:12
Hey, Luz, tell me where you're going to
2:24:14
be.
2:24:14
Are you going to be anywhere near Texas?
2:24:16
I will come to see you.
2:24:17
That would be fun.
2:24:18
And bring some Dutch licorice, please.
2:24:30
Oh, my gosh.
2:24:35
Can you see that juice?
2:24:37
That's true.
2:24:38
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:24:41
Let's vote for jobs.
2:24:43
You know, I should say that all Dutch
2:24:48
people know this, that whenever you visit someone
2:24:54
from a Dutchman or someone who grew up
2:24:56
in Holland, who no longer lives in the
2:24:58
country, you have to bring Dutch licorice with
2:25:01
you.
2:25:02
And the other day, someone sent me four
2:25:05
bags of Dutch licorice.
2:25:07
It's like crack.
2:25:09
I most Americans hate it.
2:25:12
It's salty black licorice.
2:25:14
But, oh, man, it's so good.
2:25:17
It's like Vegeta, Marmite, Marmite, Marmite.
2:25:23
Yeah, it's like Vegeta, Marmite.
2:25:25
It's salty and terrible.
2:25:27
No, it's wonderful.
2:25:29
It's so good.
2:25:29
Yeah.
2:25:30
Salty.
2:25:30
Especially if you're going to bring something in
2:25:32
from Holland.
2:25:33
Tell them to bring in some of the
2:25:35
Dutch absinthe.
2:25:45
Those are some of my favorites.
2:25:48
Switcheroo from the Indy meetup.
2:25:51
$300 came in and this is the longest
2:25:53
note ever.
2:25:54
And I'm not sure that they want us
2:25:56
to read this whole note.
2:25:57
But it's a switcheroo to Sir Ohio Bloke
2:26:00
from the Buckeye State checking in.
2:26:02
Another late stage boomer here who absolutely loves
2:26:07
it when you two launch into boomer talk.
2:26:09
Oh, they were winning.
2:26:13
Winning.
2:26:13
Winning.
2:26:16
It's always spot on and never fails to
2:26:19
crack me up.
2:26:21
I've been on board since around episode 200
2:26:24
and truly appreciate the twice weekly dose of
2:26:26
sanity.
2:26:28
My human resource span three generations, millennial, Gen
2:26:31
X, Gen Alpha.
2:26:32
And let me tell you, let me tell
2:26:35
you much of what you say about the
2:26:38
younger generation rings true in my own HR
2:26:40
department.
2:26:42
The good news is, the good news is,
2:26:46
all of mine can read an analog clock.
2:26:49
Yeah.
2:26:50
And know how to use a tape measure.
2:26:53
So there's still hope out there.
2:26:55
Make the short hope over to the short
2:26:57
hope.
2:26:58
The short hop over to the New England.
2:27:00
Northeast.
2:27:01
Northeast, Indiana next week.
2:27:03
And he's New England to me.
2:27:05
Indiana next week for the Indy and a
2:27:08
tri-state short and long barrel safety meetup.
2:27:12
Brought along Sir son of a bloke for
2:27:16
another one of my Gen Z sons.
2:27:18
Okay, it goes on and on.
2:27:19
Sent a lot of lead downrange at pumpkins.
2:27:21
That's that's what their meetup was.
2:27:23
It was a shooting.
2:27:26
Yeah.
2:27:27
Shooting at pumpkins.
2:27:28
I love it.
2:27:30
But I love it.
2:27:30
And he goes on per J.C.D.'s
2:27:32
tip, I tracked down some old Crow 86
2:27:34
or it's actually just Crow 86 to throw
2:27:37
into the raffle.
2:27:38
Excellent stuff.
2:27:40
Yeah.
2:27:40
Okay.
2:27:42
And then he wraps it up with I
2:27:45
can't read because it's off the spreadsheet.
2:27:46
He says we even got droned again at
2:27:48
the end of a great photo group.
2:27:51
A great group photo.
2:27:52
The perfect wrap up to an awesome meetup.
2:27:54
Finally, could you add my youngest Lucy to
2:27:56
the birthday list?
2:27:57
She turned 11 last Friday.
2:27:58
I believe she's on there.
2:27:59
So no worries.
2:28:01
They were with Nathan Parker from Seattle, Washington
2:28:03
222.22. A row of ducks.
2:28:06
No note.
2:28:06
So double up karma for Nathan Parker.
2:28:09
You've got karma.
2:28:14
Eli, the coffee guy, as the government shutdown
2:28:17
drags into November, which it has done, delays
2:28:22
are everywhere from airports to food stamps, plus
2:28:25
the paychecks of the federal workforce.
2:28:28
At least coffee deliveries are still running on
2:28:30
time.
2:28:31
So far, yes, so far.
2:28:34
Order now.
2:28:36
So this is a good go at coffee
2:28:37
roasters.
2:28:37
I'd come use code I.T.M. 20
2:28:39
for 20 percent off your order.
2:28:40
Stay caffeinated, says Eli, the coffee guy.
2:28:42
P.S. Can you add the United States
2:28:44
Marine Corps to the birthday list on 1110?
2:28:48
Happy two hundred and fiftieth.
2:28:49
Semper Fi.
2:28:52
Sir Q checks in from Cisco, Texas.
2:28:54
Two hundred and ten dollars and sixty cents.
2:28:57
I'm donating because I spent 17 dollars on
2:29:00
an eight part series that Sean Ryan put
2:29:03
out.
2:29:04
He's charging money now.
2:29:06
I don't know what he's talking about.
2:29:08
We know Sean Ryan is.
2:29:10
The name rings a bell, but I don't
2:29:12
know who he is.
2:29:13
Sean Ryan podcast.
2:29:14
He's a he's a big, big he's a
2:29:17
former CIA mill.
2:29:19
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
2:29:21
I know who it is.
2:29:21
Seems like a nice guy.
2:29:23
Yeah, probably is.
2:29:24
But he's charging money.
2:29:26
So 17 dollars on an eight part series
2:29:27
that Sean Ryan put out.
2:29:29
Here's the kicker.
2:29:30
I should have saved my money and sent
2:29:32
it to you guys.
2:29:33
You should have.
2:29:34
Though it was about psyops and had good
2:29:37
info in it, it seemed like the series
2:29:39
was a psyop itself.
2:29:40
Probably was.
2:29:42
It was a Radiolab type of audio only
2:29:44
stress fest.
2:29:47
Sean Ryan show.
2:29:49
Psyop.
2:29:51
Radiolab.
2:29:53
Something like that, I guess.
2:29:56
Listening to no agenda, I get the same
2:29:58
deconstruction with none of the stress.
2:30:01
Thanks, says Sir Q of Eastland County.
2:30:04
Thank you very much, brother.
2:30:06
Interesting little Patkin.
2:30:08
She's in Lakewood, Colorado, wants jobs, karma and
2:30:10
rights for a competitive edge with a resume
2:30:13
that gets results.
2:30:14
Go to ImageMakersInc.com for all your executive
2:30:17
resume and job search needs.
2:30:20
That's ImageMakersInc with a K and work with
2:30:23
Linda Liu, duchess of jobs and writer of
2:30:26
winning resumes.
2:30:27
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:30:31
Let's vote for jobs.
2:30:33
Karma.
2:30:35
And then finally on our list, we have
2:30:37
200 dollars that came in in some Bitcoin
2:30:39
through the strike, which you can find at
2:30:43
noagendadonations.com.
2:30:44
There's no no name, no note.
2:30:47
You got to you got to send us
2:30:48
a note.
2:30:49
And it should be just put subject line
2:30:51
donation.
2:30:52
Yeah.
2:30:52
Bitcoin donation might even might even well, then
2:30:55
we can we can match it.
2:30:56
So you will get a double up karma.
2:30:58
Thank you, Bitcoiner.
2:30:59
You've got karma.
2:31:03
And that wraps up our executive and associate
2:31:05
executive producers for episode one thousand eight hundred
2:31:07
and fifteen in our 19th year of the
2:31:09
best podcast in the universe.
2:31:11
You can support the show and we'd like
2:31:13
you to consider that we do this as
2:31:14
a public service.
2:31:15
You'll be doing it for a long time.
2:31:17
You just heard it there.
2:31:18
Why waste your money on other products when
2:31:21
you can just send some value back for
2:31:23
the value you receive?
2:31:24
V for V, baby.
2:31:25
It's the new international lifestyle.
2:31:27
Go to noagendadonations.com.
2:31:29
Make any amount your donation at any time.
2:31:32
You could even set up a recurring donation,
2:31:33
any amount, any frequency.
2:31:35
Noagendadonations.com.
2:31:36
Thank you to our executive and associate executive
2:31:38
producers.
2:31:39
Our formula is this.
2:31:41
We go out, we hit people in the
2:31:44
mouth.
2:31:51
Oh, my gosh.
2:31:53
Can you see that juice?
2:31:59
Shut up.
2:32:00
I have a series of clips.
2:32:01
Oh, a series.
2:32:04
About this came out last year.
2:32:07
No, it's not.
2:32:07
I don't know why we haven't played these
2:32:09
clips.
2:32:10
Don't tell about the Hillary bribe.
2:32:12
What is this?
2:32:13
The overstock CEO?
2:32:15
Yeah.
2:32:15
We've played this.
2:32:17
I don't remember playing it.
2:32:18
I would have remembered this.
2:32:20
Oh, no.
2:32:21
OK.
2:32:21
I don't want you to think I'm mean
2:32:23
to you.
2:32:24
Well, you are mean to me, but that's
2:32:25
beside the point.
2:32:26
Can you look it up and see if
2:32:27
we played these?
2:32:28
Yes, of course.
2:32:29
We played these.
2:32:30
What's the guy's name again?
2:32:32
Patrick Bryce.
2:32:34
No, it's not Bryce.
2:32:35
Yeah, I think it's Bryce.
2:32:37
No, it's not Patrick Bryce.
2:32:38
Well, it's Patrick something.
2:32:40
Burn.
2:32:40
Patrick Burn.
2:32:41
Burn.
2:32:41
Patrick Burn.
2:32:42
Exactly.
2:32:42
That's what I said.
2:32:43
Patrick Burn.
2:32:45
OK, I can find it for you.
2:32:49
This will be good because then I don't
2:32:50
have to play these.
2:32:53
Hillary.
2:32:54
Let me do the searches.
2:32:55
Patrick and Hillary.
2:32:57
Here it is.
2:32:58
I have this is a long time ago,
2:33:00
actually.
2:33:04
Let's see.
2:33:05
Stop that now.
2:33:07
And first thing she's going to do when
2:33:09
she becomes president is she's going to send
2:33:12
her goons over to the FBI.
2:33:14
Remember this?
2:33:15
Yeah.
2:33:15
Yeah.
2:33:15
Yeah.
2:33:16
We put this is from what was the
2:33:18
date on this then?
2:33:19
November 1st, 2020.
2:33:24
That's interesting because the problem I have with
2:33:27
it.
2:33:28
I'm wondering is the same clips because he
2:33:30
talks about the Durham report in these clips
2:33:35
and he died.
2:33:36
This could be a reiteration of what could
2:33:38
be.
2:33:39
Let's do with them because it's still.
2:33:40
Well, I don't know.
2:33:41
You know, I hate to play repetitive.
2:33:43
Well, let me let me just five years.
2:33:46
Let me just summarize.
2:33:47
This is where he was given.
2:33:50
He was supposed to give Hillary a bribe.
2:33:52
She actually took the money and then she
2:33:54
went down the elevator and he went in
2:33:55
the elevator and then the FBI.
2:33:57
There's no elevator talking this.
2:33:59
Oh, and then the FBI says, no, no,
2:34:01
we're not talking about it.
2:34:02
It's over.
2:34:03
You got to forget this ever happened.
2:34:05
I think this is a repeat of the
2:34:06
old story.
2:34:07
So I don't think we need to play
2:34:08
it.
2:34:08
But again, it's five years old.
2:34:09
It might be worth playing again to remind
2:34:11
people.
2:34:11
But I'm going to say no.
2:34:13
OK, well, I'll go on your no.
2:34:16
Yeah.
2:34:17
Yeah.
2:34:18
But people can look it up.
2:34:19
Just go to YouTube and Hillary bribe.
2:34:22
I thought it was a disgusting tale.
2:34:24
And sorry, I didn't remember.
2:34:26
Let's go to tariff doom.
2:34:27
How about that for an idea?
2:34:30
Tariff doom.
2:34:31
And you said since you like the way
2:34:32
I spell tariff, I made sure to spell
2:34:34
it even better.
2:34:36
It's been over seven months.
2:34:38
There's no SS.
2:34:41
No, it's because the SS came earlier, so
2:34:44
you're not going to play that same jingle
2:34:45
again.
2:34:46
So I just reneged on the second SS.
2:34:48
It's been over seven months since President Trump
2:34:50
enacted those sweeping duties on goods from nearly
2:34:53
every country.
2:34:54
And one of the questions before the Supreme
2:34:56
Court this week, who's paying them?
2:34:59
And there's Juliana Kim joins us.
2:35:01
Juliana, thanks for being with us.
2:35:03
Happy to be here.
2:35:04
Have we seen retail prices change in the
2:35:07
past seven months?
2:35:09
So far, prices have gone up, you know,
2:35:11
for coffee, clothing, furniture, things that are almost
2:35:14
exclusively imported.
2:35:16
But interestingly, only about 20 percent of the
2:35:19
tariff burden has actually made it to retail
2:35:21
prices.
2:35:22
That's according to Erica York, an analyst at
2:35:25
Tax Foundation, a group that advocates for simplifying
2:35:28
the tax code.
2:35:29
She told me companies probably had stockpiles of
2:35:32
products before tariffs hit, and also a lot
2:35:34
of businesses held off changing prices while there
2:35:37
was some uncertainty around tariff rates.
2:35:39
But that strategy is beginning to change, and
2:35:42
companies are starting to pass higher costs to
2:35:44
the consumer.
2:35:45
Economists say that's going to become more common
2:35:48
in the months ahead.
2:35:49
What could cost look like in the tax
2:35:55
foundation estimates that if tariffs stay in place
2:35:58
throughout next year, a household could face an
2:36:00
average burden of sixteen hundred dollars.
2:36:03
I also asked this question to Ken Smetters,
2:36:05
the faculty director at the Penn Wharton budget
2:36:07
model, and he estimates that existing tariffs could
2:36:10
tack on as much as one percent to
2:36:12
your average spending.
2:36:13
So if you spend fifty thousand dollars a
2:36:15
year, that's an extra five hundred dollars.
2:36:18
Keep in mind, prices are just one part
2:36:20
of the story.
2:36:21
You know, tariffs can also lead companies to
2:36:24
slow hiring or cut wages, which isn't good
2:36:26
news for an already weakening job market.
2:36:31
Okay, this was a couple of things we're
2:36:33
going to have to come to grips with.
2:36:36
These high tariffs and reestablishing American manufacturing is
2:36:40
not going to save the consumer money.
2:36:45
The Chinese can produce products and have them
2:36:47
shipped over here cheaper than we're ever going
2:36:50
to be able to make the product, no
2:36:52
matter how good we are.
2:36:54
So, I mean, but nobody wants to admit
2:36:56
this.
2:36:57
And if they're faulting Trump, I mean, it's
2:36:59
more important to have the jobs over here
2:37:01
and suffer a little bit.
2:37:04
So, you know, so your bird, you know,
2:37:06
your little birdhouse you bought at Joanne's or
2:37:09
wherever you got this thing is, you know,
2:37:10
you got for a buck and a half
2:37:12
is going to cost you 250.
2:37:13
I mean, it's fine.
2:37:15
You're just going to.
2:37:16
But this idea that things are going to
2:37:18
be cheaper when we're cutting off the supply
2:37:21
of cheap junk is unlikely.
2:37:25
Part two.
2:37:27
Of course, exit polls from key races this
2:37:29
week show that the cost of living and
2:37:31
the economy are the biggest concerns for voters.
2:37:35
How do you think tariffs have played into
2:37:37
that?
2:37:38
Tariffs have pushed prices higher, but for the
2:37:41
most part, the increases have been fairly modest.
2:37:44
That being said, many Americans are struggling with
2:37:46
inflation fatigue.
2:37:47
I spoke to Michelle Florio, a paraprofessional in
2:37:50
New Jersey, and she says she's held off
2:37:52
buying a new car and a mattress because
2:37:54
tariffs have made them too expensive.
2:37:57
And even her holiday plans are changing.
2:37:59
I have been giving baked goods as gifts
2:38:03
for 53 years and now I don't know.
2:38:08
But wait a minute, baked goods.
2:38:10
She makes baked goods as gifts, but now
2:38:13
she doesn't know.
2:38:14
I don't know.
2:38:15
Maybe I can't make because of the tariffs.
2:38:17
What is the terrorist got to do?
2:38:19
So this is the problem I'm having with
2:38:20
the Democrats in this bullcrap.
2:38:22
They extend it to something like baked goods.
2:38:26
Yes, it's bad.
2:38:29
Oh, I'm making baked goods.
2:38:30
I don't know if I can make the
2:38:31
baked goods anymore because of tariffs.
2:38:33
Oh, flour is so expensive.
2:38:36
It's made somewhere.
2:38:37
I don't know where I'm getting it.
2:38:39
That's bullcrap.
2:38:40
I've been watching the quad screen and I've
2:38:43
been seeing this developing story and it is
2:38:46
worth discussing for a moment.
2:38:48
Breaking news to bring you about the BBC.
2:38:50
The BBC chairman has announced that both the
2:38:52
director general, Tim Davey, and the new CEO,
2:38:55
Debra Tennis, are to resign.
2:38:58
Let's bring you more on that story.
2:39:00
Our cultural reporter, Noor Nanji, is with me
2:39:02
here.
2:39:02
So tell us about the background to this
2:39:04
and about the resignation statements.
2:39:07
Yeah, that's right.
2:39:07
Really significant news that's just come to us
2:39:10
in the last few minutes.
2:39:11
So both the BBC's director general, Tim Davey,
2:39:14
but also Debra Tennis, who is the CEO
2:39:16
of News, both resigning.
2:39:18
We've just had that, as I say, in
2:39:20
the last few minutes.
2:39:21
OK, well, that was a useless report.
2:39:22
But I know what this is about because
2:39:24
I'm looking at all the news.
2:39:26
This is over the BBC Panorama episode where
2:39:30
they edited Trump together to make it look
2:39:34
like he was telling the January 6 protesters
2:39:37
to go fight like hell and go storm
2:39:39
the Capitol.
2:39:40
Did you know anything about this story?
2:39:42
This is amazing.
2:39:42
No, I have no idea about this, but
2:39:44
that is scandalous.
2:39:45
And so the director and the CEO have
2:39:48
resigned.
2:39:49
I have a clip of the controversy.
2:39:51
I actually had it from, I think, maybe
2:39:54
two shows ago.
2:39:55
Here, check it out.
2:39:56
Well, it's the biggest story in town.
2:39:57
It turns out American President Donald Trump was
2:40:00
onto something.
2:40:02
Where are you from?
2:40:03
BBC.
2:40:04
Here's another beauty.
2:40:10
Well, that criticism of the BBC and John
2:40:16
Sopel, he was talking to there, apparently was
2:40:18
well-founded because the so-called impartial and
2:40:20
accurate public service broadcaster is nothing but.
2:40:25
You are fake news.
2:40:27
Sir, can you stay categorically that nobody...
2:40:30
No, Mr. President...
2:40:32
Because tonight the BBC is facing serious questions
2:40:34
over its credibility after the Daily Telegraph exposed
2:40:37
a Panorama segment that heavily doctored a speech
2:40:41
by the American President in 2021, hours before
2:40:45
the infamous January the 6th Capitol riot.
2:40:47
As you're about to hear, the corporation spliced
2:40:50
together two quotes one hour apart to make
2:40:53
it seem like he encouraged an insurrection.
2:40:57
They played the following clip.
2:41:01
We're going to walk down to the Capitol
2:41:03
and I'll be there with you and we
2:41:06
fight.
2:41:07
We fight like hell.
2:41:09
But Trump didn't, in fact, say this at
2:41:12
all.
2:41:13
The BBC spliced together two clips that took
2:41:16
place 54 minutes apart.
2:41:19
So let's go through it again.
2:41:23
We're going to walk down to the Capitol
2:41:26
and I'll be there with you.
2:41:28
Now, see there, between Capitol and and, that's
2:41:33
a cut.
2:41:34
Here's what Trump actually said.
2:41:36
We're going to walk down to the Capitol
2:41:41
and we're going to cheer on our brave
2:41:44
senators and congressmen and women.
2:41:48
It's different.
2:41:49
It wasn't until nearly an hour later that
2:41:51
he then said the second part of the
2:41:53
BBC's version.
2:41:55
We're going to walk down to the Capitol.
2:41:58
Now they're fast forwarding an hour.
2:42:02
And we fight.
2:42:03
We fight like hell.
2:42:05
So that's the scandal.
2:42:07
And wow, the North Sea Nexus under attack.
2:42:12
Look at what's happened.
2:42:13
We got the prince stripped of his title.
2:42:17
We've got the ambassador wrapped up in the
2:42:21
Epstein affair gone.
2:42:24
What's his face?
2:42:25
Yep.
2:42:26
And now the the director and the CEO
2:42:30
of the BBC resigning over this.
2:42:33
This is this is pretty big.
2:42:36
That is big.
2:42:38
Man, I'm glad we caught this on our
2:42:40
show day.
2:42:40
Thanks for doing this kind of dubious editing
2:42:44
took place on Friday.
2:42:45
I don't have clips on the news hour
2:42:49
because everybody's in a tizzy.
2:42:53
Everybody's in a tizzy over the Tucker Carlson,
2:42:56
Nick Fuentes interview, which we goodness, which we
2:42:59
played a couple of the guy at the
2:43:01
Heritage Foundation got into trouble and got kind
2:43:05
of booted from, you know, being accepted as
2:43:08
a I don't know, conservative operation.
2:43:10
I don't know what the deal is.
2:43:12
Did he get kicked out of the Heritage?
2:43:13
No, he did.
2:43:14
There was they asked him to resign, but
2:43:16
he wouldn't.
2:43:16
And all he said was I didn't, you
2:43:18
know, but apparently said it out of the
2:43:20
blue.
2:43:20
It wasn't.
2:43:21
And I'm not even sure that's true.
2:43:23
But he says, I think that Nick Fuentes
2:43:26
doing Carlson is fine because they were just
2:43:28
having a conversation that they both wanted to
2:43:30
have.
2:43:31
And the reason for the conversation initially, according
2:43:33
to Tucker, was they were having an online
2:43:36
beef with each other.
2:43:37
And so let's let's put it on the
2:43:39
let's have the beef.
2:43:41
But, you know, face to face like you
2:43:43
and I do all the time.
2:43:44
This is exactly the the op that I
2:43:46
was talking about.
2:43:47
So the other side is now retaliating.
2:43:50
And this is the neocon side.
2:43:52
And they're retaliating against this guy who you
2:43:54
said was too weak and would never be
2:43:56
able to kick Lindsey Graham out.
2:43:57
I'm not saying that that's not true.
2:43:59
But that is exactly the response you would
2:44:01
expect that going after that guy.
2:44:04
And so the latest thing is, I think
2:44:08
it was today or yesterday or yesterday, probably
2:44:09
yesterday, the day before Ben Shapiro shows up
2:44:12
on CNN.
2:44:16
On Jake Tapper show to condemn Tucker.
2:44:20
Wow.
2:44:20
He's going into the into the enemy camp.
2:44:23
Calling him a racist, which is like, you
2:44:25
know, boy, Shapiro is sketchy.
2:44:28
We have to remember that he hated Trump.
2:44:30
It was, you know, we went to the
2:44:32
whole thing in the last show.
2:44:33
But then the one that really got me,
2:44:35
though, was on on Friday on PBS NewsHour.
2:44:39
The woman there, Amina, blah, blah, blah, whatever
2:44:41
her name is, who's got a not a
2:44:44
good stage name because I can't remember her
2:44:45
name.
2:44:46
She did a whole thing, an entire segment
2:44:49
on Nick Fuentes.
2:44:52
And on Tucker, and she said, here's some
2:44:55
of the stuff he said on.
2:44:56
And they took clips from the Tucker show
2:44:58
out of context, completely out of context.
2:45:02
Wow.
2:45:03
Every one of them was out of context.
2:45:05
The whole thing about his misogyny, and they
2:45:10
play the out of context clips that we
2:45:11
we had in context.
2:45:13
We had ours were in context, as usual.
2:45:16
And those were out of context or make
2:45:18
me sound like an idiot.
2:45:19
And then they condemned Tucker.
2:45:21
So there's all kinds of and Fuentes.
2:45:23
Does he have a publicist?
2:45:25
This guy's getting more publicity than anybody I
2:45:29
know.
2:45:30
Well, he's he's the perfect the perfect poster
2:45:35
child for the moment.
2:45:36
It's perfect.
2:45:36
It's a perfect kid.
2:45:38
It's perfect.
2:45:39
It is a lot of material, a lot
2:45:41
of very inflammatory material.
2:45:44
And the podcast, the podosphere is still buzzing,
2:45:48
still buzzing.
2:45:50
Everyone's all a buzz.
2:45:54
Go on each other's podcasts.
2:45:57
But this idea of taking stuff out of
2:45:59
context and rejiggering it to make.
2:46:02
Yes.
2:46:02
Your point.
2:46:03
I would like not acceptable.
2:46:05
I would like someone to edit Adam and
2:46:07
John out of context and make a really
2:46:09
funny bit.
2:46:11
Something we can play.
2:46:12
You get somebody the guy.
2:46:13
If you're a humorist, you could probably make
2:46:16
it very amusing.
2:46:17
Yeah, we'd like to take that.
2:46:19
If you especially if you can take an
2:46:20
hour out of the conversation and drop some
2:46:23
bomb in from the end, like the BBC
2:46:25
did.
2:46:27
Wow.
2:46:27
That's fantastic.
2:46:30
I mean, that's, you know, who could be
2:46:33
next?
2:46:34
Who I with all of this happening and
2:46:37
and by the way, we don't really have
2:46:39
much on it.
2:46:39
But of course, we have Brennan supposedly getting
2:46:43
subpoenaed and Lisa, Lisa Page and her boyfriend,
2:46:49
whatever his name was, you know, people are
2:46:52
going to go down.
2:46:54
There's this.
2:46:55
Well, now I know you're skeptical, but this
2:46:58
arctic frost is still hanging in there.
2:47:00
And of course, we also have this was
2:47:02
big news from the blaze, which is quite
2:47:06
interesting.
2:47:08
One of his reporters did a gate analysis
2:47:13
on the January six pipe bomber.
2:47:17
Have you been following this story?
2:47:18
I've been trying to.
2:47:19
They can't seem, you know, that this the
2:47:21
pipe bomber was a bop of some sort.
2:47:24
Yes.
2:47:24
A former Capitol Police cop who worked for
2:47:27
the CIA.
2:47:28
Yeah.
2:47:29
But I like that they did gate analysis.
2:47:32
I don't know what a gate analysis is.
2:47:34
Your gate, someone's gate, how they walk their
2:47:36
gate.
2:47:37
Oh, the gate.
2:47:37
Oh, G.A.I.T. Yes.
2:47:39
The gate analysis.
2:47:40
Oh, yeah.
2:47:41
Gate.
2:47:41
And now that, you know, if you could,
2:47:44
I could spot Biden a mile away.
2:47:45
Well, so exactly.
2:47:46
So the first thing is, I think I
2:47:48
said right away, that's a woman.
2:47:50
That's a woman who's walking with that hoodie.
2:47:52
So, wow, I got that one.
2:47:54
But they have other video of her and
2:47:56
they did some analysis and the gate analysis
2:48:00
shows 94 percent match between the January six
2:48:03
pipe bomber and an ex-Capitol Police cop
2:48:05
who works for the CIA.
2:48:07
I want to see a gate analysis on
2:48:09
that.
2:48:10
Daddy, long legs skip over the lawn, go
2:48:12
there, skipping over the lawn to the helicopter.
2:48:15
Give me a gate analysis.
2:48:16
I don't even know.
2:48:17
Do you need a gate analysis?
2:48:19
I mean, come on.
2:48:20
The guy's legs were five inches longer than
2:48:22
Biden's.
2:48:23
He didn't, you know, didn't have that back
2:48:25
and forth.
2:48:26
I demand a gate analysis.
2:48:28
I want a gate.
2:48:29
Get it in it.
2:48:30
Grok, Grok, give me a gate analysis.
2:48:34
This is fantastic stuff.
2:48:36
And this, by the way, this was, which
2:48:38
brings me to another interesting, another, another interesting
2:48:41
point, because I'm so interesting.
2:48:44
The there was a story, if you remember,
2:48:47
about three weeks ago, Biden, who's supposedly dying
2:48:50
of all kinds of, you know, he's like
2:48:51
a wreck.
2:48:52
Oh, he rang the bell.
2:48:53
He's cancer free.
2:48:55
I didn't know that.
2:48:56
Yeah, he is.
2:48:57
That's what they say, brother.
2:48:59
OK, well, whatever the case during his cancer
2:49:01
moment, supposedly he and Obama were at the
2:49:04
same restaurant.
2:49:07
You remember this story?
2:49:08
It was about, yeah, several months ago.
2:49:10
Yes.
2:49:10
Yeah.
2:49:11
And they were at the same restaurant and
2:49:12
Obama never went to talk to him.
2:49:14
And it was like, oh, Obama's a jerk
2:49:16
because he wouldn't need the vice president.
2:49:18
His old buddy is there and he wouldn't
2:49:19
even say hello.
2:49:20
And they everyone monitored this.
2:49:22
And Biden was in the front outside in
2:49:24
the I guess in the outdoor eating and
2:49:26
he's eating with somebody.
2:49:28
And and the reason he never went and
2:49:31
talked to him because it wasn't Biden.
2:49:34
It was some other.
2:49:35
It was Daddy Longlegs.
2:49:36
It was the Daddy Longlegs guy.
2:49:40
What's he going to talk to him about?
2:49:41
I got nothing to say, ma'am.
2:49:43
I got to get back to my basketball
2:49:44
game.
2:49:45
I got a I got a pickup game.
2:49:46
I got to get to.
2:49:47
And he knew it.
2:49:48
And so what was the no reason to
2:49:49
talk to him?
2:49:50
So that's the explanation for this is not
2:49:53
because by I mean, Obama might be a
2:49:55
jerk, but I don't think that because he
2:49:57
knows enough to do public stuff.
2:49:59
Yeah.
2:50:00
Wow.
2:50:03
This there's you know, you're skeptical on Arctic
2:50:06
Frost.
2:50:06
Yes, I agree with you.
2:50:08
No, I'm not.
2:50:08
I'm not skeptical Arctic.
2:50:10
I'm skeptical that they're going to take action.
2:50:12
That's going to be meaningful.
2:50:14
I think they are.
2:50:15
I think that and it's not Congress who
2:50:17
gives a crap about Congress.
2:50:19
I'm talking about a Department of Justice.
2:50:20
You got A.G. Barbie.
2:50:22
Yes, yes.
2:50:23
Let me remind me who's the head of
2:50:26
the Department of Justice.
2:50:27
A.G. Barbie.
2:50:29
Yeah.
2:50:30
Yeah.
2:50:30
And what has she done so far?
2:50:32
Hang in there.
2:50:34
I have a feeling.
2:50:35
I just feel in my water.
2:50:37
My water tells me something's coming.
2:50:40
This is a new thing that you picked
2:50:42
up from the five Brian's.
2:50:43
It's a Dutchism.
2:50:44
No, it's not.
2:50:45
It's not from Pastor Jimmy and the five
2:50:47
Brian's in Holland.
2:50:48
We say, I feel it on my water.
2:50:51
I don't know where it comes from.
2:50:52
I have no idea.
2:50:53
It's a Dutchism.
2:50:57
Should we look into the etymology?
2:50:59
No, I don't think you need to, but
2:51:00
I think we should document some of these.
2:51:03
I need it's a book.
2:51:04
It's a giblet.
2:51:05
It's a giblet.
2:51:06
There's a giblet in there somewhere.
2:51:10
All right.
2:51:11
Well, wait, go back.
2:51:12
If you feel in your being your water,
2:51:14
that something's up.
2:51:15
We would feel it in our bones, our
2:51:17
bones.
2:51:18
Right.
2:51:19
Well, the Dutch feel in their water because
2:51:20
they live underwater.
2:51:21
Practically.
2:51:22
I don't know why they say this is
2:51:23
true.
2:51:24
They fool the dumb of Arthur.
2:51:27
I have this feeling and it could be
2:51:30
hopium.
2:51:31
I'll be the first to admit.
2:51:32
I have this feeling that they all pulled
2:51:35
back on the Epstein stuff because that's the
2:51:39
big bomb that's coming.
2:51:40
I know it sounds crazy.
2:51:41
No, I'm not going to deny the possibility
2:51:45
they're going to.
2:51:45
But the Epstein thing is just going to
2:51:47
be the release of the documents.
2:51:49
And in fact, there was a report that
2:51:51
they have one guy that's supposed to be
2:51:54
that this is ridiculous.
2:51:56
This was on I think it was PBS.
2:51:59
They said, oh, they're worried that, you know,
2:52:02
they Mike Johnson's not bringing Congress back because
2:52:06
of Epstein, Epstein, because the Epstein files, because
2:52:10
they got this one guy they're going to
2:52:11
have to, you know, he's going to come
2:52:13
in.
2:52:13
He's the new Democrat.
2:52:14
They're going to change.
2:52:15
He's going to add one more vote to
2:52:16
getting the Epstein files released.
2:52:18
Well, this guy's coming in eventually.
2:52:21
Yeah.
2:52:23
Oh, by the way, but I think you're
2:52:24
right.
2:52:25
The Epstein files may be abroad.
2:52:27
Yeah.
2:52:27
And I think they're going to push it
2:52:29
off as far as they can closest to
2:52:30
the midterms.
2:52:31
Yeah, of course.
2:52:31
That's when you want to do it.
2:52:32
By the way, void zero correctly corrects me.
2:52:36
He says the the the term is actually
2:52:38
full of them with Dave Arthur.
2:52:41
But I think it's often shortened to water.
2:52:43
So I feel it on my tea water.
2:52:48
Ah, so that may be like that makes
2:52:51
it even more obscure.
2:52:53
What tea water?
2:52:55
I don't know.
2:52:56
I can't help you there.
2:52:58
Void.
2:52:59
What is that from, man?
2:53:00
Explain.
2:53:01
It's got to be like reading the tea
2:53:03
leaves.
2:53:03
My maybe maybe something like that.
2:53:07
I do have a quick series of three
2:53:09
clips to wind this up as this will
2:53:13
enrage every.
2:53:14
You know what?
2:53:14
I'm not going to.
2:53:14
I'm going to save these.
2:53:15
I'll save these.
2:53:16
Go away.
2:53:17
What are they about that cancer?
2:53:20
Oh, you don't want to know.
2:53:21
It's like every stroke and cancer is blamed
2:53:24
on alcohol.
2:53:25
It couldn't be anything else.
2:53:27
Couldn't be.
2:53:28
And it couldn't be.
2:53:28
And it was going to be one of
2:53:29
those.
2:53:31
What now?
2:53:32
And then I have two.
2:53:33
I have a couple of I have a
2:53:35
funny rant we can finish with.
2:53:37
If you got something funny, let's finish with
2:53:39
something funny.
2:53:40
This is the this is I think her
2:53:42
name is Megan.
2:53:42
She's getting really famous online for she's a
2:53:45
black.
2:53:46
Very blunt is a little cussing going on
2:53:48
in this one for people.
2:53:49
Warning.
2:53:50
She's a black woman who just tell it
2:53:53
like it is type.
2:53:54
And she goes off on the trans, you
2:53:57
know, the bathrooms.
2:53:58
Ever since this thing happened at the gym.
2:54:01
Oh, yeah.
2:54:02
But they kicked her out instead of the
2:54:04
dude.
2:54:05
Yeah.
2:54:05
Now, I don't know what this is.
2:54:06
I don't think is the same woman.
2:54:07
But this woman has been making a fuss
2:54:09
and she goes off.
2:54:10
She goes off.
2:54:11
And here it is.
2:54:12
So let me start this off with I
2:54:14
lost my housing.
2:54:14
I lost my food stamps.
2:54:16
No, no, no.
2:54:17
Wrong one.
2:54:18
Wrong one.
2:54:19
OK, that's the food stamp woman.
2:54:20
The one we look at is black woman
2:54:22
on tire.
2:54:23
Tyrants rants.
2:54:24
Oh, I'm sorry.
2:54:26
Oops.
2:54:26
Tyrants.
2:54:28
Tyrants.
2:54:29
OK, so I have a PSA announcement.
2:54:31
OK, so I am a woman.
2:54:34
OK, uterus coach ovaries all night.
2:54:38
OK, so I am a woman.
2:54:40
OK, and I'm telling you, we don't want
2:54:43
your asses in our bathroom.
2:54:46
OK, I don't give a damn.
2:54:48
If you feel like a woman, if you've
2:54:50
always felt like a woman, if you think
2:54:53
you are a woman, if you think you
2:54:55
look like a woman, if you're feminine, if
2:54:58
you act more like a woman than women
2:55:00
do and all this other shit.
2:55:01
I'm telling you what it is.
2:55:03
So we do not want your asses, your
2:55:07
your dick, your beans, your your balls, testicles.
2:55:11
We don't want y'all in our bathroom.
2:55:13
OK, you understand what I'm telling you?
2:55:16
I don't care how you feel.
2:55:17
I don't care what you think.
2:55:19
I don't care about human rights, civil rights,
2:55:23
rights of transition, of transformation, whatever it is.
2:55:27
I don't give a damn.
2:55:28
Stay your asses out of women's spaces.
2:55:31
That's it.
2:55:32
Let's let's stop discussing it.
2:55:34
OK, it's not up for discussion.
2:55:36
Don't do not go into the woman's bathroom.
2:55:39
OK, that's it.
2:55:40
All right.
2:55:41
OK, just take your ass into the all
2:55:44
gender bathroom or the men's bathroom or go
2:55:47
pee in the bush.
2:55:48
We don't give a damn.
2:55:50
Just don't bring your ass into the woman's
2:55:51
bathroom.
2:55:52
OK, we got that.
2:55:53
OK, I'm going to show my school by
2:55:55
donating to No Agenda.
2:55:56
Imagine all the people who could do this.
2:55:59
Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
2:56:05
Wow.
2:56:08
So, wow, isn't that great?
2:56:10
Wow.
2:56:10
Yeah, that she's a phenomenal.
2:56:12
So we have the people that donated, which
2:56:15
is down to like a total of very
2:56:17
few people.
2:56:18
Yeah, that have contributed to today's show.
2:56:20
But we do have a few of them.
2:56:22
And Adam's going to read them off.
2:56:23
Yes, after I was so consumed with that
2:56:29
woman that I need to set up a
2:56:30
few things here.
2:56:31
I'm almost ready because, you know, typically when
2:56:33
we hit this segment, you start reading and
2:56:36
then I'd set up the thing and I'm
2:56:38
done.
2:56:38
OK, there we go.
2:56:39
Yes, I'm going to thank the donors.
2:56:40
$50 and above.
2:56:41
And as John said, it'll go pretty quickly.
2:56:45
Valerie Steensland from Kirkland, Washington.
2:56:48
$105.35. And she says she'll write a
2:56:51
real note when her next $100 moves her
2:56:54
to be to what I get to be
2:56:57
after Danewood.
2:56:57
We look forward to that.
2:56:58
Kevin McLaughlin.
2:56:59
Boom, we're already at $8008.
2:57:01
Conquered North Carolina.
2:57:02
Right away.
2:57:03
He says, be Laos Deo.
2:57:06
Oh, no, not be Laos.
2:57:07
Laos Deo.
2:57:09
Be is part of the boob.
2:57:09
Laos Deo is translated to praise be God,
2:57:12
be to God inscribed on the top of
2:57:14
the Washington Monument facing east towards the rising
2:57:16
sun.
2:57:18
Miguel Goncalves from London.
2:57:20
There's a Londoner who's still alive.
2:57:22
$69.69. He says he's very fascinated about
2:57:25
our debates about AI and whether there's space
2:57:27
in your publishing company for books.
2:57:31
There's a question for you, John.
2:57:33
Oh, I sent it off to Jay.
2:57:35
She's the publisher.
2:57:37
She's the publisher.
2:57:37
OK, so you're in the system.
2:57:40
Your submission has been taken into consideration.
2:57:45
Sir Tin from Arnold, Maryland.
2:57:49
$6.008. That's a crazy boob.
2:57:51
Lopsided boob donation and douchebag call out for
2:57:53
Steve.
2:57:55
Friend of Papa Chu.
2:57:57
Further small boobs from Grayson Insurance in Aurora,
2:58:02
Colorado.
2:58:03
Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona.
2:58:05
And we have Irma Sousaso de Lima de
2:58:09
Prado from Alsemere in the Netherlands.
2:58:11
Birthday donation.
2:58:12
$56.00 plus feeds.
2:58:14
Fees.
2:58:15
Would you please read my email?
2:58:16
Thank you.
2:58:17
I just did.
2:58:18
Irma Sousaso de Lima de Prado.
2:58:21
No other email received.
2:58:24
OK.
2:58:25
Then we have.
2:58:26
Ah, I got a note about this.
2:58:28
He wanted me to mention his night name,
2:58:30
which is Sir Fret Pound Forge.
2:58:33
All right.
2:58:34
Did that one right?
2:58:34
From Muncie, Indiana.
2:58:36
$56.23. Brittany Miller, Trinidad, Colorado.
2:58:39
$52.72. I'm sure these are 50s plus
2:58:41
fees.
2:58:42
Bradley Bowman from Duluth, Minnesota.
2:58:44
$52.18. Haven't seen something from Duluth in
2:58:46
a long time.
2:58:48
$51.00 from Josiah Thomas in Ankeny, Iowa.
2:58:52
And bad idea supply.
2:58:54
$50.50. 50s are here.
2:58:57
Jacob Rotrummel from Decatur, Illinois.
2:58:59
Steven Ray from Spokane, Washington.
2:59:01
Edward Mazurik from Memphis, Tennessee.
2:59:05
M.
2:59:05
Todd Allen in Harriman, Utah.
2:59:07
Roderick Brown from Mermaid.
2:59:11
What is P.E. in Canada?
2:59:15
What is that?
2:59:15
Prince Edward Island.
2:59:16
Prince Edward Island.
2:59:17
Of course, I should have known.
2:59:19
We have Rene Knigge from Utrecht in the
2:59:22
Netherlands.
2:59:23
Carrie Jackson from Watertown, Tennessee.
2:59:25
And Viscountess Knight from Edmonds, Washington.
2:59:28
Very short list.
2:59:29
We hope that we can do better.
2:59:30
We are here as a public service.
2:59:33
Don't let us go the way of the
2:59:34
farmers' almanac, people.
2:59:36
That would be pretty sad.
2:59:38
noagendadonations.com is where you can support the
2:59:40
show, the best podcast in the universe.
2:59:42
It is value for value.
2:59:43
It's all up to you.
2:59:45
If you want us to keep going for
2:59:46
more years, then keep sending us value.
2:59:48
You can send any amount you want.
2:59:50
Also set up a recurring donation, any amount,
2:59:52
any frequency.
2:59:53
noagendadonations.com.
2:59:54
It's your birthday, birthday.
2:59:59
And there we have Luz van Opselen-Kolhoff,
3:00:02
turning 40 on November 9th.
3:00:05
And Noah McDonald from Traverse City wishes his
3:00:07
smoking hot girlfriend a very happy birthday.
3:00:09
She turns 27 on the 9th.
3:00:12
And I believe we need to congratulate the
3:00:14
United States Marine Corps.
3:00:16
They'll be turning 250 years old tomorrow.
3:00:19
Happy birthday, Semper Fi, for everybody here at
3:00:21
the best podcast in the universe.
3:00:23
It's your birthday, yeah.
3:00:26
Title changes, turning facelessly.
3:00:30
That's changes.
3:00:32
Don't wanna be a douchebag.
3:00:34
Not a douchebag.
3:00:36
Not by a long shot.
3:00:38
We have Sir Kevin Keeper of the Speed
3:00:40
now upgrading his title with that beautiful Rub
3:00:43
-a-Lyzer donation.
3:00:44
He becomes Sir Kevin Keeper of the Speed,
3:00:47
Secretary General and the Duke of Portland.
3:00:49
And not just that, but he also will
3:00:52
be the recipient today of the No Agenda
3:00:55
International Peace Prize as received by the President
3:00:58
of the United States and by the team,
3:01:01
Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner.
3:01:04
That prize goes to none other than Sir
3:01:07
Kevin Keeper of the Speed, Secretary General and
3:01:11
Duke of Portland.
3:01:12
The man has more titles than he can
3:01:13
fit on a business card.
3:01:15
Congratulations.
3:01:16
And thank you very much for supporting your
3:01:18
best podcast in the universe.
3:01:27
We have exactly one meetup taking place on
3:01:31
Tuesday.
3:01:31
That will be the Everything Is An Op
3:01:33
Meetup, OKC, six o'clock at the Collective
3:01:36
Kitchen and Cocktails in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
3:01:40
And then that's for this week.
3:01:43
The rest of this month on the 15th,
3:01:44
Colleyville, Texas, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Albany, California.
3:01:48
Get John out of the house.
3:01:49
That should be a good one.
3:01:50
Central Ohio, Zurich, Switzerland.
3:01:52
Please send us your meetup reports, everybody, especially
3:01:55
on the 22nd, Charlotte, North Carolina.
3:01:57
Send us a meetup report, include your server.
3:01:59
Wilmington, California on the 22nd, Burlington, Kentucky.
3:02:03
We have Spokane, Washington on the 27th and
3:02:05
Wageningen, Gelderland in the Netherlands on November 29th.
3:02:10
Those are your No Agenda Meetups.
3:02:11
Go to noagendameetups.com.
3:02:13
That's where you can find all of them
3:02:14
listed in handy format, calendar or list.
3:02:17
And if you can't find one near you,
3:02:19
start one yourself.
3:02:20
It's easy.
3:02:21
Connection is protection at a No Agenda Meetup.
3:02:42
And we do have our end of show
3:02:45
mixes coming up.
3:02:46
Half AI slop and half homemade.
3:02:48
It's interesting how when you start introducing a
3:02:51
lot of slop that the homemade people say,
3:02:53
I can beat that.
3:02:55
And they're pretty good.
3:02:56
I have to admit.
3:02:58
Time for the ISOs.
3:03:00
These are the clips that with one clip
3:03:02
that will be chosen at the very end
3:03:04
of the show to send you off into
3:03:06
the rest of your Sunday or Monday whenever
3:03:08
you're listening to this show.
3:03:10
I only have one today.
3:03:12
You have two.
3:03:13
So I will play my one and we'll
3:03:15
see if it's a contender.
3:03:16
Okay, bye.
3:03:17
I'll just do my own show.
3:03:21
Kind of nasty sounding.
3:03:24
Well, it's Candace.
3:03:25
I expect.
3:03:26
Oh, okay.
3:03:28
Bye.
3:03:29
I'll just do my own show.
3:03:31
Okay.
3:03:31
Well, now I know that it's not quite
3:03:33
up to the snuff of Alex Jones.
3:03:35
No, no.
3:03:36
Here's a Scott Simon one.
3:03:38
S.S. Thanks.
3:03:39
Thanks so much.
3:03:40
Oh, sure.
3:03:42
Thanks so much.
3:03:43
It's a little short.
3:03:44
It's a little short.
3:03:45
Okay, well, let's go with the old standby.
3:03:48
Holy moly.
3:03:49
That was beyond great.
3:03:51
Of course.
3:03:52
That is always a winner.
3:03:53
A.I. to the rescue.
3:03:55
Time for tip of the day.
3:04:02
Okay, as a pro tip.
3:04:08
Pro tip.
3:04:09
Pro tip.
3:04:11
I'll be with dogs.
3:04:13
I don't know if anyone notices that we
3:04:15
have dogs.
3:04:16
You got dogs.
3:04:17
They stink.
3:04:19
Dogs stink.
3:04:20
Our dog is stinking right now.
3:04:22
This is good.
3:04:22
I'm very excited about this tip because Phoebe
3:04:24
is stinking.
3:04:26
Stevie?
3:04:27
No, Phoebe.
3:04:29
Oh, Phoebe.
3:04:30
I thought you said Stevie.
3:04:31
You're getting a little sibilance going on.
3:04:33
No, that's my teeth.
3:04:34
No, it's my teeth.
3:04:35
It's a combination of my teeth and your
3:04:37
hearing.
3:04:39
What?
3:04:40
What?
3:04:42
The older we get, the more artifacts will
3:04:46
be introduced into the show.
3:04:57
Odor side.
3:04:58
Odor side.
3:05:00
K.O.E. Kennel odor.
3:05:02
This is from the we have a kennel.
3:05:05
Yes.
3:05:05
So you need this product.
3:05:06
This makes 64 gallons.
3:05:08
You get the liquid.
3:05:09
It's an odor eliminator.
3:05:11
It's called K.O.E., which stands for
3:05:15
kennel odor eliminator.
3:05:16
And it's for kennels, but it's also good
3:05:18
for home, cage runs, cages runs, anything.
3:05:23
It's a non-enzymatic formula, fresh scent.
3:05:25
It smells like apricots, actually.
3:05:27
Amazon has it as Amazon's choice for making
3:05:30
your dog area smell better.
3:05:32
Do you spread this on the dog or
3:05:35
in the house?
3:05:35
No, no, no.
3:05:37
You get a mop and you get a
3:05:39
bucket of water and you put this in
3:05:41
there and you mop around.
3:05:42
You just mop everything with it.
3:05:44
Oh, no.
3:05:45
I'm not going to do that.
3:05:46
Mop up.
3:05:50
Hey, give the dog a bath.
3:05:52
OK, yeah, this is what you're looking for.
3:05:54
Dog bath stuff.
3:05:56
This is not for dog bath.
3:05:57
This is for the area that you get
3:06:00
the dog in the car to the car
3:06:01
stinks.
3:06:03
Oh, yeah.
3:06:03
You got a dog and you got a
3:06:04
kennel.
3:06:05
You got some place in the dog cage.
3:06:06
It stinks.
3:06:07
You use this K.O.E. Amazon has
3:06:10
it.
3:06:10
It's available everywhere.
3:06:12
Interesting.
3:06:13
By the way, breaking news from Dreb Scott.
3:06:16
Breaking hashtag breaking three alarms.
3:06:18
Three, three revolving lights.
3:06:21
Breaking, breaking news.
3:06:23
A senior Democratic senator says there are enough
3:06:25
Democratic votes poised to end the 40 day
3:06:28
government shutdown.
3:06:29
Sorry for the breaking.
3:06:31
Couldn't resist.
3:06:32
All right.
3:06:33
It's breaking.
3:06:34
It's breaking.
3:06:34
It's all breaking.
3:06:36
You know, Horowitz and I predicted the 10th.
3:06:39
Really?
3:06:40
That will be tomorrow.
3:06:41
I mean, do we have a prop?
3:06:43
Can we do it?
3:06:43
Are there profits on?
3:06:44
This has got to be profit.
3:06:46
I'm sure there's got to be a profit.
3:06:48
Well, they have to.
3:06:49
They have to do so.
3:06:50
We need news to cover up the BBC
3:06:52
director.
3:06:53
We need some news.
3:06:54
The North Sea Nexus is looking for a
3:06:55
good point.
3:06:56
The calls went out.
3:06:57
Oh, we got to stop people thinking that
3:06:59
our news is fake.
3:07:00
Come on, guys.
3:07:01
Vote against it.
3:07:03
Wow.
3:07:05
That would be good.
3:07:07
Well, it'd be nice.
3:07:07
It has to.
3:07:08
It has to.
3:07:09
If it goes to Friday, your Christmas gifts
3:07:12
are not coming from Amazon.
3:07:17
Yeah, well, there's a lot of pressure.
3:07:19
It's a pressure cooker.
3:07:20
We got a real pressure cooker going on
3:07:22
here, everybody.
3:07:22
That is John's tip of the day.
3:07:24
Find them all at tipoftheday.net.
3:07:34
Yeah, that's it, everybody.
3:07:39
We conclude our broadcast day.
3:07:41
Remember, we do not conform to the way
3:07:43
of the world.
3:07:44
No, sir.
3:07:46
What are you laughing about?
3:07:48
What does that even mean?
3:07:50
Some people.
3:07:51
If you know, you know.
3:07:52
If you know, you know.
3:07:58
Oh, I love that you reacted that way.
3:08:00
That's funny.
3:08:02
Of course, we will return on Thursday, one
3:08:05
day before chaos, or a couple days after
3:08:08
everything calms down and gets back to normal
3:08:10
again.
3:08:12
And then what will we be outraged about?
3:08:15
Candace Owens, please tell me.
3:08:17
I need something to get freaked out about.
3:08:20
And you're right.
3:08:21
Once we knew the 90 days was out
3:08:23
in the potosphere and the Fredericksburg area, we
3:08:27
knew that it was going to end soon.
3:08:29
Hey, great end of show mix is two
3:08:31
real dudes, Deez Laffs and Sir Michael Anthony,
3:08:33
followed by Bonald Crabtree and MVP with some
3:08:36
A.I. Slop.
3:08:37
Hear them all at gitmojams.com.
3:08:41
Until Thursday.
3:08:42
Coming to you from the heart of the
3:08:43
Texas Hill Country in the morning, everybody.
3:08:45
I'm Adam Curry.
3:08:46
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're finally
3:08:48
having our summer.
3:08:49
I'm John C.
3:08:50
Dvorak.
3:08:51
We come back on Thursday.
3:08:52
Until then, please remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:08:55
We've got Nick Dirac from the sewer up
3:08:57
next after the end of show mix.
3:08:59
Until Thursday.
3:09:00
Adios, mofos, hui hui and such.
3:09:03
Adam Curry.
3:09:04
John C.
3:09:05
Dvorak.
3:09:05
Whoa, what was that?
3:09:07
Well, yes, they are a major source.
3:09:09
And I can tell you that in the
3:09:11
Situation Room, I've seen photographs of fentanyl labs
3:09:14
in Canada that the law enforcement folks were
3:09:16
leaving alone.
3:09:16
Canada's got a big drug problem, even in
3:09:18
their own cities.
3:09:19
They'll walk around Toronto and see what it's
3:09:22
like.
3:09:23
And you'll see that it is a big
3:09:24
problem.
3:09:25
And frankly, we have intelligence that Mexican cartels
3:09:28
operate in Canada as well.
3:10:25
That's not a joke.
3:10:26
I'm being joking.
3:10:28
Yeah.
3:10:35
Scratch the record.
3:10:41
Back in the day.
3:10:43
Back in the day.
3:10:44
Ruin the groove.
3:10:45
Ruin the grooves.
3:10:50
Scratch the record.
3:10:51
Pick up the little grooves in this vinyl.
3:10:55
Scratching the record.
3:10:56
Pick up the little grooves.
3:10:58
This is a hit.
3:10:59
This is the next number one.
3:11:01
Needle.
3:11:02
Needle.
3:11:02
Needle.
3:11:03
Needle.
3:11:03
Needle.
3:11:04
Needle.
3:11:04
Needle in an arm.
3:11:06
Little drop.
3:11:07
Needle drop.
3:11:09
Scratch the record.
3:11:11
I'm sorry I asked.
3:11:12
Yeah, well, you did ask.
3:11:13
In the morning.
3:11:19
Fat lady.
3:11:30
Test, test, test, test the moon.
3:11:47
Hey, wake up.
3:11:49
It's the moon.
3:11:51
Adam and John are at the speaker door.
3:11:55
Knocking so loud that you can't ignore.
3:11:58
Slop-free deconstruction that you adore.
3:12:03
Thanks to all of the wonderful producers of
3:12:05
the show.
3:12:05
Adam Curry likes his live music straight from
3:12:06
Gizmo.
3:12:07
I'm about to OD on gigawatt coffee.
3:12:09
But the show's about to start, so I'm
3:12:10
gonna put it on the stream.
3:12:11
Everything origin from underneath the dome.
3:12:13
From the river to the sea.
3:12:14
From the cradle to the tomb.
3:12:15
We don't discriminate.
3:12:16
None of us talk shit.
3:12:17
Don't snowflake out.
3:12:18
Shut up, slave, or I'll hit you in
3:12:20
the mouth.
3:12:21
I can scratch it up, slave.
3:12:21
I'm finna smack you in your mouth.
3:12:23
No agentic GPT.
3:12:25
Propagating positivity.
3:12:26
Oh my god.
3:12:27
I, like, can't believe I'm a part of
3:12:30
group seven.
3:12:30
I knew I was special, and it feels
3:12:33
good to be validated.
3:13:06
I'm blowing up the boats on the Caribbean.
3:13:10
A little fizzle, but with an explosive missile.
3:13:16
Gonna burn the hall, sink the druggies' boats,
3:13:20
they said.
3:13:21
Cause the voyage I was on was never
3:13:23
gonna end.
3:13:25
Yeah, I'm blowing up the boats.
3:13:28
Let the wreckage drift away.
3:13:31
No turning back to what defied me yesterday.
3:13:35
When the smoke clears out, I'll see the
3:13:40
open sea.
3:13:41
A clean slate harbor, finally just for me.
3:13:46
Watch the scraps fly.
3:13:47
Hear the loud final sound of every criminal
3:13:50
hit in the ground.
3:13:51
It's a terrifying freedom, an echoing peace.
3:13:54
A brand new navigation that will never cease.
3:13:57
The world is wider than the waters they
3:13:58
sail.
3:13:59
When the drug life is gone, you know
3:14:01
you cannot fail.
3:14:03
I'm blowing up the boats on the Caribbean
3:14:05
Sea tonight.
3:14:08
Not with dynamite, but with an explosive light.
3:14:13
Gonna burn the ballast, sink the druggies' boats,
3:14:16
they said.
3:14:17
Cause the voyage I was on was never
3:14:20
gonna end.
3:14:22
Yeah, I'm blowing up the boats.
3:14:26
Let the wreck.
3:14:34
The best podcast in the universe.
3:14:39
Adios, mofo.
3:14:41
Dvorak.org slash NA.
3:14:45
Holy moly, that was beyond great.
0:00 0:00