Juicy Scoop with Heather McDonald - Don’t Say Schwarzenegger with Anne Greene

Episode Date: September 3, 2024

Anne Greene is a brave woman who is sharing her Hollywood hell story. What began as a fun evening out at the most exclusive LA nightclub turned into anyone’s worst nightmare. From life threatening... physical assaults to criminal and civil trials, you won’t believe the twists and turns this tale takes. It involves several powerful Hollywood and political families. This is Anne’s story and experience to tell, but she brings all the receipts from arrests to court records and so much more.   Get 20% OFF @honeylove by going to https://honeylove.com/JUICY ! #honeylovepod #sponsored Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to https://RocketMoney.com/JUICY Stand Up Tickets and info: https://heathermcdonald.net/ Shop Juicy Scoop Merch https://juicyscoopshop.com  Get EXTRA Juicy on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/juicyscoop  Follow Me on Social Media: Instagram: https://www/instagram.com/heathermcdonald  TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@heathermcdonald  Twitter: https://twitter.com/HeatherMcDonald Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:34 Eligibility and member terms apply. Heather McDonald has got the Juicy Scoop. When you're on the road, when you're on the go, Juicy Scoop is Today's guest is Ann Green. You may have heard of her series called Don't Say Schwarzenegger on social media. And it is about a story that happened to her involving a horrible crime that happened to her lawsuits and criminal charges and all of it. It is her story to tell. I am not an attorney. I did not go to court with her. I did not look at every piece of evidence that she's going to bring up in this interview, but she does tell the story
Starting point is 00:02:38 great and I think you'll be on the edge of your seat listening to it. So let's get started. Hello and welcome to Juicy Scoop. Well, I have a really juicy episode for you. This involves, unfortunately, some crimes, but a lot of coverups, Hollywood families, powerful politician families, California. If you thought the Tom Gerardi case was involving court coverup, this one may top it. Welcome Anne Green. Thank you so much. Star of her own TikTok series that you started back in March called Don't Say Schwarzenegger about what you've gone through for the last nine years, which involves what I said. You have over 47,000
Starting point is 00:03:26 people on TikTok, which is huge growth because you kind of started to do it much like Reese Atisa, who the F did I marry? You kind of was like, did it in these 10 minute series and there's how many hour right now? 50? 53 so far probably will be around 65, 70 when I'm done. So there is a lot to uncover and a lot of players, but let's just start from the horrible night that began this awful journey that you've been on. Sure.
Starting point is 00:03:57 That led you to be quite the investigative reporter as your own advocate, but let's get into it. So to try to summarize something, it's a long story, but it was April of 2015, nine years ago, and I was at this little VIP spot in West Hollywood called The Nice Guy. A lot of people, celebs go there, all that stuff. And we were out in the smoking section
Starting point is 00:04:18 in the fenced-in area. We happened to hear a commotion in the street, and when we peeked over the fence, we saw one man in a fetal position on the ground just getting beaten to a pulp by about a dozen men or so, and then another maybe 10 or so people just standing there that were with the group of violent people. It was so violent that I immediately just,
Starting point is 00:04:40 I threw myself over the fence and I'm thinking, judging a book by its cover, but I'm thinking, you know, judging a book by its cover, but I'm thinking because the men were so well dressed that they clearly had come out of the nice guy, which is a private list only place. So all these things are going through my head like, okay, so they're going to, if I say the fights over, they're going to stop. And when I ran over, I was screaming the fights over. Nobody stopped.
Starting point is 00:05:03 I pulled the guy, one of the Drizzz's, off the body. And- So that's one of the perpetrators. We'll get into their names, but we'll just, let's hear your story first. Because at this point, you don't know who anybody is. Exactly. You don't know who anybody is.
Starting point is 00:05:14 And obviously in retrospect, not a good idea for anybody of any size to get involved in a violent takedown of anybody. Call the police, step back, maybe film it. While you first call the police, then maybe film it. But don't get involved whether it's... Well, you know what? The hard thing about that is,
Starting point is 00:05:34 it's like, I used to do like bottle service in the clubs like a hundred years ago. And I've seen physical fights. I've seen bottles cracked over people's heads. I've seen, I've been places where there was gunshots outside and you know, the security puts us away and takes care of it. But the thing is, I've never in my life until this moment
Starting point is 00:05:51 felt the need to intervene because this one was different. He was about to die. They were stomping his skull. Like he was about to die. And since it wasn't randos on the street, it was people that had come out of this tiny little private bar. I was like, you know what, maybe I can just pull them off and they'll be like the light
Starting point is 00:06:06 bulb will go on and they'll scatter. So these men that were attacking this guy in who is now in field position on the ground, they're as you said in nice nightclub. Yes, dinner jackets, those like yacht shoes, whatever you call them, like really fancy like button downs. And when I pulled him off, I pulled him off twice, and then I turned my back to the guy, and he hit me so hard in the back of the head
Starting point is 00:06:30 that I lost consciousness. And so I don't have any recollection of being assaulted. I ended up waking up maybe 20, 30, 40 minutes later, whatever it was, and I had a traumatic brain injury. My jaw was triple in size. My skull was, was like hanging out. I don't remember any of it. So 99% of my injuries happened while I was unconscious.
Starting point is 00:06:51 And that's also because of medical records, we can prove that in photos and stuff, but witnesses, including witnesses that I've never met before, testified that there was multiple men from their groups stomping my skull while everybody thought I was already dead. It was brutal.
Starting point is 00:07:07 It was savage. So they joined in while you were then on the ground. So they have the one guy on the ground and you on the ground. Yeah, and so the guy on the ground testified later that he just remembers he was curling up trying to protect his face, protect his face because it was fists and feet kicking and whatever.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And he said, and then all of a sudden on a dime, it just stopped. And he looked over and he saw a body on the ground because it stopped because I stopped it. And then they just turned all the violence to me and he was able to get away. And let's just go back a little bit now that you know, why were they attacking this person and who was this person, the victim number one? Well, so we found out in at Ced-Sinai Hospital that night, because several people were hospitalized, and we found out from both the police and hearing doctors talking about it, and then
Starting point is 00:07:52 it's in court records, but there was an older man that was the valet for the nice guy. And the group of men who were convicted and all their friends, the violent ones, the felons, whatever, when they came out of the nice guy too, after they had been drinking all night, and they were like, let's drive. So they all try to get their car keys from the valet. And the valet is like, okay, you have a large group of people here, how about I just give you to one of the main defendants? He's like, I'll just give you your keys because your car happens to be parked. It's the first one here. It's 15 feet away.
Starting point is 00:08:23 At that point, the guy started berating the valet like, no, you pull it up 10 feet. You pull it up. I want it in front of my feet, blah, blah, blah, blah. And at that point, there happened to be two TMZ paparazzis standing there. And they happened to be, they were waiting because they testified that like Michael B. Jordan was inside the bar. He has nothing to do with the story, but that was what they said why they were there. And so they lifted up their cameras and this is like something that people disagree on this, whatever, between the defendants then, but they said they lifted up their cameras and said, hey, leave the valet alone.
Starting point is 00:08:55 He's literally trying to help you so that all of your party can get out of here quicker. Just leave him alone. You don't have to yell at him and call him names. So at that point, one of the defendants who testified under oath later said that Chandra's, he said, you know, so I shoved the TMZ guy and then I punched him and then to multiple people's testimonies, his whole group of friends jumped in, like all of them to beat up the TMZ guy. So the second TMZ guy was like, holy... Can I swear?
Starting point is 00:09:22 So he was like, holy shit, I gotta help him, obviously. So he puts his stuff down, tries to pull them off and they beat the crap out of him. He had a ton of injuries as well. And I have those police reports and all that. But like, so us around the corner of the bar, we never saw any of this. The only thing we saw was like one of the paparazzis
Starting point is 00:09:41 being rolled out or crawling out into the street where that was the end of the paparazzis being rolled out or crawling out into the street where that was the end of that, you know, little debacle, whatever, where the whole group was following them out to the street and continuing the beating. So that's where we come in. Then we saw that we didn't see the first. So it was you and your brother and your brother's co-worker friends. Okay. Yeah. And so you had enjoyed your night there. It's after one a.m. and you're just like out having a smoke. And you see all this and you take it upon yourself to be like, oh my god, like there
Starting point is 00:10:09 isn't any time to think but stop this. And so then your brother then comes out too, right? Yeah, it was like from our group, it was like one by one. I ran out, I like I hopped that fence so fast. In fact, I'm wearing the same boots I was wearing that night. And I'm pretty athletic. And all I had to do was move a tiny little two-top table next to the, actually it was already next to the fence,
Starting point is 00:10:31 hop up on that. So that's like a three feet I had to climb. And then just swing my leg over. And there was like a horizontal lip on the other side. So I hopped over. When I ran over, it took about five seconds maybe till when I was knocked out. And my brother saw that.
Starting point is 00:10:44 He jumped the fence, runs out, and he was sucker punched immediately by, and this is all in testimony. He was sucker punched, and then they broke seven bones in his body. And he had to get part of his stomach removed in an emergency surgery. And after he ran out, and that part was happening,
Starting point is 00:10:59 his buddy, who's a big guy, he sees this. OK, so I'm guessing five seconds after my brother ran out, he runs out. At this point, since you've gone through the records and these court cases, is anyone else from the vicinity calling the police? It was, you know what the funny, it was so, it wasn't like a fist fight. It was attempted murder, attempted murder, attempted murder. And it was happening so fast that I know for a fact, like in those first 25, 30 seconds,
Starting point is 00:11:29 there wasn't enough time to call because it's an attempted murder, not a fist fight. But I'm saying like other people that were standing back and seeing it, nobody else called at this point because it was so rapid. Nobody called in these 30 seconds. But in that moment, one of the, I think,
Starting point is 00:11:44 the woman that we were with, my brother's coworker, she couldn't get over the fence and she was like, oh, like she couldn't swing her legs over. She's really tall. And so she was like, okay, she ran back into the bar and I'm pretty sure she was screaming for help and then running to the front door. And so one of the maintenance guys was like, oh my God, and he went and told the manager who was in the office, like closing out for the night, because it was like last call around
Starting point is 00:12:04 that time. And he's the one, I believe he's the one, and then somebody else at that point, once they ran out, started calling the police. Like he ran out and he actually saved my life, the manager of the nice guy. My body was on the ground and one of the drizzles had his knees on each side of my head
Starting point is 00:12:20 and he was just swinging over and over and over on my skull and he actually, the nice guy manager, pulled him off of me and got beat up himself for doing so. Now let's just, just because you keep saying the Drizzes, let's just say who the Drizzes are. Okay, yes. And then we'll continue with the story. Okay. Okay, so let's go through each.
Starting point is 00:12:39 Okay. So Driz is the last name of whom? So there's only several defendants that were convicted, several defendants that had to do the civil trial and lose. But there's more than a dozen people from the group that we know for a fact were assaulting people. It was just the only names that we were allowed to find. And so three of the defendants are related.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And they are Sean Driz, Maurice Driz, and Alberto Driz. And Sean is from the younger, he's like in his 30s, and Alberto and Maurice Driz, Maurice, they're the uncle and father of Sean. And they were, they're identical twins, and the reason they were there that night was for their birthday. They were turning 60, I think, yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:19 They were turning 60 that night. So it was a big hurrah, like tons of alcohol, tons of people, fancy cars. And so the three Drizzes, yeah. So Alberto Morice and Sean Driz. And then the other defendant is William Jolson, who's in his 30s. And so these twin brothers,
Starting point is 00:13:36 Sean is the son of Alberto or Maurice? Sean's the son of Maurice. Okay, so then the police and ambulance do come. Yes. But does anybody get arrested that night? No. They all jumped in all their cars and drove after everybody was pretty much almost dead. They ran before them and they were told that the police had been called.
Starting point is 00:13:55 So they jumped in their cars and they fled the scene. And then they all went back to Sean's apartment to talk about what happened and brag about what happened. And you're getting this information from court cases that followed? From depositions and testimonies in both the criminal preliminary hearing and the civil trial. I bought probably 98% of every single court date hearing minute order deposition. I bought the videos for the depositions as well.
Starting point is 00:14:19 How much does stuff like that cost? Just to give you an idea, for the civil trial alone, which we won, I'm the plaintiff, and an incomplete copy, because I'm still missing one day out of the three weeks, cost me $8,000. Just one. And I've got a stack. If you stacked all the papers, it's probably about four feet high.
Starting point is 00:14:39 So as a plaintiff, and you were represented by attorneys, wouldn't your attorneys have these things to share with you? I would have thought so, and I also would have thought I wouldn't have had to pay out of my own pocket over all these years because since the assault I had a traumatic brain injury which clearly doesn't, it's not great for your brain. So I have a lot of little brain, brain farts and stuff a lot and I forget things sometimes. So over the years I write every single thing down and which is great for the brain stuff
Starting point is 00:15:08 but it's also helped immensely for this case to piece everything together. But I haven't been able to work for a lot of the time. It's a roller coaster trying to work sometimes. Sometimes I can, sometimes I can't. And so I literally spent so much of my own money to pay for all of this. I'm still trying to get paid back for certain stuff,
Starting point is 00:15:28 but it's a lot of pushback. But yeah, I know it's funny. A lot of people comment, even this morning, someone commented on TikTok, like, how does this make sense? Why should you have to pay for all this to get? And it's not just like I'm reading it to like with a cup of coffee and like, oh, this is interesting. Like, I'm buying all this.
Starting point is 00:15:43 And 80%, 90% of the stuff that I bought was evidence that was taken into the both that was used for criminal and used for civil. So it's evidence, like it's, and if you don't and it makes me sad and there should be some kind of change in the law or something, but if you can't afford it, you can't win. Well, I mean, I think it's sort of like what happens
Starting point is 00:16:02 when someone is behind bars and an innocence project needs to take it up. They actually need funding not only for the time, but they have to ask for all that evidence to and then start looking through it with fresh eyes. So essentially, even though you lived it, you're kind of looking at it through fresh eyes. So you and your brother and the coworker all are hospitalized. So the third coworker, the guy who, and you can see, I'm not posting the surveillance
Starting point is 00:16:30 security footage online. I've posted a couple of screenshots, but I'm very careful of what screenshots of the assault of him that I post because TikTok has strict guidelines. But if I posted the video, they would ban my account in about two seconds flat. And also I don't feel comfortable posting the attempted murder of someone else, because everyone's at different levels of healing and stuff like that. But... Sorry, what was the question?
Starting point is 00:16:54 So the question was, so that you guys went to the hospital, you, your brother... Oh, yes, the third guy. So in the video, everyone on our side was very smart to not instinctively punch anybody and to just try to deescalate everything. You can see my brother's friend who's the size of a football player on the video. Every single time you see him, he's going like this with his arms out and he's just trying to stand over my brother's body while the rest of the guys are trying to beat my brother's lifeless body at that point
Starting point is 00:17:25 and strangling that guy. And they hit that guy so hard because he was just trying to use his body to stop the fight. They hit him so hard that he lost permanent hearing in one side of his head. And then the fourth person, the woman, she came out and she testified that, and I don't remember this obviously, it's just from testimony, but she came out, she saw my body, she saw everyone like the assaults on my brother and the other guy and she thought I was dead. So she pulled my body out and she didn't want it to get stepped on and she was holding my body in her lap on the curb and checking my pulse and screaming 911. And one of the Driz twins,
Starting point is 00:18:02 I forget which one, he ran over to her while she's checking my pulse and everyone thinks I'm dead. And he calls her the C word and then he slapped her across the face. So she wasn't hospitalized. She was just, she was assaulted, but yeah. So let's get a little bit to this family. So how are they living a lavish lifestyle in 2015 when this happened? Like
Starting point is 00:18:32 where are they in society? So the twins are you think 60. How old was Sean? He was about 27 ish, something like that at the time. And at this time, what is their main source of business? Okay, so I found this out within weeks afterwards. So all three Drizzz's were affiliated with the franchise Blaze Pizza, which at the time I was looking up articles and I was reading articles that said that it was the fastest growing fast food franchise
Starting point is 00:18:57 of all time surpassing McDonald's. Not saying it has more money than McDonald's, but the fastest growing. The growing grew fast. Yeah, and like LeBron James was like the face of it or whatever. But one of their angel investors, their first investors when it began, 2012-13, was Maria Shriver, Patrick Schwarzenegger, her son, and Alberto and Maurice Driz. They were all investors and everything.
Starting point is 00:19:19 And then Maurice just had Sean Driz quit college and then move out. And he just made him like I forget the Exact job title but like director of not director of operations maybe but it's something where he had Managerial power over like 11 locations because he would brag about it in his Twitter Like I love being a manager and telling people what to do. So, okay, but also not only they were investors But at one time they also had 11 franchises in their own name. Yes, at the time.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Or like they were in charge of those franchises. Yes. Uh-huh. Yes, and the other thing which I kind of discovered in the last year of researching stuff was that Alberto Drez, he's been long time business partners with a guy named Peter Corral,
Starting point is 00:20:02 who is, he sold seven for All Mankind jeans like years ago for like $775 million, so he does okay. So that's also their business partner at Blaze Pizza. I also found out that Alberto does business, works in business, he set it under oath, with a man named Jimmy Esbag. And I just find all the, I don't know, the only pictures I found of him were on like Facebook
Starting point is 00:20:22 and he's got his initials on the side of his own private jet and he's, he looks like the type of guy that would hang out with them, to just put it very lightly. He looks like a villain from a movie. But that guy, I was Googling him and he's got stakes in Playboy. So there's all these crazy connections of major corporations and companies and stuff that they claim they don't have. But myself, along with the judge in the civil trial, was like, not so fast. I just easily looked this up.
Starting point is 00:20:49 Like, you're hiding this. So it's a lot. Before we continue, you did call it your whole series, Don't Say Schwarzenegger, and explain why that is significant to the story. So a lot of people have asked me that question. It's a good question. I was going to answer it in the final 10 parts of my series, but I'll tell you right now. So I'm covering everything in the last nine years
Starting point is 00:21:18 as best I can chronologically for the most part. And right now, we are up to about, early 2020 in the series and the corruption, the intimidation, all this stuff, it's been happening all the way up until today. It's an ongoing, it's still happening. And I'm about to cover in the next couple of weeks, the 2021 civil trial where we won, it was a landmark trial.
Starting point is 00:21:39 We won the largest PTSD settlement of all time. Haven't collected a dime, but won. And one of the things, and I had been knowing about, there'd been a lot of, you know, Arnold Schwarzenegger's name has been brought up so many times by the defendants, by multiple judges, bringing him up in the weirdest, strangest ways. When in my opinion, there's clear racketeering and corruption going on. And they just never thought the dumb model would go and buy the transcript and read that his name keeps getting dropped in these weird instances.
Starting point is 00:22:09 So I've been known, I've been researching this for years in the background and connecting the dots and validating every single thing I've thought about. And when we went into the civil trial in 2021, I forget the name, I think is it emotion and lamine when they say, hey, can we make these rules for the trial? Like you can say this or not say this, whatever. And they decide that like the day before with the judge. And one of the main things that the defense said, and by the way, to repeat, none of us,
Starting point is 00:22:38 the plaintiffs have ever brought up the Schwarzenegger's in anything. It's Sean that bragged about her in his deposition. It's two judges that brought up this. It's like, and they said that nobody should be allowed to say the Schwarzenegger name during the trial. And the judge said, no, you guys have brought them up in multiple stuff and if they're involved in this, if there's interference, you know, then we should be able to talk about it.
Starting point is 00:22:57 I'm excited guys, because I'm shifting my wardrobe from summer to fall. And it's always a challenge. But luckily, quince offers timeless and high quality items I adore, ensuring my wardrobe stays fresh and I don't blow my budget. Like cashmere sweaters from $50. Are you kidding me? I love their pants for every occasion. Washable silk tops which are so classy and so much more. The best part, all Quince items are priced 50 to 80 percent less than similar brands. By partnering The best part, all Quince items are priced 50 to 80% less than similar brands. By partnering directly with top factories, Quince cuts out the cost of the middleman and passes the savings on to us. And Quince only works with factories
Starting point is 00:23:35 that use safe, ethical, and responsible manufacturing practices and premium fabrics and finishes. I love that. I got such a beautiful long silk dress. It looks so great. And then I'm going to pair it with the most beautiful, yummy lavender cashmere sweater that I'm just, I feel like such a classy, sexy lady. Make switching seasons breeze with Quince's high quality closet essentials, go to quince.com slash juicy for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. That's q u i n c e dot com slash juicy to get free shipping and 365 day returns quince dot com slash juicy.
Starting point is 00:24:17 Hi bald. It's me, Trixie Mattel, skinny legend and board certified HVAC sommelier. And me, Katya Zamalichkova, the sweatiest creature in showbiz, reminding you to subscribe to the bald and the beautiful podcast. Listen as we cover topics as varied as proper bidet usage, celebrity impression tutorials, and a television show I recently watched that I'll base my entire personality on
Starting point is 00:24:38 for six weeks. As well as creative pest control, tasty limeade recipes, and fun sex act trend. We also chat about boobs and movies and wigs and stuff, which is obviously the public service part of the podcast. So get ready for screaming, cackling, and some occasional educational moments as two massively unqualified queens talk about
Starting point is 00:24:56 what it's like to be the epitome of fabulous. Go subscribe to The Bald and the Beautiful with Trixie Mattel and Katya Zomolchkova on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you're listening right now. So let's just jump to what the involvement is with Sean Drez and Arnold's daughter. Okay, so I found out, everybody,
Starting point is 00:25:18 it's, you know, LA is a very small world, but like within a week or two after the attempted murders, all of us were told that Seanondra is one of the guys that was identified. And they were identified because of surveillance cameras. Well, because of surveillance cameras. And it was very quick. Because to get into the Nice Guy to have dinner,
Starting point is 00:25:39 you have to be on a list. So everyone's identities are known going into that bar. So the manager and the servers and the owner of the nice guy, they all knew their names and gave them out immediately. To the police. To the police and to us. We were being sent. We were like, after the police showed us their pictures,
Starting point is 00:25:57 we had to identify them in the six pack, whatever. We knew all their names. And we knew who they were. We knew we had friends who knew them. It was a very small world. And immediately was like, oh wow, that guy is Christina Schwarzenegger's longtime boyfriend, like at least a couple of years. And Christina is the youngest daughter of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver. And Catherine is the one who's been married for a few years to actor Chris Pine.
Starting point is 00:26:20 Pratt, Pratt. Sorry, sorry. Chris Pratt. And then Patrick is also an actor in his own right. And then there's another boy that is not- Christopher, I think, is another son. And then there's obviously- And then of course, it's the housekeepers and his other son, which we'll get into in a minute. So, if anything, they were friendly. They maybe didn't know that each other was an investor of the blaze, but they're friendly enough because word on the street is that this guy was in fact either friends or dating.
Starting point is 00:26:59 Oh no, we were told, we knew for a fact, because I have, it's a very small world, especially if you're in that scene. So I had at least 10 people close to me that were told, we knew for a fact, because I have, it's a very small world, especially if you're in that scene. So I had at least 10 people close to me that were like, hey, screenshots, everybody, like they're serious boyfriend, girlfriend, not friends. They're like, they're all very, very close. And my first reaction to that was relief
Starting point is 00:27:18 because I was like, oh, well good. Because at least this means Maria Shriver, who's like an ally. She's a feminist. She's a smart journalist. She's sharp as a tack. There's no way she's going to let her, I mean, yes, her daughter has bodily autonomy. She's an adult. But I was like, there's no way that she is going to let her daughter date a violent piece of shit like this. There's no way that her daughter is going to allow this to continue and stay by his side and he won't.
Starting point is 00:27:48 I remember thinking too, so naively, I was like, and if anything, there won't be corruption or anything because we know that it's clear there's a lot of power and money here. They're driving rules, Royces and all that stuff. But I was like, the fact that Maria Shriver is two degrees away, she will make sure that strings won't be pulled on their end that will hurt the survivors and the victims in this case. That's literally what I thought. And I had an inkling, I was gonna post about the assaults
Starting point is 00:28:15 and everything on my Instagram or Facebook, whatever, at the time, but I was... Back, back? Way back in 2015, and I was like, and I kept being told, this system will handle it. That's why we have a justice system. Back, back. Way back in 2015. And I was like, nah. And I kept being told, this system will handle it. That's why we have a justice system. Let them, and you guys have way too much evidence.
Starting point is 00:28:31 You have witness report, you have medical report. Like you have a slam, even the cops told us that. You have a slam dunk case. Just sit back and it'll just, it'll turn over and they'll probably offer a, you know, a million dollar settlement and you won't even have to go to trial. Just let it do its thing. When we got to the preliminary hearing, which was literally, it's weird,
Starting point is 00:28:49 it was only like five, six days, but it was one court date every two or three months. So it lasted like a year and a half or something, it was, or a year, it was so crazy. And that was just the criminal one. Just the criminal. And that was when I started to see. Okay, so who were the people from the night
Starting point is 00:29:04 that actually had to show up in court and face charges? The Drizzes. OK. So the three Drizzes. And they came with, as they called it, the dream team of attorneys, which was like four or five, six attorneys.
Starting point is 00:29:16 It was Robert Shapiro. From the OJ trial. From the OJ trial. It was Thomas Mesereau, who's famous for doing the Michael Jackson pedophilia thing. you can Google and like literally I think he did like Bill Cosby Danny Masterson like he just does all those cases Yes part they had at one point because a lot of them were interchanging They had Blair Burke who was simultaneously representing Harvey Weinstein amidst his rape scandal
Starting point is 00:29:40 So they had the most high-powered high-powered Criminal defense legal team that you could have. And I'm not even, I can't even remember the rest of the name. Donald Rhee. There was a bunch that you might not have heard of, but they had the dream team. And one of the things, and this came because a year and a half later when I started catching, noticing things were not right. And again, I wasn't like, corruption. I was like, well, that can't be right. Let me get the transcript and just double check, and I'm sure I'm wrong.
Starting point is 00:30:07 I'm sure I'm buying it to prove myself wrong, because why would certain people be lying to me that I'm supposed to trust in the system? And one of the first things I found when I bought the preliminary criminal transcripts, it was like 2,000 or 3,000 pages, was that, so when you're in a criminal hearing, call it a, it's not a trial,
Starting point is 00:30:25 but that's pretty much what it is. Witnesses aren't allowed to be in the courtroom while other witnesses are testifying because you don't wanna sway somebody's memory or something like that. And so we all sat in the hallway and one by one, like whoever would be testifying would go one at a time, but the rest of us have to stay outside,
Starting point is 00:30:42 which is totally fair. So we didn't know this thing had happened until I bought the transcript. When I bought the transcript, now remember, Maurice and Alberto Driz are identical twins. And I remember one day, and I don't know why I did this. And do they still look like identical today? Yes. Yes. Like barely tell them apart. Like Maurice wears glasses and Alberto doesn't. That's really all I can tell them apart. Okay. But I remember and I took- And which one was the one that was that the witness said that they he had straddled you and was hitting your head on?
Starting point is 00:31:10 That was that was Maurice Driz and that Alberto Driz bragged to his friends afterwards that he had knocked me out. He was the first one to hit me from behind. Wait, I'm just going to stop you for one second. So what was with this dream team? What was their defense? Was it that it wasn't us? Was it that you guys instigated it?
Starting point is 00:31:30 What was the defense in a nutshell? And yes, the narrative changed like four or five times. So you're right and you're right. They said it wasn't us, there was a mystery puncher, like just running through that wasn't with anyone that just like ran through and like they, it was like a weird, we're like some windmill mystery puncher. Okay.
Starting point is 00:31:48 Then they said that they were just, you know, it was a nice gentle evening. They were having a lovely evening. And then the crazy green family came out and just started. Which is your family? Which is me and my brother and that me and my like little high heels. I'm five, six, like 120 pounds. And then I went out and I beat up like eight men and that they were trying to say that they had like really bad injuries bleeding from the eyes,
Starting point is 00:32:09 yet oops, they forgot that there was security footage and when they were arrested two weeks later, the police footage, it's like immaculate skin and like nothing, no bruises. They tried to say that and then for the civil trial, they changed the entire narrative and said, actually, we weren't having a nice little night. We were completely blacked out having doubles of scotch every two seconds. We don't remember anything. We were blacked out. I want to reiterate we are wasted that night.
Starting point is 00:32:35 We don't even remember and so what happened was a total mistake. Then they would say you know Chandra's Christina Schwarzenegger's boyfriend actually said under oath and I quote, I am the victim. And then in the next breath, he would apologize to us for what he did. And then in the next breath, he'd be laughing at us out loud and giggling and smirking while our injuries are being shown on the screen for the jury and talking about, you know, the PTSD and stuff.
Starting point is 00:33:02 So like, it's just it's changed every few months. And just to confirm, because this was part of your TikTok, we're going to jump to you did get granted this money by a jury trial in a civil case from them. And you haven't gotten a dime because they have been shown that they have no money, but you have done your research and you realize it's been shared and moved to different trusts and whatnot. Yeah. But in him, in Sean being questioned, he said he lives at a home in Brentwood.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Yes. And so tell that part. Yes. So it was actually just a few years after the incident, way before the civil trial. Oh, OK. So we deposed Shondrez in 2018. And when I got the transcripts and everything,
Starting point is 00:33:56 he actually was asked, so where do you live? And at the time, he and his family had been telling everyone, even though this is just factual, they were living in one of the most expensive, nicest luxury condominium buildings in Beverly Hills. And they owned other properties as well, like Manhattan Beach, all this stuff. And they tried to say, like, you know, they're loaded. And they tried to say, like, oh, no, me, my, my dad and my uncle, like we all share an apartment together now
Starting point is 00:34:26 because we don't have any money and there's no money to give. And so in this apartment, they were trying to say was like, not a big deal. You know, it's huge, like even for like Beverly Hills standards. And so he testified that he had been living at that Beverly Hills condo with his uncle and his father.
Starting point is 00:34:41 However, he had moved suddenly out of there in late 2017 and he said that he moved in with his long-time girlfriend, Christina Schwarzenegger. Now there's a very specific, specific thing. This has a lot to do with the Schwarzenegger's. Why I talk about them and why my series is called this is because this is one of the main points. In late 2017, they're on felony probation for GBI felony assaults for all of us. All the drizzles for us for what they did.
Starting point is 00:35:09 They're on probation for like years. So they're on felony probation. The three of them are living together in a luxury condo. Because let's just jump. They did get convicted for all three. Yes, all guilty. Did they do any time? They were supposed to get like years in prison and the judge allowed them to choose a jail
Starting point is 00:35:26 of their choosing. So they chose the Seal Beach private jail, which you're not allowed to do violent criminals, aren't allowed to do pay for play there. It's supposed to be for people that like evaded taxes or something like that. And it's just against the law. You're not allowed to do violent criminals to do this because there's a whole point to going to prison and jail. It's to teach you a lesson, get you off the streets.
Starting point is 00:35:47 And they were convicted of? GBI felony assault, among other crimes. Spell that out. GBI is great bodily injury and it's the most violent crime right under attempted murder and murder. Okay. So they went and chose that place and instead of doing like... And did they all get around the same time or the same sentence?
Starting point is 00:36:03 Yep. They all got, the judge gave them 45 45 nonconsecutive days in a private jail. What that means is, nonconsecutive days means over the course of one year, they were allowed to choose whatever day they wanted to show up to jail. Just a boring Tuesday. Yeah. So that way it didn't have to get in the way of their vacations or their work. All of that. And so, remember you're on felony probation,
Starting point is 00:36:26 you cannot be drinking alcohol. You cannot be in bars. You can't be around drugs, guns, other forms. Do you have a ankle monitor? No, no, they would never. But they, so in the private jail- I wanna say, just to remind people, this is basically what the Jeffrey Epstein first,
Starting point is 00:36:42 Yes. What he was given where he could spend weekends at a jail somewhere in Florida, close to his Palm Beach home, after he was convicted of having sexually assaulting children as young as 14. Yes, so in this jail, by the way, this private jail that they were allowed to pop in whenever they wanted, you're allowed to have a full-size refrigerator and a flat screen inside your cell. And you can have any restaurant deliver your food all day long, like so you don't have to eat jail food. You can have, you know, like, mummifuco delivered. At the Seal Beach private jail detention center where they're not allowed to have violent criminals.
Starting point is 00:37:24 But this loophole was made. So they were doing like, you know, one day. And this is because the judge decided the punishment. Yes. We had an amazing judge for the whole preliminary hearing. And he even said, and I quote, he said at the very end, once all the witnesses were done, this amazing judge, he said, it's very clear to me that these defendants are extraordinarily dangerous and a threat to public safety. After he said that, the very next day he was removed from our case and the replacement judge came in and said, okay, I'm going to give these guys 45 non-consecutive days in
Starting point is 00:37:56 a jail of their choosing. And that was the first like whiplash. And this is why they still have the high profile attorneys, the high defense attorneys working for them. Yes, this is Shapiro, Mezzarro, yes. So those guys probably know this judge very well, who knows, and like, let's make a, let's talk, okay? Well, I know for a fact that that judge and her husband.
Starting point is 00:38:17 Or possibly. Not allegedly, I'm just saying I could see it happening in a movie, okay? It's funny you say that because the armchair detectives of TikTok and Instagram, the amount of tips and evidence that I have been getting is just off the charts. And someone sent me a link to some articles and she was right, that replacement judge who I believe in my opinion was extremely unethical
Starting point is 00:38:41 and unprecedentedly lenient with these guys, that her and her husband were neighbors of Arnold Schwarzenegger and her husband was like a councilman or something like that and that they were friends with the Schwarzeneggers. But that might not affect it. I don't know. It's just a fact that I found online. But when this judge gave them this unprecedentedly lenient sentence, they're on felony probation. They can't be drinking.
Starting point is 00:39:03 They can't... Guess what? They got caught in one of their first weekends at Seal Beach Prison, jail, jail. They got caught wasted, intoxicated, trying to fight the cops there. They got breathalyzers. All three drizzles got caught with alcohol in their systems. So we all went- So did they arrive drunk or when they got their Uber Eats, there was alcohol in the sushi?
Starting point is 00:39:23 Like what the hell happened? They arrived drunk and aggressive. And so this is a huge felony probation for a violent crime. This is seven years in prison. That's what you get for that, for anyone, for even lesser crimes. So we were all excited, like, okay, they're finally going to get the real sentence. We go to the, we, here's where like the major corruption in Schwarzenegger's name keeps getting dropped. So I get an email from the DA who was handlingzenegger's name keeps getting dropped.
Starting point is 00:39:45 So I get an email from the DA who was handling the case and he was a really sweet guy and he was very patient with us and he was like, hey, so guess what? Last weekend the Drizz has got caught intoxicated, like breathalyzers, everything. We're going to go to court and I'm going to try to get them the full sentence. We get to court and the replacement judge who I'm not a fan of. The one who gave them the 45 days non-consecutively. Yes, she said, and we attended these hearings, she said, now, pretty much paraphrasing,
Starting point is 00:40:15 but she was like, I'm gonna let it slide because nobody said specifically, do not show up drunk to jail. It doesn't matter. And she was like, and you know what? So now let's change their probation, whatever, and say, hey guys, don't show up. And we're like, it doesn't matter where you show up.
Starting point is 00:40:32 Felony probation for violent crime is no alcohol in your system. So that was so weird, but that's not the first time. Then fast forward to one year later. So did they complete their 45 days? So the two older Drizzz's were forced Fast forward to one year later. So did they complete their 45 days? So the two older Drizzes were forced to complete the last 20 days or so in county jail. But no time added on.
Starting point is 00:40:54 Sean Driz was allowed to complete his stay at the cushy jail at his leisure. So okay, so now cut to a year later, now it's 2017. I get an email in September 2017 from the DA once again. He's like, hey, guess what happened last weekend? All three Drizzes got caught with by the Beverly Hills Police Department cocaine, a loaded stolen chambered gun, and a duffel bag of weed, which at the time it was illegal.
Starting point is 00:41:20 Where, driving around? Nope, inside their luxury condo. Because technically Sean, or they all lived together. That was their address for probationary reasons, just in case there was a probation needs to come and do a little pop-in. So that would happen? They did a pop-in? So it was a surprise probation search, not even by their probation.
Starting point is 00:41:38 It was by the high-risk GPS unit of LA. And that means they're not connected to our case, but they just run numbers throughout the day. And they're like,'re like oh okay let's do a surprise probation search on this address and then they they read it real quick in the computer so they're aware of what to look for who they are the pictures and then that's how it works for probation search. So then what happens? So six officers from the Beverly Beverly Hills PD they pop into the luxury condo and they're like fully armed the whole thing And what they do is they have the defendants and one of them was home, one of the adult
Starting point is 00:42:10 drizzles. I forget which one. The older one. They pulled one of the older drizzles out to the front yard because they have to search the premises. And while they're doing that, the older drizzles like this is according to the head of the GPS unit, her testimony, she was like, he was losing his mind. Like he was like, oh my God, oh my God,
Starting point is 00:42:25 well can I get my heart medicine? Oh God, can I call my brother? She was like, you can't call your brother, you can't warn anybody about this. So we're gonna do this. So they're going through the bedrooms and he points out for them, that's my bedroom, that's my twin brother's bedroom,
Starting point is 00:42:37 and that's Sean Driz's bedroom. And they go in and that's where inside the bedrooms they find the cocaine. That's where they find the loaded, stolen, chambered gun. And none of it's locked away. It's all just in a drawer right there, out here, whatever. And then they found paraphernalia. The list goes on.
Starting point is 00:42:55 So they're like, okay, we're about to arrest these guys. They come out to go tell Driz. So this is what we found. Did you know about the gun? Or no, they're like, this is what we found. And he's like, can I call my brother? Are you sure? And she's like, don't do it. And he's like older and just didn't understand how to do it silently on his phone.
Starting point is 00:43:12 But he had one of those things where he typed something and then the phone was like, calling Maurice Driz. I'm like, no, no, it said texting Maurice Driz, probation, probation. So that was out loud. And the cop was like, are you serious? Like, are you serious? Stop. So within like 10 minutes, his twin brother, Maurice
Starting point is 00:43:31 or Abelka or whatever, he shows up at the house, freaking out. They're like, what's going on? So she pulls him outside and she says to them, are you guys aware of the gun? And they say, both of them, oh, it's a family heirloom. Our aunt handed it down to us. And so they made sure, they say, both of them, oh, it's a family heirloom. Our aunt handed it down to us. And so they made sure they said it on the record that yes, they're aware of a
Starting point is 00:43:50 gun, but it's not what you think. It's not dangerous. And what world do you keep a family heirloom loaded, chambered, and in your nightstand? And like, so it was, they caught them, whatever, they arrested them, threw them in jail. Now, here's the thing. Sean Driz, Christina's boyfriend of at this point, about four years they've been dating seriously, his address is there. And the cops even said they were pointed out things in his room that you could tell he did stay there for sure. So he wasn't there though, he just happened to not be there.
Starting point is 00:44:21 So they're arrested, they go to jail, they're going to county, and we get a hearing a couple days later to address this probation violation. I'm talking to the head of the GPS unit who ran the arrests. I'm talking to the probation officers. I'm emailing going, this is amazing, they're finally going to go to jail. They're so dangerous. Like thank God. Why haven't you guys arrested Sean Driz? It doesn't matter if he was home or not. That's the law. It doesn't matter if you are found with cocaine and stolen goods, you go to jail until you're hearing and then you go to prison. They said, it was like everybody kept dodging the question.
Starting point is 00:44:54 So finally we get to court and we're listening to all of the people testify that were there at the arrest and everybody's just slam dunking it. There's too much evidence. Afterwards, and I'm with my brother, I'm with friends who came with me for support, and we approached the woman who led the arrests afterwards. I forget her name at the moment, but after court,
Starting point is 00:45:11 she comes out and we were like, hey, thank you so much for testifying and showing up and everything. Like you have no idea these guys keep breaking the law and we're terrified they're gonna kill us. Like we need them to go to prison. And I said to her, why wasn't Chandra's arrested? And I have witnesses to this, multiple witnesses. She said, she was like, yeah, I want it. She's like, I made a point of showing
Starting point is 00:45:31 up. Like, obviously, we try to show up to everything. She's like, but sometimes we just can't, we just have to send a transcript. She goes, but I've made a point of showing up to this because I'm really pissed off about what happened after that. She goes, she goes, we started like within the 24 hours, we went to go find him or at least wait for him at the condo to arrest him because he needed to be arrested. She goes, however, he, she goes, that little punk must know somebody really, really powerful because whoever that person is that's really,
Starting point is 00:45:59 really powerful told my boss to tell me to stand down. And that if we wanted to ever come back and try to arrest Sean Driz or do another surprise probation search, we would have to do it at his girlfriend's house in Brentwood, Christina Schwarzenegger. That's what she said to us. And we were like, he doesn't live with her. And at the time, we said, well, he doesn't live with her.
Starting point is 00:46:20 That's his serious girlfriend. He lives at the Beverly Hills condo. And she said, well, he moved there immediately there. That's his serious girlfriend. He lives at the Beverly Hills condo. And she said, well, he moved there immediately after the arrests happened, like within that, by that evening. She's like, so for some reason we're being told it's like retroactive, his new address and that we're not allowed to arrest him.
Starting point is 00:46:37 So what happened was she moved him into her, and she did. She moved him into her very fancy Brentwood home the very next day or that night, like within a 24-hour period. It was six months later when we finally deposed Sean when we had asked, so when did you move into your Brentwood place with Christina? And he said, in September, October, which was the exact time that we had found out as well.
Starting point is 00:46:58 And then he said under oath that he's just too broke to pay, you know, he's too broke, indigent, all this stuff, and that Christina provides him this luxury home, she provides him his luxury cars to drive, she provides him everything, phone bills, allowance, he doesn't have to, she is making sure that he is protected, safe, and taken care of, and to this day is still living there. In fact, we were able to give him another subpoena
Starting point is 00:47:20 for another debtor's exam just very recently, like a few months ago, and we served him at her Brentwood home. They're very much together. And, you know, that killed me in a sense because then I understood, we all understood, who this powerful person is because then once you start Googling this powerful person and their record of scandal, which is very well documented for the past 30 years, it all made sense both cheating not only in his marriage, cheating in bodybuilding contests, cheating, and again,
Starting point is 00:47:50 alleged, cheating in politics, nepotism, cronyism, just the story, the murder of Luis Santos is another thing if you look that up with... Someone go look that up. I don't want to talk about that. It is rough. Yeah, it's rough. I cover it in part 29 in my series and it's dark. We're looking at part 29. I don't want to talk about that. It is rough, yeah. It's rough. It's rough. I cover it in part 29 in my series and it's dark. We're looking at part 29. I don't want to get into that. Yeah, okay. Hey everybody, my name is Bob the Drag Queen.
Starting point is 00:48:12 And I'm on Xchange. And we are the hosts of Sibling Rivalry. This is a podcast where two best friends, Gab, talk smack and have a lot of fun with our black queer selves. Yeah, for sure. You know, we are family. So we talk about everything, honey, smack and have a lot of fun with our black queer selves. Yeah, for sure. You know, we are family, so we talk about everything, honey, from why we don't like hugs to Black Lives Matter,
Starting point is 00:48:32 to interracial dating, to other things. Right, Bon? Yes, and it gets messy, and we are not afraid to be wrong. So please join us over here at Silver Ivory, available anywhere you get your podcast. You can listen and subscribe for free. For free, honey. Are you an over thinker?
Starting point is 00:48:55 Then I have a podcast recommendation for you. Introducing the Magical Overthinkers Podcast, a show for thought spiralers exploring the subjects we can't stop overthinking about. I'm your host Amanda Montell, author of the New York Times bestselling book, The Age of Magical Overthinking, and host of the Sounds Like a Cult podcast. Every other week on Magical Overthinkers, I interview a brilliant expert guest about a buzzy, confounding subject from the zeitgeist.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Think narcissism, social media comparison, imposter syndrome, girl math? Complete with thought-provoking conversations and actionable takeaways for how we chronically online listeners can get out of our own heads, this podcast is here to make some sense of the senseless. Listen to Magical Overthinkers now every other Wednesday, wherever you get your podcasts. However, in one of your parts you did cover
Starting point is 00:49:48 one of the juiciest scandals of all time, which is Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California, that it came out that he in fact had fathered his housekeeper's baby. Yes. In which I was like, my God, not only are you giving birth to this kid that looks just like your boss who goes on to be the governor of California, but you remained still working as a housekeeper for the family and folding the clothes. The fact that at that point, as horrible as it is, I think the real crime is that if you're a dude that did that, immediately you should have been like, here's a home.
Starting point is 00:50:29 Yeah. You don't have to be a housekeeper. You know, 20,000 a month for the rest of your life. Please be quiet. Yeah. Raise the kid nicely. I'll tell Maria. You tell Maria you got another job.
Starting point is 00:50:41 Right. She won't be inviting you to things anymore. That's actually, that's a mind blowing aspect of the whole thing. I think that's the biggest part. Look, a lot of men have mistresses, a lot of men have side pieces. A lot of times women know that they're married to a cheater. And then they're like, you idiot,
Starting point is 00:50:58 now the world knows, now I have to divorce you. I think they may have had an understanding of cheating or whatever. In what I have read, she didn't really realize until one day, because that boy was very close in age to their youngest son, she sometimes would say, oh, invite him over, like she was a nice employer. Invite him over, the boys can play, whatever. And there was one Christmas party in which she came with him. And she did testify the housekeeper that at one point, Maria said, is your son Arnold?
Starting point is 00:51:33 Oh, I didn't know that. And she, you know, I can't remember what she said. This is all part in magazine articles and stuff. I'm just like, but I don't know if she admitted it or was like, but she had her suspicions. The boy has become sort of a reality star. He's doing really well on his own. I think she was a lovely mother to it.
Starting point is 00:51:54 But when you really think just about that, how much of a dick do you have to be? And by the way, that kid looks more like Arnold than any of the kids he had with Maria. Right. Like he's a spitting image. He's good looking, you know, and it's nice that they have a relationship now and it's nice that he's enjoying
Starting point is 00:52:13 some of the nepotism from it because he wasn't when his mom was working eight hour days folding his siblings clothes. I don't know, okay? But like, and that's just an interesting tale in coverup No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
Starting point is 00:52:28 no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no adult, they're not saying, well, we're taking that home away from you because the home is in fact in her name, you said it's in her trust. Right. So it's like, yes, there's a trust fund, but you're not necessarily on the payroll when you have a trust fund. That's why you have a trust fund. And it gets like doled out so much per age or whatever so that you're rich so you can protect your child from your generational wealth and you can protect yourself from unseem taxes, whatever it is, the way these things work, they've been going on for years.
Starting point is 00:53:11 But in this case, he could not have a job in which money could be garnered. And he just is like, oh, so he has a job. Well, he claims he's been working for his cousin. It's either cousin or uncle. But his cousin or uncle, Sergio Siderman, who has a law firm in Sherman Oaks and it used to be in Calabasas I think. But as a convicted felon, he's been claiming that his trips to Turks and Caicos and the first class fights and stuff that they're business and that he works.
Starting point is 00:53:40 He first tried to deny that it was his family member that owned the law firm, but then I just did a little research and it was. But also back to like, Mariusz, I understand like... But I just want to interrupt for one second. One of the ways that you know about the connections between all these people and these trips and stuff is that Christina had a very popular social media with over 100,000 followers showing her trips featuring her boyfriend, right? No, not her.
Starting point is 00:54:07 It was the daughter of Alberto Driz, who was the cousin of Sean Driz, named Annabella Nicole Driz. She was this person that was just putting all of every single first class flight, every mega yacht, every, you know, the Ritz, all this stuff. She was posting so much stuff. And what's her connection? And so her connection, she's the daughter Ritz, all this stuff. She was posting so much stuff and... And what's her connection? And so her connection, she's the daughter of one of the defendants,
Starting point is 00:54:29 she's the niece of one of the defendants, she's a cousin of one. So she's like very close family member there. And her major connection, which I started figuring out about five years ago, is that after the lawsuits began, Alberto Driz, one of the twins, he illegally made a trust fund in her name called the Annabella
Starting point is 00:54:48 Nicole Trust. And with that trust fund, he started sliding the mansions and the multimillion dollar condos. And I was looking, even during the punitive trial a few years ago, the judge was like, oh, here's like, you know, 200,000, 800,000 coming in and out for, to your cousin, to your other cousin. So we need to adjust that. So in a nutshell, it is your belief in gathering all this stuff and in the trials that knowing that this looming case was coming that they started to hide assets with family members. Yes.
Starting point is 00:55:23 And actually the way I found out about the trust, because these guys, they're consistent, if anything, just a couple months before my attempted murder, just a couple months before, they were being sued and they lost for sexual battery of an underage girl. And she was an employee that was 16 years old working at Blaze Pizza, working under all three drizzles. And the twins, you can Google it, you know, sexual harassment, Blaze Pizza with their names. But it was awful, the things they did to her, both in public and in private, over and over and over. She went to corporate and corporate said, okay, well, you know what you can do? Even though you worked your way
Starting point is 00:56:03 up to manager, you can work at a place that's 45 minutes away from your home instead of five minutes, because we're not going to do anything to them, because sexual harassment is totally fine. We're not going to punish them, but we're going to punish you. So that's why she sued, and she won half a million dollars. And did she?
Starting point is 00:56:19 But then she was able to get that money because she sued the corporation of Blaze? Well, no. Or was she not able to get it? I she sued the corporation of Blaze? Well, no, I think it was... Or was she not able to get it? I don't... I actually... That's a good question. I do know for a fact that corporate for Blaze Pizza attended all of her legal stuff and
Starting point is 00:56:32 everything and there was a lot of weird things going on. She went through some weird stuff, but she ended up... Her and I ended up finding each other because she saw my posts about this like years ago, my non-viral, stupid little stuff that never went anywhere, but she saw them. And she was like, I know you're telling the truth. This is what they did to me. This is right before she won, but after the lawsuit. So while we're in this lawsuit with them for attempted murder or GBI felonies, they were
Starting point is 00:56:55 also dealing with sexual battery of an underage girl. So through her, when she won, you know, her and I stayed in contact. We even met a couple times and just cried and just, you know, believing each other, supporting each other. Because you've just been traumatized by these people. Yeah. And we know what they're like. And both of us have had these people show up to our houses, show up to our friends'
Starting point is 00:57:15 houses by mistake. The actual brothers have showed up to your house? So they will, I want to say, allegedly that once I bumped into them one time, I covered it in my series recently, but I bumped into them and I took a video and I saw them and they caught us catching them, videoed them violating probation with whiskey, cocktails, whatever at the Addition Hotel. And later that night, somebody came to my home and took a crowbar, like hopped the gate, came over and took a crowbar to the front of my car.
Starting point is 00:57:42 I had to get the whole front like replaced. And then two days later, I was having an intimate moment inside, with a guy I was dating inside his house, which has a, it's a huge property with a huge wall. You can't see anything. A drone popped over just a few days later. Drone popped over and was filming us
Starting point is 00:57:57 for like four or five minutes being intimate. And we saw it, this is all within days of like the crowbar, like, cause I'm about to take this evidence of the video I took to the DA. So the crowbar happens, the drone happens, and that, but then like over the next couple years, I was like, I was waiting for somebody, possibly them, you know, I can't say it was them,
Starting point is 00:58:16 but possibly someone to release a video of me having sex onto the internet. So that was weighing on my head. But at the same time, you would know it's not a sex tape because it's being filmed through a closed window, like, but it's still you can see us. And I ended up getting an email from a burner account on the third week of our civil trial saying, Anne Green, very long email, and it was pretty much saying, you know, we have that sex tape of you and we have hacked all your contacts and we're going
Starting point is 00:58:41 to send it to everyone unless you make the right decision in the next 48 hours. And what would be the right decision? To pull out of the lawsuit, stop the trial, stop it and pull out. Completely. Yeah. And walk away with not a dime. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:52 And did they ever try to offer you a million dollars or something to not go forward with this? Yeah, my attorneys actually sent me a letter, like a letter in the mail, maybe like 2019 or 20 or something like that, and I was offered $1,000 to walk away. And I was threatened that if I didn't take the thousand, that I would end up going bankrupt because I would lose because there wasn't enough evidence, and that I would have to pay their legal, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 00:59:25 And so I turned down the thousand dollars, obviously, like turned it down. I mean. So, I mean, it sounds to me that, you know, once they did this, they did use their money to hire really good attorneys. And there are people in this world that absolutely abuse the legal system. It's legal abuse. It's knowing that I have enough money and I will sue you and I'm in the wrong and you might even win.
Starting point is 00:59:53 But the torture that I'll put you through on a nonviolent thing, just like I'm going to fuck with you. It's a tactic. It's a tactic. And so, and some people just, it's fun for them and for other people it's completely debilitating. Even if it's a small lawsuit that you, everyone around you says you're going to win, don't worry, it can haunt
Starting point is 01:00:09 you so I can't even imagine being that you were physically fighting for your life at one point and you know at any point did your attorney or whoever was counseling at the time, did they say look I know this is no money, but maybe we go back and try to get 500,000. They were just like, this is so low, we shouldn't even fuck with it. Like we shouldn't even try to settle out of court because they're so blazing with their horrible offer. The thing is, is like, $100,000 would change my life
Starting point is 01:00:41 at that point and to this point. But when we kept having moments of having drones following us every day, having cars follow our friends, having slash tires every other weekend. And that's all an intimidation tactic to be like, give up your fight. All of it. It's meant, it's psyops.
Starting point is 01:00:56 It's meant to wear you down. It's meant to bankrupt you. It's meant to isolate you from your friends and family. It's meant to break you in every way. And it came pretty, pretty fucking close many times where I almost gave up. And the thing is, they were such a, they were so scary and so, I mean, getting caught with cocaine, getting caught with a loaded stolen gun, like stomping my skull. There was all these things where you realize there's no accountability. And when the justice system is saying, it's okay, they did that. We're not going to really like do
Starting point is 01:01:23 anything. They're going to keep doing it. And if they weren't like that, if they weren't so scary dangerous, I probably would have taken half a million upfront and probably signed an NDA too, just to never have to deal with it again. However, when Sean Driz showed up driving a $450,000 Rolls-Royce Phantom to one of the hearings, and they're driving like... And who owned that car, do you know? You know, I don't know who owned it, but I'm sure I'm going to guess one of the drizzes.
Starting point is 01:01:50 And he's the youngest and the brokest out of all three because the adults have had a long career, long careers, you know, and he just like was kind of placed in as the pizza manager. But like, when you see somebody driving a half a million dollar car, you're not going to settle for 400 or 200,000 because they're gonna come finish the job. They're gonna, like, that's been my fear for years is I need there to be such accountability on their end that it affects them, not me.
Starting point is 01:02:13 100,000 affects me, yes. That would, give me 100,000, it'll change my life. You take 400 from them, it won't affect them and I know that I've pissed them off enough by talking about what happened to me that I'm terrified that they will finish the job. I've spent so much money on private investigators, on getting my apartment and car sweep, getting cameras everywhere.
Starting point is 01:02:33 I don't go out anymore. I've been diagnosed with extreme PTSD. I can rarely be in crowds and drunk people. I like to go out and have a drink. I used to be the most social person. I used to be like a party planner. Like it was, I was the person that would bring everyone together and I sometimes have panic attacks
Starting point is 01:02:52 going to the mailbox. Like. Well, I mean, I think in talking about it, it does protect you now. It's so much does. I do because it's like if something was to happen, absolutely. They would be the first suspect.
Starting point is 01:03:02 So, absolutely. Hopefully this shit will stop. You know, the first suspect. So hopefully this shit will stop. You know, the more that you speak and now that I've sharing your story, I'm sure other people will, you know, hopefully want to share it as well because of that. But I want to get back to the Blaze thing. So once she won her case, this young girl, what happened to them and their steak with their 11 restaurants in the Blaze franchise? Well, that's a good question.
Starting point is 01:03:29 So the contractual, whatever the contract says at Blaze Pizza and most major corporations like that is if you are a convicted felon, you have to sell your shares. You can't be running the franchises anymore. So right after the conviction, so the arrests happened, the convictions happened six to 12 months later, the charges, all that, they were convicted. And I hadn't said anything on social media until the night before I gave my impact statement in the criminal process. And when I gave my impact statement, I put it on social media, like just Instagram and Facebook, and it had like a big reaction, not viral, but it had a really big reaction. And everybody suddenly knew what happened. And it's a small town in LA. So that was the good part of it,
Starting point is 01:04:12 where everybody was like, wait, we know these guys. So immediately those people, this is like in 2016, all these strangers started commenting on Blaze Pizza's Instagram saying, you support violent men. they're still owners, because in one of the hearings where they were requesting a private jail and non-consecutive days, they said the reason they needed non-consecutive days and not just a straight shot of jail was because they worked for Blaze Pizza
Starting point is 01:04:36 and they needed to be able to run the business. And if they can't run the business, they can't pay for the injuries. And the judge said, okay, but then, so Blaze Pizza was being used. However, so I said that in my thing. I said, well, they're still working for Blaze. After my post, which was after the convictions, after the arrest, everything, after my post, finally Blaze did a statement publicly and said, we do not condone the actions of the Drizzz's
Starting point is 01:05:01 and we are right now, we are meeting right now to talk about removing them from the company. And I was like, okay, why didn't you do that before? But okay, we'll take it. However, we found out in the next couple of years that they sold about 11, so you need about one to $1.5 million of like cash to open a franchise location. So they owned 11. of cash to open a franchise location.
Starting point is 01:05:26 So they owned 11. So let's say that's, we're now talking 11 to $15 million that these locations are worth because Blaze Pizza is a billion dollar corporation now. They're so successful. And instead of selling and selling those all and getting 11 to $15 million that would go to us, the victims, instead they sold all of that for a total of about 100 to $15 million that would go to us, the victims. Instead, they sold all of that for a total of
Starting point is 01:05:45 about $100,000 to $110,000 to their almost billionaire partner, Peter Correll. So yeah, Peter Correll, his nephew is Adam Correll, who owns The Nice Guy, where the attempted murders happened. During the criminal preliminary process, I caught in the transcripts that either The Nice Guy, Adam Correllral or Robert Shapiro, their attorneys, submitted falsified bar tabs to try to make it look like me, my brother and his coworkers were just like popping bottles of Grey Goose and stuff and we weren't. I was having like, I had a Stella beer, like we had a shot, like it was literally like we had just gotten there and just like- So that was also part of the defense to say that you guys were wasted.
Starting point is 01:06:24 Yeah, out of control. And starting, just beating everybody up. Starting the problems. Okay, got it. Yeah. But so now we're fighting, trying to get this like billionaire Peter Corral to, I mean, I've been reading up a lot because this is all so new to me, the law and everything. Like I've been modeling for 20 plus years.
Starting point is 01:06:42 Like I had to, I Google every, like what's a motion in Lameen? What's a prosecutor? Like I don't know. I've been learning it as I go. And now I'm learning a lot about fraudulent transfers after, you know, finding out all this information about Peter Corral paying $100,000 for 11 Blaze Pizza locations. That's clearly, that's so- And that you found, that's public record.
Starting point is 01:07:01 That was it. Okay. Interesting. That's public record. That's public record. That public record and the fact that like five to $7 million worth of luxury homes and cash was put into Annabella Nicole Driz's illegal trust fund and then disappeared from it. And that's public record as well. And it was used in the punitive portion of our civil trial that the judge, we had an
Starting point is 01:07:20 amazing, amazing, hard ass like by the book judge for both the criminal and the civil who did the hearings. And at the end of both of those, criminal and civil, both of those judges, seven years apart, were removed and replaced with an unprecedentedly lenient judge who said, not my problem. Like, So let's get to the civil one, because we covered the criminal. What happened at the end of the civility? So, you had the judge and you were, do you have a jury? We had a jury and everything. It was three weeks long.
Starting point is 01:07:53 Our judge was incredible. In fact, she scared me for the first few days. Judge Susan Bryant-Dieson. She literally, she terrified me because, you know what, and then I learned to love the things that terrified me about her. I learned to love it because I thought maybe because I'd been through so much corruption and weird stuff happening in the justice system, I went into the civil going, we don't have a chance in winning.
Starting point is 01:08:14 Like they're just going to buy off whoever is running this. They're going to buy the jury. They're going to, I don't know. So I was just feeling deflated in the first few days and she was, she was just kind of like very by the book. She wasn't like coddling the plaintiffs or anything. Not that I needed her to, but I was just deflated. And then after a couple of days of evidence and witnesses and doctors taking the stand
Starting point is 01:08:35 and behavior of the defendants, like Sean Driz skipped the first couple days to go on a mega yacht, just skipped the first couple days of the trial. Who was on the mega yacht with him? His cousin, Annabella Driz, who owns the illegal trust fund. And Annabella Driz, by the way, I found out in the last couple months from TikTok followers that she is, and I have photos and screen grabs to prove it, but she's the long time, like at least for the last year, she's Jessica Alba's private either assistant or social media manager and travels with her all around the world and very close friends. And I did mention that and I talked about it in an entire one or two parts,
Starting point is 01:09:08 like 42 or 43 in my series and actually spoke directly to, in my series, to Jessica saying, hey, like you're, you know, you're not saying she's guilty in anything by any means, but this is who you're surrounding yourself with. And this person you're paying to be your employee is actually sitting on millions and millions and millions of dollars in an illegal trust fund that should be going to victims. So I'm gonna call out Annabella, her employers, her friends. I'm gonna call them all out until the day
Starting point is 01:09:35 that that stuff is handed over to the victims. And the fact that there is not arrests happening or hearings happening, well, I know why. Before I forget, the original victim, the cameraman from TMZ that was working for TMZ that night, that defended the valet and was beat up. What happened to him? Okay, so that would be Robert,
Starting point is 01:09:58 that would be Jacob Castellon and Robert Sorachi. Those were the two TMZ photographers that were present. It was Robert, sorry, why do I keep saying Robert? It was Jacob Castellan. That was the body we saw. We didn't even know there was a second paparazzi that got beat up, because he was like laying off to the side, like he had lost consciousness too.
Starting point is 01:10:18 But so I see Jacob, he was the person whose life I tried to save, and I, you know, we knew the whole story that he was beaten pretty bad. Even in the hospital, we found out that night that he was beaten so bad that the doctors were deciding whether to do facial reconstructive surgery on his face, but they couldn't make the decision until the swelling went down. And it was really scary. And I was concerned he wasn't going to live, but he lived, thankfully.
Starting point is 01:10:42 But fast forward to the preliminary criminal hearings, like a year, year and a half later, and somebody, the DA, like I asked if he was here and the DA was like, that's him over there and I was like, okay. And I was really emotional and I wanted to go over and say hi. I wanted to give him a hug and ask him how he's doing and just, you know, we just went through something insane together and we've never met. And when I went up to him, I remember it so clearly and I didn't understand it at the time, but I do now.
Starting point is 01:11:10 I went up to him and he sat back and he wouldn't look me in the eye and he was like, yeah, nice to meet you too. And he kept looking around as if somebody, as if he wasn't supposed to talk to me, as if somebody was gonna get, something was gonna happen if he talked to me, but he's looking around, looking around and he looked scared and I was like, as if he wasn't supposed to talk to me, as if somebody was going to get – something was going to happen if he talked to me.
Starting point is 01:11:25 But he's looking around, looking around, and he looks scared and he's like, okay, everyone deals with trauma differently. I'm going to back off. Okay, nice to meet you. Bye. So I leave. So maybe like two years later when I start realizing there's something wrong with the case and I start buying the transcripts and instead of taking everyone's word for it
Starting point is 01:11:40 of what had happened in the trials and stuff, I get the transcripts and I'm realizing everybody's fucking lying to me. And what I realized was that he got on the stand and he downplayed his injuries. It's not a matter of opinion, like, well, he might describe it. No. He downplayed them like, oh, it's just a scratch. Oh, I was just, I was out of work for like a few weeks or something. Really?
Starting point is 01:12:00 Because your boss, Charles Latibodeau, the executive producer of TMZ, told me in person, took me to dinner to quote unquote thank me. It wasn't a thank you. What was it then? I had caught one of the biggest things of corruption in my case. I found out there were secret court hearings being held illegal. This is actually how they kind of caught Jeffrey Epstein. It's when you have to let victims in serious crimes like this know if
Starting point is 01:12:25 you're going to have major hearings with the defendant that's going to change their probation or if they violated probation or something like that. It's the law. It's a federal law. It's the CVRA, Crime Victims' Rights Act. You can't just hide this from victims. The only people that hide it are very wealthy, powerful people. This is the Epstein level people. This is the Driz level people, not just like Joe down the street.
Starting point is 01:12:49 So I found out about these secret court hearings that were happening with the gun cocaine bust that happened at the Driz's house. They were having on paper hearings for one twin, Maurice Driz, downtown regular. But I found out, and I won't say how or why, because I want to protect the person's identity and safety of them and their family. But we found out that Alberto Driz, whose house it was, whose gun it was, that his hearings were being done secretly in a different district, was secretly given a new case number, a new judge, a new DA, and a new set of attorneys, all secret private.
Starting point is 01:13:30 And we were told about the—I'm not even going to say I just want to protect this person's safety, but we were told by somebody that this is happening and you need to show up. And when we showed up, we witnessed this secret court—like a new case number so that they could have this judge go, okay, you got caught with cocaine and a gun and you're on felony probation. Okay, well, can you make sure that you go home and you get all the rest of the bullets out of there? And just remember, I promise this is two different court hearings during these secret illegal court hearings.
Starting point is 01:14:01 When he let the defendant off, not even a slap on the wrist, he actually loosened up his probation and travel restrictions when he got caught with the cocaine. That was his punishment. And then after he said that to the defendant, he said, and by the way, do you know the, do you know the term I'll be back? And he said, yeah. He goes, do you know the movie? And he goes, yeah. He goes, Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Terminator, former governor, he said that. And so when I tell you that quote, I'll be back, that means make sure there's no more guns and bullets in your home because probation will be back.
Starting point is 01:14:34 That fucking judge repeated that same weird little paragraph in the next hearing as well, like a week later. So, okay, so wait, just get back to what happened to the victim though. Did he get any, did he go civilly after these people? Did he get any money, the paparazzi kid? I can't say, because I wasn't invited to those mediations, but if you look, I just was actually going over
Starting point is 01:15:01 the police reports initially. And this is, so when you look at police reports, this is when everyone's telling the truth because nobody's changing their stories yet and everything. But everybody was like concussion, horrific injuries, both TMZ paparazzi, like knocked out unconscious temporarily. Robert Sorachi was not a part of the civil proceedings, one of the TMZ paparazzi, and Jacob Castellan ended up changing his story twice, each one getting more helpful
Starting point is 01:15:33 to the defendants, I guess you could say, as it went on. And when he showed up to the civil trial, one of the witnesses, actually, one of the victims got on the stand and actually said, yeah, I'm terrified of the Drizzes because of their connections, because it seems to me that they actually bribed Jacob Castellan, the TMZ pap, to change his story to help them. So it seems like he clearly got settled out. He said this on the stand. And the Sean Driz, I believe it was Sean Driz, turned to one of the other defendants and
Starting point is 01:16:00 said, how did he know? Like yelled it out because they're not the smartest. But Jacob Castellan said on the stand at the civil trial, he said, yeah, the injuries weren't that bad. It was like, it was just a little this, a little that. And I recovered. It wasn't a big deal. And I think, and he looks at us and he goes, and I think it would be unethical to sue for something that's not that big of a deal. And then when he got off the stand, he walked by my brother and I and the other victim and he started smirking at us. And we were just staring him down like, we've known for years who you are. And it's, you know what, take the settlement, sign the NDA.
Starting point is 01:16:34 I don't care. Everybody, like, I don't give a shit. That doesn't matter. Everyone, like, he deserved that because he was assaulted. Yeah. Disgusting that his testimony changed. Disgusting also, you know, he or one of the PAPs testified in a deposition like years earlier that the parent company of TMZ, which is either EHM or EMH, one of those three, parent company, ordered that the SIM cards inside the paparazzi cameras be removed and kept from the DA, from the LAPD, from the plaintiff. They took videos and photos of what happened before the
Starting point is 01:17:12 assaults, during, after. I have a very strong feeling that there's video of my attempted murder while I'm unconscious, while all these guys, I have a very strong feeling that that video is sitting somewhere. And then it suddenly disappeared and was put somewhere for safekeeping. And then suddenly, suddenly TMZ started doing weird fluff pieces on Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Starting point is 01:17:40 I looked, I went to the last 15 years on how many and when and what kind of stories. I looked, one of the witnesses, I won't say he's a defendant, I won't say he's one of the accomplices. I'm not going to say he's not, but I will say that one of the witnesses who was deposed and I found multiple points of perjury where he changed his story that completely contradicts every witness in person. And it was Jack Nicholson's son, Ray Nicholson.
Starting point is 01:18:06 Well, I mean, I can just speak on the fact that, you know, what I do love about my job is that I don't have somebody that is like, hey, I saw that you're gonna interview Anne Green and just don't think it's a great idea. Like, I don't have that and I never have had it. And I love that I do this because I've been a victim of a story being squashed as well that involved sexual harassment with the owner of Podcast One. And I did all these interviews and then it never went anywhere.
Starting point is 01:18:37 But it did because I talked about it on the show. And the Juicy Scoop women took care of, you know, getting him off of UC regions, getting him no longer an honorary sheriff. So I, you know, look, would this be an awkward moment if I spent every Christmas Eve with the Shriver's and the Schwarzenegger's? Yeah, I would maybe say no, just full disclosure. I would probably say no, go find somebody else.
Starting point is 01:19:03 But at this point in Hollywood, I don't have anyone but my husband and my kids. So to me, no, I love that you are sharing it and that you're saying it and like spread the word. And no, they're not going to be able to get away with it. And, you know, just all the different layers of it, I think is just really, really important. And people can take it how they want, you know, they can ignore it, they can still be friends with these people. The people that are directly involved, you know, are the worst ones, the ones whose daughter is somehow romantically involved with this person. You know, that's another thing. But I love that it's just all exposed
Starting point is 01:19:46 and it's all connected. And this is juicy scoop and this was fucking juicy. And I really pray that you guys see some money at some point. Because that's really fucked. Just like the Tom Girardi cases and all of that. And there are so many people in that case where we thought it was
Starting point is 01:20:05 just him and Erica Jane. And it's like, well, what about all the people that were running the law firm? And what about all the other people? What about the lenders in the California State Bar? And what about the fact that he gave, you know, huge donations to Biden and Newsome? And are they supposed to give that money back seven years later? Because that money went to the victims. Like it is a lot of layers and I understand it's a really hard legal thing to do. But if anything, I mean, I hope this, I hope you get something out of it if not the money. I hope that they make a movie out of it or a documentary or something.
Starting point is 01:20:41 I'm open to that. I've been getting a lot of reach out from people over the last, since I started my TikTok series. I'm very open to it, you know, and I'm gonna keep pushing till the very end because I'm now ready to platform this. I'm like going on camera talking about this in the first place was like this last hurdle
Starting point is 01:20:58 that I was terrified to do for years and telling it. It's probably so freeing now that you're like, fuck it and empowered and like go for it. And also being able freeing now that you're like, fuck it and empowered and like, go for it. And also being able to, not just telling that story, but it's really, really, really empowering and freeing to just be able to say, because I have extremely bad PTSD. Like a lot of moments people can't tell,
Starting point is 01:21:17 because especially if I'm on camera, because you see a great 10 minutes of me, and then afterwards I'm like in a fetal position, like I can't go to the grocery store. And it's like, it's crazy it's I've gotten so much community and support from from everyone on Instagram and tick tock over the last few months I never saw it coming like I have a lot of moments now where I just sob because I'm so grateful and also the amount of messages I get both on comments and DMs, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and thousands
Starting point is 01:21:45 of people saying, I went through this and it's healing to watch you healing and telling your story. I think maybe I'm ready to tell mine. Stuff like that. Just tears, tears. It makes it very well worth it no matter how terrifying this whole process is. So just tell everybody where they can follow you both on Instagram and TikTok. Instagram, I am am my name, I'm A-N-N-E underscore, underscore green G-R-E-E-N-E. And then I think the name under that Instagram is Dublin soul because I'm Korean Irish. So spelt Dublin soul. And on TikTok, my name is, oh, I'll tell you why too. Yeah, on TikTok it's Ann, A-N-N-E-I-M-A-L-G-R-E-E-N-E on TikTok. Also the reason I chose Animal Green for my TikTok series is because during the civil trial the Drizzz referred to me as an animal. So I was like, I'll show you an animal.
Starting point is 01:22:40 So I created the TikTok series. Wow. Well, you're also gorgeous with fabulous hair. So are you, lovely. You're amazing. Thank you so much. Thank you. We'll see what happens.
Starting point is 01:22:50 We'll see if it runs in my backyard tonight. God, let's hope not. Well, you'll get nothing. My dog and I talking to each other. Juicy. Thank you. Thank you so much. Well, you guys, as I said,
Starting point is 01:23:01 don't say Schwarzenegger on TikTok or Instagram. If you want to find out more, there was one little cliffhanger because she has not finished the series, so you can get and follow it and find out more of what has happened. And I hope you found it really interesting. I did. And of course, I want to remind you guys to go to HeatherMcDowell.net for all of my standup dates and to join Patreon. Thank you.

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