Modern Wisdom - #857 - Ryan Long - DEI Wars, Trump's Bible & The Masculinity Vote

Episode Date: October 28, 2024

Ryan Long is a comedian, writer, and filmmaker. The world feels like a comedy goldmine right now. From the upcoming election and DEI backlash to bizarre trends like Japanese and Indian fetish porn, P ...Diddy conspiracy theories, Hawk Tuah memes and Florida men doing Florida man things, obviously we need an expert like Ryan to help make sense of everything. Expect to learn why companies that embraced DEI are rolling back their support, the hottest Google search trends when you type in “my husband wants (blank)“, Japanese men’s recent obsession with tickle porn, Ryan's thought on Kamala and Trump making the rounds on podcasts and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a Free Gift, 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Upgrade your wardrobe and save on True Classic at https://trueclassic.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get expert bloodwork analysis and bypass Function’s 300,000-person waitlist at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get $5 off your next Magic Spoon order at https://magicspoon.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. My guest today is Ryan Long. He's a comedian, writer, and a filmmaker. The world feels like a comedy goldmine right now, from the upcoming election and DEI backlash to bizarre trends like Japanese and Indian fetish porn, P-Diddy conspiracy theories, hoctua memes, and Florida men doing Florida man things.
Starting point is 00:00:21 Obviously we need an expert like Ryan to help make sense of everything. Expect to learn why companies that embrace DEI are rolling back their support. The hottest Google search trends when you type my husband wants dot dot dot in. Japanese men's recent obsession with tickle porn, Ryan's thoughts on Kamala and Trump
Starting point is 00:00:40 making the rounds on podcasts and much more. People of Australia, I'm flying to your country this week. I may be in the air right now as you're listening to this and you can come and see me on stage next week. Brisbane is completely sold out, but Melbourne on Friday the 8th of November and Sydney on Saturday the 9th of November still have tickets. VIP is sold out at both venues,
Starting point is 00:01:00 but you can still get general access. It's going to be awesome. I'm going to be on stage with James Smith. I will be inside of you for the first time ever Australia. Then you can come and watch and see James as well. Anyway, go to chriswilliamson.live slash Australia to get your tickets now. But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Ryan Long. I probably would never do this on a podcast, but I made a couple notes of things I'm going to say.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Oh yeah. Well, because you're probably one of the most people that you kind of remind me of, some of my closest friends in home where it's always trying to get to the bottom of something. You know what I mean? So I felt like I have a couple of good theories that- Oh, I fucking love this. You came prepared.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Yeah, also, well, we've talked about this already, but I said your stuff that you post, a lot of times feels very much directed for me. Like I'm the exact, like, you know, I'm the one target audience being seen. What was one of the ones that that's happened with probably the most ever is because the idea that, you know, hard work, you can't always just like hard work your way out of a problem. And I think, you know, you become so accustomed to this is how I, you know, excel over people. And then you're like, well, everyone's talented at a certain level. And then
Starting point is 00:02:29 also these problems aren't that. And then on top of that, adding creativity into that is like even worse, right? Because in some, sometimes stand up, it's like, it almost feels silly when I'm just like, what might be the work is like, you need to just like sit there and think. Yep. Stare at the ceiling for a while. Yeah. You're like, this is crazy, right?
Starting point is 00:02:51 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, but you have to, and then you're like, well, how do you, like, how do you rationalize all those things of like, I'm trying to work hard, but at the same time, this isn't a problem that just requires more work. I think creativity is one of these really unique domains that sits outside of, like, there's very few problems
Starting point is 00:03:08 in life that working harder won't make a bit better. Some, but one of them. But you've used it a lot of times you've maxed that out, I guess. Yeah, you're already foot to the floor going as hard as you can. Yeah, that's not the issue. You're not like lazy, right?
Starting point is 00:03:20 So I've been trying to write this for ages and I'll see if this makes sense to you. So I've been thinking about, you know, type A people and type B people. So people that are sort of insecure overachievers that work too hard and then the sort of lazy people that need to get off the couch. I've been really trying to sort of work this out. So type A problems, type B problems. I think type A people have a type B problem and type B people have a type A problem. Insecure overachievers need to learn how to chill out and relax and lazy people need to learn how to work harder and be disciplined. Given that you subscribe to me I'm going to guess you're a type A person, a kind of
Starting point is 00:03:54 walking anxiety disorder harnessed for productivity as Andrew Wilkinson says. Type A people get no sympathy because a miserable but outwardly successful person always appears to be in a much more preferential position than a type B person being lazy, but on the verge of bankruptcy. Goggins and Hormozzi style advice reliably makes everyone more successful in the only way that you can get judged, outwardly, but there aren't many issues in life
Starting point is 00:04:17 which can't be solved by just working harder a little bit. So everyone just smashes it with a hammer. But for a certain, perhaps minority cohort of people, they actually need to hear the opposite. We need like a parasympathetic Goggins, like hashtag rest harder than me. And that's the creativity piece. I'd probably even go a little further than that
Starting point is 00:04:34 where if you are a type A person, you're not gonna respond to the idea of like, well, you just need to be more, like you need a reason. Chill out. Yeah, you need a reason. And I think the reason is if you were like to really boil it down, it was that the great ideas come from making connections between things and you need the, and so a lot of times you're building
Starting point is 00:04:59 those connections in your brain that you could now use. Whereas a lot of times you're out of connection. So you're kind of, you know what I mean? So your brain, it's not just you need to like rest, it's that you need to, you know, rejig your inputs and like centralize them. But then again, you know, there was kind of a, you know, in this stuff, which I, again,
Starting point is 00:05:17 not to keep complimenting you, obviously we're friends, but like I, whatever this is you do, I think you're one of the best at. Thank you. Whatever you call it. Yeah, thank was fucking talking. But there's kind of like, when you're talking about the amount of connections that you can have,
Starting point is 00:05:37 that's why in a lot of ways, like the smartest people aren't good at creativity in some ways, I think. So if you talk about, you know, why are like the best comedians in the world, not just the smartest people, okay, for example, or the best artists a lot of times. And, you know, obviously you could say, well, it's because, you know, there's better options available to them and whatever, right?
Starting point is 00:05:56 But still though, you know, there'll be, there's people that we probably know, mutual friends, they're like, you go, they're two people and you go, this is the smarter one and this is the guy's funnier. So it's not just career wise. Right. And I think the reason is, is in a lot of times it sits at, you know, like 120 to 140 IQ or probably like a lot of times top comedians are creative people.
Starting point is 00:06:17 And you know, there's probably some smaller, less IQ ones. But the reason is at a certain level, the more connections you have in your brain, you need to make shortcuts because it's exponential, right? So if you're 20% smarter or 40% smarter, that's actually not 40% more connections. That's, you know, 8,000 times, however many you may be. And at that level of connections, it starts to, you know, multiply in a way that you're made by millions more connections, right? What would you say to the type A person listening
Starting point is 00:06:45 that wants to become more creative? Like you work hard, even though it might not seem like it from the outside, even though you might seem like you're like sort of just- I think the first step is to understand like whether that actually is the goal. Do you need to be creative? Yeah, cause I think some people probably, you know,
Starting point is 00:07:00 think they want to be creative and they're like, well, you actually don't. There's so much like sacrifice for that. You know what I mean? It's like sexier, but it's also less like financially and every other way rewarding in general, you know? That's interesting. I, I agree with you.
Starting point is 00:07:13 And I do think that the like hard work, the creativity being sexy, cause it seems like, I know you're a loop, you're an artist, you know, you're like fucking Salvador Dali with the twirling his mustache, but there's another bit I, where everyone prays at the altar of the Goggins, the Jocko, the 430 AM kettlebell swings and stuff. And I've never heard any of those guys talk about where they embrace the muse from. I'm not hearing Jocko talk about, like, you know, my creativity spoke down to me from above as I went for a slow walk through a meadow. Like that's not, I'm not hearing that.
Starting point is 00:07:48 So I think that there is a real place for the conversation about creativity. Where does sort of artistic inspiration come from coming up with solutions that aren't more of the same, but a genuinely novel and different to the problem that you've maybe been facing for ages. Especially when you're talking about content though, because that's the other part about is like creativity really for a lot of people that are running businesses where they're putting out tons of content. Like, you know, there's that kind of, uh, I think James Algeter had like a really good
Starting point is 00:08:17 point about Jim Cramer where he was kind of like, you know, and now people joke about him being like wrong a lot and they've got the index, but he was like, he was a really good, he was really good at being, you know, a hedge fund manager. And he was like one of the top guys. It's like, yeah, but you know, Warren Buffett has three ideas a year, you know what I mean? Where it's like, if you got to have 10 ideas every day, it's like, well, they're not going to be good or they're going to be borrowed. Yep. Which is kind of, you know, like I think, you know, a lot of times I'll, you know, when I'm doing stand up, I'll be like, okay, let me, I'll spend, you know, maybe two full days kind of like thinking, and I have a lot of times when I'm doing stand up, I'll be like, okay, I'll spend maybe two full days
Starting point is 00:08:46 kind of thinking and I have a lot of systems that I'll do. I'll be like, okay, go through these words and I go through old stuff. Then I kind of, you know, whatever. I have whatever weird systems that I have to do. And I'm like, at the end of that week, if I have like two really good ideas, that's a lot. It's so cool.
Starting point is 00:08:59 And some people are like, oh, I have eight, 80 things to say a day. You're like, well, okay, you didn't make them up. Yes, they've been adapted by somebody else. You're like, well, okay, you didn't make them up. Yes. They've been adapted by somebody else. They're straight stolen from somebody else. I mean, it's cool in any industry, I think, where you get paid for the quality of your ideas, not the volume of your ideas.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Yeah. I mean, I know that you can't just tell one joke and walk off stage. So there is like a volume component. Yeah. But really what people are looking for. I mean, how long did Rogan's last special, from special to special, it's like six years or something, right?
Starting point is 00:09:28 So he does it and obviously- Yeah, it's like a luxury position in some ways. He can do what he wants, but still. I don't even just him. I mean, it's a luxury position in some ways to, yeah, cause it's, I guess to some degree, I kind of have heard people say that, but some of you are like, duh.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Yeah, obviously, I'd rather be paid for my one good idea than grinding into trenches. Shit tons of bad ones. But you're like, how do you get there? Your new special. You have to be insanely leveraged, essentially. Correct, yeah, so what you're doing is you're looking to get paid for the quality of your ideas,
Starting point is 00:09:58 not the quantity of your ideas, and also to have a really good idea, give you a huge return, which is the Buffett approach, right? I think it's like, I don't know. I think some absurd amount of his net worth, percentage wise, has come from like five decisions. It's less than 10 decisions. Coca-Cola was one of them.
Starting point is 00:10:16 I think Apple was another one of them, something else, something else. And he, yeah, that's the position. But to go back to your original point then, so now in like people making content and all this stuff, like what is that? You know, it's the position. But to go back to your original point then, so now in like people making content and all this stuff, like what is that? You know, it's the guy running the company, that's who it is.
Starting point is 00:10:30 You know what I mean? Who gets paid for his one big decision. Because the other thing you're like, well, yeah, you could, like there doesn't exist, the only, you know, when you describe the like artist who kind of exists in terms of like every once in a while he pops up with one great thing. Those people are all like legacy people
Starting point is 00:10:46 that are left over from like, or not left over, they're still around from a different era where it was different. You think that you need to grind more and sort of- Well, I guess there's like maybe in movie industry or books, there's people that kind of do that, but I don't even even need to. It's just like, it's kind of like set up that way right now.
Starting point is 00:11:01 That's a really great point. Yeah, that- It's just like the game's the game a little bit right now. That's such a good point. The world really is sort of rewarding the pace that people can pump stuff out at. And obviously if it's total crap, it doesn't matter. But there's people who are prolific from their volume
Starting point is 00:11:17 at like an okay quality, way more than people that are prolific from their quality. Yeah, yeah. At like a pretty crappy volume. Can your like 90% be really funny? Yes, but there's another, the tension obviously between creativity and the quantity of your work is that you need to do quite a lot of reps
Starting point is 00:11:32 or publications or tweets or writings or whatever it is, drawings of your thing to be able to determine what's good and what's not. Yeah, yeah. You have to take tons of shots at goal. I mean, unless you're some savant that was just gifted to play the guitar like a, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:11:47 a genius from birth or whatever. But you need to write a ton of songs in order to work out that they're not good. And then you can create something which really is good. And then you can allow the creativity to sort of, no, now it speaks through me and I can just be Rick Rubin and like, you know, wear glasses, pop up, do something awesome and fuck off again.
Starting point is 00:12:02 Even when you've, you know, that kind of, I was thinking of that a lot in terms of like, you know, the Drake, do something awesome, and fuck off again. Even when you've, you know, that kind of, I was thinking about a lot in terms of like, you know, the Drake, Kendrick Lamar, and Kanye West, and kind of rappers or musicians that have kind of been around forever, where you kind of are like, you know, they were, when you think of like a young virtuoso, and why, you know, why is like a young person
Starting point is 00:12:20 generally better than an older person at music? And it was like, well, because you're kind of a collection of a culture that you were like a part of, you know, in the start when you were in grades six or whatever, you're part of that music. So it's like, you were a part of it, right? After you're older, it's, you know, you're not gonna be very much a part of music culture
Starting point is 00:12:37 is you're not gonna be have like, you know, you see the like intricacy of the fashion. You can kind of like study and analyze it, but you didn't like feel it. So I think every, when you talk about them being virtuoso, yeah, the actual technical component, but the impact on culture component, it kind of feels like they have,
Starting point is 00:12:55 you're saying like, oh, they just had it in them, but it's like, well, not really. They were like came up at a time and they like processed that in a way to spit it out. And they were able to be like part of what's happening next. But then how do they do it again? It was kind of like, they almost just watch what's happening with the new one. And then they go and sort of like, pretend they're part of it. That's a really good. That's why you have it now. They now have an auto tune album. Now I have this now. Well, I suppose the first album can be
Starting point is 00:13:23 groundbreaking and super interesting, but by album four, are you reinventing it each time? No, it's the new people that are inventing something completely orthogonal. Yeah. And then you're repurposing what comes off that. Did you see that story that I found about Kanye West when he was writing, what was it, Betray the Throne,
Starting point is 00:13:40 Enter the Throne, what was his fucking big album? Something the Throne, anyway. So Kanye was writing- Fen, Graduation? No, he was writing one of his big albums and apparently some guy went in to sit down and just watch him work in the studio and he had Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in the studio with him.
Starting point is 00:14:01 I was like, what the fucking Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen doing here? Kanye just turned around quick to flash and went, they're my thermometer for what white girls like. Like true story, fucking wild. Um, but yeah, like even then you have this guy who's super competent and has got this sort of illustrious history and some questionable politics and he is still out. So he's got this, you know, somebody in there that acts as like a finger on the pulse of
Starting point is 00:14:28 culture. Yeah. You become like a good barometer for where things are going. Yes. But like you weren't actually part of it because it's not possible. Correct. Yeah. So I kind of feel like I try to have a grasp on those things.
Starting point is 00:14:41 So then they become not something that because things can like piss you off where you just you know for example like the content thing you're like what the fact that that's the way the game is or you know the fact that i feel like a lot of these things can start to irritate you because it maybe isn't the way you want it to be but if you then you just become agnostic to things that are just well that's how it is well i understand that like you can start to hate the game that you're being made to play, even though you sort of didn't want to do it. Or you get resentful about the fact, why is it like this? Why couldn't it be, you know, back in the fucking eighties when I could take all this time
Starting point is 00:15:13 and I didn't have to create all of this stuff. I could spend fucking three weeks walking through a meadow, coming up with an idea with Jocko. And I get it, but you're right. I think that working out a way to sort of, this is the price of doing business at the moment. Yeah. It's just the entry cost to being in the world at this time.
Starting point is 00:15:30 And look at all of the advantages where I can frictionlessly post some awesome that reaches a few million people, but on the flip side of that, I'm gonna have to be a bit of a like content. And then also if you can address it, you're like, well, how do I now react to it? You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:15:44 Yes, and call it out. I was kind of thinking about, so, you're like, well, how do I now react to it? You know what I mean? Yes. And call it out. I was kind of thinking about, so if you look at, uh, there's kind of, you know, there's different times in culture where, you know, certain times where it's like, you know, probably like five years ago, there's a lot of things, it was hard to say things, you know what I mean? And it was very tense and there was, uh, you know, kind of a lot of like truths to be said that weren't, you weren't part of the public discourse. And then now it's like all the stuff's been said.
Starting point is 00:16:09 You know what I mean? And I was thinking that if you look at what's, a lot of people in culture are right now, it's following from the front, if that makes sense, where they're really following. But if you think of like a mob of people, because you know, if to some degree, there's, you know, the media is being like, okay, we care about this now, we care about this now. But to some degree, it is a little organic
Starting point is 00:16:33 of whether, you know, whether, you know, this group of people likes this candidate or we care about this, right? There is like organic directions of what, you know, movements go in. And then it's kind of about people are like in the people that like were leaders, the. And then it's kind of about people that were leaders of the last one, it's like them running around trying to catch up and act like they were leading. You know what I mean? So there's almost like people acting like they're leading groups of people.
Starting point is 00:16:56 But really it just kind of went there and then they kind of run and then they go back. They go, oh yeah, we care about this now. And then you, I mean, I could think of like 20 examples, but there's so many people that they're following from the front louder. That's a really fucking good insight that I hadn't considered, but you're right.
Starting point is 00:17:11 It's the exact same, good example, might be in Pride month every year where the organizations change their flags, Mercedes and Xbox and fucking Nike or whatever, change to a pride flag, but they only changed to pride flags in countries where gender, like sexual orientation equality has already been reached. Yeah, of course.
Starting point is 00:17:35 And in the Middle East, where it actually needs to be, work needs to be done on it, it's still the same. There's no change made at all. So that would be an example of like following from the front where we're going to stake our claim and put the flag in the ground right here. Yeah, we're acting like we're leaders of this movement. It's already been, this has already been won.
Starting point is 00:17:53 The place where it needs to be done is the place where you're like, zup. Yeah, it definitely happens a lot in that kind of, you know, that, you know, media activism space. But it happens in everywhere. Yeah, you'll see, you know, that, that, uh, you know, media activism space, but it happens in everywhere. Yeah. You'll see, you know, like you'll watch like the right wing movement of like, what's the thing they're all talking about now. Right. And, and then someone will be kind of, you know, out front being like, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:17 leading the flag and you're just like, you didn't talk about this two years ago. And it's like, well, why it's like, well, you didn't lead them here, but you acting like you did. The like full horseshoe fucking infinity loop of the Bud Light conversation has been pretty interesting. Yeah, true. I got in so much stick from people when I said, all right, I get it, you know, Dylan Mulvaney,
Starting point is 00:18:37 should he have got a fucking six pack of Bud Lights with the face on it, probably bad move from a marketing department, but really does this mean that Bud light is infused to its very core with woke progressive ideals that show that they're the anti-American communist country that you are company that you always knew they were, is that really the case? Or is it probably just some person, some intern somewhere that decided to do one thing and the right is always the, we mustn't cancel people for one small slip up. That seems like way too judgmental.
Starting point is 00:19:11 This person didn't mean to say that. And you go, you're not extending the same luxury, the same sort of charity to this other side. And then I got shipped for that. And then fucking a post Malone and Shane Gillis sponsorship later, everyone on the rights now fucking what's his face? The guy that shot it up with the 50. But I did a pretty good job of making the comeback.
Starting point is 00:19:32 They fucking fully like just fixed everything. The human centipede did everybody. Then you're like, oh, okay. So like somehow everyone's asshole is in everybody else's mouth and it just sort of loops all the way around. So stuff like that. It's like people are so prepared to even the outrage is like circular. They're prepared to be at the front of
Starting point is 00:19:50 while actually being gracious with Bud Light. That's the position that we should take. How many people are still holding their feet to the fire now? No one. Well, yeah, there's almost like a hundred things going on at once with the Bud Light thing. Would you write it is a pretty good like case study of everything. Cause I guess there was one part where, you know, the principle there's, there's always kind of an argument to are like between, Hey, are we trying to win? Are we trying to, you know, have principles? And those things are almost always like go against each other. You know what I mean? Like in any political movement, it's kind of like,
Starting point is 00:20:24 are we trying to win? Then you're like, I mean, with political movements, it's always kind of like, that's why they get sort of hijacked by cynical actors always, because, you know, there's always just a bunch of energy there, and then someone can take it and be like, well, I have some goal here. And then I guess, so I don't think anyone was specifically
Starting point is 00:20:44 outraged with Bud Light as much as they're like, well, here's the poster child. Yes. And then I think there's like a rationalization where you can say where, well, they aren't gonna realize what it's like unless we do it back to them. And you know, that can go on forever, but. Yes.
Starting point is 00:20:58 Yeah, I asked. But you go, you're not a political actor. Like you're not running for office. You're not running a political movement. So you're like, why do I have to pretend I care? Yes. Well, I asked- Sorry to interrupt again.
Starting point is 00:21:09 You're a normal buddy. It's one thing you go, I get your thing. You have a whole channel, like telling people how to vote or whatever, but you're a normal person being like, you don't get sucked in. Yeah, you don't need to be complicit as a normal dude on the street.
Starting point is 00:21:21 You have enough stuff to worry about. There's a fuck- Yeah, don't get sucked into their bullshit. There's a hurricane outside. I asked Jeremy Boring, who's the CEO of Daily Y and I asked Shapiro this as well. I was like, maybe similar to your leading following from the front thing.
Starting point is 00:21:34 It's like a lot of what the platform of right-wing sort of commentary has been over the last six years, seven years or so, has very much been anti-woke. And that discur, it's been like reactionary. Here is a crazy new flag that's got 55 different colors. And here is a person that got jailed for bird scootering over a crosswalk that was put down with the pride flag on it
Starting point is 00:21:58 and all the rest of it. That very much was the position. But I think you're right, over the last five years ago or so, the things that you couldn't say, largely now most people are saying, most people I think were past peak woke were very- Yeah, yeah, that stuff's- It's kind of gone, but I was like, okay, so given that you guys have made so much of your platform off the back of this,
Starting point is 00:22:19 are you worried that when most people probably agree with this- I think there'll always be a space for just being like a meat and potatoes, conservative commentator. You know what I mean? I think you look at some of those guys where you're just like, well, what's that guy been, you know, what, I don't know. Like, what's the guy like? I don't know. I think not him, but like the Rush Limbaugh, the Glenn Beck's, the world's you're like, oh yeah, remember that guy? You're like, member that guy. He got 4 million viewers every morning. That's seven hours. Yeah. like member that guy, he got 4 million viewers every morning,
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Starting point is 00:24:00 Companies are either getting in trouble at the moment for being too gay or not gay enough. That's the way that they exist. Too gay or not gay enough. Yeah, there was a pretty good rip there where companies were having a hard time finding the perfect amount of gay to be. I found on that, I did a little bit of research, Toyota won't sponsor Pride events following backlash from an anti-woke mob.
Starting point is 00:24:23 So Pink News, which I think is like a gay website, in a memo sent to 50,000 US employees and more than 1500 dealerships, the company said the decision follows a highly politicized discussion around business commitments to DEI, not sporting festivals and parades. According to Bloomberg, they're not participating
Starting point is 00:24:38 in some other stuff in DEI and all of that. They're stopping all of that anyway. So I did a bit more digging and it turns out that there's a lot of companies that are sort of quietly rolling back and DEI and all of that. They're stopping all of that anyway. So I did a bit more digging and it turns out that there's a lot of companies that are sort of quietly rolling back their DEI efforts. And Pink News has a big problem with this, but- I can't imagine Pink News loves it.
Starting point is 00:24:55 Yeah. The choice of companies that they were getting outraged about rolling back their DEI efforts, this is the best list. So- Is this the list of not gay enough? Yeah. This is the best list. So just- Is this the list of not gay enough? Yeah, this is the list of not, of was too gay for their customers,
Starting point is 00:25:10 not gay enough for Pink News, but they highlighted that they could have done it and they're in real shit. Okay, so this is a list of companies who have rolled back their DEI efforts because of right-wing pressure and are not providing an inclusive working environment. John Deere, the tractor manufacturer- I an inclusive working environment. John Deere,
Starting point is 00:25:26 the tractor manufacturer. I remember the John Deere hustle bustle. Jack Daniels, Harley Davidson, Ford, Lowe's, Molson Coors and Stanley Black and Decker. I'm like, you couldn't have picked a list of less gay companies to be angry about the fuck. I think Harley-Davidson was actually doing some stuff. What were they doing? I don't know exactly, but I think they were just, a lot of it is kind of that there was
Starting point is 00:25:57 a moment where, you know, if you look at it like stocks, right? There was a moment where there was like an arbitrage opportunity where a lot of these companies were like, you know, we can make money by pandering to this bullshit. It's an easy way to get clicks. The problem is if you stay in those waters for too long, before you know it, you have actual people in your company that believe it. Or it's like, you know, at the top, you're just like,
Starting point is 00:26:18 oh, this is, yeah, okay, this is what you do to get press or whatever, and they probably don't give two shits. And then, yeah, but if you're in that for four years, you have turnover nets, like now you have 35% of the people. And also you have to sell press or whatever, and they probably don't give two shits. And then, yeah, but if you're in that for four years, you have turnover nets, like now you have 35% of the people, and also you have to sell the bullshit to the company. Yes. And then you're like, well, guess what?
Starting point is 00:26:31 Now they all believe it, so you can't, when it's no longer an arbitrage opportunity, and you're like- Yes, it's no longer cool. You've got to, you've got this like a fucking- There's no value in it, like monetarily for a company. Well, now what do you do? How do you back out of it? It just blows my mind that those were the,
Starting point is 00:26:47 this was like the vanguard of the issue of we can't believe that these companies aren't supporting LGBTQ rights. I'm like, John Deere, really? Is that the tip of the spear? They probably had, you know, a lot of these companies, I've seen this a lot in television, like I've, you know, worked in television a lot
Starting point is 00:27:04 where it's like, there's, and especially you'll talk to, you know, a lot of these companies, I've seen this a lot in television, like I've, you know, worked in television a lot where it's like, there's, and especially you'll talk to, you know, a lot of people that are higher up and they're like, you know, we're not about this life, but they, you know, they kind of hired some hip new marketing team and the marketing team's like, this is what you do, you post all this stuff. And they're kind of right at that time. They're like, if you want to get a lot of clicks.
Starting point is 00:27:22 And now I think people have a little bit of a difference between like, what's a good click and a bad click. You know what I mean? Whereas before you're like, Hey, I did your ad campaign. It has 18 million views and you go, well, if you look under it, you'll see that that's most people saying they hate us. Well, I wonder if, uh, if the Bud Light thing has kind of highlighted to companies that caving into pressure that they're then going to have to go back on.
Starting point is 00:27:44 I think Gillette is still kind of out in the wings. I don't think- Yeah, caving into pressure is being generous because I would say it is like being vultures trying to be able to cash in on this like little energy that's in this social movement. Oh, they're sort of predestining the pressure that's going to come. Yeah, I don't think
Starting point is 00:28:01 they're innocent in this. Right, yeah, yeah, yeah. I think that it was like, you know, I mean, we have people and you're in this industry. I'm sure it was like, you know, I mean, we have people and you're in this industry. I'm sure you see all the time where, you know, like something is like a trend. And there's people that sort of like address the trend but stay themself.
Starting point is 00:28:14 And then there's certain people that are trying to like really cash it in and you can see that. I'm just waiting for Russia to do its $10 million check. Yeah. I'm still fucking dude, Tenant Media, where are you at? Come pay me. I thought Lauren Chen had my number. Um, but yeah, it's, I, this was, I spoke about this on the show a couple of weeks
Starting point is 00:28:34 ago, we got this email through just the general contact form on the, on my website that said, um, we want to pitch this person to come on the show and we're willing to pay six figures sum to bring them on. And the topics that we would like to discuss and the fucking list of topics were all like oil prices in the Middle East. This is some Saudi deep state conspiracy bullshit. And yeah, it's funny, man.
Starting point is 00:29:01 It's funny. You know what that would be funny though, if you ever want to do it, is have those people on and then allow us to do like a prank show thing with them. It's like have the people on that are paying 100 grand, and they give them 100 grand back after, but like have them in and like prank them where we're not doing any of the stuff. Have you been watching, who's that guy? No cap on God? Yeah, I know that guy.
Starting point is 00:29:19 Yeah, fuck me. He is so good. I mean, you have this like on street thing. I can't do it. My cringe meter, my British cringe meter just goes through the roof even second. It's very British. It is, thank you. It's very prim and proper. But it goes through the roof watching you do your thing.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Where, what was it that you were, you were walking through Times Square, asking people to donate money to Trump's legal fund? Oh, I had a while where I was, I had a bunch of different like funds I was getting people to donate to. I tried to get the, I want to do one where I was like did Alex Jones legal fund, then I did Trump's legal fund, and then I did Tucker Carlson was making a doc, killery and liberal lies. And I was asking, but the Trump one, yeah, the Trump one, I was telling people in New York, I said that they have a chance, they get entered into a raffle to win a chance
Starting point is 00:30:07 to go to lunch with Baron Trump. And she goes, I would never wanna go to lunch with Baron Trump. I'm like, well, it's not a guarantee you're gonna win. It's just a- Ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha ha! It's so funny.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Yeah. I think you're getting ahead of yourself. Yeah, it's so funny. Yeah. I think you're getting ahead of yourself. Yeah, it's not guaranteed. Those on-street interviews are, for me, like I love watching them, but I can't deal with them. And the dude from No Cap On God, Lionel, Lionel I think is his name, is fucking sweet. Did you see that Trump had his own line of Bibles?
Starting point is 00:30:46 Do you see this? Sorry. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's got a lot of fucking wacky stuff. He's got it all. Shoes, Bibles. It turns out that Trump's God bless the USA Bibles were made in China. The official Bibles of Donald Trump were printed in China
Starting point is 00:31:00 has been revealed. Thousands of copies of his God bless the USA Bible printed in a country that the former president has repeated the accused of sealing American jobs. Trump never said where they were printed or what they cost a copy hand signed by the former president sells for a thousand dollars. So yeah, like maybe they maybe you could offer one of the signed Bible as well. I probably guarantee that. Dude, that was I've actually been talking about this on stage a bit that it is funny to me that Fox News
Starting point is 00:31:27 can't get good commercials. So they just have to sell junk to old people. And Rumble has that a little bit, but you know, Fox, CNN's always like, you know, McDonald's and most multiple family of all time, just enjoying a bag of Doritos. As in combos you don't even see like Asian guy, black woman, Indian son.
Starting point is 00:31:46 No stereotypes in this house. The Asian and the woman are both really good drivers. Shit you never see, right? And then you go to Fox News, they're like, rise up, Patriots. This is a shrapnel of 9-11 that is made into a bucket of Trump's cum. but this is a scab off Ronald Reagan's arm. But it's just like, there was one where, oh, this is what I was. This is what made me start. I think I was, I can't remember if it was Rumble or Fox or whatever, but I was watching something and it started out, the ad just pops up and I actually burst out laughing where it goes, sleepy Joe doesn't want you to see this. It's like a coin or something. Just out of the blue, sleepy Joe doesn't want you to see this. I was dying.
Starting point is 00:32:38 That's the funniest thing ever. That is good. You are right. The right-wing adverts versus left-wing adverts. I did a sketch a while ago, and a lot of the things have happened because I said they were selling Patriot water. Oh, yeah, there is actually, what's it called? Like Patriot 2.0 or some shit like that? Yeah, the only thing they haven't done is Patriot Air, which is like air for Patriot.
Starting point is 00:32:58 Yeah, there's no immigrants who have breathed this air in. It is a good air. Fucking hell. The other thing from your special that we need to talk about, you taught me that there is a YouTube niche of breastfeeding advice. And I didn't even know that this was a thing.
Starting point is 00:33:18 I mean, I guess that you need advice for everything. I wish I didn't know it was a thing, buddy. I hope you're not in the situation I am because the problem with the algorithms, and this is, I've been saying this with, you know, I got on disability TikTok, right? Which is, what are you a jerk off to? So there's this guy, he just like rolls around.
Starting point is 00:33:36 He's got no arms and legs. And there's like a bunch of them, right? And this guy's, you're laughing, the guy's crushing. He's probably a bazillionaire right now. He's rolling into a bag of money, right? But the thing is the algorithm, it's so wild because you don't ask for it, but you know, if you were, I said, if you were walking around the street and there was a guy rolling around on this floor
Starting point is 00:33:59 or like taking a shit in the alley, like of course you would look more than you would just look at a normal person. And then the algorithm's like, oh, that's your shit, So it's like, that's, that's all you get now. So if you want, like, so now when I see any freak show content, I try to scroll as fast as I can, but I guess they got me with the breastfeeding. Like I'm just, dude, it's a literal, like, you know, only fans chick just sitting there, you know, fake baby. Oh, I don't know if you, I didn't mention that part
Starting point is 00:34:27 in the special, they got fake babies too. So basically it's a loophole that you can be nude on Instagram if it's breastfeeding content. Okay, even if it's not a real child. Well, I don't know the logistics of the real or fake child because maybe you could say it's, you know, it's educational. Practicing, it's a practice child.
Starting point is 00:34:43 Yeah, and you know, and they say it's for new mothers. That's why I'm on my special. I'm just like, yeah, it's 10,000 new mothers. That's who's watching this. So they have basically fake babies now, and then they're feeding this to me, man. I'm the demo. I don't watch it anymore.
Starting point is 00:34:59 They keep giving it to me. Like you did that one time, though. You love it. Well, it's funny to look up whether or not it was like them activating a secret thing that you actually did want in the back of your mind. What tits? Yeah. Well, you're fucking zany me. If I'm seeing a full out pair of tits on my timeline, I scroll
Starting point is 00:35:17 a little slower. Fucking wacko. I remember reading the TikTok terms of service thing that was in some news article. And they were talking about how the app is allowed to use the front facing camera to detect micro expressions. How would it? They must have mapped the way that your face moves and then it's watching you looking and you see some of the breastfeeding.
Starting point is 00:35:40 Oh, so you go like that? Well, yeah, but that's a reaction, right? So maybe that's good, maybe that's bad. I'm sure they've like matched the micro expression to breastfeed, fake breastfeeding porn, real breastfeeding porn to a fake baby, I guess, technically. I mean, yeah, whatever. You hacked the system,
Starting point is 00:35:55 you figured out how to be nude on the internet to get people to subscribe to your things and get views. It's probably good, but yeah, the problem is now the algorithm is just the whole thing's based on, did you look at it for longer than you looked at the last thing? This is now your thing. Hey, guess what? This is your entire identity. Yeah, and well, that's, you know, it's one thing to be like, you know, you tricked me into having an algorithm full of boobs. It's a whole other thing to be like, you tricked me and having a whole algorithm full of like guys whose faces are burned off. Right, or rolling
Starting point is 00:36:24 around quadriplegics, rolling around in bags of money. You know what I try? I tried to hack my algorithm where I went and just, so my, my Facebook and my boys cast page. So I only scroll through those and I loaded my thing up and I watched like only horse hoof tutorials. So now, so now. It thinks you were a rancher. And what are you still getting delivered all of the horse hoof tutorials. So now- He thinks you're a rancher. And what are you still getting delivered all of the horse hoof? That's the majority of what I get now. I have like favorite hoof guys now and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:36:53 Like I have, I literally like watch hoof content of a guy just cleaning it off and I'll be like, guy's missing a spot. Nate the hoof guy would never miss that. Yeah, exactly. He's nowhere near as good as dry Creek Dwayne. And then I got into horseshoes too. So I got horses, cows hoof. So that's all I get right now.
Starting point is 00:37:09 And actually life's been better. Ever since I pivoted from watching breastfeeding content to horse hoof cleaning content, everything's gone right. So I wanted to teach you about this book that I read a couple of years ago. The number one Google search in India that starts with the sentence, my husband wants... is my husband wants me to breastfeed him.
Starting point is 00:37:32 So porn featuring adult breastfeeding is higher in India than anywhere else in the world. Why is that? In just about every country, nearly all Google searches looking for advice on breastfeeding is how to breastfeed a baby. In India, Google searches looking for breastfeeding advice are equally split between how to breastfeed a baby and how to breastfeed your husband. So I mean, it has to be, I know a guy who's into this. Have you met my buddy JJ? He's my JJ. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. Is he Indian? No. He should be. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:08 But it's, they have some messed up thing. He's got a, you know, overbearing Jewish mother that he's freaking messed up. Right, I agree that he's got a fucking Oedipus complex. So Indian dudes, I grew up in like right around Toronto, which is like huge Indian population. So a lot of people where I grew up with are Indian. I have relatives that are Indian.
Starting point is 00:38:22 And they do have a culture of a bit of an over with are Indian, relatives are Indian. They do have a culture of a bit of an overbearing mother, I think. So India, especially like the boys are very like the golden child to the mom. So, you know, to some degree- They're going to be babied later in life as well. It's got to be related to, you know, obviously that has something to do with mom shit, right? And maybe it's something to do with like, I think Indian people have that same like overbearing Jewish mother, like an overbearing Jew, Indian. Well, I wonder why it's not.
Starting point is 00:38:48 I don't know how much sort of Jew breastfeeding. You're obviously going to get hurt real bad. I don't know how much Jew breastfeeding porn there is. Uh, definitely not between the hours of whatever it is 6 PM on a Friday. So this Huff Post person that was doing this. Well, then you know why the Jewish people do it? Why? Well, because milk's why the Jewish people do it. Why?
Starting point is 00:39:05 Well, because milk's free. You're awful. Next thing they did. You're awful. So this HuffPost person put a search in, put a search, my husband wants me, top searches that came up, my husband wants me to breastfeed him,
Starting point is 00:39:20 my husband wants me to abort our first baby, my husband wants me to sleep with other men. My husband wants me to sleep with other men. My husband wants me to quit my job. And then a conservative person did it at HuffPost. My husband wants divorce, breast milk, oral all the time, me to breastfeed him. Like this breastfeeding is real. I mean, oral all the time is not that crazy, I guess.
Starting point is 00:39:42 But that came in as like third after divorce and breast milk. It didn't even appear for the liberal person either. What's your theory as to why? I don't know, the Indian things really, I wonder whether it was maybe something to do with the sacredness of- You're from London, London's super high Indian population. Similar.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Yeah, the whole UK is pretty high sort of subcontinental stuff. But I wondered whether it was something to do with like cows cow milk, the sacredness of cows. Saying their mom's fat. No. I thought it might be something. You think it's the sacredness of cows. No, that's not it.
Starting point is 00:40:17 No, evidently not. No, you've got to have a more sophisticated fucking thought process. I don't know. I don't know what's going on. Ask JJ. I'm sure he might be. I'm telling you it's messed up mother stuff.
Starting point is 00:40:27 Okay. And what's it all of India overbearing mothers just across the entire country. Well, not every, I mean, a lot of Indians. So I don't know if all of them are on the, on the breastfeeding searches. Well, it's an equal. I'll tell you another thing.
Starting point is 00:40:38 Okay. This is my other theory. That's like, you know how that's like being in defeat, like one above that in a sense where it's like, you know how that's like being in defeat, like one above that in a sense where it's like, it's not, I'm not, maybe I'm not that crazy yet. You know what I mean? In their mind, they're like, this is like, I'm fucking this kinky dude, but it's, it's, you haven't fully crossed over into, you know, the craziest stuff.
Starting point is 00:41:00 So maybe this is like a trend animal necrophilia. Yeah, maybe that's one of those things where it's like india's getting into breastfeeding stuff and you're just like, oh yeah, that was America 25 years ago. Are you saying are you saying that it's a gateway drug? That's one that's my hypothesis. Breastfeeding porn is a gateway drug into much more hardcore. Yeah, this might be like a transitional period you go you check in on India seven years from now you're like that's not even the top. You check in on India seven years from now, you're like, that's not even the top, it's not even crack at the top 20. It's like, uh, when they, they look at chimpanzees and stuff and they say, it seems like chimpanzees are beginning to first use tools and it's like, Oh my God, I'm watching them evolve in front of my eyes. And it's the same thing, but with like degenerate porn for Indian people.
Starting point is 00:41:36 Exactly. This might be a transitionary step, but I think it's also a transitionary step because of the mother stuff. Right. I wonder what we're going to see in a few decades time. And we're going to be like, like sedimentary rock. We can just track the porn hub searches of all of the, like everybody across the world and see who's out front. That being said, Japanese men have recently become obsessed with tickling porn. More than 10% of porn hub searches for young
Starting point is 00:42:03 Japanese men offer tickling. That one, I really don'tornhub searches for young Japanese men are for tickling. That one I really don't have a... I don't know Japanese guys. I know Indian people pretty well. I don't know the Japanese as well. They want to be tickled. That's all you need to know. I mean, if I was to guess, this is completely out of nowhere. What? You're saying that this isn't a well-researched opinion that you're about to put in front of us that's backed by data? I feel like my Indian stuff's on the money. that this isn't a well researched opinion that you're about to put in front of us. I feel like my Indian stuff's on the money. I feel like I'm tapped into the Indian culture.
Starting point is 00:42:31 Japanese stuff, my guess would be that Japanese culture is very childlike. If you look at all the, they have the girls where it's hot and they're basically dressed like, School girls. Yeah, school girls, the anime kid stuff. So if you think of, you know, that stuff being very popular. Oh, it's babying. Tickling is very cartoony. Ah, I think you might be onto something there.
Starting point is 00:42:54 That wasn't total dog shit. That was. Yeah, that has to, if I was to make a connection between two things, it's the childlike, you know, fashion stuff versus, you know, that stuff, you know, you do change your, you know, like, you ever watch like a movie about like, you know, like a place that's all not white people and, you know, whether that be like Asian or, you know,
Starting point is 00:43:20 and then you leave that, like, let's say you watched the whole thing about fucking Jamaica or something, you leave that kind of being like, like, I think I'm into black girls. Like, you know what and then you leave that, like, let's say you watch the whole thing about fucking Jamaica or something, you leave that kind of being like, like, well, I think I'm into black girls. Like, you know what I mean? Like it does change your, whatever you're around, obviously changes. Like you're saying that you've got this like a proximity, like impact on what you're attracted to.
Starting point is 00:43:37 Well, that's for sure true. It's just the extent of which each person it's, you know, that's just a nature nurture conversation, right. And for every person that's whatever percentage, but what chicks are into is for sure nature nurture. There's got to be a split, right? Yes. Well, I mean, you can't be into something.
Starting point is 00:43:52 So if you're always just, you know, surrounded by like all of the imagery of hot chicks is them being like, like, you know, you, yeah. Okay. That's interesting. Then you're just like, oh yeah, like, well, that's this, that's this, that's the same thing about, uh, are you finding something that you're just like, oh yeah, like, Well, that's the same thing about, are you finding something that you're genuinely interested in from the algorithm or is it training you to be interested
Starting point is 00:44:10 in what it wants you to click on? I know, and this is kind of, you know, the very negative parts about all of like algorithmic based, you know, art form. I mean, it's moving closer to, you know, no property law China kind of thing. But the more important thing is that isn't a metric. So if you were a company, and I mean, you are a company,
Starting point is 00:44:31 and if you said, okay, I did this thing, if you made a video and it got more views, right? And people watched it more, but most of them hated it. And no one signed up for your stuff. No one's, you would consider that, well, let's not move in that direction. Like views is not your only metric. Their main metric is how long you watched it.
Starting point is 00:44:50 Again, if I'm walking by and a guy is shitting on the street, I will probably look at that longer than a guy who's sitting in a chair doing nothing. I didn't prefer that. So that is inaccurate. And I'll tell you where it leads to is because I just stopped using the apps with like that. Okay. So tick talks the most like that. And I know everyone, you know,
Starting point is 00:45:12 the joke everyone always makes is they go, you go, I actually don't like that. And you go, sure, bud, it's based, you know, the algorithm knows you better than you do. It's like, well, sure. The same way that you go, if I, if I was sitting in my house and every day, there was like the best food in the world or something healthy, you know, or the best tasting food or something healthy or the hottest girl or, you know, uh, someone that you're not going to get in trouble for sleeping with, you know, every day you would still want to make those you would still eventually you would stop going to that room. You've stopped going to
Starting point is 00:45:41 that party. Like, you know, the same reason. So eventually, I just kind of stop using the apps that I go, I don't like this more. You go, yeah, technically, you're like good at like keeping me here longer. But that doesn't mean I like it more. So there's a, you know, like shows that here's a perfect example. Sorry to know, rainbow on about this. But I stopped watching shows that force, you know, there was a shows used to be kind of episodic. And then they realized, you know, there was a, shows used to be kind of episodic
Starting point is 00:46:07 and then they realized, you know, when it went to the streaming model that we need to end everything with like a huge cliffhanger to keep you involved, right? I stopped watching shows like that. So I won't watch shows that are episodic because yeah, I like can't go to sleep if I'm watching and it's like, I need to watch more episodes.
Starting point is 00:46:21 It's like, yeah, but then I won't do it the next day. Right. So you don't- Unless you can watch the entire thing to the series finale before you go to bed. Yeah. You beat me in the short term. Yeah. But not in the long term. In the long term, I just exited the game. Yeah. That's funny. In other news, this episode is brought to you by True Classic. True Classic tees have some of the highest quality t-shirts, hoodies, and jeans on the market without a premium price tag.
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Starting point is 00:47:37 it's supposed to be due. Yeah, that's very true. Just keeps on expanding, but there's a one that's kind of similar called good hearts law. Good hearts law says when a measure becomes an outcome, it ceases to be a good measure. So for instance, if you were to say, um, the measure that I want is the most number of email newsletter subscribers that I could get.
Starting point is 00:47:54 And that is the only thing I'm optimizing for. That's the outcome. A measure email newsletter subscribers becomes the outcome that you optimize for. You would say, right, I'm going to post online that I'm going to give $10,000 to every person that signs up for. Yeah. That's a good point. Then they don't get $10,000.
Starting point is 00:48:10 What have you done? Hooray. You've got all of these people to sign up for your newsletter, but that wasn't actually the outcome you wanted. It was just a measure on route to it. The outcome you wanted was I want a large list of people who are interested in what I do and want to hear from me and think about me positively and so on and so forth.
Starting point is 00:48:26 And that's the same with talking about the content thing or the views thing or the optimizing for anything thing. It's the same as I want girls to like me, therefore I'm gonna get as jacked as possible. You get super duper jacked, but you don't realize what the externality of that is gonna be, which is just tons of fucking attention from men.
Starting point is 00:48:44 Or if you owned a company, if you owned a company that was... I never found getting jacked helped at all, one way or another with women. With getting men? I don't, yeah, with getting men it was, did okay, yeah. No, I think you'd be surprised at how little of a difference it makes.
Starting point is 00:49:00 I might've been, it might've been adverse for me. Yeah. How jacked have you got? I think if I had a six pack, I think the like, the knowledge that, you know, it sounds like a cope, but I mean, you know, obviously it's different types of girls, but like, if, you know, I played in, you know, bands my whole life and I've been in entertainment
Starting point is 00:49:19 my whole life and been a comedian, touring comedian for 15 years. And I would say that the people that are around that scene, like I've never seen a correlation between the most jacked guy and the most girls, touring comedian for 15 years. And I would say that the people that are around that scene, like, I've never seen a correlation between the most jacked guy and the most girls, like, you know, to a point, but I think that there's like a level of like cool, you know, nihilism that is negated by having a six pack.
Starting point is 00:49:37 Oh, that's funny. I wonder how special, uh, that is to your particular industries of like lethario, smoking, fucking leather jacket wearing, 4 a.m. people. I probably, especially depends on your body type too, but I think that like the skinny heroin version of my body types look like is more appealing than the jacked version to women.
Starting point is 00:49:59 You texted me something about that the other week. I was fucking pissing myself. But that good hot slow thing. So imagine that you run a company and one of the measures that you want, you tell, we need to drop the fraud rate in our company as much as possible. So you get customer support and you drill them.
Starting point is 00:50:16 This is the most important metric. This is exactly what you're focusing on. Hooray, they managed to drive the fraud rate to essentially zero. Boo, what they actually do is treat every customer like a potential fraudster. That's not good. That's not actually what you wanted to achieve. So I think when you're looking at stuff like the pooping man on the street that
Starting point is 00:50:36 you look at for a little bit longer, the equivalent of that on the internet, what you actually end up realizing is, okay, I can make something that will cause people to look and may even accumulate an audience, but it's not the sort of audience that I want. What are they here for? Are they here for like the right reasons? What are their expectations around me? This is one of the things that you should always be scared about if you ever do anything that blows up, even as a musician. Like let's say that you make a song and this song's amazing, but it's like kind of a bit out there compared with what your usual stuff is
Starting point is 00:51:06 and what you love to make. And you just experimented and had this crack and you go, I've just got this. That's, you know, that's you. And you go, Oh, I need to now play in that field. I made a like right wing country, that Oliver Anthony guy. Remember that guy? Yeah. Like, guess what?
Starting point is 00:51:22 You're now like a political football for the rest of your music career. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Everybody cares about you and what you think to do with DC and the Richmond, north of Richmond and blah, blah. You know, that might've just been, I don't think it was, but that might've just been one, he was like, I'm just gonna have a crack, I'll write a thing that's about like Richmond,
Starting point is 00:51:38 that they're kind of in the Washington DC area. You go, that's you now, that's your entire identity. So be careful doing that. 1000%. I think the hardest part is like, when you're trying to explain to other people your version of it, cause you know when you're trying to like have employees or whatever, anyone else that's like working for you,
Starting point is 00:51:56 it's like, cause you're basically describing an equation that's like, this, if this, right? You're saying like, if these, you probably know the better wording for it, but if these criteria are satisfied, then this is the thing we're optimizing for, right? But it's, I feel like that's a very hard thing to like get people on board with.
Starting point is 00:52:18 I had this. Like, I mean, a big, huge thing that probably the, you know, and you can't have a million of them, but the big thing I always have that it's like, none of this matters if it isn't funny, right? So I'm always like, and it's like, well, you said you want this and this and this. And it was like, yeah, none of that is,
Starting point is 00:52:33 we don't even have any of those conversations like until it's funny. So it didn't, yeah, so it's like having conversations like doing things in the right order maybe is the answer. Well, having a gate that you have to pass through. So if it's, if this isn't funny, it doesn't matter how much money it makes, doesn't matter how much impact it has,
Starting point is 00:52:50 doesn't matter how cool it makes me. If it's not funny, it doesn't get through the first. So there's like an ordinating principle, kind of similar Jeff Bezos and Musk supposedly have got one. Bezos' Amazon was, does this make the customer experience better? And Musk's was, does this make the customer experience better? And Musk's was, does this get us closer to Mars? So everything, all of the choices, it doesn't matter how fucking cool it is. It doesn't matter how fast the Tesla is.
Starting point is 00:53:12 It doesn't matter how much money it makes on Amazon Prime day or Black Friday or whatever. Does this make the customer experience better? Does this get a good, as close to Mars? And if it doesn't get through that, is this funny? If it's not funny, doesn't matter. Yeah, that's the base level of like that. It makes everything easier.
Starting point is 00:53:28 I think that that's why, you know, on stage it's easy because you're like, well, obviously, if it's not getting laughs, like... Kill it. Well, maybe not kill it, get it to the point where it's getting laughs, but you go, none of, no matter how good I think this is, doesn't matter until that's solved.
Starting point is 00:53:46 So that makes it easier. You think it's impactful if you think that it's useful if you think that it's cool for your career, if you think it's gonna make headlines, if it's not funny, it doesn't get. I mean, it's like one of those things where, it's like working in a magazine and you're kind of, we have this amazing scoop, but it's about the boss's wife. It's like, well, it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:54:01 They're not gonna say yes. You know what I mean? You go, no, you don't understand how great this is. It was like, it doesn't matter. Yeah. But it's hard to... I had this conversation with a guy called Stuart Russell, who wrote this book, Human Compatible. So the worldwide textbook on AI may still be the case, but it certainly was for a couple of decades. It was written by this guy, Stuart Russell. Anyway, wrote this book and in it, he taught me this really interesting thing about how the algorithm works.
Starting point is 00:54:26 So the algorithm works in two ways. First way is that it finds content that you are likely to click on by getting better at predicting what you're going to click on, right? That's kind of the way that everybody understands that the algorithm works. But there's a second way that it works as well, which is it moves your preferences. It nudges your preferences to make you easier to predict. So it's a bi-directional relationship. That's sinister.
Starting point is 00:54:53 You've really sinister. Yeah, that's a great word. And yeah, so what, one of the reasons that we talk here, why is the internet so- People hate unpredictability. But the internet's so like polarized and you know and these two camps don't talk to each other and all the rest of it. And you go, okay, maybe that's because of tribalism. Maybe it's because you're stating your opinions to everybody all the time.
Starting point is 00:55:17 Maybe it's because we don't have time to have nuanced opinions and there's these sort of shows of loyalty to your own side and threat displays to the other. Or maybe it's the algorithm meaning that if I know you're far right, you're always gonna hate click or love click on these two buckets of things. And if you're far left, you're gonna do the opposite. Maybe everybody is just being cucked by the algo and we've all been turned into these sort of easily
Starting point is 00:55:41 predictable like preference engines. Yeah, I always think of things a little bit like, you know, stocks is maybe just everything is stocks, but it's the only one that is, you know, there's a centralized body which describes everything. But it really does though, the more they do it, the more there is that arbitrage opportunity where they're, because the, you know, like in, you know, attraction or whatever, it's like, you know, there's the kind of the oldest men, women thing, but women aren't attracted to a man who they can predict every thing about them, you know? And so it's like the people think they want that, but then they kind of stop wanting it. So at a time when everything kind of becomes predictable,
Starting point is 00:56:25 when you see something that wasn't, you know, in a lot of ways, it's so much more attractive, but then, yeah, so you kind of like, how do you rise above the algorithms to be that? There's a tension between sort of novelty or being exotic and being reliable and consistent, because people like that, I think is one of the reasons, again, I listened to tons of Shapiro during 2020
Starting point is 00:56:47 during COVID. If there's a global pandemic going on, you need a daily show. I chose him. I know you can, I can just read the title. I've got a pretty good idea of what his takes going to be. It's like putting on an old pair of shoes. You know, there's a cadence. I watch the cop shows like NCIS and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:57:03 You know, it's the fucking brother. It's the uncle. It's the guy that was like sort of snooping around the cop shows like NCIS and stuff like that. You know, it's the fucking brother, it's the uncle, it's the guy that was like sort of snooping around the corner at the start and asking too many questions. You know what it's gonna be, but you're almost there for that. It's comfortable log fire, you've got your fucking slippers on like I'm familiar with this.
Starting point is 00:57:17 And I think that the tension that people have between this desire for reliability and consistency and predictability, but avoiding being boring and also the sort of spice of novelty and, and, and newness that everybody wants finding that is exactly what it is. But I mean, how many times have you been on the algo and it's just thrown you something you've never seen before and you're like, Oh, that's fucking good. So I, I went down a rabbit hole of Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:57:46 If you're in the meme culture, there's a lot of, you know, it'll get you. Dude, I went in, I went down this huge rabbit hole of Star Wars character battle power, like analysis, people that had read all of the law and they know who the most powerful Sith is of all time. And they work out what would have happened if Luke Skywalker at peak power had actually fought blood, this guy and all the rest of it. And then that led me into this one about Marvel comics and all of the Marvel comics, and this is the biggest, most powerful guy and it's that same fucking black man AI voice that everybody uses.
Starting point is 00:58:18 Yeah. And I was like this and I was enthralled, but that was one video I'd never seen before. So that was the, you know, a bit of novelty that just gets tossed at you and you're like, oh wow, like this is fucking sweet. And then other times you go, okay, if I had that all the time, it'd be too chaotic. It's like cat video, breastfeeding video,
Starting point is 00:58:33 cow video, fucking Marvel video, too much. It's got, there has to be, you know what? This would be the opportunity for the company that you basically are like algorithm curators. because you know, especially like what you what you do where you go, you know, there's people that are like, yeah, I know that this is worse for me. So I'm choosing to sort of, you know, it's obviously you don't want to just be like using your willpower every second. Right. So you you you're able to say, okay, this is someone, they take over your account for a week and then they give it back to you where you're like, this is like the success algorithm you're about to get.
Starting point is 00:59:12 I was saying that I don't get, I never get messed up by politics shit. Like it never really like gets to me, but the alpha male shit sometimes where it's like, if you sleep you're gay and I'll be like, what the? You know? Like. Hey.
Starting point is 00:59:28 Dude, it's so. I will legit just be like on a plane and you know, a guy's just like, you know, y'all sleeping. You know, these, they're sleeping while I'm working content. And I'm just like, fucking a loser. It's just yelling at me. Can I tell you one thing? My buddy, I know a guy that he filmed with Jordan Peterson. I know you know Jordan. He was like the camera guy and he was doing like a rant and he said he like honestly went home stressed out because he was just right here, right? Well, Jordan Vito's like, and another thing, fuck off.
Starting point is 01:00:06 And I went to work, I just got yelled at by Jordan Vito's in over three hours. He said, he was like, he had to shake it off. Like, just the camera guy. Oh my God. Yeah. Uh, I, I have, I have no idea how people that have to put up with that sort of stuff, there was a dude that worked for us, Bennett, my DP, uh, the camera opt didn't show for the Jocko Willink episode that we did a few years ago.
Starting point is 01:00:39 And, uh, he was, I mean, Jocko's got, he's a man with a large head. Um, and this shot was zoomed like just that. It was just his eyes and his nose. Yeah. And, uh, this guy for three hours, Bennett had just been looking down the lens of the camera like this, like tracking his head as he'd moved around. And, uh, it was like, dude, I just like stared at a guy that's killed people's eyes for three and a half hours.
Starting point is 01:01:04 Yeah. Yeah. I know he wasn't looking at me, but it kind of felt like hours. Yeah. He was getting my soul. Yeah. Yeah. I know he wasn't looking at me, but it kind of felt like it. Yeah. It feels like it. Okay. We got to talk a bit of politics. Like what, what the fuck is the assessment you've got?
Starting point is 01:01:15 This isn't your first time in the U S during an election. Is this more crazy than it is typically? It's my first time here. Um, Oh, this is your first time being here for it. Yep. Feels less crazy to me. Really? To feel more crazy to you.
Starting point is 01:01:29 Why I haven't been here before. You've been, I mean, everyone's been indicted by American. Hey detention. I don't know, man. I mean, from two assassination attempts to a replace candidate to like. One of them going on call her daddy. Like, I mean, it's, it's all happening. He's the AI king right now. Bro. So for the people that don't know, I mean, it's, it's all happening. Have you seen Danny's the AI king right now? Bro. So for the people that don't know, I had to text Danny about this.
Starting point is 01:01:51 I also sent it to the guy that did Alex's $125 million Sirius XM deal. And I was like, bro, have you seen this? Danny did a Kamala and Alex AI talk over and makes like a script that the AI must read in their voice. And he was talking about Kamala, everybody knows that you're the throat goat. So can we talk like unreal.
Starting point is 01:02:18 I mean, if you're 70 years old and you just watch a video and you're supposed to know it's AI, like you're cooked, man. You know, you're done. But yeah, in terms of, to me, it feels like, like, I mean, the last four elections, okay. I remember I was in, I guess we'll see who wins and how it shakes down. I remember being in Toronto when Trump won the first time and I was at a comedy club and girls were crying. Like girls were like bawling their eyes out. And I remember I went on.
Starting point is 01:02:46 Canadian girls. Yeah. We don't even, yeah. I mean, obviously, you know, American politics is everywhere. So you are, yes, it's funny that it isn't Canada, but I guess it doesn't feel like that. They feel like, you know, and I'm sure they were correct that like Trumpian president is going to affect the next four years of the life or whatever, but yeah, that's how much, you know, and I know people in New York that were like,
Starting point is 01:03:06 yeah, I cried and they kind of feel like a little embarrassed about it now. But I remember I went on stage and I was like, it's 2016. And I was like, there's going to be some fucking changes around you. Like the first thing that happened. But it was like, yeah, it was crazy before crying. Right. But to me, it doesn't feel like it's, it feels to some degree, like a lot of people are in some ways embarrassed about how much they lost their mind. You know, and they lost their, people lost their minds so many times where now it feels, you know, back to probably a little closer to how I grew up where, you know, people are like, yeah, you know, there's podcasts with people that have different political views.
Starting point is 01:03:45 It seems to me like both candidates are sort of, Trump's going on being like, no, I'm not crazy on abortion. And then Kamala's going on being like, I swear I'm not like this fucking crazy woke person. Like they're almost, they're clearly sort of- Tempering. Whether they're gonna do it or not, but they're clearly like,
Starting point is 01:03:59 that's who they're trying to sort of move into. Again, we'll see what happens afterwards. But I was kind of thinking that so many of arguments right now is just, you know, abortion would be an example, but you can probably, you know, pick anything. Most arguments in politics are just who has the more egregious edge case. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:04:22 So it's like, and most of the time, 90%, 99.9% of the time you're not talking about edge cases, but it's really being like, here's this edge case of what happens if you get your way. And then this guy goes, well, here's an edge case of what happens the other way. Okay. One person's like immigrant that's killed an entire family of five is another person's third trimester dead baby
Starting point is 01:04:41 that's actually been five hours born or some shit. And in reality, none of it, you know, most of it, person's third trimester dead baby that's actually been five hours born or some shit. And in reality, none of it, you know, most of it, almost never any of it happens, right? And I'm sure whatever people are probably arguing like, well, this one happens a lot. And maybe there are edge cases of what I'm saying. Well, if it's a true edge case,
Starting point is 01:05:00 then it doesn't happen a lot. That's what the definition is. By definition, so there you go. But yeah, so to me, it was like every argument I watch right now, it feels like it's like, how can you prepare the most egregious edge case? Just not picking from left to right. Yeah. Yeah. Well, and I think why it's gone a little more politically, like if you watch, if you watch like the debates with the VP debates, right. And I kind of watch this stuff
Starting point is 01:05:22 because we talked about it a bit, but like to me, that was your classic vintage, you know, I was gonna say, like, you know, the politics we're used to now is just like, these guys are going on being like, he has a pretty good idea. I actually agree with him on that one, it's a pretty good idea. And I'm like, call him fat.
Starting point is 01:05:37 What are you, what is, like call him a rapist. What do we want? I came in from like, that's what me and Danny were saying that you just have a flashback where you go, wait, am I just watching a VPist. What do we want? I came in for like that's what me and Danny were saying that you just have a flashback where you go, wait, am I just watching a VP debate? I came here for a Royal rumble. Yeah. I thought I was, I thought I was watching politics, not politics. We were saying the same thing about conspiracy theories, where sometimes you, you get too deep into conspiracy theories. Like I was watching all the P Diddy stuff watching all this stuff. And you're like, it's an Epstein sex trafficking ring. And then eventually you're just like, so JLo is leaving Ben Affleck and he's not happy.
Starting point is 01:06:13 And you go RFK's wife was seen without her wedding ring. And before you know, you're just gossiping. And you're like, what are you talking about? RFK's wife's even you. I'm doing conspiracies right now. Right. It's been so watered down that everything is now. Like those kinds of conspiracies you're just doing. How much do you think, uh, the Kamala going on podcast and doing the 60 minutes and all the rest of it is just a response to the fact that Trump is everywhere. At the moment.
Starting point is 01:06:42 Do you think that's them playing defense? Just sort of trying to get her out there, because it's too obvious if she doesn't go on all of this long, any long form stuff at all, there's this big sort of open loop of, I think it was too obvious. And they were like, well, let's crank out a few, you know, softballs like Stern, you know,
Starting point is 01:06:58 Stern's gonna be, you know, gonna be like, what's it like being so great, you know? So I think that that's what they're doing. They're like, yeah, let's crank out a few. And then I think that people just don't like her. So it seems to be that it's kind of changing the things. I'm sure it's not changing a lot, but I mean, the betting markets are not feeling
Starting point is 01:07:15 our interviews. Dude, do you follow Polymarket? Yeah, I love following Polymarket. All right, so everyone, I had Mike Solana from PirateWires on the show a couple of months ago. He's so fucking great. They wrote this thing today. I wanted to read to you.
Starting point is 01:07:27 Um, so this is, they're sponsored by polymarket, right? They're like, I'm not a partner with polymarket. This is not an ad, but this is one of the best ad reads that I've ever read. So, uh, a tour, Hawk tour as Donald Trump continues his campaign tour podcast circuit ahead of next month's presidential election. Polymarket gives a 4% chance that he'll eventually join the Hawk Tour girl on her new talk tour show. While those odds have gone down, no pun intended, from a high of 10% earlier this week, there's
Starting point is 01:07:54 still a non-zero chance that the Don Hawk collab happening, meaning a few betters with real stake in the game still believe DJT may sit down with the influencer, grab the mic and spit on that thing for an hour or so. Let this be a lesson, folks. If someone comes up to you on the street asking invasive sex questions, don't be so quick to brush them off. You might just end up interviewing a president. I fucking loved that ad read.
Starting point is 01:08:17 I thought that was so fucking funny. A tour, a tour, Hawk tour. But yeah. That is, yeah, right now I was, I've been kind of making a joke. I was actually gonna do a sketch about this, I never did, but the idea of like every girl now, you know, answering a street question being like,
Starting point is 01:08:32 oh yeah, actually, you know what, can I do that again? Bring it in, I think I can do that better. Ooh, just every girl trying to be the biggest ho because that's how they get famous. I think Lieutenant Dan, the hurricane guy, he's gonna be the new Hawk tour guy, that guy's gonna have a, he's gonna be interviewing the president. But the people that don't know who's Lieutenant Dan, the hurricane guy, he's going to be the new hawk to again. That guy's going to have a, he's going to be interviewing the president.
Starting point is 01:08:46 But the people that don't know who's Lieutenant Dan. He's the, he's like a guy that been going viral during the hurricane stuff. And he even lives in a boat, I guess, or something like that. Because he refuses to leave during category five hurricane. But yeah, so I guess that there, obviously she couldn't do no interviews. So yeah, she had to do a few. At some point. It's funny that you say about that,
Starting point is 01:09:09 like retrospective shame, PTSD, post-traumatic shame disorder of... You must know people have that. A little bit, but I don't know, because 2016 I still really, really had my head at my ass. So I was not paying much attention to what was going on politically. But I can totally see how that would be the case. There's another element as well, I think.
Starting point is 01:09:36 Just people that were like mad crazy during COVID. Yes, that's true. That would be more accurate, that one. But with the Trump thing, I think there's a bit where people don't want to admit that he gets to them. Like everybody knows his shtick largely now. Did this bit the other day where people, someone was like, gay's for Trump, gay's for Trump. And he said, who said that?
Starting point is 01:09:57 Some guy was like, oh, it's me over here. And he went, you don't look gay. Like you just know that what he's gonna say, he called Alex Cooper like dumb. She's a dummy. Like he's a dumb, dumb girl. She's a dummy. And you're like,
Starting point is 01:10:11 I mean, there's, there's, there's, there's like fair criticisms. And then there's like, your brain's gone. Like I can get like a normal person being like, yo, I don't want to like live in a world that like revolves around one man again for four years, you know, where it's just like the whole world like revolves around this one guy. Like that's fair to say, you know, and I think some people think that so I mean, probably a referendum on you know, whether people want Trump again, and then out of the people that are like, we don't being like, is this too much? Is she going to be that bad? People saying that.
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Starting point is 01:11:45 or heading to functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. Isn't it interesting that the press are pushing so hard against Trump, the Atlantic came out in support of Kamala. Wait, the media was against Trump you're saying? I didn't catch it. Which one? But like the single greatest thing that could happen to all of the clicks of every single news outlet on the planet would be four years of a Trump presidency.
Starting point is 01:12:17 Sort of, but again, it's the short-term thing again, like think about how did that end? All of those places that you go, this was a click bonanza, how are they doing now? Are they doing better or worse than they were doing before that? Keep them in power. But that's what I mean. It's kind of, I mean, I've been, I was having trouble sleeping
Starting point is 01:12:34 and I started taking sleeping pills. And it was like, well, now I have to take sleeping pills. Right, okay. But I mean, well, yeah. But I think it feels like that a little bit where you go, yeah, that'll be a click bonanza. But you I think you have to like, but you're going to ruin your brand in the process. I wonder whether. And literally, dude, they lost their mind so much and tried to like ring out every click
Starting point is 01:12:56 during Trump that it killed media. That's true. That is true. Yeah. It expedited the death of mainstream media. It's not a job anymore because they've lost their minds so much during Trump. That's a good point. Have you seen the New York Times were striking, right? No.
Starting point is 01:13:12 And so the New York Times was going on strike and they basically had to, they had their demands and it was like, imagine what you would think they would be. It was like, we need, you know, like rooms if we're feeling microaggressions. The one thing was they go, we need trigger warnings. And it's like, it's shit that you're like this, you're kidding. Right. And it was like, they want trigger warnings at the news. Like they work in the news. You trigger warnings, right. But it was just funny because the same day that came out was the thing where Wall Street was like,
Starting point is 01:13:44 we're only going to let people work 82 hours a week. It's like so funny. They're like dichotomy of like- Within the space of like three miles each other. Traditional media. Yeah, traditional like fucking liberal New York media versus, you know- Ruthless capitalists.
Starting point is 01:13:57 Versus like, yeah, dude, bro, fucking capitalist. And it was like, they're making a rule that they're only allowed to work 82 hours a week on paper. I mean, no one's going to follow that, but. Yeah. You're limited to three grams of cocaine per day in the office on account. Yeah. So this, uh, the Atlantic thing, the Atlantic for the fifth time in its history is endorsing a candidate for president Kamala Harris. But another way to write it is the Atlantic. Huge endorsement. People were waiting on that. Yeah, well, I mean, dude, they wrote an article when was it Scientific American came out
Starting point is 01:14:28 in support of Kamala, they literally wrote an article saying Scientific American didn't need to endorse anybody. And then a month later, obviously, whatever pressure has been applied to them that they need to come out, come on, we really need your support. So is it the reason they have a big subscription model and their base is like, hey, we're paying you money, are you gonna say something or what?
Starting point is 01:14:44 Maybe, I get the sense that it would have come more from inside of the company than inside of the audience. Gotcha. But another way to write it fifth time in the history endorsing a presidential candidate or third time in a row they're endorsing Trump's opponent. Yeah. It's like, it's not the whole,
Starting point is 01:15:01 everything that's happening with regards to politics at the moment is just a big fuck off protest vote. You're not voting for the love of that candidate. You're voting for the hate of the other one. You know you said that, you know, you were in COVID, you go to Ben Shapiro and you're that comfort and that's what it is. I mean, that's how I look at news where I'm like,
Starting point is 01:15:19 okay, I'll just, sometimes I like to look at it to see what the thing that people want you to think is. You know what I mean? Like those publications. Yeah. It's not telling you what's going on. It's telling you what people want you to think is going on. Which I think is, you know, especially if you're someone that's, you know, a comedian or in culture and any business where you need to know like the way things are moving or, you know, probably you want to know those things, but that's the only information that you get generally. Or if they corroborate something
Starting point is 01:15:51 that everyone else seems to corroborate, it's maybe another piece of data. I wonder what's gonna happen if it does calm down a bit. Like, you know, we've sort of crazy, wokey stuff on one side seems to be chilling out a little bit. Trump seems to be moderating himself. Maybe that's just in the run up to the actual voting point,
Starting point is 01:16:07 or maybe that's actually indicative of what he's trying to do longer term. Well, I think the end of the day, you have to look at, it didn't work. You know, at the end of the day, like, where you go, why is it, you know, why are things like moving away from that? You go, because it didn't work very well. Ineffective.
Starting point is 01:16:28 Yeah, it was ineffective. So your job during the campaign is to get elected. You did a thing. It didn't get you elected. Do a different thing and see if it works. Yeah. And then also, but you know, it also probably, I mean, okay, Candace obviously like a more aggressive example.
Starting point is 01:16:44 They've had 12 years of Justin Trudeau who's like a clown, right? And you go- With face paint. Yeah, and there's like, people went from mostly people being fairly liberal to people having like fuck Trudeau stickers on the, like turned into like a Republican dad over a night.
Starting point is 01:17:00 You know what I mean? Like people are legit, you know, your average person is, you know, ready to, is talking about the second amendment and stuff like that, right? And that to me, that's what that did. Like it didn't, it made people go the other way because it was, you know, so flawed, like logically
Starting point is 01:17:19 that I think that like most dudes just weren't like, I'm not buying what you're selling. You ended with reaction. Yeah. So, I mean, that's in, in addition to like politically, it was somewhat not effective in the longterm. It's probably, I mean, it might be, to be honest, it might have been somewhat effective at points to get people elected, but probably not to make
Starting point is 01:17:37 anything better, that's for sure. Well, that's the game, right? Is between what you need to do or say in order to be able to get yourself into office, but what does that actually do in terms of making the world a better place? And how do you do it again? You know what I mean? It's like the girl that you promised the world and didn't deliver, you know? Well, that's the thing. That's the mad thing about the sort of Kamala situation is that you're in power now. Like you're literally, you've been in office. I know you're second, like number two or whatever, but you've all of the things that you're highlighting
Starting point is 01:18:09 that are problems with the country that need to be fixed. There has to be attention when it comes to the talking points that her team are creating for her that is, well, we can kind of derogate where the world and the country is at right now, but we can't do it too much because kind of we were in charge a bit. So whereas the person that is the opponent, as opposed to the incumbent, I guess, is she the incumbent? I guess, kind of, kind of not. Um, the person that's on the other side can go, this has been ruined.
Starting point is 01:18:35 I'll come in and fix it. Like all of the problems are their fault, technically her fault. She's got like a bit of culpable deniability, but not that much. Cause he's like, well, you were fucking inside of the tent, pissing out, not Trump trying to burn it down from the outside. I mean, you're, I think you're talking to like your audience and you're talking to, uh, voters the way that maybe there are people are supposed to think about it, but I don't think that is how people think about it.
Starting point is 01:19:02 I mean, most people have their one issue, Like any girl that I know that's like, yeah, I'm not voting for Trump, like he's against abortion, end of story. Like that's so many New York people. I mean, so, I mean, really that's all like semantics. It's like an argument that changes nothing to some degree. Well, it's wild every time that I read an assessment, if it's Nate Silver, that polling guy,
Starting point is 01:19:24 or even like more partisan media stuff, everybody that's talking about polling is basically saying, almost all of this campaigning stuff could just be shut down. Probably 98% or 99% of America could just switch off about the election. And there's like four counties in Pennsylvania
Starting point is 01:19:44 and a couple in Nevada, and they can actually deal with it. Oh, it seems weird to me. Well, yeah, people probably made this point, but they're like, all the undecided voters, you're like, who? No. I don't know anyone that's like-
Starting point is 01:19:56 5% of vote- At this point is like, oh, I don't know. They're both good. It's like, who is that guy? I mean, the only thing I get is the guy who, you know, do I like this person enough to actually get off my ass and do it? To me, that makes sense where you're when they always talk about undecided, but to me, it probably seems more like unregistered. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You're not yet registered. Am I actually, you know, this guy that, you know,
Starting point is 01:20:22 maybe, uh, yeah, I prefer Trump, but I don't like Kamala. You're like, are you actually going to go do it? And you're like, probably not. Motivated enough. Can you get that guy to vote? To me, that feels like more what it's about. Yeah, that's a really good point. But when you think, I think it's about 5% of voters, a class themselves is undecided or a class is undecided, but then of that 5% of 330 million people,
Starting point is 01:20:41 how many of them have registered to vote? How many of them have registered to vote? How many of them are going to go and vote? And if that subset of that subset, how many of them live in the counties of the places that actually matter, the Pennsylvania, the Nevada, the whatever the fuck. It's like you're, you might actually be talking about the entire political campaign running rampant across the world being for less than a million people. That might actually be who it is. It's a lot of money for those people.
Starting point is 01:21:10 Less than a million people. Like that might be who is, who all of this stuff is being funnelled toward. The only ones that matter can vote, will vote. I guess it's really based on blunders then, you know, at this point you go, I don't know if there's anything good someone could do or like their speech was so good, they changed people's mind. It's really like, did you not mess up so bad that you've dropped a point? You're going on Call Her Daddy. That's a high risk strategy there for you. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:21:35 You are right though. I mean, how many times Trump did flagrant with Schultz? To me, I didn't see it that way where it is hilarious to me, but to me that felt like, I mean, the Call Her Daddy when they were doing the like blow job tutorials, that was more like the five years ago bar stool days from what I understand.
Starting point is 01:21:53 So really it was like, she go from what I think in my mind, what I think it is now is like women talking about mental health and you know what I mean? Chick talk. Yeah, like that kind of shit. So. It's Hayley Bieber talking about mental health and you know what I mean? Chick talk. Yeah, like that kind of shit. So. It's Haley Bieber talking about how difficult it is to deal with the pressures of fame and stuff like that.
Starting point is 01:22:11 Like a lot of that kind of shit. I think it is too. Although yeah, you're right. Alex kind of branded herself as one thing and then. I just wish she got, yeah, she wanted to get out of it. Yeah, I think that seems to be the case, but we're playing off errors, not successes, I think is like absolutely dialed, like fucking straight
Starting point is 01:22:33 on the money, how many times that Trump was on Schultz's show and, uh, he described himself as I think like kind of truthful or mostly, I'm a mostly truthful person or something like that. And everybody, Schult shelter's like, what? Mostly true, like, what is that? That was in a campaign ad for Kamala like today. Really? Yeah. That happened.
Starting point is 01:22:55 They recorded it on Monday. It came out yesterday. It was in a campaign ad today. So it very much is a just obsessively watch what the other candidate does. See if you can find a blunder. Yeah, so the amount of, I guess, opportunities that you give the other person,
Starting point is 01:23:12 like the fewer opportunity if you don't do so many. You think that's kind of wild when you look at it where you go, you know, like, you know, all these people that are kind of like pivotal people in deciding the election now, you know what I mean? Yeah. That kind of wild, like the media like changed so much and you kind of, in the last five years, you look around,
Starting point is 01:23:27 you go, oh, I guess I'm like, it's like your friends that are kind of like pretty vivid. Andrew Schultz is apparently fucking important in the future of the country somehow. Yeah, and a lot of people like that. It's pretty wild. It is pretty strange. Yeah, I don't know how I feel about that.
Starting point is 01:23:42 Like it's kind of flattering to everybody that it's power, but it also feels a lot like who the fuck, I keep bringing this up. There's this image of Mark Zuckerberg in front of Congress and he's being shouted at. It's when he still was AI. I've shown them. But it was like AI Mark where everyone was sure
Starting point is 01:23:59 he was a lizard robot person and not Chad Mark now with a beard and a necklace chain. Grilled. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he a beard and a necklace chain. Grilled. Yeah. He's like, he's fucking... Hi Beast Mark. He is. He is.
Starting point is 01:24:10 Yeah. He's Erewhon Mark. And it was just an image of a guy who 15 years ago had tried to be able to work out who was hotter on a website and whether you were in a relationship with someone or not. Now being told that he's suppressing information, which is crucial to the future of the Republic or some shit, and he's just like this. And he's like, it's just a guy.
Starting point is 01:24:30 But it's kind of the same with, you know, what the fuck is going on that Alex Cooper, some girl that just wanted to have a chat with her friends and like maybe some famous chicks about what it's like to fucking be a girl and grow up and have casual sex or something. Thea Hoare. what it's like to fucking be a girl and grow up and have casual sex or something. Be a whore. And now you're having a chat with like the vice president,
Starting point is 01:24:50 potential future president of the country. Oh, like we've handed a lot of power to like random people. Well, we didn't hand it to them. That's the, yeah. Yeah, they've grown that power. Yeah, it's super interesting. It's fucking. The people they had the power before
Starting point is 01:25:05 like proves themselves not to be trusted and then people left. Massive. You know, it's kind of, I mean, there's that, I'm sure you've heard it in tech where they like, everything is just centralizing and decentralizing again. Well, basically like every new company is bundling and unbundling of some sort
Starting point is 01:25:22 where it's like, you know, there like, there was, first it was, songs were a thing and then you started having CDs. And then basically, then they started, the new company was like, you could buy a bunch of CDs at once. And then it was back to like original songs and then Spotify bundles them again. And like, so basically there's a thing that every company
Starting point is 01:25:44 is basically like bundling and then unbundling products. But I was kind of thinking like, so basically there's a thing that every company is basically like bundling and then unbundling products. But I was kind of thinking like, you know, it's almost like if you look at everything, you know, politics, culture, it's all just fashion going from baggy to tight and tight to baggy. Like, it kind of it kind of relates to like everything. But it's like music always goes from like soft to hard or or like technical and then back to to kind of nihilistic, it doesn't matter. And then you get the rapper who's like, I'm the best at rapping. And then you go to the guy that's like, I don't even care about being good, it's not about that.
Starting point is 01:26:12 It just goes back and forth. But it's all just things going from tight to baggy, baggy to tight. And politics and media, it kind of is like that too, where it really went from baggy or tight, which is button down, prim, it went from baggy or tight, which is, uh, you know, button down, prim and proper to baggy, which is like a bunch of people like talking shit on a podcast.
Starting point is 01:26:31 And then, yeah. So it's like all of, you know, kind of culture is just things going from tight to baggy and baby tight. I'd never thought of that, but also it's in line with what you was saying about the Trump Biden and then Trump Kamala debates and you go, that could have been the intro to the flagrant episode. It's the same tenor. Do you know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:26:55 It's personal insults. Right. Oh, I see what you're saying. It's like the exact same. So for us to say, Oh, isn't it crazy that now Alex Cooper and Andrew Schultz and all of these people have got, Aiden Ross is important to the future of Donald Trump's presidency and stuff like that. And you go, well, kind of, but only if you're comparing it to the wrong period in history. If you compare it to the right period in history, which is right fucking now, it makes total sense.
Starting point is 01:27:17 That's what happens. Yeah. I don't think he knows what he said at the end of that sentence. He doesn't know either. Like it was just, it's complete. It's continuation. Yeah, it's the removal of like gatekeepers, but yeah, you can imagine why that like- Even when they're on the gatekeeper program, you know, they had to reinstall gatekeepers as in there's a way that we can mute your mic. Like that's a physical fucking gatekeeper
Starting point is 01:27:37 because the natural decorum that would have typically been had in a presidential debate. Do you ever see that one? It was whoever Obama ran up against in like 2012, whoever that was. And they go and they sort of shake hands at the beginning. And I think before we get started, I'd like to wish the honorable gentleman's wife a very happy birthday. And he think who the f**k is, f**king lame s**t.
Starting point is 01:27:59 Come on. Call him a d**k. It's always, it always switches. To me, it's like politics is politics and then it becomes culture. You know what I mean? Where Trump is culture. Where it's like you could, whether or not you were into politics, you had an opinion on Trump.
Starting point is 01:28:18 So it kind of transcends. There's certain issues like men and women and race stuff that they're kind of more of part of culture. And then there's issues that are less sexy, like the Federal Reserve, which are the actual, usually important ones. They're not sexy, right? In other news, this episode is brought to you by Magic Spoon. You probably know Magic Spoon for their super popular high protein cereal that's got 75,000 five star reviews, which I'm sure you're aware of. Well, now they've turned those cereals into treats that taste just like classic
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Starting point is 01:29:17 marshmallow, chocolate, peanut butter, blueberry, double chocolate, birthday cake, and strawberry milkshake. Right now you can get $5 off your next order by going to the link in the description below at magicspoon.com slash modern wisdom. That's magicspoon.com slash modern wisdom. Or you can look for Magic Spoon in your nearest grocery store. There's an idea called the barber pole
Starting point is 01:29:38 when it comes to fashion. So if you imagine you've got four layers, you've got lower class, lower middle, upper middle and upper. And basically each different group is trying to pretend to be one above them. You can't pretend to be two above you. So you know how a barber pole, when it rotates, it goes up and then it restarts at the bottom.
Starting point is 01:29:59 Like if you think about- It's pretty good, I like it. Talking about the baggy to tight, tight to baggy thing, when Kanye West started making clothing, what was it? It was like almost hobo chic, right? It was like literally like oversized long sleeves. For a million dollars. Correct.
Starting point is 01:30:14 Here's a ripped up shirt for me. The only people that could afford it were the people at the top of the barber pole. But how were they dressing? They were dressing like the people at the bottom of the barber pole. So why- Oh, that's, oh, fuck, I like it. Yeah, it's good.
Starting point is 01:30:26 You're signaling, but the only reason- Cause everyone's going one up, but when you're at the full top, you've got to go right back. That's the hedge fund kid's son. Hoodie, red sneakers. Slum it, or the, yeah, Mark Zuckerberg. Yeah, where they don't-
Starting point is 01:30:39 Taxi thing where they're all wearing the hoodies. It's the same as the guy that just got his PhD saying it's a doctor long, actually, as opposed to the dude that's been a practicing surgeon for 50 years. Call me Mark. Yeah. 100%. That's a great theory. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I love that barber pole idea. So I'm always thinking about, okay, what's this person signaling and who are they trying to be? You know what? I'll tell you what kind of something that I think about
Starting point is 01:31:07 I'll tell you what kind of something that I think about that relates to that. Because when you're thinking about, you know, people are always moving and looking to present themselves as something different. I'm always like, never listen to anyone who hasn't been the thing for less than two years. So when someone's telling you about religion, you know, you'll have a friend that's like, I'm religious, here's why it's great. Or I'm, here's why they just got into- Veganism. Yeah, or just got into right wing stuff and they're calling you a sheep now. And it was like a week ago, this guy was watching CNN. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:31:36 But I feel like two years is the amount where you have to be in it for two years before I want to hear- Then you can preach to me. Yeah. Yeah. Because then otherwise it's like, you know, use that on someone else. Like if you, if you want to go talk to your family and bother your coworkers and your bullshit, I don't want to be the test subject for you, you know, playing out this new life. Playing with your new toy. Yeah. Now that's then I'm a sucker. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:02 If you find yourself being like, yeah. Am I a fucking son? Am I a Pete pre dish for your like, like dog shit, new ideas? Yeah. That's when you're a sucker. That's a, that's a good point. You're a, you're an easy mark for me to like, dick about with this new idea. Uh, one of my friends has a rule where he never listens to the suggestions
Starting point is 01:32:21 that anyone's got for, uh, software and like productivity is like into productivity and stuff. And someone, everybody's known, oh bro, I've got this new task management app, loops in with Google calendar and then it automatically populates, it tracks all your time and then you've got the, you can do it on your phone
Starting point is 01:32:35 and it automatically does all of this stuff. And he's like, how long you used it for? And he goes, about two and a half weeks. He goes, so his rule is he never takes suggestions for software for anyone that used it for less than five years. Yeah, because they don't know all the problems. Yes. Yeah. Where does it, where does it, what's the limits that this thing comes up against? What's it like living with this thing today, day to day? When the shininess and the novelties,
Starting point is 01:32:55 what is left? When I'm like working with people, especially like films, a big one for this, you know, comedy even more so in any sort of like comedy film sense. It's like, everyone's pretty good at their job until there's a problem, right? So people that aren't that good, you know, that haven't been, you know, done it for every year, like really what makes like a great sound guy a lot of times is like they've dealt with every single problem. 100%. So nothing will happen and there's a peace of mind to know, you know, whereas someone that's not that good and a lot of people that are mediocre will always kind of be like,
Starting point is 01:33:27 well, this is wrong and this is wrong. You're like, yeah, that's things go wrong. Everyone can be good at that job when there's a problem. Yeah, that's, yeah, that's a good way to say it. Everyone can be good at their, everyone can be good at everything. Like you can, you can spend six months getting to the point where you're good at this in perfect conditions, but like being good at something means there's not. So yeah, so people that kind of have that thing often, you find you, you like hire them and they'll kind of be like, well, this went wrong and this went wrong. And they'll always be giving you things that went wrong. And you're like, yeah, things go wrong. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:33:58 Yeah. That's why you're hired. You're hired to stop the things. When I was, when I used to do like showcases in comedy. What's that? Like if you, let's say, you know, they have festivals and TV things, if you're, so people would be on the- Oh, like that moon tower thing. It's kind of like how people auditioned for things for a long time.
Starting point is 01:34:14 Like a lot of times they would have, you know, people audition this way and stand ups, you kind of audition by doing stand up. And I, but a lot of times, you know, especially in the 2017, 18 eras, there was a lot of people that were, you know, shooting up in the industries that weren't actually that good at the thing. So I would always, whenever I was, I always would hate when it was a hot crowd. I would love it. Like whenever I was
Starting point is 01:34:35 doing a, yeah, because you're like, if there's 10 people and four of them, like Kenny, they're not even that good. If it's a hot crowd, you're not going to be able to tell which one of those are. If it's a bad crowd, those people are all going to bomb. Oh, it's the proving ground. Yeah. So I always used to like it when it was, whereas if you've been doing this forever and you're not going to be able to tell which one of those are. If it's a bad crowd, those people are all going to bomb. Oh, it's the proving ground. Yeah, so I always used to like it when it was, whereas if you've been doing this forever and you're pretty good at it, you're like, oh, I actually know how to switch this, like, or whatever. Not you're not going to every time,
Starting point is 01:34:53 but like you might be able to do it, they won't be able to do it. That's so good. So I always do this. Yeah, there's a, I've been using this analogy about lifting on Mars or lifting on Jupiter. So Mars less gravity, Jupiter more gravity. And what you want to basically do is do your practicing where you're lifting on Jupiter and do your performance when you're lifting on Mars. Yeah. So like
Starting point is 01:35:13 prepare for the worst and hope for the best type thing. And that's really interesting. I've got my first set of work in progress shows for the next live tour happening starting this Monday that you helped me with last year. And I've got the same thing again, where I'm like, the room's really cool, it's really dark. It's perfect temperature. Yeah, I'm like fucking- But Jerry Seinfeld has a pretty good point about it
Starting point is 01:35:37 that applies to, I think a lot of things, but he has pretty good points. He doesn't make much comedy, but he has a good points on comedy.'t make much comedy, but he has good points on comedy. But he says, he goes that good rooms are for exploring and bad rooms are for refining. Oh, that's great. So this goes a little against what you're saying, but if you're looking to like figure it out at the beginning, that's not the worst to have like a good room where people are supportive. However, I would imagine that most of your rooms are that. Like I can't imagine you're gonna do like,
Starting point is 01:36:10 if you did like a small room for a hundred. Yeah, and people are like, you know, I think you're gonna get that energy. I've been loving, I mean, I gotta, again, I need to thank you and you thank me at the beginning, but I gotta thank you with some of the stuff that you gave me last year, it was so fucking amazing. I, if you are a person who doesn't have a friend
Starting point is 01:36:27 that's a top flight comedian, which maybe I guess most people don't, but if you, I texted you a couple of times about a few things I was trying to work out. You could have been on the toilet or like in an Uber somewhere and I just got nothing short of like pure gold that given a hundred years I couldn't have written. Just this like stream of consciousness from you on my iMessage. And I still like hold onto these fucking bits.
Starting point is 01:36:51 Like it's, you won't even remember them. You won't even remember that there's like one bit about Amber Heard, which was just fucking phenomenal. Like this three-part bit, there's another bit about Bill Cosby. There's another bit about something else. I was like, it just, it blows my mind. Like to see, I guess it's probably, it's probably what it must feel like
Starting point is 01:37:07 if you have a friend that's an unbelievable MMA fighter and you just know him, right? You just talk, you go for dinner, you hang out. And then every so often you get to watch him put on this very specific set of skills on display and you go, holy fuck. Like what's that? What's that bit of you? And it's just this like growth, this sort of like bit
Starting point is 01:37:28 of the additional side of your entire capacity that nobody else has. So yeah, it's- Yeah, there is like a brain thing of like how jokes work. And I think a lot of, yeah, but so you kind of get good at doing that. And I think for what you were doing too, there was an element where it's like, you know,
Starting point is 01:37:44 a bunch of eights would be like really good in this hour. an element where it's like, you know, a bunch of eights would be like really good in this hour. But like, when you're actually, you know, trying to put together like a thing that the purpose of this is just pure stand up, you go most eights don't usually make the cut. And then also there's, there's usually, uh, you know, I could, I maybe like had a idea of like what type of stuff where remember there was one joke where you're like, I don't really get this one. And I'm like, listen, I obviously do what you want, where you're like, I don't really get this one. And I'm like, listen, I obviously do what you want, but I'm like, I'm telling you,
Starting point is 01:38:08 that's the one that'll get the biggest. That was the Amber Hood. That's the Amber Hood. Yeah. I was like, all right. No, I could just tell. I trust you and sure enough, I did it and it fucking destroys.
Starting point is 01:38:18 And I was like, that's, yeah, it's just, it's so wild. But yeah, to think about like the capacities that your friends have and to go, Oh, I just get to see you and you sort of usually do this thing. And then you actually saw the last time. So when I, I, the special that I just released, you came and saw the second time I started putting that hour together here. That was like the second time I started putting that together. And then that was a two, two years later.
Starting point is 01:38:45 What else have you got? Have you got anything else that you want to go through? Oh, yeah. Okay. I have a couple of, yeah, I told you, I brought a couple of like points that I've been thinking about for the last like a few days that it, so I was thinking that in politics, um, you can either be the funner side or the more righteous side and you can't be both.
Starting point is 01:39:04 And it always kind of switches back and whoever's the funner side or the more righteous side and you can't be both and it always kind of switches back and whoever's the funner side it's too delectable for them to not start being the righteous side because it's like righteous like being righteous is like so uh maybe not addictive is the right word it's so uh appealing like you just want to so but the funner side usually does better but when you're the funner side and then that expands the funner side usually does better. But when you're the funner side and that expands, the funner side can't help but start being the righteous side once you have like a movement. Who's the funner side?
Starting point is 01:39:32 So you built a movement with the funner side. I think right now, it clearly like, obviously at one point, the liberals were the funner side. They became the less fun side. I think that Republicans became the funner side. They became the less fun side. I think that Republicans became the funner side. Now probably like, you know, the, I mean, there were the OG, like it is fun. It's funner to just be like, fuck yeah, America guns, like jet skis than
Starting point is 01:39:58 to be, you know, um, telling you what, you know, you can tweet or whatever, right? Federal reserve and immigrants and. Now I think that the, the draw to be righteous is like very strong on both in my opinion right now. So I feel like I feel righteousness coming at me from both ways. It's interesting getting spit roasted by righteousness. Feel like a little bit. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:24 It's, it's funny that definitely when Kamala got nominated first or whatever, it was, it's all vibes and you would just brat-summering our way through she's so cool and it was memes and all the rest of it. But you do have this very moralistic side that's righteous because Roe versus Wade and abortion is such a key part of the talking point. So you can't, like you can't speak non-seriously about what you're saying is an existential
Starting point is 01:40:49 threat to 50% of the entire country. So you can't fuck about with it, but then you've got this sort of brand. And I guess with Trump as well, his whole thing is to be the, I'm going to flip the table over, I'll drain the swamp, I'll say funny things. Yeah, but if you do that, what are you actually going to like, we've got all of these problems. What about the communists? You can't call them communists and just like meme Lord your way through tweeting and truth socialing everything.
Starting point is 01:41:13 It kind of is in real life too. There's a little bit of, you know, definitely in comedy where you go, you know, it's very attractive to kind of be like the auto, you're in fucking pay attention that shit. But then like once you do, it's like, it's hard to go back. You know, you, I think that was the big attention to that shit. But then like, once you do, it's like, it's hard to go back. You know, I think that was the big problem like liberals had is they all kind of were like scolding you and then they went back to trying to be silly
Starting point is 01:41:30 and you're like, what the fuck? It's like you always see on stage a guy will, there'll be like an audience member, he'll start yelling, get the fuck out, blah, blah, blah. And he's like, this is a real show. And then he tries to go back to like, so I'm on the bus. And you know, it's just like ridiculous, right? But I think that in people, it's like, people, it's like funner to be the like, you know, I'm not, I'm on the bus. And it's just like ridiculous. Right. But I think that on people,
Starting point is 01:41:52 it's like funner to be the like, you know, I don't whatever. And then, but then it's attractive to be like, okay, actually this is ridiculous. So it's very, there's always a pull to be the righteous. Baggy to loose, loose to baggy. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Tight to baggy, baggy to tight. Yeah. Tight to baggy, baggy to tight. Yeah. Tight to baggy, baggy to tight. I guess it's back to that. Yeah. I think that I had a funny theory that, you know how girls put guys in friend zones, right? So people say, well, what's the guy version of that, right?
Starting point is 01:42:20 And the guy version of that is grandmother treatment. So a girl puts a guy in a friend zone, because for girls, that's a, you know, male friend is really the most non-sexual thing. Whereas a guy, you'd be like, yeah, fuck, I could be friends with a girl and fuck her. But the guys see friends as higher. So girls, when they treat a guy like a friend,
Starting point is 01:42:39 it's very like a little brother, like a friend. Those are like very, the least sexual, that's the lowest run. Whereas guy version of that is grandmother. So you would never talk about anything real. You would never talk about anything sexual and you, I'm sure you have women in your life like that. You're like, Oh, how's it going? Like, you know, they'd be, and if they ever said something sexual, like, Oh, that guy's hot. You're like,
Starting point is 01:42:58 yeah, he seems to be doing pretty good. Like you would never engage with anything sexual. She'd be like, I'm masturbating. You'd be like, speaking of pregnancy, Nancy's having another kid. You would never engage in anything sexual. The grandmother treatment is the guy version of FriendZone. But when does that get deployed? Who uses that ever?
Starting point is 01:43:18 I would say, where do I deploy friend and grandmother treatment? I would say a lot of people that are like your coworkers, for example. Right, okay. Because of all of the female coworkers you've got? I would say a lot of people that are like your coworkers, for example. Right, okay. You know, like- Because of all of the female coworkers you've got? I would say, okay, there's no way to, like, okay, listen, you're a good looking guy, girls like you,
Starting point is 01:43:32 obviously. I would imagine that if you show up to a city like Austin, there's plenty of girls that are like around that you would probably make a lot of enemies if you just like ran through a bunch of the hot girls in a city. So you're smart enough to not do anything like that. You're not that guy anyway, but like... Friends, girlfriends, friends, ex-girlfriend.
Starting point is 01:43:49 Whatever. Shit like that. Exactly, right? So you would probably just not do that stuff because... Friends, ex-girlfriend. That's actually a really fucking good one. So... So you would treat them like the way you treat your grandmother. That's so funny. You're actually really right. I'm now starting to find like little pockets of girls that fit into that. Friends ex girlfriends are a big one like that. Friends ex girlfriends is the perfect grandmother treatment. You get ultimate grandmother treatment. You're very pleasant to them.
Starting point is 01:44:12 You're very nice. You basically sort of detach. You might be overly nice to them. You've detached your penis and like left it outside. The penis is not in the end. Yes, it's so gone. You're actually... And opinions. You might not tell them opinions either. So the grandmother treatment is gay best friend.
Starting point is 01:44:26 That's basically what you're trying to position yourself as. Yes. You're like talking about, oh, your hair looks lovely and like, isn't it nice outside? Gay best friend would probably drift into the, then I was, ah. Your hair looks lovely. But if she ever said she, okay,
Starting point is 01:44:41 if your grandmother ex friend or so, if she was like, give you a really extreme political opinion, right? And it could be, it could literally be like, uh, you know, like this Hitler guy's actually the man you'd be like, everyone has good points. Like there's no way you're not engaging. You just don't engage at all with anything. Yeah. I know exactly what you mean. Yeah. There was a time when I was in the gym not too long ago and one of my friends, ex-girlfriends like had this crop top thing on and took a crop top off, huge fake boobs, one nipple was out.
Starting point is 01:45:12 And I was like, fucking hot day today, isn't it? And I'm like, have you seen there's a dog over there? And I was like, I didn't even tell her. I was like, I'm gonna let someone else. I'm gonna let somebody else sort of, she walks away. That was like a bad friend thing to do, but it was like almost the secondhand sort of grandmother. Like I can't not.
Starting point is 01:45:30 I can't, there's no, I don't want anyone to know that I've seen your boob. I don't want you to know, I don't want me to know. I definitely don't want to address it. Single titty, one titty that's out. But no, that's a really, that's a really great point. The friend zone thing is so, I mean, it's become like- Because people, yeah, they go, oh, what's the female equivalent?
Starting point is 01:45:47 That's what it is in my opinion. Yeah, yeah, friends, ex-girlfriends, and current friends, girlfriends, and shit like that, and like the orbiter thing, or like people that your boys, you know that your boy fancies her, so you're like, I'm, I can, I gotta do this. Yeah, the only thing you're talking about is how sick he is.
Starting point is 01:46:02 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, the gay best friend thing comes in again. Yeah. Dude, great cock. What kind of other quick one, just about that was, there was sort of, I was thinking about, there was this girl that I knew that she said,
Starting point is 01:46:16 she was like, I knew the girl and the guy and they were friends forever. And then they were, then they ended up being together, but they've been friends for six years. And someone was like, why were you, what took you so long? And she goes, honestly, you never even crossed my mind. And I was like, that like stuck with me where I was like, no guys, you know, it crossed his mind.
Starting point is 01:46:35 You know what I mean? Like no guys known a woman for six years and it's like, it's never crossed your mind. And I was thinking about, I think that like men treat our thoughts like a, men treat our thoughts sort of like a friend that's a piece of shit that's like, yo, you should try to fuck that girl. And you're like, no, we're not, they're not doing that. He's like, yo, we should party tonight. You're like, I told you I'm having like three beers. Like, and women treat their brains like an abusive ex boyfriend and they defend it. Cause they'll write about like articles being like,
Starting point is 01:47:06 it's actually pretty reasonable to be drunk texting your ex. So, so because guys' thoughts are more aggressive. So they're like, yo, do well. And you're like, we know, we don't defend our own brain cause we're like, this guy's too much, man. Whereas girls, they defend their thoughts. Like, I'm not weird for thinking this.
Starting point is 01:47:31 Nothing wrong with- Your best friend's brother actually could be the right guy for you. Yeah, they write the article defending the crazy shit that they're thinking. Yes. Fuck. So that's my other one.
Starting point is 01:47:44 Dude, I can't stop thinking about that grandmother thing. Yes. Fuck. So that's my other one. Dude, I think that I can't stop thinking about that grandmother thing. Grandmother treatment. Fucking real. I've kind of, you know what? I had an old saying that me and my friends used to say forever that just came back. It's kind of just from grandmother dream
Starting point is 01:47:58 reminds me of it's not related. But I said, we used to always joke that when, like, you know, if you're dating a girl and it's been like three or four months and she's kind of like, what is this? We used to always say our one friend was an expert at it. You play the groggy, tired guy where you're kind of like, maybe like talking about this tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:48:15 It's kind of like, like an employee being like, you know, we're gonna talk about the rage. You're like, I don't know, today, you know, what time is it even? Like you basically act like you're really groggy, like in the morning, like, okay, what can I do? I doubt to have this conversation. I was fucking like, very forgetful.
Starting point is 01:48:31 Yeah. You act like you're just so groggy, right? And then we just said, our one friend was like always looking groggy. So he could never get into like, you know, he'd never get tricked into a relationship because he's so groggy. But it's like a joke we used to say, but then I was watching like, uh, interview, I was watching a lot of the like, uh, stuff, the interviews with the rappers when I was getting into the Drake and Kendrick stuff, because I'm
Starting point is 01:48:50 from Toronto and I was saying all rappers do the groggy tired guy to every question. Like if you watch like no jumper, like Adam Trey doing stuff, it'll be like, you know, where were you the night of this? And he's like, fucking, I don't even know why you ask it. What? Like every rapper dodges every question by doing the groggy tired man. I was like, it's kind of brilliant. You dodge every question. You act like pretending like you're not in the room. But you're like, what?
Starting point is 01:49:14 I don't even, I barely know my name right now. Like, I can't, that seems like a lot for right now. What do you think, speaking of the rapper beef, I really didn't pay, haven't paid anywhere near enough attention to the P Diddy stuff. I know the outline of the story. We don't need to do a 30,000 foot view
Starting point is 01:49:34 of a thousand boxes of blue. I'm sure there's been a lot of them done too. Is that in any way linked to rap world, the rap world, or is it all just culture and like weird sex party stuff? Or is it gonna end up being that he was looped in with some other rapper that ended up being- Well, it depends who you ask, man. If you ask the rapper-
Starting point is 01:49:52 I don't know how deep the fucking rabbit hole of this goes. I mean, there's always that community that's just like all of Hollywood and rap is trying to make black dude banged guys, right? You were the first person to ever teach me about this. When we were texting about the cat Williams thing. Oh, you didn't know about that. I didn't know.
Starting point is 01:50:09 And you were like, oh, this is the meme of Hollywood. That Hollywood just tries to put black men in dresses. Yeah. And I texted you and I was like, what? You're like, you mean you don't know? Like this is the meme. Yeah, right. Cause I had no idea.
Starting point is 01:50:22 It's written, it's not a thing. I had no idea that, but that, but this is maybe a further continuing. So P Diddy is like the fucking- Well, it's like every comedian, they're like, they always make them an address. And Chappelle said it and Catt Williams and Dick Gregory was like, if you watch Dick Gregory, he has these old videos on YouTube.
Starting point is 01:50:39 And it's just like, I mean, I'm sure there's, you know, like anything, there's some truth to it and not truth, but it's literally like every move that was ever made in history is to make me suck a dick. Like, you know what I mean? Like, it goes deep, right? And to me, as a white guy, like, obviously I find, you know, I find guys in dresses funny.
Starting point is 01:50:58 I find, you know, gay shit funny. So when they're, you know, they're always saying this and they're like, they're always trying to make black guys in dresses. I'm like, every one of my comedian friends is also wearing a dress. You're they're, you know, they're always saying this and they're like, they're always trying to make black guys in dresses. I'm like, every one of my comedian friends is also wearing dress. You're like, you're like, no, we're wearing them too.
Starting point is 01:51:10 Like, you know, but I guess it's, it's white. I think what it is is like white and Jewish, like Hollywood writers writing white sensibilities for, you know, black guys that are like, they don't realize that like, yo, this guy's gonna get killed if he does that. Like the same way that right now, if you're like, hey, if I go out,
Starting point is 01:51:26 if you're just like a normal commentator, that's like, you know, maybe associated with like the UFC or something, but you're not like a political guy coming out and being like, you got to get faxed and you got, you know, just like maybe all that stuff. You're like, you do realize this, this isn't like free for me. Like these opinions have like a lot of weight in the communities that I'm part of. And I think that, you know, femin feminizing yourself to black culture, they're like, that's the number one, you sold out shit, right?
Starting point is 01:51:50 So they see it as like, I'm sure there's both. Maybe there is some control components, but I think a lot of it is writers that are guys like me, writing stuff for black guys and being like, yeah, and then you guys fucking kiss without realizing that they're like, yo, his community is gonna like obliterate him if he does that. Yeah. So I think some of it's that. You know what, it carries the weight off with all of this.
Starting point is 01:52:11 It is, again, I totally didn't realize, and I said this to you when I watched the Kat Williams thing, like it is, you know when you hear somebody that speaks, Mexican person or whatever, like an Asian person or whatever that's speaking your language, but the way that they speak, like the pacing that they speak at and the cadence and the accent and the pronunciation of the word, everything, you kind of need to tune an old
Starting point is 01:52:34 radio in and you're like, Oh, there we are. There we are. I'm fucking in. And it's like that was like listening to cat Williams on a club. Shake, shake. I'm like, what? There it is. I'm not trying to beat match.
Starting point is 01:52:51 I'm DJ trying to beat match and I'm phase phasing it up. I'm, I'm, I'm out of phase. Ah, there it is. It just took, it just took time for me to, to really get it. And, uh, and then you realize, oh, this is an entire other world. This is the references are different. The people that talking about different, the way they're talking about things, their assumptions about the world are different. And you go like shock horror person from different culture has different worldview than you. Like he's surprised by
Starting point is 01:53:18 this. Nobody. But I think it was one of the first. And it's a different culture in a different culture. Cause you're not even American. Double different culture. But I think, and I've, first. And it's a different culture in a different culture because you're not even American. Double different culture. But I think, and I keep talking about this, when you're an immigrant in a country that speaks the language that you speak, you're off the knickknacks? No, I have a knickknack, so.
Starting point is 01:53:37 You've spat the fish. I'm loving these, by the way. We have them in our studio. Good. We have them on our show all the time. They're on the rotation man. The voice cast. Between newtonic and knickknack.
Starting point is 01:53:47 Yeah, Danny loves them too. Stimulated. When you're an immigrant in a country that speaks the same language that you do, you forget that you're an immigrant. Because if you're in, again, Guatemala or fucking France or something, you know, you're permanently reminded of the fact
Starting point is 01:54:02 that you're not from there. But when everybody understands you, it kind of creeps up on you. And then every so often you try to use some cultural artifact or history thing, or somebody from your pop culture in your past or whatever. And you go, oh, I can't use that. I can't say that thing. I need to say, so that's kind of like, you know, Bill Cosby or like, you know, the fucking pool aid or whatever. And you think, what is the thing that I think-
Starting point is 01:54:30 No one wants to hear your Queen Elizabeth references. Exactly. Yeah. No one gets my battle of Hastings, like talking points. So very much with that- Bill Burr had a thing once where he said he goes, the number one, I think it was Bill Burr, but it might've been someone else, but he was like, the number one way to start sounding old in your comedy is your references are dated. Uh, and it was like, I might've been Chris Rock, actually one of those guys, but, uh, yeah, he was basically like, that's, you know, it's like, it's crazy. The extent to which like old things are just relevant, but you just got to change a
Starting point is 01:55:02 few words. Yeah. Yeah, so listening to- Change Britney Spears to Taylor Swift, like you know what I mean? It's basically the same talking points though. I mean, Britney Spears, it's been a little while since she's popped up on my timeline, but my God, that period where she like got access
Starting point is 01:55:18 to her phone back again, and it looked all kind of serial killery, but it was an iPhone 5 or something. And you go, Britney, like if you're gonna do dances in the like entrance hallway to your mansion, don't record it on a potato. It's just the best. I had a bit of a contrarian view on that.
Starting point is 01:55:35 I wanna go back to the British thing, cause I actually listened to your interview with that British guy talking about the differences and I thought it was really cool. But the Brittany thing, I was thinking, and I'm like you, was like that where, I felt I was in the mob, everyone's like, free this woman, you know?
Starting point is 01:55:50 And then she got her phone back and everyone was like, maybe she'll be back in the thing, right? And it was just like, and then I remember a guy that I know tweeted, he was like, we should have never freed her. I go, what do you mean we? Like, do you think that you, like that's how fucking, that's what internet does to us. Like you're a guy being like, I should think that you like, that's how fucking that's what internet does
Starting point is 01:56:06 to us. Like you're a guy being like, I should have never let Brittany out to like back in the dungeon with her. And I was also like, if showing your tits on camera gets you put back in your dungeon, like I got news for half this country. Cause so I was kind of laughing at like, I also was self importance. Yeah, yeah. You're kind of like, we shouldn't have, like what the, we, yeah, we were all part of the mob and like. What were you thinking about the UK? I thought it was interesting. Like when you, the main things you were saying about how, you know, you'll have, why are
Starting point is 01:56:39 people more successful here? What is it about that? And it was, you know, you were saying there's a lot of funny people in Britain. Why are all the comedians here? And there's this element of, you know, the crabs in? And it was, you know, you were saying there's a lot of funny people in Britain, why are all the comedians here? And there's this element of, you know, the crabs in a bucket of like, oh yeah, you're gonna go be a fucking famous, like that's who you think, oh yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:53 Like you think you're like, oh, and that is a funny instinct. And a lot of the better people have that instinct of being like, oh, you think you're so good. So how do you, you know, how do you, you know, remove that like, you know, how do you, uh, you know, remove that like, uh, you know, shame and find the balance of, you know, how do you find the, there's kind of two things. One is if you, if you be too nuanced, you won't ever say anything, right? Also,
Starting point is 01:57:18 if you be too cool, you'll never say anything, right? If you, if you're like too cool for everything and too nuanced for everything, and then also like you're too cool to fail, which means you never try anything. And I think that's, it's a lot of that too, right? Too much care and attention and not enough care and attention. And too much pride, you know, like there's pride.
Starting point is 01:57:39 It's funny that the self-deprecation and the sort of sardonic wits and the sort of sardonic wit and the sort of cutting elements of British culture are awesome, but they're also, uh, they cause you to be in stasis because you're so fucking terrified of doing anything in case people take the piss. Yeah. So the very thing that makes you potentially funny is also the very thing that makes you terrified of trying to be funny. It also makes you a pussy. Like, you know what I mean? And I don't just mean you. I mean, like, I mean, you know, me or, you know,
Starting point is 01:58:06 British commentators, a lot of times I see that. It's like, you know, so sometimes it can make you like not bold. Well, that's why someone like Piers Morgan, for instance, is a bit of an outlier. Like you don't have a massive number of people that have gone, but most British people, if you're going to get them and port them over
Starting point is 01:58:23 and they're gonna do that kind of thing, you're gonna be James Corden. They're not going to be Piers Morgan, right? Piers Morgan just fucking, he'll fight you on the beaches and he'll like hold your feet to the fire and Ben Shapiro, you and your gun rights, like what, 15 years ago that debate was had and he's still doing it. Now it's about Hamas or it's about Ukraine or it's about P Diddy or it's about whatever. Like he's just still wielding a big flame sword. He did it in the US, he did it in the UK again. You go, huh, yeah, that's it.
Starting point is 01:58:49 Ricky Gervais just overcame the concern about it and then goes and just scorches, what was it, the Oscars or the Golden Globe? Yeah, the Hollywood Oscars, yeah. Yeah, that he did that with. And he goes, ah, okay, that's what happens when someone's able to retain their ability to be cutting but reaches escape velocity to get out from the self doubt. And he still has his Britishness in him.
Starting point is 01:59:10 Like he's, you know, in a way he, you know, kind of disappears for a bit and then comes back. Like he doesn't seem like he's, you know, lives kind of a modest life. He doesn't have this like, why am I not a movie star? Cause to be honest, there could be that. Like why am I, you know, why didn't I become Jim Carrey? Like, you know, he might, he could easily have that attitude, but he kind of is like, no, I'm, you know, happy with my lot
Starting point is 01:59:31 and whatever, which is in some ways British. Very British. Cultures in America go from like, oh, here's a new thing to like every variation of this has been corporatized within like, it's corporatized and sold within like two years. Well like. What would be an example of that? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:59:54 Okay. I'll pick a comedy thing and then I'll pick a like business thing. In comedy, I would say crowd work would be an example of where comedians kind of realized that, oh, like doing crowd work would be an example of where comedians kind of realized that, oh, like doing crowd work would be like a good way and people like it and it works well with algorithms, right? And I think that like people from where I'm from,
Starting point is 02:00:12 people from London have a little bit of like, yeah, I'll do a bit of that, but I'm not gonna, whereas in America, it was just like, within a year you saw every person be like, this is my whole thing, to the point, it got to the point where people were like almost sick of seeing it. That took a year. Right.
Starting point is 02:00:29 The meme cycle was in and out in the space. It like Jimmy Carr's done it. It blew up. Let's try it, intro it, get too much. And then it's old. Yeah. And you could say that with like a genre of, you know, uh, reality shows, you know, I would say,
Starting point is 02:00:43 well, superhero movies, right? How long did it go from, uh, Iron Man 1, like 2006, 2008, something like that, to Avengers Endgame? And then after that, like Thor 4, he's doing Jean-Claude Van Damme splits over a set of lorries. Sure. So there's this cool critical drinker, do you know him, the sweary Scottish guy? He taught me about this. It's this cool critical drinker, do you know him? The sweary Scottish guy. He taught me about this.
Starting point is 02:01:06 It's pretty cool. There's four phases, I think to any media movement. I think it tracks with what you're talking about here as well. So I think there's introduction, growth, maturity, and parody. And it starts off with something that's new. It's groundbreaking. Let's say it's Iron Man. No one's ever seen this before.
Starting point is 02:01:25 It's like slick and sexy as a superhero. It's kind of not as dark as all the DC shit. And then the growth, you end up still sort of building on what you've done previously. That's like Iron Man two and three. You've got like Captain America, you've got Ant-Man, you've got all of these other bits and pieces. Then you've got maturity,
Starting point is 02:01:42 which is we kind of know what to expect now. It's not so much about further establishing ourselves. It's about like rinse and repeat. It feels comfortable, but then you've got parody. When you get to parody, that's when you're in decline. And that's when Chris Hemsworth is made to be the butt of every joke. He's kind of this big lumbering idiot.
Starting point is 02:01:59 He's a caricature of himself when he was in intro growth and maturity. And he is the joke, the joke is everything's meta. Nothing's actually about the thing. And we've seen this with Suicide Squad, that you have to make a movie about superheroes, about bad guys, because it can't just be good looking man or woman has good intentions,
Starting point is 02:02:22 overcomes difficult things and saves the world. No, it has to be this weird upside down meta-commentary. And you know how quickly it moves in America that people are left still doing the parody when the thing doesn't exist anymore. It's dead and they're still flogging this fucker. But that's only, that's like, that doesn't happen in other places
Starting point is 02:02:42 because the thing's gone for so long. That's the corporatized squeezing and rinsing crime. Yeah, do you remember when, how many, like I'm always, one of my favorites is like every comedian doing, and I love doing it too. It's almost become its own genre, but like the old school cop like, Riggs, you know, I'm getting too old for this shit.
Starting point is 02:02:57 Like, you know that? It was like, no one's making those movies, but everyone's making parodies of those movies. So the things comes and goes so quick that the parody outlives like the... You go, you're making fun of something that doesn't exist. Yes, but everybody knows. Everybody knows about the parody.
Starting point is 02:03:12 That's a quick things move. The parody phase was longer than the lifespan of the actual thing. And there's so many things kind of like that. Yes, what was your one from the business one? You know, emo or like genres of music that are like for four years, that's all you ever heard about. Like a sleep token t-shirt.
Starting point is 02:03:25 Oh yeah, you're into that stuff. I didn't know. Do you still listen to ska? No, I was like a punk guy, but like, uh, which if when I was growing up, like Rancid was kind of like, in my opinion, you and Huberman, they were, yeah, yeah, I kind of like all the same shit as Huberman. But he was that when that band came out, I think they were like very like defining and they had a bit of a, I think they were like very like defining and they had a bit of, you know, that kind of like British punk and Scott influence.
Starting point is 02:03:49 Then Scott with the Boston's and everything really took over and I kind of liked that stuff, but I was more into the kind of that, the rancid, like to me that would be like the coolest band of my generation. Yeah, I've decided that I'm gonna start dressing like 15 year old me would have wished that he could have dressed if there was no,
Starting point is 02:04:06 if he had an unlimited budget for t-shirts, like $25 t-shirts. So I'm like in neck deep and Polaris and fucking Bad Omens and Sleep Token and Bring Me the Horizon. I'm like slowly trying to accumulate like all of the bands that I still listen to and used to listen to.
Starting point is 02:04:22 But I did this in a, you remember Silverstein? Yeah, you're like, why don't I just go buy $400 with the t-shirts? Yeah, and that's going to last me for the next like year and a half, but it's kind of, you know, I'll treat myself. Silverstein? Yeah, they're Canadian. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So discovering the waterfront, that the original, original, original record, I managed to find one of those t-shirts, like olive green with pink. And I was like, I am, I don't care how much this cost, it was $35.
Starting point is 02:04:45 I was like, it could have been $350 and I was gonna buy that t-shirt because it was like something from 20 years ago that meant a lot to me. Bought it, wore it, I'm like, I fucking love this. It's so cool. But you wear like band t-shirts too. I've seen you in like old school shit.
Starting point is 02:05:00 Yeah, funny. Sometimes I'll think of that. Like sometimes it'll be like, a lot of times I'll be, one thing that'll happen now is a lot of the bands that I was so like involved in music that I'm a lot of these people I'm friends with. Right. And then or it'll be like I'll talk about something and then the guy will like it and mesh me and we'll start talking.
Starting point is 02:05:18 And then when that happens, I'll be like, you know, I let me go buy a couple of their shirts. So then I'll just go to their merch store and like buy a few shirts. Yeah, that's pretty sweet. It's actually my special special I just did. That was like a pretty popular, like, you know, kind of like punk reggae band from Canada called Il Scarlett.
Starting point is 02:05:32 And they had a couple of like pretty big hits and he's like a good friend of mine. And I actually wanted to put their song on my special. And that- You would have got pop for copyright. Yeah, exactly. It was a Sony song. I knew I wasn't gonna be able to do it,
Starting point is 02:05:44 but I didn't realize the extent to which it was going to be like the nightmare of my life for three months. Trying to get that song cleared. You're kidding. Oh, it's a nightmare. And the guy was like, I'm trying to make it out. He was suave. He's like a buddy of mine.
Starting point is 02:05:58 He was trying to make it happen too. So you, you, that's what you ended up using? Cause it is a kind of scar. Yeah. Yeah. It's a, yeah. And that was like a very, very popular. The people that don't don't know I guess if you don't make YouTube videos, why would you? You have to get sort of special dispensation to be able to use copyrighted music in your videos if you want to monetize them
Starting point is 02:06:16 Yeah, good luck. I think yeah well because you're basically Allowing it would be like Sony going hey have some of our go, dude, this is- I was trying to pay them. It's 20 seconds out of an hour and 20 seconds comedy special. It's the intro music to something that's taken me two years to write. Like I'm not, people aren't coming and going, wow, I can't wait to re-listen to that 20 seconds.
Starting point is 02:06:38 So I never stream that song from Sony directly again. Sure, yeah. I mean, that's even 100% true, but even, and the band signed off on it, but like they have a deal and that's the deal, but like more importantly than that, I wasn't trying to do this for free. I was trying to pay for it.
Starting point is 02:06:54 Please take my money. Yeah. Please take my money. It was like, you know, they'd put me onto some guy, he would put me onto some guy, he put me onto some guy, that guy would take a week. Like it probably like, it took me like four or five weeks of like badgering people to like just, that guy would take a week. Like it probably like, took me like four or five weeks
Starting point is 02:07:05 of like badgering people to like just get someone that would talk to me. Well, I suppose that shows just how rare it is for anybody to use licensed music on YouTube. Which sucks. Maybe that's part of it too. Or maybe like they see it as like, you know, small potatoes.
Starting point is 02:07:23 Oh right, if fucking Dave Chappelle had come and had like a million, he was my first special on YouTube and he'd go, oh my God, he's gonna do 200 million. Yeah, maybe I could have got someone's attention a little easier. Yeah. Or, you know, maybe the song, maybe the thing. Artist, right, okay, yeah, how many people
Starting point is 02:07:39 are bothered about this particular, whereas if- Do they have someone that's even like dealing with their files right now? Yeah, if Kamala comes and says we want Taylor Swift to be our new campaign thing and it's going to be the front and center, okay, this is like two big deals. Either way, it was a nightmare, but I'm glad I got it figured out. That's good. Yeah, we use an MGK cover for a vlog recently and I didn't realize it's because you want to monetize the video. If you don't monetize the video,
Starting point is 02:08:05 I think you can get away with it like significantly more easily, but it's that they don't need to nab any of the ad sense from them. And a bunch of people message, I'm like, dude, how did you use MGK? Like, do you know MGK? Well, he's like a friend's friend, but I just think turn ads off.
Starting point is 02:08:24 They give you turn ads off. Yeah, you turn ads off, everything gets fixed. You could use like whatever you could, Queen and fucking Michael Jackson. The problem with that for my specific thing is I needed to make sure that it wasn't gonna get flagged. So you need to look at the monetization to find that, but you can't, cause you don't have that. If it's someone else's claim.
Starting point is 02:08:41 Soon as you turn it on, game off. So I couldn't look to find out if I was getting flagged, which I needed. So that's why I needed to have this cleared properly so I could claims it. Soon as you turn it on, game off. So I couldn't look to find out if I was getting flagged, which I needed, so that's why I needed to have this cleared properly so I could do it. Do you look at, I have a buddy that, he runs the Hard Times, the website, the funny comedy website, and I used to do stuff with them. And he's like a entrepreneur and he's like,
Starting point is 02:09:02 built and sold some successful companies and stuff like that, but everything he does is back to like punk. Like, you know, he'll be like in these meetings with like really high end people and he'll tell me about them. And it's always funny to me. He'll be like, you know, Oh yeah, it's like kind of like when you're selling a T-shirt, it's like everything's back to like punk tours to him. Right.
Starting point is 02:09:19 And I kind of feel like that, like I kind of look at everything, like a little like music, which is why I look at things maybe different than a lot of comedians, even though I've been doing this for 15 years and way longer than the other stuff. But it's like, so my question is, do you look at everything kind of like club promoting a little bit? Correct. Yeah, like it. All the time.
Starting point is 02:09:36 You're the one thing you look, yeah? All the time. It's the only thing, it's like, what do you know best? You know how there's a rule, I need to learn this, because I keep meaning to bring it up. There's something that happens between the ages of 12 and 17. The music that you listen to when you're going through puberty is like ossified.
Starting point is 02:09:52 It's locked in, concretized in you for the rest of your life. You will always, it seems on average, have a warm place in your heart for the music that you listen to during that period. And maybe it's because of what you were going through as life experiences, or maybe it's something to do with brain development at that time. Well, my theory is what I said earlier, which is that, well, you're actually a part of the
Starting point is 02:10:14 culture that created it and you'll never have that again. But what if there's a guy who's 35 when you're 35 making music for people that are 35? Does that not mean that you would be part of that culture there? There's something like- I wouldn't call that not mean that you would be part of that culture? That there's something like, I wouldn't call that a culture. Because old people don't have culture. Kind of, no. I mean, that's a little bit true.
Starting point is 02:10:31 They might have like thought culture, but like, I don't think that to be honest, I don't think that they really do have like music and fashion culture. That is like a young man's game. Your identity gets captured in it. You can be like a popular artist, but if you have a culture, it's young people.
Starting point is 02:10:48 Like, well, you convinced a bunch of 35 year olds to change their entire identity to like, people don't like change their identity really at that point. You know what I mean? That's a good point. And start dressing a different way and you know. So in the same way as that happens with music, when you're young, I think that whatever the first thing
Starting point is 02:11:04 that you learned to sort of frame the world, I think that whatever the first thing that you learn to sort of frame the world, especially the world of business, networking, social networks, stuff like that, whatever that is, you just sort of, I'm sure if you were a trader, if me and you had been traders straight out of college or whatever, like right, working at Goldman Sachs, the 80 hour weeks and the three grand bags of cocaine,
Starting point is 02:11:22 and you go, for the rest of your life, you would just be talking about free alpha. And you know, like there's a lot of volatility in the system today. You just use that. I do that a little now, but yeah, I know. Of course I get your point. You would have that as the frame.
Starting point is 02:11:34 So I guess that's a, be careful. The lessons are all like universal, but you need to plug in, like, you know, it's just like if you're teaching math to someone, it's like, you know, what's the thing you're like, okay, this guy's selling apples. Like so, give me a fucking analogy. Yeah. So every, you need to, you need to kind of like a, yeah, a world, a world that you have, you funnel every lesson through in some way, because the lessons are somewhat universal, I guess. Right. Almost
Starting point is 02:11:57 everything is, uh, how can we make this queue look longer, which is basically how can you make something look more popular than it is if you need to play with that level of popularity. So in nightclubs, the length of the queue is indicative of how busy and popular the event is, but the length of the queue is determined more by the width of the queue than the number of people in it. So you can just make a longer queue by taking it from five people wide to three people wide. So if you push the barriers up against the wall, it makes the queue way longer. So we realized if we kept it two people wide, we only needed, we needed fewer door staff
Starting point is 02:12:29 because they couldn't push as much. And it made the queue look fucking massive. So you're always kind of like, is this actually bigger or did they make it look bigger? Exactly, exactly. If they just created this funnel that sort of squeezes stuff down. One of the other cool things that we did,
Starting point is 02:12:40 there's this problem in the UK, nightclubs are open pretty much everywhere until two or three in the morning in a city centre. And a lot of the city centres have got residences that live there and not everyone is obviously a degenerate student that's supposed to be awake at that time. So noise abatement orders, as they're called, trying to reduce the number of like, anti-social incidents that occur and the amount of noise that people make. So we were thinking what is a way that we can get people into taxis quickly, shut them up and sober them up
Starting point is 02:13:09 as they walk out of the door. One of the things that we decided was we're gonna give like little kids lollies out buckets, like good looking girls stood on the door with buckets of lollies. People would take them, put them in their mouth and then shut up because they had a lolly in their mouth and they're busy tasting this nice thing
Starting point is 02:13:25 and everyone would just shut up. So we managed to fix all of our noise abatement problems by just giving out, I've given away all of the secrets of my whole business here. Well, you're not doing it anymore. Yeah, my business partner is though, so you might still want them. Oh.
Starting point is 02:13:36 Anyway, sorry Darren. But we gave those out and it sobered people up a little bit, got them into taxis more quickly. It was like all of these tiny little things. That's great, yeah, those are very interesting tips. All right, what's one of the things that we can do to improve people's exit experience and make them behave in the way that we want?
Starting point is 02:13:54 So like little bits and pieces like that. I mean, you do, comedians know this intuitively. You have a peak of the set and then you have an end of the set. And often those two things are the same, right? You often finish on very strong jokes or one of the strongest jokes. Kind of like the classic theory.
Starting point is 02:14:11 Yeah. But why? Well, it's because the way that human memory works when we're remembering experiences, the most emotionally intense and the last part of the experience are the two that stick in memory the most. So it's called the peak end rule.
Starting point is 02:14:26 So Daniel Kahneman got super famous for this work. They got people to do, I think it was like colonoscopies or endoscopies or something. And they were able to track how long someone had been under this procedure and the amount of movement of the camera or whatever. More movement of the camera would mean more discomfort. So that should be higher pain.
Starting point is 02:14:46 And obviously if it's over a longer period of time, people should also find it more uncomfortable because it's been more pain for longer, right? If pain is like intensity times duration, okay, in retrospect. So first iteration of the study, they did this particular procedure, finished it and got people to rate in retrospect how painful it was. Second version of the study, they did this particular procedure, finished it and got people to rate in retrospect,
Starting point is 02:15:06 how painful it was. Second version of the study, they did the exact same procedure, but then just left the camera in for a while, a minute or a couple of minutes, not moving. So there was significantly less pain at the end, even though objectively it had existed for longer. So it should be more, should be more uncomfortable.
Starting point is 02:15:24 But retrospectively, people in the second group even though objectively it had existed for longer. So it should be more, should be more uncomfortable. But retrospectively, people in the second group rated it way more comfortable than people in the first group, even though objectively it was more uncomfortable. Why? Well, because the end, which is one of the most important things
Starting point is 02:15:36 that people remember about an experience, was the thing that they colored most of the experience with, which is the reason why comedians should finish on the best joke, bands should finish on their most popular song, nightclubs should ensure that the way that they finish a night is with everybody's hands in the air and all the rest of it.
Starting point is 02:15:52 If you've got a kid that's scared of going to the dentist, what you shouldn't do is allow them to leave while they're still scared. You should leave them in there so that their lingering memory of that thing is the- That's actually a pretty good point. Dentists being nice, they give them a sticker. Do you ever get stickers when you went to the dentist?
Starting point is 02:16:06 I had a little- Yeah, I think so. I had like a little passbook thing. Dinosaurs and stuff, yeah. A little passbook and each time I went in. So what is it? Well, you're excited because you have a sticker at the end. And- I don't think you could buy me off of the sticker.
Starting point is 02:16:17 You're too clever for that. Yeah, you were a little easier to buy off. Peek, peek, I won't look at it. I was a simple British man. Peek Andrew, fucking, and every comedian uses it. Yeah, it's laws of nature like that, that you want to sometimes fight against, but they don't, it is, I feel like the same as, you know,
Starting point is 02:16:37 all the stuff you do, but in comedy, you also realize like how manipulatable the human brain is. And I'm sure like pickup artists and stuff like that, you know, realize that's why they become cynical a little bit. I always think the one that's funny to me is, you know, like obviously you do a, you know, three sets of nights sometimes for, you know, 15 years or whatever it is. Like, you know, exactly like this was better, this was better, right? So I've had a few jokes where,
Starting point is 02:17:08 I did one of my specials where I was kind of doing like a thing about pedophiles, if you remember. And then I kind of, the joke was like, oh, no, you guys don't want that. And then I kind of did something worse and I'm like, okay, no one laughed at that. But I just say that, like it actually gets a big laugh. I just say like, oh, nothing, like, because the joke is I'm gonna keep doing something.
Starting point is 02:17:25 I'm gonna keep, I just, it's like, the joke is eventually that I just tricked you four times. Right? But I've had a lot of people come up to me and being like, you know, they weren't, you know, obviously that crowd wasn't feeling that, but I thought that was the funniest part. And I'm like, yeah, everyone thought that.
Starting point is 02:17:38 Like, I just said that, I just told you that no one was laughing. Everyone was actually laughing, but it's like, all it takes is for me to tell you like, oh, you guys don't like that one, eh? I just told you that no one was laughing. Everyone was actually laughing, but it's like, all it takes is for me to tell you like, oh, you guys don't like that one, eh? And everyone in their mind was like, oh, no one likes that one.
Starting point is 02:17:52 And then they come up to me and be like, I don't know why no one liked that one. I'm like, you were there, you heard everyone laugh, but then I told you that no one laughed. And in your mind, you left being, so you could, the opposite of that is you tell people like, Oh yeah, you guys really liked that one. And they were just like, Oh, I guess that Joe killed. Like you just tell them how they thought about things.
Starting point is 02:18:11 We're having so much fun. Isn't this so great? I love being here. Well, I mean, it's the same as the, I got really fun. Hey, we're having a fun time. I got to tell you guys, you know, Dallas, you have been the best crowd of this entire tour. It's like, Hey, guess what? That's the, that's the script, but everywhere, why? Because it makes you feel special. I think there's a bit, maybe this is just my only child syndrome coming through.
Starting point is 02:18:32 But when I watch comedy, a lot of the time, I think about the comedian and I think about my direct relationship with this person that doesn't know that I exist. And I think what you're playing into, maybe a little bit, that total bro science theory, what you might be playing into is people's, cause all of my other ones are so well grounded.
Starting point is 02:18:48 I think that a good part of it is the audience really wants to feel like they're watching this person on stage that everybody's attention is on and is very admirable and competent and they respect them. And they kind of want to be that a little bit. And they're trying to find the bits of them that are like that, that are the center of attention, that a performance that are superior. And if you tell people a thing that makes them feel like their realization was
Starting point is 02:19:18 unique to them, like, Oh, we don't like that. They don't, we don't like that joke. And you think to yourself, what I did. And by liking it, I'm like, oh, I'm one of the chosen ones. Yeah, I'm cool. I'm one of his crew. Yeah, I'm cool. I wonder whether it plays into that. There's an old saying in Arda,
Starting point is 02:19:33 I mean, I always just say everything's old saying, I don't know if it is old or not, but that it's like, having an audience a lot of times, it's not about whether they like you, it's about whether they want you to like them. So if you have an audience, really, if you're really killing, it's not so much that they're like, I love this guy.
Starting point is 02:19:54 What they really are thinking is like, I think he would like me, you know what I mean? Like, oh, this guy would like to hang out with me. And then they come after you, like, yo, you're just one of my buddy buddies. You would love like, they, and so there's this kind of a weird dichotomy where it's like, yeah, you're more,
Starting point is 02:20:11 so then, but if they want you to like them, like, cause they're like, oh, this guy would like, they want you to like them. And then all of a sudden they're like, they find themselves like trying to get into it more cause they like want you to think they're cool. Yeah. So there's
Starting point is 02:20:23 This guy, Mike Isretel, have you come across him? Yeah, we had him on our podcast. No fucking way. How was that? Great, he's the best. Okay, so Mike was telling me this story about why he learned game and pickup. And he said one of the reasons was that
Starting point is 02:20:38 when he used to be very intimidated by attractive women and he just found himself not being able to be himself. So he'd be hanging out with them or whatever. And he'd be like laughing at jokes that aren't funny like playing like, he was like, who, who is that? Like who is stepping inside of my skin? What are you doing? Yeah. And doing this thing, what, which is because of you, because there's something. So he was getting warped by that. And I suppose it's not too dissimilar to the audience
Starting point is 02:21:09 seeing the comedian that they want to like them. So like laughing, even giving more grace than they should to jokes that aren't that funny because they think, oh, well, I should make him like, if I like it. But it's, yeah, subconscious. Yeah, with Mike Hidriotel thing too, I was thinking that with the red pill stuff, like I think you it. But it's, yeah, subconscious. It's kind of, yeah, with my kids, you're telling the thing too. I was thinking that with the red pill stuff, like I think you've probably had this conversation,
Starting point is 02:21:28 but you know, whether or not they have good points or bad points or whatever, but it's kind of like there's the one central problem where for some guys, they put two girls on too much of a pedestal, which is that, and then you aren't able to like, not need them, which is like a very, you know, attractive thing for women is you don't need them like not need them, which is like a very attractive thing for women
Starting point is 02:21:45 is you don't need them. One of the ways to get there is to sleep with a ton of women now you have an abundance mindset. One of the ways, but it's not the only way. So I think that's real, you know what I mean? It's kind of like, that is one path to solve that problem is like do everything you can to like get so good at women that now you've slept with a ton
Starting point is 02:22:02 and now it's like, oh, now it's nothing. Yes. But yeah, I think that the real answer is like, well, yeah, but you could also get there a different way. Talking about the edge cases thing. I think that a lot of the dating advice online, maybe not quite so much the red pill stuff, but some of it, but especially the black pill, more incel Lee world. A lot of that is edge cases. It's guys that I think in the in-cell community, there's a 10X.
Starting point is 02:22:28 In-cell community is a funny word. It exists. In the community of in-cells. There's 10 times the normal rates of autism in there. Right, so what you're talking about is by design, a psychological, like a non-typical setup for men who are struggling with women. You go, this proves that women are this, that and you go, well, you wouldn't say that for most other, you wouldn't say this proves that bicycles don't work because for people that
Starting point is 02:22:58 have only got one leg that is only a small portion of the population. That's so funny saying they don't work, the girls, you're like, girls are broken. That's kind of it, that like the typical mating, that's what Blue Pill is. Blue Pill is like, you believe the sort of Disney princess, the handsome, charming guy is gonna get the girl and he just needs to play along and be nice
Starting point is 02:23:18 and all that stuff. And yeah, it's like, I think that much of dating advice is coming from edge cases, both for men and for women. Well, and probably he's going to, it's always that way because you're like, who else needs it? Yeah, the people that are happily married, they're not trolling Reddit looking for like stories about how to get it back at her, that girl that broke your heart when you were this
Starting point is 02:23:41 age. So yeah, it's, the edge case thing is, is interesting. Yeah, that 100%. I always kind of felt that there's a lot of, there's a lot of, you know, even like when Jordan Peterson first came out, uh, there was a part of it that I felt like he was really good at, you know, the make your bed talking to the 5% people. But to me, I was kind of like, I was more attracted to advice. That's like, okay, you okay, you're pretty good at stuff, how to get great. You know what I mean? As opposed to like how to get out of bed,
Starting point is 02:24:09 which goes back to the, you know. That's a really interesting point because I've moved through the trajectory. I've been like each different level of like uselessness within the Jordan Peterson verse. That's interesting. So I went from fuck, I really need to hear that telling the truth is something very important.
Starting point is 02:24:24 I'm basically a man child at 27. Yeah. To, he is interesting and I admire the way that he debates sort of these important topics. To now, some of the stuff that you're talking about symbolically to do with religion and the collapse of the Western Judeo-Christian, I'm like, maybe just not for me anymore. And I don't listen to the old stuff quite so much either, but there's certain elements I really want to dig into, but it's like how grading systems in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu work, right?
Starting point is 02:24:51 Like you start off as a white belt and the techniques that you're learning as a white belt and the ways that you're using them when you're a black belt are very different. And that's what personal growth is. Now, for me, I needed the like, hey, fucking tell the truth, stand up straight with your shoulders back, stop being such a pussy, like though pick up a burden and carry it, whatever
Starting point is 02:25:08 his thing was. That was a big deal. And then as you start to grow, you go, okay, I need to let that go. What you hope is that the person you're learning from is growing with you. And one of the problems that you have of this is goes back to your, like, are you a part of a scene? Are you part of a trend thing? What I think an advantage that you have if you are the same age as your audience, as a writer, as a poet, as an artist, as a singer, as a whatever, is that you get to basically just be two steps ahead
Starting point is 02:25:37 of where everybody that's consuming your shit is, and you just leave little breadcrumbs behind you the way that you go. This would be the best older brother in the world, the oldest sister in the world. Yeah, and if someone gets too far ahead, they leave. So it's like by design, it stays that way. Yes.
Starting point is 02:25:50 So you, you're just sort of chugging along and- That's a good, yeah, best older brother is a good way to find, that's the good advice you're supposed to be finding. Yeah. Like here's a thing that I dealt with and, oh, you're dealing with it now and you're like four years behind me or whatever, or 10 years behind me or something like that. And I remember what it used to be like to be like that.
Starting point is 02:26:07 And these are the challenges that you're gonna face. And I was in it too and you go, fuck. But then as you keep- Sometimes you just need someone to be like, you're not crazy for thinking about that. That is actually a real problem that you need to fix all. Such a big part of it to just feel less lonely and like.
Starting point is 02:26:20 Well, I wouldn't even, that's true, but I wasn't even saying I'm the lonely thing. I was saying like, okay, here would be like a lot of, you know, tech and bro advice when it kinda started first popping off probably, you know, maybe 15 years ago, right? Spot you've taken over. But you know, a lot of it was very,
Starting point is 02:26:36 I remember, you know, when you're trying to build something and then you're kind of like, you know, how do you tell like someone you're dating that, you know, like, okay, can I slot, you know, oh, do you wanna hang out? Like, how about Thursday? And the girl being like, you fucking slot me in. And you're in your mind, you're like,
Starting point is 02:26:50 well, I can only run my life. And like, you know, and you're just like, what? So you have like, oh, this is your mandatory like hanging out with me time for three hours. Like that, and that would seem like an unsolvable problem that was kind of like, and I, in some degree, had probably written it off when I was younger to be in like, yeah, girls are a pain in the ass.
Starting point is 02:27:10 Like that's really where I probably ended up on that. But then I think there was people talking about it. You're like, yeah, duh. Like if you're trying to build something, like people aren't gonna be that receptive to it. Like, and you're gonna have to figure out a way to like make that, you know, and I'll tell you what the answer isn't, explaining to over and over, like, you don't understand, this is important
Starting point is 02:27:28 and you need to be understanding of how I that's, that ain't the answer. No, the answer is to sort of lie, not lie, but like you almost kind of figure out the way to do this in a way that's like respectful of how they're going to see it. And like, it's like a game. You're like, yeah, that's a hard equation and you need to like maneuver it. And it's like, or don't and stay where you are. Like, yeah. And it was like, but if you are gonna try that,
Starting point is 02:27:50 it's like building a company. It's not, oh, you want an easy answer. You're like, no, this is hard. That actually is hard to do. There's that Thomas Sowell quote where he says, there are no solutions, only trade-offs. And yeah, fucking everything just comes back to that. So I was whining.
Starting point is 02:28:04 You want the money or the hooker? Correct. Can't have both. Yeah, exactly. Unless you like kill her afterwards. In which case. Now we're talking. Uh, speaking of that, uh, there's this.
Starting point is 02:28:14 YouTube channel, I think it's got maybe 3000 subs. It's called T pallets. And, uh, one of my friends sent me it earlier on. He's just like some kid on the internet, but happens to be the best investigative journalist for internet shit ever. So this hasn't even broken, but this kid has done a ton of work. He did just dropped a huge video
Starting point is 02:28:35 on the Romanian Mafia's links with Andrew Tate. And it's like geo-located on Google Maps. Is he saying Tate's tapped into the? They've left. So Tate said it himself that he was working with the Romanian mafia. That was why he started all of these
Starting point is 02:28:51 casinos in Romania. With the gambling stuff? Yes. So that was why he started them. And this kid has like geo located on Google maps, worked out where they are, then done Romanian Facebook photo caption analysis to reverse engineer where all of these guys
Starting point is 02:29:05 are. Then he looked at the tattoos to work out which one was the captain and there's different shaped stars for different levels of lieutenant in general and all within the fucking Romanian mafia. Like looking at Romanian police records and trying to like doing all of this shit. It's fucking wild. Sick. But this gang said what you found out, they own all of these casinos and stuff. And there's, it was mostly slot machines. It wasn't playing poker or whatever. And, um, this gang, if someone won the jackpot, they would wait for them to collect the money.
Starting point is 02:29:34 And when they went outside, just beat them up and take the money back. Oh, pretty good. Yeah. Pretty good scam. Absolutely like flawless system. Yeah. So there was this one video of this dude who wins $110,000 in Romanian rupees or whatever it is.
Starting point is 02:29:50 And the machine's going off and one of the attendants just comes over and unplugs the machine. Bro. Wow. It's crazy. This is the Romanian math, but they stated in some police report.
Starting point is 02:30:03 The only reason I went down this rabbit hole is because Tate's having it out with Sean Strickland at the moment. Do you see that? Yeah, I mean, they've kind of been going back and forth for a long time. Happened again, like today or whatever recently. But yeah, someone that wins money in your casino,
Starting point is 02:30:16 finding out because they need to put their address in, where they live, and then just going around to the house after they've won and they've got money and beaten them up and taking your money back is the most GTA solution. That's the killing the hooker after. So you can have your cake and eat it too, I suppose. Fuck yeah.
Starting point is 02:30:32 Okay, I gotta take a piss so bad. You wanna wrap? We're all good. Where should people go? Yeah, definitely check out my special. Seems like the response has been pretty good so far. So it just came out, youtube.com slash Ryan Long Comedy, free on my channel. Check it out. My podcast is the boys cast, but also I'm just going to say a few dates because I'm doing this crazy tour. But if you are come out, the
Starting point is 02:30:56 tours have been awesome. And I'm doing a new hour for Wayne Louisville, Saratoga Springs, Philadelphia, Nashville, Chicago, Las Vegas, Minneapolis, Phoenix, Portland, and then more. I appreciate you, man. Saratoga Springs, Philadelphia, Nashville, Chicago, Las Vegas, Minneapolis, Phoenix, Portland, and then more. I appreciate you, man. You're the best. All right. I'm out. Go piss.

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