PBD Podcast - Pfizer Sued, Newsom Bans Smartphones, Death of Cable & Boeing Senate Hearing | PBD Podcast | Ep 427

Episode Date: June 20, 2024

Patrick Bet-David, Vincent Oshana, Tom Ellsworth, and Adam Sosnick cover the biggest stories in business, politics, current events, and more! VT STARS & STRIPES COLLECTION: Purchase the limited... edition Stars & Stripes VT Collection: https://bit.ly/3z6VaLM --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wish you were a better investor? Then stop wishing and start listening. With Dynamic Funds On The Money podcast series, you'll get timely insights to help you become a savvier investor. From retirement planning and investing to the latest market trends, the On The Money With Dynamic Funds podcast series covers it all. Get On The Money. Search On The Money With Dynamic dynamic funds and follow today. That's the sound of unaged whiskey transforming into Jack Daniel's Tennessee whiskey in Lynchburg, Tennessee.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Around 1860, nearest green taught Jack Daniel how to filter whiskey through charcoal for a smoother taste, one drop at a time. This is one of many sounds in Tennessee with a story to tell. To hear them in person, plan your trip at TNVacation.com. Tennessee Sounds Perfect. 30 seconds. Did you ever think you would make it? I feel I'm so close, like it tastes sweet victory. I know this life meant for me. Yeah, why would you bet on Goliath when we got bet David?
Starting point is 00:01:13 Valuetainment, giving values contagious. This world are entrepreneurs, we gain no value to haters. I ain't running homie, look what I become. I'm the one. Rob, what episode? This is 427. This is 427. You just heard Rob say it.
Starting point is 00:01:28 Episode 427. Cobra. By the way, I saw a video that you guys got to see. Rob, I'm going to text you this story. It's NBC saying the fact that YouTube has now become a right-wing Christian commentary channel. Have you seen this article? I'll send it to you guys.
Starting point is 00:01:47 We'll comment on that. But a lot of weird things going on. Stephen Baldwin said something that has to do with November, and he got biblical. You guys got to see this video. This is the brother of the, what do you call it? The- Alec Baldwin. Pistol, Alec Baldwin.
Starting point is 00:02:03 Pistol Beat, how you doing? Alec Baldwin. Pistol, Alec Baldwin. Hey, Mr. Beat, how you doing? Alec Baldwin. MSNBC analysts suggest black voters shifting to Trump because of disinformation. Okay, so that's another story we've got to cover. Bannon predicts Trump will be sentenced to years in prison. And at the same time, MediEyed's story comes out saying not at all what Bannon was hoping for. Ex-Trump advisor will reportedly serve prison sentence alongside violent criminals and may
Starting point is 00:02:31 end up at Rikers, which is ridiculous. But anyways, we'll talk about that. Netanyahu slams Joe Biden for withholding large bombs from Israel. You'll see the video. He was pretty passionate. Average American, if you're watching this, do you agree with this analysis? Average American feels at least 10 years older than they actually are and all blame the same day to day annoyance.
Starting point is 00:02:56 We'll talk about that. Kansas, the state Kansas, sues Pfizer over misrepresentations and adverse events of COVID-19 vaccine. What do you see what the lawyer has to say about this? It's a very interesting angle they're taking. We'll talk about that here in a moment. Gavin Newsom, he wants to win you over, folks. This is actually pretty good policy. You ready for this?
Starting point is 00:03:15 Gavin Newsom wants to take smartphones out of schools. Yes, Gavin Newsom from California wants to take smartphones out of schools. J.Lo article came out, Wall Street Journal. This was supposed to be J.Lo's year. What happened? Nvidia is officially the world's most valuable company passing Microsoft. Luxury real estate world rock by rape allegations. We didn't cover it last time.
Starting point is 00:03:42 We're going to get into it right off the bat. Money can't buy happiness, says CNBC. It's actually the other way around. Happy people are more successful in life, experts say. Kevin O'Leary explains why restaurants are shuddering across America and why more will follow. More retirees consider returning to work as high inflation squeezes. Boeing CEO apologizes in his own way after revealing how much money he made. Maybe he didn't want to reveal it, maybe somebody else got him to reveal his income, but he
Starting point is 00:04:14 apologized to families of crash victims at Senate hearing. Pay TV is in so much trouble that even its one bright spot is dimming. There's a bunch of newsmax lost 42 million dollars Do they need to go IPO will talk about the streaming top and broadcast cable viewership? by double digits in May we'll talk about that Fauci's on a Legacy tour. I don't understand why they're not grateful for such a fantastic job. We did Terribly frustrating. Americans don't appreciate how I manage COVID-19, says Mr. Fauci. Anyway, so that's that part. New York Times best seller list. Tom's got some thoughts on it because he used to have a publisher. For a matter of fact,
Starting point is 00:04:57 he published my first book, I think, if I'm not mistaken, Doing the Impossible. Yes. People are delaying buying new cars, creating a deflationary spiral. That's bad news for the auto industry. Now, again, and then I got a clip from Rosie O'Donnell where one of his girls' daughters comes, one of, well, they, we have to get these, I'm trying to improve any, one of, he, they, she, her daughter came out and said that gender and it's infa, you just have to watch this clip. Vinny just showed it to me. It's very, very entertaining to see this clip. People are being so confused. Parents are not confused. A lot of weird things going on. However, here's what's happening. One of my favorite holidays of the year is around the corner, 4th of July, and we've been working on this
Starting point is 00:05:45 merch drop for a while. A lot of you have been asking about, Pat, I want a USA flag. I want an American flag. I want something with value to me that's the American flag to represent for 4th of July. And at the same time, I want there to say future looks bright. I want it to be VT gear. Can we get some? So today we're giving it to you to purchase. So you can wear this gear during 4th of July, which is what, a week and a half away.
Starting point is 00:06:12 So if you order, these are limited supplies. Let me tell you what we got here. We got this Vitaiment hat with the American flag and future looks bright on the side, which is here for you to order. We got this other one, the navy blue with the red Vitae my local future looks bright and American flag on the side and this is so far right now Vinny's favorite This is Chris's favorite and this is Tom's favorite for golfers Tom likes this one, but this one right here says USA This is I think it's a USA
Starting point is 00:06:41 For those who love America flag on the the site, future looks bright, future looks bright here. And then we got these shirts here as well. If you look at the screen there with the material, you've got to feel the material, incredible material. Valuetainment with the US flag. If you're somebody that loves America and you love Valuetainment, you love the representation that we have on what we talk about and you want to walk around because nowadays people are stopping each other.
Starting point is 00:07:10 People are stopping each other, saying, you're a Valuetainer, I'm also a Valuetainer, I watch this, I watch that. And you're kind of finding, it's almost like a, you know what it's like, you know how back in the days there were certain tattoos people had to be able to know you're also part of that community I am as well. There are certain gangs and communities that had this for a long time. This is one way where you see somebody with a vitamin hat, you don't have to say anything to the other person. You know what they stand for and they know what you stand for and it's a very unique
Starting point is 00:07:37 connection that takes place. And I get these DMs all the time and Manex all the time and messages all the time. So, limited supply. The last time we did the green hat, people are like, oh it's not going to sell out, sold out within 90 minutes. This is limited supply. So go place your order, that's the QR code, vtmerch.com. Again, go to vtmerch.com, place your order for 4th of July gear.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Now anybody places an order over 300, I think we have 10 more seats left to be with us to watch the debate on June 27th. So place an order over 300, you'll be invited to be with us and a friend at our club, 5990 Live, cigars, conversations, all that stuff, we'll watch the debate June 27th, I think it's going to be from 830 to like 11 o'clock at night, we'll be together. All right, having said that, let's get right into it. First story I want to get into is Kansas sues Pfizer over misrepresentations and adverse events of COVID-19 vaccine.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Now this is not a regular lawyer suing somebody. This is not an independent lawyer suing somebody. This is a state suing Pfizer. Kansas has sued Pfizer for allegedly misleading the public by marketing its COVID-19 vaccine as safe and effective while concealing serious adverse events, including myocarditis, failed pregnancies, and deaths. A 69-page lawsuit claims Pfizer misled the public and concealed critical safety information. The lawsuit filed by Attorney General Chris Kobach asserts Pfizer earned record company
Starting point is 00:09:11 revenue of $75 billion over two years through these misrepresentations. It alleges that millions of Kansas heard Pfizer's misrepresentations with over 3.3 million doses administered in Kansas, and that Pfizer used these methods confidentially, agreements and altering control groups to conceal critical data. Pfizer responded, stating it is proud to have developed the COVID-19 vaccine in record time and that its representations have been accurate and science-based. Rob, do you have a clip of what the lawyer says?
Starting point is 00:09:47 If you have that clip prepared, I want to kind of go to that first and then we'll go to commentary. So, again, the reason why this is a big deal, this is a state, folks, a state. Go ahead, Rob. Robert R. Reilly, Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D.,
Starting point is 00:10:01 Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D., Ph.D pause it? This is the. February of 20. Kansas. Kansas Attorney General. Go up a little bit so I can read it. This is Kansas Attorney General. Go ahead. Pfizer possessed reports for 458 pregnant women who received Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine during pregnancy.
Starting point is 00:10:18 More than half of the pregnant women reported an adverse event and more than 10% reported a miscarriage, many within days of the vaccination. Pfizer also possessed information from its own October 2020 study on pregnancy in rats, indicating that its COVID-19 vaccine was likely linked to infertility, loss of litters and stillborn offspring. Number two safety relating to heart conditions like myocarditis. Pfizer consistently denied any evidence of a connection or safety signal between its COVID-19 vaccine and myocarditis or pericarditis.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Indeed, on January 18th, 2023, when asked whether its vaccine caused strokes or myocarditis, Pfizer chairman and CEO Alan Burla stated, quote, we've not seen a single signal, although we have distributed billions of doses, end quote, a signal that he was referring to as a safety signal, which refers to a negative consequence. However, as Pfizer knew the United States government, the United States military, foreign governments and others had found that Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine caused myocarditis and pericarditis. Number three, effectiveness regarding variants. Pfizer also claimed that its COVID-19 vaccine protected against COVID-19 variants even though
Starting point is 00:11:39 data available at the time showed Pfizer's vaccine was effective less than half the time against variants. Finally, transmission. Pfizer urged Americans to get vaccinated in order to protect their loved ones, clearly indicating a claim that Pfizer's COVID-19 even studied transmission of it after its recipients received the vaccine and whether they could say it stopped transmission. After making these misleading statements, Pfizer also engaged in some censorship attempts. Emails revealed that Pfizer officials coordinated with social media platforms to censor any speech critical of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine safety and effectiveness. It should also be noted that Pfizer elected not to join the federal government's vaccine development program known as Operation
Starting point is 00:12:35 Warp Speed and declined that development funding. When asked about that, Pfizer's CEO Albert Burla said Pfizer did not participate in the program in order to quote, liberate end quote, Pfizer's scientists and to avoid government oversight of its vaccine development. He also said quote, they want reports. I don't want to have any of that, end quote. Referring to they, when he said they, he was referring to the federal government. Pfizer's misleading statements contributed to success in marketing its vaccine in Kansas. By February of 2024, Pfizer had delivered over 3.3 million doses.
Starting point is 00:13:11 You can pause it right here. You can pause it right here. And by the way, there's a clip I just sent you on the Pfizer CEO saying a couple thoughts. I don't think this was a response. This is something that he did say at an event, but Vinny, thoughts on this? Well, I got mixed emotions because obviously for all the people that are the purebloods, I know you're one of them Pat it feels great knowing that I didn't give in I didn't I wasn't you know They tried to force me to do it to get into comic clubs and stuff I feel good that I'm the pureblood But I actually feel I feel so bad for the people that I do know that are dealing with all this stuff that he's talking
Starting point is 00:13:40 About the vaccine injured Kelly's, you know going through it, you know that right Kelly has all these problems and stuff like that for all the people. But it's like, oh yeah, 100%. And it's like, it infuriates me that they're, by the way, I don't know if they're not going to be reliable because the literature in their things says they're not going to get in trouble. And you brought up Albert Burla and it's always weird, anybody that has to do with any of this pushing COVID, anything, all these like Karl Schwab's pal, these people that always have an accent, Albert Berla, I sent Rob a video as well. He admitted in a video that COVID was used as a test. Think about this, a test while also
Starting point is 00:14:16 saying that he believes that the days of Pfizer are ahead. He says, I truly think that the best days of Pfizer ahead of us because COVID was for me like a rehearsal. Yeah, that's the video I have. Although I sent you a different one, Rob, the rehearsal one. I sent you a separate one, but anyway. Is this the one you're talking about, Rob? Go back to the one I... This is him.
Starting point is 00:14:34 Rob, go back to the other video, right there. This is it, yeah. Okay, yeah, just play this clip. Yeah, this is a different one, yeah. I truly think the best days of Pfizer ahead of us. Because COVID was for me like rehearsal, a provat generale, how you can mobilize an organization and do the impossible possible against a main disease. We are after cancer and many other things in the years to come.
Starting point is 00:15:01 And by the way, I don't know if you guys remember this, he was interviewed, I forgot who it was, Pat, but they asked him, they're like, hey, did you, because remember, he said at the beginning, the vaccine was 95.6% effective. And then he was asked if he took the vaccine. And he said something along the lines and Rob could have it. But I can say he goes, well, I'm 59 years old, I'm in good health. And this type doesn't need to take the vaccine. But he was pushing it on everybody else. The CEO Pfizer and then months later, they have a photo of him, Pat, you know, they have
Starting point is 00:15:29 the needle next to your arm, like all these guys, probably nothing in the needle. But I think it's ridiculous. And I'm just hoping when he says something like that, that rhetoric of now it's a practice run, they've been saying pandemic two is coming. Bill Gates, Mr. Fauci, this guy right here, they're warning of something that's coming. Bill Gates, Mr. Fauci, this guy right here, they're warning of something that's coming. And if you guys are paying attention in Australia, bird flu is hitting them right now. It just hit the seventh poultry farm in Melbourne. It's affecting six farms, a duck farm, one million chickens, 5% of Australia's egg laying flock is affected. And now they're warning everybody of
Starting point is 00:16:01 it jumping to human beings. I think it's ridiculous, and the fact that there's no shame in this guy, but in their literature, they're not going to be held accountable. Is that right, Tom? Yeah, well, yes and no. First of all, I applaud the Kansas AG here. That was a very structured, clear case where he is allowing people in plain language to hear what they're
Starting point is 00:16:26 saying and what they're saying is so clear. He says, they did this, then they did this, then they did this, and this. What usually happens in this, as it happened with cigarettes, as it happened with asbestos, as it happened with lead paint and opioid painkillers, What'll happen is enough states get through, and these mega-settlements is what's going to come down. Because at the very, very end of it, I think there's a thing of, there's not scientific freedom here. So I think individual scientists and people can be criminally liable if you push past certain tests. But pharmaceutical industry will never let that happen. They will make a multi-billion dollar
Starting point is 00:17:07 Settlement, so I think that's where this is going, but I applaud the Kansas AG This is what Americans need to hear and if you haven't heard it listen through it again Step by step Rob. This is the clip of the CEO go ahead and play 59 years old in good health. I'm not working in the front line. So my type is not recommended to get vaccinated. So the CEO of the company that got a bunch of people that are not necessarily needed to take the vaccine, but he wanted them to take it and he didn't take it. It's kind of, it's like working at Ford selling expeditions while
Starting point is 00:17:52 in the parking lot for employees, you have a suburban park there, you know, or you got a motorcycle park. They're like, yeah, I don't need a Ford car. I drive other types of cars. Adam. Well, I remember hearing this guy's name Albert Berla during COVID. Like how many big pharma, how many CEO's names do you know of any companies out there in the fortune 500? I mean, whether it's Warren Buffett or Tim Cook, like Elon Musk, then it stops. But why do I know Albert Berla's name, the CEO of Pfizer? Why do I know Stephane Bancel, who is the CEO of Moderna? I know you're a big fan of the guys with the accents. Joaquin Duarteau, who is the CEO of Johnson & Johnson.
Starting point is 00:18:33 We all know Fauci's name, but I think that, you know, we talk about accountability. There's enough blame to go around. You know, I always say follow the money. How much money did Big Pharma make during COVID? How about him? Yeah, him alone. I mean, billions, tens of billions, 100 billion, whatever the number is. Yeah, it's believable. They made so much money. But here's what I'll say. You know, the whole the whole iron triangle pick two of these three things. Things could be done good. They could be done fast, or they could be done cheap, right? They could be done with high quality, good. They could be done quickly, fast, or they could be done fast or they could be done cheap, right? They could be done with high quality,
Starting point is 00:19:05 good. They could be done quickly, fast, or they could be done cost-effectively cheap. Those three, you can only pick two. You know, when COVID came down, we had no clue what was going on. You know, the NBA shut down, league shut down, Rudy Gobert is touching on the mic. We had no clue what was going on. People are getting toilet paper as if this is like the number one essential. Operation Warp Speed came down. And what happened is, whether it's Trump, whether it's Biden, whether it's Fauci, whoever you want, there's enough blame to go around. They did it quickly.
Starting point is 00:19:40 They did it cheaply, but they didn't necessarily do it with quality. Pat, how long does it take to get accuracy in testing? Sometimes it takes 10 years. Ten years, something like that. He said it. He was bragging about it. They did this in less than a year. I thought the fastest one prior to that, and Rob, you can look this up, was mumps and it
Starting point is 00:20:00 was what, three and a half years? That was the fastest one that had ever been done on a national pandemic level. Not pandemic, but a national bad problem months, mumps, I think that was the fastest one to date. Measles, mumps, or belly, we've all gotten those vaccines when we were kids. However, my point is this, they did it quick, yes, obviously. Did they do it cheap?
Starting point is 00:20:19 I mean, how much was it to get a vaccine? I don't know. Co-payment, 25 bucks, cheap. They were given out for free. They were rewarding people to get vaccines. It's 50 bucks. Go get some McDonald's. But it was not necessarily done with high quality or efficacy or effectiveness. So when you do it fast and you do it cheap, you're going to have some ramifications of low quality. The challenge, you're right on the fact that They they did it fast cheap all that stuff great And that's why I didn't take it the number one reason I didn't take it is because you have nine months of testing or whatever
Starting point is 00:20:54 It was to put it together. That was my number one reason Yeah, you know it's a number two reason I didn't take it is because they try to force it down your throat the mandates if they would have done it in a way That was do it don't do it because they try to force it down your throat. If they would have done it in a way that was, do it, don't do it, it's totally fine. If they wouldn't have gone the route of forcing you, I wouldn't have taken it. Now here's a different story.
Starting point is 00:21:13 What would the 18-year-old PBDF have done? What would the 20-year-old Pat have done? I'm in the Army, let's just say, okay? And I'm oblivious. I'm not well-read. I haven't done my own research. I haven't been around. I haven't done my own research. I haven't been around I haven't even started reading yet, right?
Starting point is 00:21:27 Hey, you got to take this vaccine or else you got to get out the army. All right guys Hey 50 other guys you have to bar. I'll F it, you know, let's just kind of take it you take it, right? How many people had to take it? Because they didn't have another choice and they didn't want to lose their jobs Yep See that that's the problem with this and the fact that what is the 75 year, Rob, that they put a 50 year or 75 year,
Starting point is 00:21:53 the timeline they put that you can't sue them till 2075. What? Oh, they went to the government and asked for the immunity clause. That's exactly what they got. There it is. You just pull it up, Rob. You didn't get immunity when you got the job, but you're going to get immunity 75 years
Starting point is 00:22:07 later. So, Judge, to release vaccines, they've... 75 years. No, no. There is one that they ask for immunity. Did they get immunity? Because that's what's most important. Did Pfizer get immunity for the vaccine?
Starting point is 00:22:19 That's the most important thing. So the Moderna-Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine offer immunity against COVID-19 for up to six months to increase protection. No, I'm talking about where... Dr. Justin Marchegiani Yeah, lawsuit immunity. Dr. Emanuel Farah Yeah, I'm talking about lawsuit immunity where nothing could happen to them. There were blanket immunity. There it is. Under the PREP Act, people injured in a vaccine develop their response to the emergency. Muspring claims under the Countermeasures Injury Compensation Program, CICP, provides blanket immunity to drug makers manufacturing the COVID-19 vaccine
Starting point is 00:22:49 unless there's a showing a willful misconduct body. Mind you, folks, let me read this one more time. So countermeasures injury compensation program CICP provides blanket immunity. What's the definition of blanket immunity? Nothing can happen. Two drug makers manufacturing COVID-19 vaccines unless there is a showing of keyword willful misconduct by the manufacturer. So now what do you have to prove as a lawyer? What do you have to prove is what based on that that statement, Tom, that there was willful misconduct. Correct. You're going to have to prove that a scientist sat back there and said, you know what I'm
Starting point is 00:23:32 going to do? I'm going to, you know what? We're going to rig this. How do you prove that? How do you prove that? They're going to say, oh, no, no, no, the scientists were acting in good faith trying to save humanity. And that's what they're going to be saying.
Starting point is 00:23:44 So they're protected. So you mean to tell me you come out with a drug that you spend less than a year researching to put together nine months, then you want me to take it, then you want me to tell you that the US government, you want to tell me that the US government, you gave them blanket immunity and still trust them? Yeah, I'm out. I'm out. I'm going to herd immunity.
Starting point is 00:24:05 And I tell you why you have credibility here. Why? Because I'm remembering all this stuff right now. Because you would constantly tell the story about when you said, what would the PBD, 18 year old PBD do? Because you were in the army. You told the story about when you went in and you enlisted and how many shots. Anthrax shots. They were doing. Yeah, we had to take all these shots with air guns So it's not like you're anti-vaxx. No, you've taken more Vax and probably anybody I know the only person here that's probably taking more vaccines than me is probably Vinny. Yeah And the only reason it's probably the same is because when you go in the army or the military
Starting point is 00:24:38 There is a day you literally walk through Vinny Do you remember that when you're going through and one shot one shot one shot one shot. And it's an air gun. Have you seen these air gun shots? Yeah, it's not fun. It's an air gun. Well, yeah, it's an air gun shot. So it's faster. How many do you think you got in your? Probably 11, probably 10 or 11. I mean, I had to get anthrax cause I was about to go to Iraq. So I was like, you know, I think you go to Iraq or no? No, I was right about to go. Thank God. By the way, the anthrax shot in the army was a very big discussion and a lot of people were freaking out.
Starting point is 00:25:08 I remember as an 18 year old kid, guys getting out and going and trying to get leave to avoid it and there was a big dispute. What's wrong with you? Why are you so worried? You're a part of the US government. You got to do it. Take it for the country. It was like a lot of things going on at the post-mortem.
Starting point is 00:25:22 I want to highlight that because, you know, people say a lot of crazy things right there. One thing you are not is anti-vax. You've been very open. Your father was part of this. Yes. One thing that I know that you stood for, and I've learned this is the government control and the mandates. You said, Hey, listen, they rushed this in less than a year. But number two, listen, my body, my choice, which party sort of owns that moniker? We know on the left, my body, my choice. So on the right, when they do it, how does that work? I'll tell you one quick story. Talk about the mandates. You know, my other company, I have a girl that works for me there. She also works for Disney. She would tell me the
Starting point is 00:25:59 story. She goes, you know, I never get sick. I never get sick. She would tell me that. Then she got the jab. And since she got the jab, this girl is always sick. I said, what happened? You said you never get sick. She goes, I don't know, but I never got the flu stuff. I never got this. I'm just letting you know, this is anecdotal. This is her story. She gets sick here. And you know, ultimately, I mean, I'm going gonna make light of it you know George Bush fool me once and you can't get fooled again yeah I think a lot of people got fooled one time and they're not gonna do it again. I wouldn't give them that much credit because it's their choice. Take a second take a step back Tom think about what they did think about this operation that they did okay they created the problem Fauci the lab Wuhan they have this shit come out, right?
Starting point is 00:26:45 Oh my God. They scared the shit out of me. Allegedly created the problem. I think that they, they're not stupid. They get it. Okay, then all of a sudden you're like, hey, listen guys, scare them. It's the end of the world. CNN put the death cracker. Think about this mission. Then you scare the shit out of me. Media did do that. Yeah, they did. And then you go, hey, we have the cure.
Starting point is 00:27:03 And these billions of people were duped. they're dying and guess what they're saying what? Read the contract I said so it's create the problem scare the shit out of body and give them the tour that term called when you Create the boogeyman and then you're the solution to the boogeyman that's exact guys Rob how much did how much did Pfizer's ad spending year over year? Can you go to Statista? Go to ad year over year, if you could, how much money they spend. It's interesting, Tom, when you look at this, because the number is going to surprise you, by the way. And I go to stock price, I go to... Oh, no, no, but check this out.
Starting point is 00:27:38 Zoom in. Look at Pfizer ad spending year over year. Okay? So their highest, what does that sound? Their highest is 2010, 3.8, okay, and then 2011, 3.6 and it goes down. COVID happens 2020, that's their lowest ad spend. 2021, 2 billion, then it goes to 2.8, then 2023 is 3.7. So I process this in a couple different ways. One, their biggest ad spend was the government was doing it for them.
Starting point is 00:28:11 Everybody was doing it. You didn't need to get the money to get the ad spend, right? Because it was free marketing. Can you go to Moderna's ad spend, Rob? I'm curious to know what Moderna's ad spend was. Year over year. Just do the same exact thing and just type in Moderna. Yeah. And then who's the other company, by the way? Is it Johnson & Johnson?
Starting point is 00:28:28 Or their information is in public? You don't have their ads? Pfizer is public. The other ones are not? Interesting. Go back and type in Johnson & Johnson's ad spend. I'm actually curious now with Johnson & Johnson. Johnson & Johnson ad dollars is what I typed and I have it only until 2022. I don't have it until 2023. Same exact thing, you're looking at the drop-off team. So anyways, I mean, the main reason why we talk about the story is because the Attorney General of Kansas is going after a Pfizer. Guess what?
Starting point is 00:29:04 We support you. We're excited that you're doing it. A lot of people want to find out what happened. And I can tell you one thing. If Kansas makes any progress, be ready for 10 other states to follow Kansas. If Kansas makes any progress. So imagine then Florida joins. Then imagine if a couple other states, I think Florida's already gone through some kind of
Starting point is 00:29:24 a lawsuit, but there's going to be other states joining as well if Kansas makes any progress. Let's go to the next story here. Kevin O'Leary explains why restaurants are shuddering across America and why more will follow. He highlights the U.S. restaurant industry dire situation, noting the U.S. restaurant industry finds itself on a menu with frequent headlines about bankruptcies, layoffs and closures impacting beloved brands like Red Lobster, Applebee's, due to inflation and declining foot traffic. Post-pandemic, he adds, seemingly every day there's a headline
Starting point is 00:29:55 announcing a bankruptcy, layoff or store closure impacting one of the country's most beloved brands. O'Leary explains that rising food prices and the shift to remote work has significantly hurt restaurants, especially in urban areas, where expensive locations are no longer seen enough for traffic. He notes, eateries in urban locations have been hit especially hard as their expensive locations are no longer receiving the footfall they need to meet rent. It's almost like the days where you used to go to a dealership to buy a car, and nowadays you don't necessarily need to go to a dealership because you can order a car and it'll come to you.
Starting point is 00:30:34 I think Uber Eats has probably played a big role in hurting these guys as well, Tom. But what are your thoughts about the story here? Tom Bilyeu What I thought about this, the restaurant industry is suffering and he's right. I'll paint the picture a little bit more broad. He's talking about the Applebee's location, downtown Dallas, and you don't have as many people in the high rises. It doesn't take much. If your EBITDA is 15%, let's say you make 15% profit and you suffer a 20% drop in people coming to the restaurant, you're probably pinched on the edge of that not being
Starting point is 00:31:05 a profitable location in trouble. So, yes, remote work and the urban areas are causing some of it. Now, put yourself in this position. How many problems can you manage at once and stay in business? One, some of our key locations in downtown areas, they're pinched because the foot traffic is down. So, we're really in trouble with those. We may have to think about closing some of them because now they're consuming cash, not generating it. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:31:32 Sir, in general, our overall profitability is down because of food prices. By the way, TransUnion says that the food price inflation over the last four years actually is 30%. So, that's TransUnion, one of the big credit agencies doing deep research. It's 30%. Okay, food prices are up. And sir, by the way, in four states we're going to have to pay $20 minimum wage. Ah, crap. How many problems can a restaurant manage at the same time as having locations that are not profitable because of foot traffic getting pinched by $20 minimum wage, and then the food price.
Starting point is 00:32:06 So Kevin Leary is right and he's only hitting on one of the two things. And it's really unfortunate because a lot of people have favorite restaurants and things that they still patronize, but they're just not survivable. But I'm going to tell you something, Rob. Tom, can you go a little lower? That was a very good breakdown. So go up to the top of the article, Rob, if you could. No, the one I just texted you.
Starting point is 00:32:23 The one I just texted you, not this one. I texted you to your article right now with numbers on Uber Eats and these numbers will reveal a lot, especially a certain trend. I just texted it to you while Tom was speaking. So here's the look at it. Uber Eats revenue and usage statistics. This is from two months ago, April 10th. Okay, go lower.
Starting point is 00:32:42 And just one by one by one, let's look at each chart. Keep going. Okay, let me look at that one. It says the statistic right there in the middle. UberEats generated $12.1 billion in 2023, 11-year increase. UberEats gross booking. Okay, so that's the numbers. Go lower, Rob. Check this out. Keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going. There it is. Okay, zoom out. All right, so that's revenues from UberEats from 2018 to now. Look at Q1 2020. Do you see what's Q1? When did COVID happen? Second week of March. The dip right there. So they got, they felt it. But COVID launched UberEats business to the stratosphere. Go lower,
Starting point is 00:33:20 go lower, go lower. Okay, so right there, right there with the revenues for now, go up a little bit Rob, go up, go up, go up, go up. You just had it right there right there with the revenues for an old go up a little bit Rob go up go up go up go up. You just had it right there So this is a revenue for them. This is to two uber eats 2017 600 million 18 one and a half billion 19 1.5 1.9 billion. Look at the increase from 2018 to 2019 not a big increase 22 20 percent but look at the increase from 2019 to 2020 nearly 3x okay then 2021 they double again then 2022 coming a couple the restrictions are gone 10.9 to a point one but that business of going from 1.9 if you look at it 1.9 to 12.1
Starting point is 00:33:58 billion that's all money taken away from somebody but go lower because that's not the real number. Keep going. That's what Uber Eats made, revenue to them, but go down to how much revenue was the food. Go lower, Rob. This is the actual bookings, okay? Look at that. $3.1 billion to $7.9 billion to $14.5 billion to $30.2 billion to $51.6 billion, $55.7 billion, $67.8 billion. That's money going away from somebody. So COVID,
Starting point is 00:34:32 it's the weirdest way of visual I'll try to give you. So COVID did this. It took money from restaurants, 200,000 restaurants shut down, and that money lost from restaurants. Rob, how much money was lost in restaurants during COVID? Okay, total, I remember it was, you know, directly and indirectly, 50 million jobs were affected. That's not the right number. That is not the right number. It was a number in the billions.
Starting point is 00:35:04 But just visualize this. This is the business of restaurants. This is how much money restaurants had. What COVID shutdown did is it took this money from here, gave it to Uber Eats drivers bringing food to them, and that money from here gave it to Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Moderna. Meaning this revenue of $100 billion or whatever the number is came at the cost of destroying the restaurant business. So look at the National Restaurant Association said restaurant and food service sales were $240 billion below. Below 2020 pre-pandemic forecast, more than 110,000 eating and drinking establishments closed last year.
Starting point is 00:35:50 The association hopes that 2021, this is that time, right? Now, Rob, do me a favor, keep this article. Can you go and search how much money did, what do you call, Pfizer, how much money did Big Pharma make during COVID? How much money did big pharma make during COVID? If you can somehow 90 billion, okay right there, big pharma raked in 90 billion dollars in profits Vinny, with COVID vaccines. That's it, just the COVID-19 vaccines. Pfizer, BioNTech, Moderna, and Sinovac made an extraordinary U.S. dollars, $90 billion in profits on the, so that $90 billion of profits is like a 401k rollover.
Starting point is 00:36:34 It rolled over from restaurants into Big Pharma. So you know what it makes me think about, Tom? Here's what it makes me think about. Every industry has lobbyists. Every industry has lobbyists, right? This just tells you the lobbyists of Big Pharma are more powerful than the lobbyists of restaurant business Why didn't the restaurant business lobby harder to protect them? What kind of access to resources do they have?
Starting point is 00:37:00 What is the biggest restaurant chain that can go out there and be vocal about it? Why were they so quiet about it? They got destroyed. And if you think about restaurants, Tom, the fast food chains, fast food chains would be considered low income, middle income, right? If you go into McDonald's, Burger King, places like that, who is the biggest restaurant chain that's not fast food? Cheesecake fact?
Starting point is 00:37:28 Cheesecake, TGI Fridays. I'm not talking cheesecake is up. You might be. I don't know, I'd be guessing. You probably take girls on a first date to Cheesecake Finny. Grand Lux and Cheesecake are in the same. Family.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Same family. How do you Google that? How do you search that? Biggest non-fast food. But they're probably owned by one big company. I know, that's what I wanna know. I wanna know who that is. Who is that? How do you search that? Biggest non-fast food. But they're probably owned by one big company. I know that's what I want to know. I want to know who that is. Who is that? Like remember we found that one thing in California with the one guy. They own Panera and different companies. So who owns Cheesecake? Who owns Applebee's? Yeah, who owns Applebee's? Who owns Chili's? So Applebee's, go ahead. What's Applebee's market cap? Do they have that kind of weight?
Starting point is 00:38:03 Applebee's market cap. They're eating good kind of weight? Applebee's market cap. They're eating good in the neighborhood, I know that. No, that's not a lot. That's $570 million. That is insane, that's nothing, guys. That's part of Donny Brand Global, find out that. Can you go type in Big Pharma lobbying spending? Big Pharma lobbying budget, okay?
Starting point is 00:38:22 Whatever it is, let's just see what numbers comes up. All right, let's see what this is. Can you zoom in Rob? What does it say? Pharmaceuticals right there. It's what? 300 and so what? So what number there? So check this out. 378.59. What Applebee's does in revenue, go back, what Applebee's does in revenue, okay, which is what? Five hundred and seventy million dollars, okay? Today that's their market cap. They only spend $200 million less than what their revenue is just in lobbying. You're not going to beat them. So guess what, folks? Here's what we learned. Big farmers lobbyists are more powerful than the restaurant
Starting point is 00:38:59 industry's lobbyists, and that's how they got destroyed. The greatest 401k rollover money rolled from 200,000 restaurant owners shutting down into the hands of Big Pharma. There you go. That's one way of looking at it. I'm not telling, I'm just purely doing the math, and I'm looking at how this thing took place. But Uber eats capitalized, Uber took a big share from a lot of these restaurants on the backs of a lot of bad policies
Starting point is 00:39:25 Mm-hmm. I have some commentary here But more from a macro perspective not necessarily just the food industry because I like how you kind of broke it down whether it's uber Whether it's these restaurants, whatever it is, but from a macro perspective and then to kind of filter it down to a personal perspective This is just Darwinism. This is just survival to fit as can you adapt? What do I mean? You know what percentage of the companies that were in the Fortune 500 in 1950 or even in 1990 are still in the Fortune 500? We hear the stories that it's like the attrition rate is insane.
Starting point is 00:39:53 Fifty percent of the companies go out at Fortune 500. I think 10 percent of the companies that were the biggest companies in the world in 1980 are still in the Fortune 500. How many companies have gone out of business? Whether it's WAMU, you tell that story, whether that's Lehman Brothers, whether it's Bear Stearns, you tell the story about Kmart, JCPenney, Bed Bath & Beyond, Radio Shack, Blockbuster. These were the biggest companies in the world. We work, you know, two years ago, what was it?
Starting point is 00:40:19 Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. If you can adapt and change with the times and you make poor decisions and you go on offense and you don't play defense, i.e. paying for lobbying, you can potentially go out of business. And I'll bring it to what PBD always says, outwork, out improve, out strategize. And then what's the last thing, PBD? Outlast. If you don't do all those four things, you're not going to outlast the market. But I'm telling a very good point when when go ahead Tom. I don't disagree with your concept, but I think in this case, it wasn't survival of the fittest. There is a meteor that hit Earth and killed all the dinosaurs.
Starting point is 00:40:54 Depending on which scientist you want to believe. A meteor hit the industry and killed these restaurants and the is what happened. COVID happened. They were forced to close and all of a sudden they're only making food delivered by Uber Eats and they don't get beverage, they don't get beverage, they don't get a bar tab, they don't get all those other things and all those other people that worked at the restaurant that were delivering the food, the only people that were working was the three chefs in the back making stuff that people were picking up with Uber Eats. So this was a meatier called COVID that hit the restaurant industry,
Starting point is 00:41:26 but Ward's talk numbers scream, and Pat, you just broke down, you broke down all the numbers of where all the numbers flowed after the meteor hit. By the way, by the way, I wanna move on because we got the next story I wanna get into. Here's what I'll wrap up with this. I hope the folks in the restaurant business
Starting point is 00:41:44 pay very close attention. When I was first coming up and I'm like, you know, I don't want to worry about politics because politics is a dirty business. That line, right? Politics is a dirty business. And guess what, folks? If you pay taxes, taxes is a form of politics. So you must pay attention to politics.
Starting point is 00:42:02 And here's the other thing I learned as well. A quote back in the days, Rob, can you verify who this is? It's either Plato or Socrates. Those who don't study politics will be governed by fools who do. Let me say one more time. Those who don't study politics will be governed by fools who do. To those of you in the restaurant business, watch the way you vote. One political party locked your ass down and you went out of business. Just remember that.
Starting point is 00:42:36 You can sit there and tell me I'm a John F. Kennedy liberal, whatever you want to say. This is a very different climate today with with shutting things down, where other states left it open. Bob Iger was helping out Newsom in California with Disney, and then when Newsom said, no, we're going to shut it down, Bob Iger got off the board and said, I'm not helping you out. He had two parks. One park was where?
Starting point is 00:42:58 California? Shut down. Lost a bunch of jobs. The other place was Florida, ran by a guy named the Santas that they got ended up getting to the biggest Fight and Disney actually played games with the Santas calling at the gable and all these weird things that you guys started doing Guess what Florida proved policies were better for restaurant fast food parks in California Absolutely was a next story more retirees considering to work as high inflation squeezes. A Motley Fool survey shows 44% of retired Americans are considering returning to work due to chronic inflation and inadequate Social Security benefits, which despite a 3.2% cost
Starting point is 00:43:36 of living adjustment in 2024 have not kept pace with rising costs. The average monthly Social Security payment of 1907 and 2024 is significantly less than the 4818 monthly expense reported by Americans ages 65 and older. Let me say this one more time. Rob, can you highlight that part and let's show it on the screen? The average monthly Social Security payment in 2024 is 1907. And that is a fraction of what the average American, aged 65 and older, reported spending in 2022, which is 4,818. So with 27% relying on their sole income, inflation and high interest rates have drastically increased costs for necessities, causing severe financial pressure.
Starting point is 00:44:25 Financial struggle has led 61% of respondents to report daily hardships and many are considering retirement plans. About 25% of non-retired investors expect to return to work due to insufficient savings, while 19% doubt they will ever save enough to retire, with another 19% planning to retire later than expected due to inflation. Tom? Well, words talk, numbers scream. We got a bunch of numbers here and was very interesting side by side with this. Side by side, Motley Fool is doing this. Harris had a poll and the Harris poll has been tracking and boy
Starting point is 00:45:00 it's so surprising that mainstream media, Vinnie, doesn't ever talk about this particular Harris tracking poll. In Q4, 79% of people said the number one issue, economic issue for them, was inflation. After 60% of them saying that economy was number one and they said what issue in the economy? 79% said inflation in Q1. That was Q4 of last year Q1 82% It's inflation in middle of Q2 May 10th. Just just passed by 84% said it was inflation and by the way
Starting point is 00:45:50 75% of people over 50 in a Harris poll done at the same time the Transunian poll said inflation is continuing to increase. Meanwhile, the federal government is saying, inflation is under control. No, people are saying inflation, it's affordability. And what's happening is these poor retirees and the numbers we just saw are saying, I can't do it. I got to go back. I want to be a Walmart greeter or I got to do something because I've got a gap and it's the affordability crisis. And I previously mentioned TransUnion's food inflation survey done at the end of Q1 said it was a 30% cumulative increase since the end of Q4 2020. There you have it.
Starting point is 00:46:28 There's the numbers. The affordability crisis in America is worse than ever, and now the people who can least afford it are thinking about, man, I got to go back to work. I got to get a side hustle. Grandma has to get a side hustle. Where are we? Adam? Well, I love Tom's commentary here. I'll flip it. Tom always says
Starting point is 00:46:46 the following, you know, there's the upstream problems and the downstream problems, right? The downstream problem, or this is probably the upstream problem, is, you know, a 70-year-old who has to go back to work. Sucks. Nobody wants to do that. But the reason that they're doing that is the downstream problem is they just never paid attention to saving enough money and investing. And that's the biggest problem. So what's the message that you guys can take if you're 30, 40 years old, whatever it's, nobody cares about your problems 30 years from now, when it's time for you to retire. You know, how, what's the average age of our listeners? 30, 40, whatever. I'd say 40. Okay. Yeah. Well, respect to you guys from a fellow 40 year old, wink, wink. 30 years from now when you go to retire and you're like, well, inflation in 2024, no one's
Starting point is 00:47:33 going to care in 2054. They're going to say, what did you do over the last 40, 50 years of your life to get out of debt, stop being paycheck to paycheck, start saving and investing? Because I know one thing for sure, you cannot save your way to becoming a millionaire. You have to figure out a way to become an investor and you're going to need a million, $2 million when you retire at 70 years old, whatever it is. So you don't end up on the government plan. So you guys at home right now, flip a coin heads and tails heads.
Starting point is 00:48:02 You're going to have money in retirement tails.ads you're going to have money in retirement. Tails you're not going to have money in retirement. Because the reality is this, 50% of you are straight up going to be on the government plan and the other 50% are like, oh shit, I don't want to have to rely on social security and I don't have a pension and I haven't saved enough money. I should probably start that 401k thing that they talk about, that Roth IRA thing. I should probably stop living for today and plan for tomorrow because if you're 30 you're gonna be 40 if you're 40 You're gonna be 60 and the reality is if you don't save that money
Starting point is 00:48:31 You're gonna end up one of these old people then 30 years has to go work. So so a couple things one You know we can talk what you should have done Which we have to do that because we have to learn from our parents' mistakes and what they did right, what they didn't do right. This Sunday at church, this pastor gave a message which I thought was absolutely powerful. R.J. Howell, the other day? R.J. Yeah, yeah. I thought it was powerful. And Rob, I'm going to give you the timeline for you to go to to show this clip. It was unbelievable, okay? However, so one of the messages that you said that I agree with is the fact that this is what happens when you don't pay attention to money, period.
Starting point is 00:49:12 You're going to go through this, okay? And you're paying a price for it today that you weren't taking finances seriously. You were being sloppy, not working on another job. You were coming home making sure you didn't miss a single Miami Heat game or didn't miss a single Laker game because you're a true Laker fan or Dodger fan or I'm a Chicago White Sox, I want to come home and I want to watch every single game. Yeah. Chicago White Sox or the Lakers or the Miami Heat, these guys barely pay retirement plan
Starting point is 00:49:41 to their athletes they used to play for them, let alone you. They're not going to be paying your bills. Okay, it's kind of like it goes back to that one movie, Bronx Tale, where the guy's got a Mickey Mano card, says, does Mickey Mano pay your bills? Yeah, Mickey Mano pay your rent? Robert De Niro, Chess Momentary. Number two is the following. And by the way, that reminds me of a concert I went to with Cia Mac years ago when I had
Starting point is 00:50:00 lost my voice. I couldn't speak for six months. I did a surgery. Cia Mac took me to a concert in Newport Beach or somewhere like that Irvine and it was by many my believe it was Dariush and Dariush was one of the best singers I can listen to his music all freaking day long I love Dariush, but Dariush doesn't sing happy songs. Dariush sings a sad song. Pat, we all know Dariush. Come on. Everyone's a big fan of Dariush. Stop it, Pat.
Starting point is 00:50:26 You know, I gotta explain who Darush is. He's so funny. We all went to his concert. By the way, him and Michael Jackson, two of the biggest performers ever. One of the things Darush said, by the way, just so you know, he had some issues back in the day, his drugs, stuff like that. He opened up. He is beloved. People love this guy, right? And he gets up and he says, I want to apologize to all of you he wanted to give two advice to everybody says I'm gonna apologize to all of you says I want to apologize for not being invited to your wedding at your weddings and they're like what are you talking about he says because I
Starting point is 00:50:55 never sang songs happy enough to be invited to your wedding why would you invite somebody like me to your weddings but make your divorce party I will be there Darvish you can count on him, baby. But you know what he said right afterwards? What? He said, I want to say something to the young people in the room here, to those in their twenties, the young wolves, the thirties. He says, make sure the young wolf in you takes care of the old wolf one day you'll be.
Starting point is 00:51:19 Oh, yeah. Because the old wolf will not have the same fire that you have today. But very soon, you you're gonna be my age Let me tell you it leveled Me to come back and give that message to other people. So Now we all have parents that maybe financially didn't make the right decision or something We cannot go to them and say how come you don't work for me? We're not in that business. You just want them to live a happier life and realize a part of that
Starting point is 00:51:45 You just want them to live a happier life and realize a part of that responsibility now lies on you. Because the government can't do it all by themselves. You have to do it partially. Government's going to do it partially. The reason why government gets 1907 and not the whole 4881 is because it's not the government's job. I'm not supposed to take care of your parents. I'm going to do my part with my parents, right?
Starting point is 00:52:01 But taxpayers are willing to pay 1907 portion to Social Security. And the last thing I'll say, which is kind of weird, is the following way. Tom, a part of me likes people working in their 70s. And you can call me out and be upset and say whatever you want. My dad has had 13 heart attacks, three stents in his heart, bypass surgery, God knows how many angiograms, angioplastics, you name it, he takes 50 pills a day. I'm being sarcastic, but it's a lot of pills he takes every day.
Starting point is 00:52:31 He's 82 years old. You know why he's 82 years old? Because he just retired two years ago and he's finally moving into my house. Till two years ago he was working. Not because he needed to. He could have retired a long time ago. He kept working because he wanted to stay active. So part of me, if you're listening to this and let's just say you're 72 years old or 68 years old and you're like, I don't need the money, dude, go find a job two days a
Starting point is 00:52:53 week doing something. Find a way to contribute. There's a part of it that for me is not feeling like it's actually bad for you. You're meeting other younger people. There's something that happens. I'm around Brooklyn. Brooklyn makes me younger, okay? And I'm 45. I'm not old. But even Brooklyn makes me younger and she's only two or three years old, right? Now imagine if we're 75
Starting point is 00:53:13 and we're only hanging around 75 year olds. Dude, you gotta go around 30 year olds and 20 year olds and 40 year olds and let them kind of fire you up a little bit. But anyways. Can I give a quick little feedback? Number one, I love your dad and the fact that he's still putting things together, knitting, he's staying active, he's chasing Brooklyn around, love him. But you're absolutely right. Like my mom is 74 years old, she's about to be 74. I said, Mom, when are you going to retire? She's like, why would I retire? I love working. She works at a nursing, she works as a nurse. She loves interacting with people. She said, what am I going to do all day? I don't golf, I don't do any of this.
Starting point is 00:53:47 So there's nothing wrong with working when you actually enjoy what you do. The flip side of that, I remember, you know, me and my Ubers, one time I get in an Uber and it was the oldest Uber driver I've ever been in his car. This guy must have been 80 years old. And usually Uber drivers will be very subtly like, hey, thank you for a tip. This guy, as the ride started, hey, don't forget the tip to driver. He had a sign. Remember to tip the driver.
Starting point is 00:54:08 He's like, Hey, remember at the end of tip your driver, I go, okay, why, you know, like you haven't even driven me here. And it goes, this is essentially what you said with the young wolf and old wolf. He goes, let me tell you a little something. And he was talking, he goes, I used to be the biggest fashion designer. I used to go to Italy and travel and I'm from New York. And I gotta tell you honestly, I didn't save any of my money. So now I have to drive Uber.
Starting point is 00:54:33 So he's not blaming me in a long violation. He's saying basically I lived for today, not for tomorrow. He's 80 years old, sharp, like in a suit. And he goes, yeah, I don't wanna be driving Uber. So I do, I gave him a $20 tip on a $20 ride But I felt this guy's pain a lot of old people are gonna and a lot of people are there but I want to show You this so this Sunday This pastor Ruben Ram Saran. I've never heard him speak and he gave this one message
Starting point is 00:55:00 I'm sitting there with the kids and and I think every father needs to hear this message every father go to play this clip ceiling as a dad no no back up back up back up pause it pause it pause it pause it thinking and ruminating about yeah that's it right there about this idea or this concept and the idea is this is that your ceiling as a dad will one day become the very floor for your kids. Your ceiling as a dad will one day become the floor that your kids stand on. What does that mean? All of the things that you accomplish,
Starting point is 00:55:35 all of the things that you become really good at, all of the things that you still struggle with will be the very foundation that your kids stand on. So of course, we're gonna give good things to our kids one day, but they will also inherit some of our bad habits. They'll also inherit some of our bad thinking. Because I remember this, brother, you know,
Starting point is 00:55:57 he prayed for me once. There was a part of the mass where like, if anybody needs prayers, come up there, and he put his hand on my shoulder and he prayed for me. This guy's awesome. Ceiling, floor, ceiling, floor. If anybody needs prayers, come up there and you put his hand on my shoulder and you pray for me. This guy's awesome. Sealing floor. Sealing floor.
Starting point is 00:56:09 Father's listening. The example we set today, one day is going to be their standard floor to live on. Good, bad, ugly, lazy, passive, the way we treat our spouse, our kids, people we work with, friends, everybody. They're going to watch to see how you and I are, and one day that'll be the standard that'll raise up. I'm a byproduct of this. My dad set the ceiling.
Starting point is 00:56:39 The most annoying thing my dad ever did with me, that was the best thing he ever did with me. You ready for this? I've never met a man in my life who's done this never when I tell you I've never met a man I've been Vinny I've never met a man in my life that's done this last year first week of this year we were having this meeting and I'm telling everybody about the values and principles our b-hacks everything at the vitamin group and if you remember one of the 12 principles we talked about was the what? Do your best to be part of the One Club.
Starting point is 00:57:09 And what's the One Club? You only need to be told once and you do it. The job gets done. We have a lot of sevens, we have a lot of fives, we have a lot of threes, we have a lot of twos. Every great organization is ran by a very, very, very, very small percentage of people that are part of the one club What is the most annoying thing about my dad? My dad's never said anything that he was gonna do that I had to remind him of hmm
Starting point is 00:57:37 Do you what I just said never Vinny matter got to hug a little of you hug a little of you well not one time Not one time he is never ever Said he's gonna do something for me that I had to remind him of How the hell do you do that? First of all, that's the ceiling He went and he became my floor So guess what was our culture in the insurance company we ran? If we made a promise, we're doing it.
Starting point is 00:58:09 If we said we're doing this, we're doing it. Now, if we said we made a promise and a guy does criminal activity, you changed it. We didn't do that. Then we have to change it. If you did fraudulent stuff or complying stuff and you're kind of making, that's a different story. But that was what? That was the example he set. And then here you are a kid that you're him and he says, you said you're trying to kind of make it. That's a different story. But that was what? That was the example he set.
Starting point is 00:58:26 And then here you are a kid that you're him and he says, you said you're going to do it. How come you haven't done it yet? It was the most annoying thing he would tell you. How many times do I have to ask you? That's a common phrase. Because he was teaching to be part of the one club, right? I can tell you 50 different things. But I saw this message on Sunday and all I thought about the guy sitting next to me with the grandkids and everybody is my dad. The fact that he
Starting point is 00:58:48 set that example for others. Fathers, you are so important, I can't even describe it to you. The other day, Tom and I were having lunch with a couple people, not even the other day. Yesterday we were having lunch at the house. I think yesterday or two days ago, I think two days ago we were having lunch at the house. It's me, you, RJ and another fella, and I said, you know, Tom's one of the best dads I've met in my life as well. We can be anywhere in the world. He's calling his girls to pray with him before he goes to sleep. He calls and has a conversation with them individually. Vinny, he's never missed a
Starting point is 00:59:18 mark. It doesn't matter where we are. He's never forgot to make that call, ever. I have. He never. Tom has never forgotten to make the call to call his girls. Say, how was your day? What happens? Let's pray. Go to sleep.
Starting point is 00:59:35 That is an example he's setting for his girls to follow that maybe one day when you're looking for a man, I would like you to aspire to want to have a man that treats your kids the way I'm treating you one day. His girls, for the rest of their lives their lives are gonna look for a man that has a standard like that, right? Tom what are your thoughts about this whole message the pastor gave about sealing and floor? He's absolutely correct and it doesn't matter where you are. You can reset Tomorrow's floor with today's ceiling you can reset it There are tremendous stories out there, and biographies that I've read of historical people, but I think the current ones are really
Starting point is 01:00:12 inspiring to me. Warwick Dunn's story is inspiring to me, you know, about his grandmother and the things that were there and how he rebuilt what was going to be the ceiling of his life from a really tough floor from where he came from and This is true, but it takes two things Intention and discipline you have to be intentional about what you do every day. It doesn't just happen It's not luck you have to be very intentional what you're gonna do and you have to have the discipline to keep doing it It's the same things that go with the, that goes with exercise, it goes with personal habits. You know, you got to be intentional about it and then have discipline about it. But
Starting point is 01:00:50 this guy's right and I encourage everybody to, can we put the link in the comments and people can go watch the whole message from this guy. I think it is one of the most apropos Father's Day messages that you could hit. But I would say this way, it's a great Father's vision message for every day. Yeah, you know, sometimes when you give this message, people will say, well, you know, that's why I'm who I am. I didn't have a good example. Okay?
Starting point is 01:01:17 And that's also the flip side of the coin. That's the excuse to keep standing on a broken floor. That's right. You're like, well, you know, that's why I'm doing it because I didn't have the father you had or I didn't have the mother you had. There's a lot of other things I can say about our family that I'm not going to get into. You know, I'm giving you the good of my dad is what I'm talking because I want to applaud this man because it's changed my life.
Starting point is 01:01:37 We all have different issues, but I think at the end of the day, it also eventually at one point if you're saying, well, didn't have that, well you become that. You become the new standard to set for many, many years to come. Years ago I read a book called Ten Generational Curses, and I don't even like that phrase, generational curses, but I read this book and it talked about how, you know, adultery gets taught, okay? What was the other one? Gambling, taught. Okay, what was the other ones gambling taught then it was alcohol being an alcoholic is
Starting point is 01:02:09 a curse that passes down everybody's an alcoholic and you know small thinking financial issues That's the other one right there. That was the bottom right one the ten curses that block the blessing That was the book. I read a long time ago When did that be oh Oh, six. So 20 years ago, 18 years ago that book came out. So it was interesting to see it, but for a lot of people who go through this challenge, you don't also want to be the person. Like I grew up in a very poor family. It's like, well, you know, I grew up poor. That's why I'm poor. No. You need to also make a decision for yourself to want to be a leader one day
Starting point is 01:02:44 if you consider yourself to be a leader. All right, so anyways, I saw that this Sunday. I've never short anything from our church service on Sunday. I was inspired to show that. Oh, that was your church. Yeah, we go to that church. That's one of the churches. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:02:56 Yeah. So anyways, okay, so let's go to the next thing here, story-wise. Gavin Newsom, what a transition, wants to take smartphones out of schools. Okay, Gavin You're getting a shout out today, buddy. So don't say we only say bad things about you the other day. I'm a California Man listen, I love your stuff man, but why do you why do you come after us so hard? It's like it's constant, you know, it's like we don't get enough of it man It's always California, California, California. I say, listen, bad policies have consequences and that's what your governor is doing.
Starting point is 01:03:30 However today, we're going to read this article from Politico. Governor Gavin Newsom plans to restrict smartphones used during the school day, citing social media's harm to children's mental health. Newsom stated when children and teens are in school, they should be focused on their studies, not their screens. Newsom's initiative aligns with recent warnings from Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, who advocated for warning labels on social media due to its severe impact on youth. Newsom, a supporter of Biden's reelection, aims to work with California's Democratic Legislature to implement these restrictions by August.
Starting point is 01:04:06 The move follows ongoing concerns in previous legislation aimed at protecting children from social media dangers. Newsom's wife, Jennifer, great name Sibel Newsom, highlighted the failure of the tech firms to address these issues and share personal experiences of their child being bullied online. Tom? Yeah, well this is Gavin Newsom. personal experiences of their child being bullied online. Tom? Yeah, well this is Gavin Newsom. It's Groundhog Day, so Gavin Newsom is going to pop up and say something that sounds moderate.
Starting point is 01:04:32 There's a lull in the news cycle. Tom, let's relax. All of a sudden we said Newsom. He flips, time turned red. He kicked me. Shoot. You're going to say Newsom or give me a double black coffee? So it's one of the two, and here I come.
Starting point is 01:04:47 So this is what's going on. Newsom, every so many months, he's being politically very strategic here, popping up with things that sound like they're kind of moderate here. So banning the phones in schools, it's harmless. It's harmless. It doesn't cost him any political capital. And then what, six months ago, he came up and there was a parental rights thing and he was like, I'm going against the state assembly because parental rights are important. Remember when he did that? And it didn't mean anything to it. And two weeks ago, he supported the, you know, don't tell the parents transgender policy in the schools
Starting point is 01:05:27 two weeks ago. So six months ago, he pops out, Grand Hot Day sounds kind of moderate, and that's what's going on here. This is a mamby-pamby little thing that he's popping up, trying to get parents to lean from the middle over toward him a little bit. And look at the perfect timing, Tom, you nailed it. Perfect timing. All this stuff is coming about, Joe Biden,
Starting point is 01:05:49 he's falling apart, he's restarting every two seconds, and then all of a sudden- Waiting for the Supreme Court on Trump. Exactly. It's kind of a quiet news week. Yeah, he's a snake in the grass, like you nailed it, just coming up now, because you know what, those little things,
Starting point is 01:06:03 once he announces, or if he announces, he's going to be like, well look at the stuff, the good stuff that I was doing. Guys, the phones in the schools, which you're right, doesn't spend it, how much money does that cost? Nothing. It's just a rule. He's a snake in the grass. And if he was the Antichrist at the end, I wouldn't be surprised.
Starting point is 01:06:17 He's one of the most skilled politicians that I've ever seen. I respect, I really respect, you know, you can respect an enemy for their capabilities. You can respect it. I respect Newsome and he is so clever. And Tom, I'm not even joking. If he announces and he becomes a president, I wouldn't be surprised if he's on the podium and he just rips off his mask and he is the devil.
Starting point is 01:06:40 And I'd be like, oh yeah, that's, we knew that. Adam, where you at? Talk about the least surprising mask ever. Guys, can we just take a second and give a little credit when someone makes a smart decision? Adam, come on. Vinny, I know that the second you hear his name, you're like, oh, Biden's jumping out of the race and Gavin's declared. Dude, Adam, never done that.
Starting point is 01:07:02 Adam, you're getting more excited than I've ever been. For those of you listening at Home you're witnessing a relapse Go ahead Adam. This is comedy hour Tom Ellsworth get your ticket out for free You dude starring you the these guys got you guys lived in California I know when we laugh when it's I know holy princess and the relapse here we go episode 6 make your point Holy shit. Princess and the Relapse, here we go. Episode six.
Starting point is 01:07:23 Make your point. I had a feeling. Say it, spit it out. Can I, I mean guys, can I, I'm gonna interrupt you guys every single time you talk now. The rest of the episode, promise. I know that you guys get literally- That would be fine with me, do that. Tom, this is Tom's comedy.
Starting point is 01:07:37 I know that you guys get emotionally triggered when you hear Gavin News' name, and rightfully so sometimes. But like, without speculating, this is because he's running for president. How about the fact that he's actually the governor is going to be the governor of California until what? 2027 after the recall, the reelection in 2021. This is something that Ron DeSantis has basically been advocating keeping the kids out of school, keeping the phones out of school, you know, banning social media from these phones. By the way, this is a bold move. Silicon Valley, all the big tech companies are in his state.
Starting point is 01:08:09 You think they're happy about this? No, but he's actually taking care of what needs to be done to take care of the kids. So let's give a little credit where credit's due. I know that there's some Democrat people in the audience that are like, yeah, okay, give the guy a little credit, but here's the deal. He's focusing on studies over kids being on their screens He's focusing on kids actually being able to socialize rather than being on social media And he's enabling kids to actually live in real life than on their phones
Starting point is 01:08:34 So let's give the guy a little bit of credit look for a good time Let me let me let me give my let me give my responsible go to the next door I don't want to put a lot of time on this because California is a Fires Tom up and Tom's getting angry right now. When Tom starts saying princess, he's pissed off. All right. So here's what I'll say. Okay. Let me read a part of what he said. So he's doing this for what? What's the part of it that he's doing? He said he's doing this because children's mental health. When children and teens are in school, they
Starting point is 01:09:03 should be focused on their studies not their screens Okay, let me let me change one word ready when children and teens Governor Gavin Newsom are in school. They should be focused on their studies not their genders. Yes about that Okay, so now if you're taking smartphones out of schools fantastic So now if you're taking smartphones out of schools, fantastic. Let's take pride flags out of schools. Why should they be worried about their sexes and genders and any of that stuff? Why should you confuse them?
Starting point is 01:09:34 If you're so worried about social media's consequences on kids with smartphones, how worried are you about the agenda of LGBTQ on kids at a young age? Not adults. I didn't say adults. It is what it is. Quite frankly, it's a little too much anyways. 143 days to recognize LGBTQ. We have a gay uncle day in America.
Starting point is 01:09:54 What is a gay uncle day? Yet we have one father's day? You mean to tell me fathers get one day and they're just as important as a gay uncle? You want me to celebrate my gay uncle? Is that what you want me to do? And then you got Mother's Day gets one day, but a gay uncle gets a day, so the equivalent of a gay uncle is the same as a mother and a father. Is that what we're doing right on California or other places? So all I'm saying to you is this. Let's add one other
Starting point is 01:10:14 thing to this, Newsom. Great policy. I'm with you. When children and teens are in school, they should be focused on their studies, not their screens. When children and teens are in school, they should be focused on their studies, not their screens. When children and teens are in school, they should be focused on their studies, not their genders. How about you do that next? I dare you, brother, to do that next, to keep that out of schools. You do that, I will be singing praises to you on the podcast right here. I will applaud you.
Starting point is 01:10:40 I'll say, great job. He did a phenomenal thing for California. I'll even come to California and say there's some progress being made in this specific area if that happens. Now, you know what are the chances of you doing that? Do you know what are the chances? Do you know what are the chances of that doing that? It's the same chances as Vinny when they're coming out of the closet saying he's gay, okay? Because Vinny's straight and it ain't happening. What? Vinny is?
Starting point is 01:11:02 Yeah, he is. He actually is. I thought so the other, you guys posted a clip about, you know, when I was in Hollywood, if I would have stayed there any longer, I would see you would have been gay. Dude, I was going to celebrate gay uncle. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 01:11:12 I was going to say, please. There you go. So that, that, listen, I gave him credit. I'm just trying to challenge him a little bit more and see what he does with that. All right, let's go to the- Put that phone down while we're trying to indoctrinate you. Yeah, let's go to the next one here.
Starting point is 01:11:24 Let's go to the next one here Let's go to the next one. Yes luxury real estate world rocked by rape allegations against Star broker now this story isn't written by Daily Mail. This story is not written by some hocus pocus website This is written by Wall Street Journal five women have accused Oren This is written by Wall Street Journal. Five women have accused Oren Alexander, co-founder of Luxury Real Estate brokerage official, of sexual assault or rape, with incidents spanning from high school 20 years ago to as recently as 2020. One woman, an aspiring model, described an incident in 2017 where Alexander allegedly
Starting point is 01:12:01 ripped her dress off and threw her on the bed, pinning her down and raped her despite her begging him to stop. Orin has taken a leave from his firm, calling the allegations baseless civil accusations and stating he is confident that the truth will be brought to light. Two lawsuits filed in March accuse Orin and his twin brother, Alon, of sexual assaults dating back to 2010 and 2012. In one case, Rebecca Mandel alleges that after being invited to a non-existent party, Orin and Alan assaulted her, with Alan holding her down while Orin penetrated her. Another woman, Kate Whiteman, alleges she was raped by the twins at Sir Ivan Castle's in the Hamptons after being forced into a black SUV and driven to
Starting point is 01:12:45 the location. Adam, these guys are from Miami. What do you know about the story? Because I'm going to give my version of it away in a minute, my story, but what do you know about these guys? Adam Ligato, Ph.D. So, full disclosure, I know these guys. I know their whole family.
Starting point is 01:13:02 They grew up in Miami. I'm not friends with them. I don't have their phone numbers Have I been in the same room as them? tons of times There this is the biggest story in real estate by far And this story has sort of been trickling out over the last week or so, right PBD First I saw it in the real deal, which is a specific real estate publication. I saw it on Instagram. And then all of a sudden,
Starting point is 01:13:30 people are like, bro, like, what's going on? Like, we run in similar circles, you know, started messaging, oh, shit, this is not good. Three women, five women. Oh, man. Then it went to 10 women. Then it went to the latest count, 30 different allegations. And I'm using that word specifically allegations because we don't know what is true and what is not true. And we learned from other friends that we've spoken to interview people that we spoke to, we don't ever know what's true and what's not true in these allegations. But then it was in the New York Post.
Starting point is 01:14:03 And then as of yesterday, I believe it was in the New York Post. And then as of yesterday, I believe, it was in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal and then I was like, uh-oh, this is now officially a massive story. So here's what I could tell you. There's a few different things here. Most of the stories that you're hearing go back to 2010 to 2012 and a lot of them are in New York, specifically in the Hamptons. Why New York and the Hamptons? Even though they're from Miami, they left Miami, they started working in real estate in New York. By the way, in the past 10 years, I think
Starting point is 01:14:34 five out of the last 10 years, they're the number one real estate team in the country. They were part of Douglas Elliman. I think they've sold $7 billion of real estate over the last 10 years, I say. Correct me on these numbers. Real estate, you talk about commissions, we have that conversation. If you take 1%, which is a low commission for $7 billion, that is $70 million in commissions. Imagine if they got 2%, whatever. They've made tens of millions of dollars in commissions, no doubt. New York, specifically New York, Kathy Hochul, the governor in 2022, she came out with something called the Adult Survivors Act, where basically it has to do with the Statue of Limitations, because this is, again, this is 10, 15 plus years ago
Starting point is 01:15:22 that they allegedly did some of these stories. So here's what I could tell you for sure. They have marketed themselves as the most high-end luxury top realtors, high-end in the country. By the way, they have the record for the most expensive home ever sold. They sold it to Ken Griffin, the hedge fund guy we've talked about in New York, I think for $225 million. Check those numbers, Ken Griffin in New York.
Starting point is 01:15:50 This is insane. But then during COVID, there was 238, there was right there was the most expensive home ever sold in the United States. Four floor mega condo. So to talk about these guys are with the who's who and the elite and the billionaires would be entirely accurate. So this isn't some just, you know, random allegation. This is even like a Tate situation that's in Romania. This is the high end people in New York, the Hamptons and Aspen. So what's my point? On one end, is this a hit job? Is this a money grab?
Starting point is 01:16:28 You know, after a handful of names, okay, maybe 30? How serious is all this? And then it makes me think of, you know, choose your enemies wisely. Who are their enemies? Look, there's a lot of people out there in the real estate world that want to see these guys go down. It's a doggy dog world. It's a competitive world out there.
Starting point is 01:16:44 There's a lot of happy, jealous, spite spiteful competitive realtors out there that are saying, all right, my turn now. Because one thing for sure, depending on what these allegations turn out to be, who's ever going to work with these guys again? They're now fighting for their lives. Forget about their career. Forget about their reputation, like their lives. Last point. I had, I've never been to the Hamptons. I've actually never spent time in the Hamptons despite going to New York a ton of times. There's this guy called Sir Ivan. Remember that name. He's known as the Hugh Hefner of the Hamptons. There it is right there. Now he would throw these wild, wild sex parties and orgies and
Starting point is 01:17:22 romps and be very open about it. There's the Hamptons Castle. You've heard about it, Tom? You ever been? No, I've never been, but I've heard about Sir Ivan's Castle. So, apparently the guy had... Tom, just tell him. Tom, you've been to the castle. Tom, you saw how he got happy? He was like, Alright, I have the gold key. It's like this Game of Thrones-esque Playboy Mansion in the Hamptons,
Starting point is 01:17:43 and allegedly, the boys had their own room here. So when you talk about partying, we talk about sex, drugs, rock and roll, this is what's going down in the Hamptons. So this guy, Ivan, you know, retroactively has now come out and said, the Alexander brothers are no longer invited to the parties. Yeah, no shit guy. cover your own ass. What I'll say is this, let the facts play out. Let's see what happens here. These are serious allegations and the number one guys in real estate are really in some
Starting point is 01:18:17 hot water here and we'll see what happens. Go ahead, PBD. This is just the latest chapter of People in Power with Influence behaving terribly badly and now it all shows up that through the 80s and 90s and the aughts, you know, it was drug sex and rock and roll and there was very little consequence. And yeah, you know, Governor Hockel passes this bill that caused some people to run to the microphone with salacious fake stories claiming suits, looking for money, chasing money. And other people that said, wow, you know, I'm going to come forward here because I was injured. I was injured by all this.
Starting point is 01:18:47 Les Moonvives, all those people came forward. You look at Harvey Weinstein, you know, he wasn't found innocent. There was a, they have to retry the case. There's plenty of evidence there and he's still guilty in LA. But this is people of power behaving badly and now it's coming home to roost. Yeah, I mean listen, you get one rape allegation, you know, you take it seriously. The state and whoever's, Rob, my audio is super low right now for whatever reason, just lowered in the last 10 minutes. You have to take it seriously if it's one, but at the same time, you know, you can jump to conclusion and then you realize This one person says rape is not what you think it is. It's not physical. It's it's a fantasy
Starting point is 01:19:35 You know, it sounds great and EG Carol or whatever her name is right? It's just something like that. Then you get two rape allegations. All right, man. Come on, man You somebody comes and tells me Vinnie, you Vinnie hit me, one of your exes. Okay, and you've had 10 exes, let's just say. And I'm like, listen, stop it. Then second ex, and third ex, and fourth ex. If all of a sudden seven exes tell me you're hitting them, Vinnie, you're probably hitting them. Okay?
Starting point is 01:20:04 There's some kind of credibility there. If you had 10 businesses you start, if half of them filed bankruptcy, there's a problem there. You got 30 allegations and people coming out. We didn't say, I read the story when it was one, we kind of read it when it was five. When it was 30, we're like, listen, this is out of control. Three years ago, this was three and a half years,
Starting point is 01:20:30 three years ago, Tom, I think you even remember this. I was looking at this house, Rob, if you can pull up the one I sent you. This is the house I was looking at in Boca. Adam, did I even take you there or no? Adam Ligato I didn't go with you, but I remember. Dr. John B. Daly So I looked at this house, this is on Rob report. Dr. John B. Daly It's like a mall. Dr. John B. Daly With the grass on the roof. Dr. John on the roof. Yeah, we want to look. It was a 25 million dollar house in Boca and
Starting point is 01:20:47 Pull up a little bit Rob so we can show that's the house. No, no like the picture. So that's the house We probably looked at this house six times five six times. Okay real nice place corner You know intercoastal Boca the whole nine beautiful nicely built Guess who was the realtor? Intercoastal, Boca, the whole nine. Beautiful, nicely built. Guess who was the realtor? Oran. Oran Alexander. So he comes in and he has it on the market for 25. I make an offer for 17 million bucks.
Starting point is 01:21:17 He rebuttals with whatever number that he rebuttals with. 24 and a half million dollars. Here's what I'm gonna do, I'll.5 million. Great. I come back and I said I'm out. They call him, they say, no, no, no, why is he out? I said, no, I'm out. I'm not playing this game. $500,000. This is not a $25 million house. Sitting on a third of a lot or whatever the size was. Fast forward. I meet another person who's a realtor in Florida. Her name is Sonata. Sonata's actually been on the podcast before. They're part of the same company. These guys were number one. I think Sonata is number three or number five in the country.
Starting point is 01:21:52 Phenomena what she does. She used to work for Trump for five years. VP of marketing or VP of something. She was a high-rider. I love her. I know what she looks like. If you see her, you know, she's been on NBC, she's been all over the place. So anyways, she said, hey, maybe we work together to try to sell you this house. I said, I'm not going to go that high, the number I'm going to make, I'm not going to sell this house for that much. I said, maybe I'll go to a number. We're having lunch at Luff's, okay? You're with me at Luff's.
Starting point is 01:22:21 And it's me, you, Mario, and one other person. I don't remember who the other person was. I walk out, I come out, and I say, look look if they go to this number. I'll do it anyways eventually They play a little bit more games. I'm out again, but this time I'm permanently out We go to a event in Florida for cart don't want to say the name. Yeah, you're saying I invited you we went together You and I beautiful home everybody's there. It's a small invitation ten people are in the room They're selling five million dollar comic books stuff like that. It's not a low Beautiful home, everybody's there, it's a small invitation, 10 people are in the room, they're selling $5 million comic books, stuff like that.
Starting point is 01:22:47 It's not a low end. Facebook cards, jerseys. Very, very high end. High end you can get. You can get, yeah. And he shows up, okay? Now this is when I realized he's got a little bit of douche stuff in him. And he comes in and he says, oh hey, you know, you could have bought that house.
Starting point is 01:23:02 We sold it. You could have bought the house. I said, yeah, you could have gotten a couple million dollars more than what you sold it for. But my initial offer is what you sold it for because Real Deal announced you sold it for $17 million. And then he walked away. Oh, weird.
Starting point is 01:23:17 So I don't know who this guy is. I've been around the block when you're around different guys that have certain energy that they give that's just annoying. Maybe he's just annoying. That's what he is is, and super arrogant. I don't know, I've been around guys like that, that they're competitive, they're good at what they do, and in the real estate world,
Starting point is 01:23:31 real estate attracts people like this who do very well. In regards to the 30 rape allegations and all that stuff, this is how much I know about it, nothing, okay? I've never been around these guys outside of those two experiences that I had, and even when I walk around and I'm trying to buy a house or a property, I'll typically probe the individual to get to know who they are, what they're all about. Tell me about your family. Tell me what you're doing.
Starting point is 01:23:54 Tell me where you're at. Tell me where you're from. What's your story? How did you guys do it? And I'm probing, right, to kind of get to know who they are. That is the only experience I've had with this guy. But the market's going to decide, lawyers are going to decide what's going on, but 30 is a valid number.
Starting point is 01:24:05 Yeah, and I remember all those conversations. I remember the negotiation in Boca. I remember, you know, sending some text messages, kind of being a part of it. I'm actually grateful where you ended up buying the house. I think you're very happy with the decision. I think that's all that. But this is, I think, a story of your past mistakes can haunt you. What do I mean?
Starting point is 01:24:23 I had a conversation yesterday with a very credible source who was very close with these guys. And I would consider myself very close with as well. He said, I could tell you in the last 10 years, I've seen none of this behavior. What's the reality these days, all three, there's three brothers that are involved in this. Two are twins and one, uh, two are in real estate. One is actually in security. Um, they're all married. One of them has kids. Um, they've all been married since COVID.
Starting point is 01:24:54 They made a ton of money since COVID. They're living in, I think, I believe all in Miami at this point. Um, but a lot of their reputation is big ego, narcissist, sort of being douchey. I get that. But just because people don't like you, you don't get along with them, doesn't mean that these allegations of course remain true. And that's not what you said at all, PBT. I'm just saying I'm distinguishing you with the two. What I've understood is that a lot of these stories stem from this sex party situation at this guy's Sir Ivan's house, mansion, castle in the Hamptons. So he's gonna
Starting point is 01:25:26 have some explaining to do. I think they've already subpoenaed him. We don't know what happened but these allegations are... Well, I showed you and Pat already saw this story since we're on famous people and rape the Alki David, the heir to Coca-Cola, Greek billionaire. Guess how much he has to pay this Jane Doe? The jury just said. $900 million for allegedly harassing and raping a girl over a three-year period. $900 million. I mean, dude, rape, horrible. He'll pay for it if he doesn't atone to God, but that is the biggest assault verdict in the, not, do basically just say a billion dollars for raping someone I don't even think he's worth a billion dollars I know he's got money so wrong
Starting point is 01:26:09 but is that not like I thought it was I thought I was reading it wrong but a nine hundred million apparently yeah the Greek billionaire have to pay pay the woman identified as Jane Doerner lawsuit a whopping down to bill for allegedly harassing and raping her over a three year period. It's so despicable. The facts in this case, he raped my client while on trial in another case, Gary Dordick told the Los Angeles Times. That's all he's worth right there. What was it, Rob?
Starting point is 01:26:34 2.3? I just saw one that said $50 million, one that said $1.9 million. When they say he's the heir and hologram, what is his heir? He had the Tupac hologram, I believe. Oh, that was him. This is the guy that had the Tupac hologram. Oh, that was him. This is the guy that had the Tupac hologram, if I'm not mistaken. And he was married to a girl named Jennifer Stano, Jennifer something. Yeah, you're right. He's a hologram USA is the company and she was a model for several of his companies. I think the one last thing I'll add is you know there's allegations then there's court
Starting point is 01:27:12 decisions and there's what turns out to be true. You know even there's another story in the right here Matt Gates they're coming after him for sex and drug allegations and I don't I don't know what happened there and I'm not insinuating anything that has nothing to do with these stories, but these stories, if you do stupid shit, things can come out. By the way, here's a part though. Here's a part that matters, okay? One night, me and my friends in LA, I had just gone out of the army, I'm 21 years old. We go to this one party and a lot of the guys that I you know, you know We used to spend time with a lot of gangsters and people like that were over there and I'm like listen guys Moving forward. I can't come to these parties. You can't invite me to these types of parties
Starting point is 01:27:56 I'm not coming to these types of parties anymore and it was mean and three other guys outside I can tell you all their names. Yeah, if they see this they'll remember one of them is dead the other two are still here with us. And one of them says, whom I love, I just had a conversation with this guy three weeks ago, and I said, Pat, what are you talking about, man? We're just regular guys. We're just hanging out. I'm like, nah, I can't do this.
Starting point is 01:28:15 So the point is, sometimes you have to be careful how deep you go into, you know, with certain friends that you're hanging out with. If I'm friends with Tom, and Tom's friends with another guy who has a rep for doing stuff that's super, super problematic and I'm hanging out with him and so he's there as well, you just have to be careful. You just, you have to truly pick your friends in a very intentional way, especially as you age. I'm at a page right now that I'm picking friends based on who I want to be around my
Starting point is 01:28:45 kids and how they speak and what language they freely use and all this other stuff, let alone when you're in your 20s, you have to pick friends for a complete different reason that you're comfortable with them being around you because how they could directly or indirectly impact you. Remember what Suge Knight said about Diddy. Now, I never forget what Suge Knight said about Diddy. He said, Diddy wasn't born wanting to sugar night said about Diddy he said Diddy wasn't born Wanting to do this stuff to boys exactly was someone taught him. Yep, and who's the name he gave?
Starting point is 01:29:11 David Clive Davis. Oh, get out of here. Yeah, he says Clive Clive away wasn't wait. I don't mess up the name. What was you think you can go pull up who he was a name I think I messed this up one. I don't think you did I'm gonna make sure it's Clive No, he said Clive Davis. Yeah, you're right. It was Clive Davis. He said Clive Davis. I said the actor one. People got really mad.
Starting point is 01:29:32 He said Clive Davis. He says, you're taught. So these guys doing what they're doing, if they did, they were taught. Who did they learn it from? Is it hanging out with that guy? Maybe. And you know, there are certain things that are cool and all this stuff while you're going through it. Try to get this kind of cool stuff out of your system as quickly as possible. Maybe. And, you know, there are certain things that are cool and all this stuff while you're going through it. Try to get this kind of cool stuff out of your system as quickly as possible because,
Starting point is 01:29:49 you know, it can totally destroy your life. Anyways, I want a transition. I want a transition. Next. Money can't buy happiness. It's actually the other way around. Happy people are more successful in life, experts says to CNBC. A moneyzine.com survey found the average salary Americans believe
Starting point is 01:30:06 would make them happy is $94,696. But happiness expert Tammy Muller asserts, happy people make more money, have better relationships and are more successful in life, not vice versa. Social scientist Arthur C. Brooks emphasizes that money doesn't—is this the same Arthur C. Brooks that wrote a book about capitalism? Can you type up Arthur C. Brooks emphasizes that money doesn't buy happiness unless it's used for experiences, gaining extra time, or donating to others. Instead, happiness comes from building strong social connections and finding purposeful engagements. Research includes, including a 2005 survey of 225 papers indicates that happiness leads to success in areas like income and health. Muller concludes, happiness is the thing that actually
Starting point is 01:30:58 causing us to succeed, urging a focus on happiness first, which then leads to success. Yeah, right there. The road to freedom is all about capitalism. This guy's a very good author, by the way. Tom, thoughts on this story? It's absolutely correct because, you know, it says that results follow attitude. You have, you bring into anything you do, whether it's a relationship, whether it's a job, you have an attitude and you have your skills.
Starting point is 01:31:23 And when it's a great positive attitude and you've got good skills, guess what? Money will follow. How? Not billions of dollars, but you're probably going to need a better bonus. You're probably going to focus. You're probably going to be a better guy and better woman and better it to work with. And I think this is absolutely true. What were we talking about just on the other podcast? Poor people take $100,000 and buy a bunch of things that they think will increase their
Starting point is 01:31:52 standard of living or their perception about other people. Then the next level people take $100,000 and they invest it. And there you go. That's why lottery winners, we've talked about this. I think we haven't talked about this in probably two years. Where California studied the first several mega lottery winners had all that money. Four years later, they had addictions and there were suicides. So, the money didn't buy happiness. It actually isolated them from friends. They quit jobs, lost relationships. It made things worse. This is absolutely correct. The most valuable
Starting point is 01:32:25 thing you can do is go back to the principles, and you find them in faith traditions. I find them in the Judeo-Christian Bible, and you find them in great writings, you know, How to Win Friends and Influence People, who was actually a Christian pastor who wrote that, Norman Thun's Appeal. Happiness coming first. No, no, How to Win Friends and and influence people is Dale Carnegie. Dale Carnegie. Thinking the power of positive thinking. Positive thinking. I'm sorry, sorry, sorry. Trump used to go to his church, but go ahead, keep going.
Starting point is 01:32:50 No, but those two, so I would say you get your attitude first, you add skills to it, success will follow. Yep. Adam. Yeah, well, I love this article. You remember the scene in the boiler room when Ben Affleck comes in, he starts talking to all the guys and he throws his keys to his Ferrari on the floor and he goes, They say that money can't buy happiness. Look at the smile on my face. Ear to ear, baby. Anyone that says that money can't buy happiness is poor. Right? He's used a different line. But doesn't f'n have any. Doesn't have any. Exactly. So so the reality is he's mostly right
Starting point is 01:33:26 The problem that he had is that he attributed money to happiness to materialism And there's actually scientific evidence that shows that materialism is fleeting That it's a sugar high when you get a new car when you get a new wash when you get a new clothes You feel cool for a minute, but then it's fleeting and then you want to get something else You want to get something when you get a new clothes, you feel cool for a minute, but then it's fleeting and then you want to get something else. You want to get something new. When you get a new Casio gold watch, it's a big deal. But the reality is money is a tool, it's energy and it's a medium of exchange that enables you to do what you want to do in your life.
Starting point is 01:34:04 It's an enabler, a good kind of enabler. Um, what I love about this article is talks about money and happiness being used for experiences, gaining extra time and donating to others. I always talk about, you know, the big three things in life, health, wealth, and happiness. We know what health looks like. We know what wealth looks like, but what does happiness look like? I often say that happiness is having meaning and purpose to your life and not just talking about it, being about it, not just saying things, actually doing things.
Starting point is 01:34:33 And as you're doing those things and you're accomplishing those things, you know, and you're becoming competent, you develop confidence and you start to say, oh, shit, like I'm actually good. I'm happy. I'm working on what I want to do and I'm accomplishing something. That to me is happiness. So does more money enable you to be happier? Yes, because it enables you to have more time on your hands, do what you want to do and spend with the people you love and help the people you love. If it's just about materialism, happiness won't be there for you. Vinny.
Starting point is 01:34:59 I agree. I think, you know, but there's a flip side to it. The people that never had anything that get the money, then that's a completely different story. Don't you agree? They never had nothing, Pat. Then they get all this money, they're freaking happy. When you have absolutely nothing and then you get it all, I think it's a whole different story. You worked for it or you were henpecked? You worked your ass for it and then you get it, Pat. Then it's a different story. No, no, no. If it's a lot of work and the experience of it, when a group of people sets their minds
Starting point is 01:35:31 on a vision and a price to go after and it's so much hard work and it takes years to get it, it's an unbelievable feeling when you experience it, right? To me, it's not about happiness. And you know, back in 2008, when a market crash happened, you know what was the most common word used in book titles? The word happy, because everybody wanted to be happy. It was the top title of books. Everything was about delivering happiness. Happy this, happy that, happy this.
Starting point is 01:36:00 Happy days. Everything was about the word happy in movies. No man, I'm not trying to be happy. I want to be fulfilled, is what I want to be. I want to be in a position where I'm in pursuit of something special to sit there and be proud of the work that I'm doing. Now, personality, there's an attractive personality component where when somebody has an attractive personality, last night we were having a conversation with the kids and the conversation was about obnoxious, being obnoxious. And he says, you know, we're talking, all the kids are in front of me,
Starting point is 01:36:35 Sena, Tico and Dylan, I said, I said, you can love somebody and not want to be around them because they're purely obnoxious. You don't want to be obnoxious because if you're obnoxious, you miss out on a lot of opportunities. And a lot of opportunities are simply because people don't want to be around other obnoxious people. Now you may say, well, not just the way I am, but great, stay obnoxious, and you're going to be having other obnoxious people around you. If you have somebody that's super grateful, happy, pleasant, personality, fun to be around, everybody, there's a lot of opportunities that come that person's way.
Starting point is 01:37:13 I used to, in a way you work with when you give leads, like let's just say, you know, I have a client that wants to roll over $100,000 and I give it to one of my agents. And he's like, yeah, hey, when's the next time you're gonna give me a lead? I closed it for you, by the way. I closed it for you. Like, he did me a favor. You just made $4,000.
Starting point is 01:37:34 Then you give another guy another lead, and he says the following, hey man, just wanna let you know, I never expect any referrals from you because you've done so much for me, and I thank you so much for this referral, okay? Because of that, we were able to help them out. They're very happy. I appreciate the commission.
Starting point is 01:37:47 Guess who I want to give more referrals to? The second guy. He's not even close. So one is entitled, arrogant, I closed it for you. Oh my God, I would have never made it in life without you, buddy. Like that whole concept, like people want to do that? No. It's the attractive personality.
Starting point is 01:38:04 So to me, I don't know if it's really happy people make money. It's a little bit of an attractive personality that, you know, grateful. I would actually replace happy with grateful. I would say grateful people attract opportunities. There's something very, you want to do stuff for grateful people. You want to go above and beyond for grateful people. You give a gift to three people, one guy says, that's it. By the way, you know how you go to weddings, you give gifts and nobody says thank you to you.
Starting point is 01:38:36 At least say thank you. You don't send a thank you card. You don't say, hey, thank you for. One of the first things Jennifer does, you know why kids can't open gifts when they get gifts on their birthdays? Watch Jennifer system. Do you know Jennifer doesn't allow the kids for their birthdays to open their gifts without her being in front of them?
Starting point is 01:38:52 Do you know why? Why? Because she has to write a note what the gift was to say in the card, thank you so much for the Barbie set that you gave to Senna. And some people are like, yeah, I mean, I thought I was expecting like a $500 gift. Not that you were gonna give like this kind of a gift. No, so I would replace happiness, seek gratitude,
Starting point is 01:39:13 not happiness, grateful people, I think live more fulfilling lives and are more attractive than just people that are seeking happiness, because happiness could be high. It's like cocaine. Let me get my next high of happiness. Let me get my next quick, you know, happy. Let me get my next, oh, I'm not happy. Oh, I'm happy. It's not healthy for you.
Starting point is 01:39:33 Spank dopamine. No, no, no. Grateful, grateful, gratitude. Yes. Real quick, I remember I used to always have to write thank you notes for a gift. These days, didn't we tell a story about the guy that sent a text message to his grandpa? Like, hey, thanks grandpa. Do you call your grandpa and read? It's like you're just texting grandpa. It's like kids are not as grateful these days. I'll tell you the one thing that I remember from the Tate interview the second time when
Starting point is 01:39:57 we flew to Bucharest and we spoke with Andrew and Tristan, and I think you can appreciate this. He said, you know the best part about having money? It's remembering when you didn't have any and being like, dang, remember when we used to be like the story you tell about how you used to make your own ghetto ass lemonade? I remember that. I remember like I would do anything for five bucks when I was 20 like anything, you know, 20 bucks 20 bucks, right Vinny?
Starting point is 01:40:21 But remembering when you were broke is is the best reminder of where you were at. You know they say that money exposes or reveals who you really are. If you get money and you're a piece of shit, you're still gonna be a piece of shit with money. If you get money and you're actually a good person, you're gonna be a good person with gratitude. Friends from high school, those who were always negative, they're still broke and miserable. So, the friends that I had who were always grateful, optimistic, they're very successful today. Gratitude is key.
Starting point is 01:40:58 Happiness is fake. If you seek happiness, you may be fooled and waste a lot of years of your life. All right, Tom, I'm coming to you with this one here. Pay TV is in so much trouble that even its one bright spot is dimming. So what are they talking about? Let's take a look. Because this, I got three articles back to back to back. Streaming top broadcast cable viewership by double digits in May.
Starting point is 01:41:20 Newsmax lost $42 million last year. Canon IPO saved the company. You know what they're going through. There's even one about YouTube, you know, talking about the fact that YouTube is destroying, you know, Netflix. But let's go to this specific story here on on what it's talking about. So here we go. Pay TV subscriptions continue to decline rapidly with a record loss of 2.3 million subscribers in the first quarter of 2024 marking a 6.9% drop. Analysts at Moffitt-Nathanson describe this period as the worst the pay TV business has
Starting point is 01:41:55 ever seen as younger people avoid signing up and existing customers cut the cord. Digital pay TV services like YouTube TV, Hulu, Live TV, Fuboos, Sling initially thought to offset the decline of conventional providers are also losing subscribers. They estimated that YouTube TV lost 150,000 subscribers last quarter, its first ever decline indicating that even newer platforms are struggling with the flexibility of digital TV services which allow easy addition and cancellation contributes to subscription. Churn, this trend has led the TV industry to push for long-term contacts, similar to traditional cable TV models, to stabilize their subscribers base, as evidenced by the
Starting point is 01:42:36 fluctuation linked to seasonal content like the NFL. Tom? Well, guess what? Cable and satellite are not dead, but they are dying ugly deaths. DirecTV lost the NFL, and that used to be the anchor if you wanted all those NFL games. You got DirecTV, you get every single one of them! And then the NFL said, but we're going to take these off DirecTV, we're going to take those off DirecTV, we're going to do a Sunday night football, Thursday night football, and so it all gets spread out.
Starting point is 01:43:03 So what has happened is cable and satellite, you know for people over 45 was automatic you automatically had a 50 to 75 dollar subscription For cable and satellite we all remember it. It was a friend. I agree with you Tom. It was like totally Thank you very much. It was like a second making a great point here Tom. Perfect. Yeah, I do have great points Thank you very much Adam the the first thing you did when you're making a great point here, Tom. Perfect. Yeah, I do have great points. Thank you very much, Adam. The first thing you did when you got into a house, you got the power on, but then you had to have cable on. Remember that?
Starting point is 01:43:30 You had to have cable, have a phone. Now it's a mobile phone, and you don't need that. So the new generation, they do not wish to spend $60 a month, $70 a month, of their entertainment budget on a box of programming. They want on demand. That's why they go with Netflix. And they are moving some of their watching from cable to scanning TikTok and music subscriptions.
Starting point is 01:44:02 So the new generation that's under 50 years old, 45 to 50 is the line I was reading, they consume entertainment so much differently and that's what's happening here. And now everybody thought, this is great. We got Hulu, we got YouTube TV. This is the voice from the industry. Now we don't need to put out those set top boxes. Everyone doesn't have to get a set top box. They're just going to pay us $70 through YouTube and we're gonna put ESPN discovery. Yeah, you know pump it the cooking channel
Starting point is 01:44:31 Now it's changed and now guess what Hulu and YouTube TV are actually losing subscribers losers as the As the new generation says I want Netflix. Here's the big three they go after they go Netflix Yes, this go a music subscription, which is increasingly Spotify or Apple, where they pay 15 bucks or so. And then they want scan on demand. And that's the article I read. It was called scan on demand. And guess what? They're scanning on demand. What shorts on YouTube and tick talk. Those hours that would have been spent What's my favorite where people would watch three or four series? People used to watch the other thing I read interesting people used to be into three or four series on network TV
Starting point is 01:45:14 You would watch friends then you would watch ER right you were into it now people say hey Do you see Game of Thrones? I'm really in that did you see Ted lasso and Apple? I'm really into that and Did you see Ted Lasso on Apple? I'm really into that. And they're not into 304. They're into on-demand and they're spreading it around. And it's a generational cliff and it's leading to, uh-oh, the alarm bills are now going on in pay TV and they thought streaming over the top was going to save them, but it's not. Tom, I'm fully with you.
Starting point is 01:45:39 I'm not into 304's question. How often, legit, do you just Netflix and chill? You're just chilling, doing your thing. That's a private question. First of all, the guy's married. What he's asking is, Kim, forgive Adam, how often do you guys watch Netflix? That's what he's asking. Chilling is private. Chilling is just like a damn business. We have a Netflix subscription and we also had Disney Plus. We'll see it's PM Plus. But for us, it's appointment television. We don't sit and vegetate. If we say, Hey, let's watch a movie tonight. What are we all going to watch? Or Hey, tonight, Hey, Dodgers are
Starting point is 01:46:16 on Sunday night baseball. Let's sit down and watch it. It's appointment television. That's very intentional. We don't just sit down like America did in the seventies and eighties and nineties and just kind of couch potato and scan back and forth. You schedule TV time. Yeah well yeah we're intentional but it's not like we schedule it like it's written on a board somewhere but it's very intentional. In other words we don't flop down after dinner and just vegetate popping back and forth on channels the way grandma and grandpa and aunts and uncles did when they had cable. What did you see growing up Vinnie? With my parents or just us? Was it kind of like that? No, grandpa, aunts and uncles did when they had cable. What did you see growing up Vinny?
Starting point is 01:46:45 Oh, with my parents or just us? Was it kind of like that? No, no, no. What did you walk in on? Yeah, no. It was my dad. No, when my mom and dad, I mean my dad would come, he just drank and smoked. So he'd just come home and we'd sit, either we'd watch the Yankees or we'd watch football or anything like that. Definitely never watched any CNN, thank God. They were not political. But we would just watch like George Carlin specials and stuff like that. Definitely never watched any CNN. Thank God they were not political. But we would just watch like George Carlin specials and stuff like that. And my dad would
Starting point is 01:47:08 just sit in front of the TV. It was work all day, come home, sit in front of the TV and we would watch whatever the hell he was watching. Nobody dared to touch the remote. And we're in the late seventies. They coined a term, the couch. Potato. Potato. That's what my dad was. Where you just sat on the couch and got big and stretchy. With alcoholism and smoking cigarettes
Starting point is 01:47:25 No, that's why people used to consume TV. The new generation does not do that. They consume it on their mobile phone They consume it on their laptop They're they're away from it and they don't just sit down and and just watch all night And and now the industry is seeing cracks in the floor and that's what's happening So Adam, I think what Adam asks the question because he wants to tell us what he watched What did you want? Did you watch friends? Did you watch Melrose Place? So Adam, I think what Adam asks the question because he wants to tell us what he watched. What did you watch? Tell us, did you watch Friends?
Starting point is 01:47:47 Did you watch Melrose Place? Beverly Hills 90210? Are you a... Although, when you wake up in the morning and you're... Say bye to Bill. Hold on, what about Three's Company? It's alright cause I'm saying bye to Bill. Zach Morris was the coolest kid in school. I wanted that hair. I wanted that hair. I like AC. But go ahead. Yeah, I liked, we're talking about this. I liked Beverly Hills 90210.
Starting point is 01:48:16 I liked Melrose Place, dude, In Living Color in the 90s. Forget about it. Oh, for sure. Death Comedy Jam. That's where I first saw Vinnie for the first time. Seinfeld. Table of four. I think Rob's a huge Seinfeld guy. These days I have literally no Netflix, no nothing. Zero. I just watch YouTube. Did you watch three's company? What's that? Well, the John Ritter and the, he had very old show. Oh my God. But like he moved in with these two girls. He fell asleep at a party. He wakes up. They need a roommate. He has to print that pretend that he's gay for the entire series. Oh, that's a great show. I remember this one.
Starting point is 01:48:46 Oh my God. What's the blonde girl, Susan? Susan Summers. Susan Summers, yeah, she passed away. By the way, these were my... I thought she passed away. She did. But the blonde girl for the older generation, that blonde girl was like every guy...
Starting point is 01:49:00 Because she would wear tight clothes on purpose. We would all drool over her. He had to pretend that he was gay and his friend, the neighbor Larry was the biggest pervert. He just come over and try to have sex with everybody. Yeah. It's like Larry, get the hell out of here. And by the, the landlord hated him cause they thought he was gay. Do this show. We're really fixated on this. This is one of the best because this show wouldn't last. This show would not have been airing situation. This is one of the best shows. What's going on here, guys? Because this show wouldn't last. This show would not have been airing today.
Starting point is 01:49:26 There's no way. Because he would actually be gay. By the way, did you ever watch Family Matters? Steve Urkel? I watched all of those shows. But remember when he'd get cool and then he'd be like, Stephon Urkel? Stephon, yeah. I could see Tom doing a thing like he's Steve Urkel one day and then he's cool.
Starting point is 01:49:38 Tom's the biz doc now. Yes. Steve Urkel. All right, let's go to the next story. Just give us a shout out. It's French. Rob, I want you to pull up the Boeing CEO give us a shout out. Let's go to the next story. It's French. Rob, I want you to pull up the Boeing CEO with, I think it's Josh Hawley, if I'm not mistaken. Oh, it's one of my favorite videos.
Starting point is 01:49:50 The exchange, how much money did you make? Thirty-three million. You've got to see this, folks. So, Boeing CEO apologized to families of crash victims at Senate hearings, and it was an interesting one. You have to see this one here. Let me read it and then we'll watch the clip. So, Boeing CEO David Callahan apologized to the families of the crash victims during Senate
Starting point is 01:50:09 testimony, especially specifically addressing those who lost loved ones in the 2018 Lion Air Flight 610 and 2019 Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashes. He stated, I want to personally apologize and on behalf of everyone at Boeing, we are deeply sorry for your losses. Nothing is more important than the safety of the people who step on board. Our airplanes Calhoun testimony followed a recent incident and ongoing investigation. The hearing comes after a Boeing 737 MAX 9's door plug blew off during an Alaskan Airlines flight in January, which Senator Richard Blumenthal described as a symptom of Boeing's broken safety culture.
Starting point is 01:50:44 Several whistleblowers have reported retaliation for raising manufacturing and quality concerns, but new allegations presented to the subcommittee. Go ahead, Rob. What is it that you get paid currently? This guy's such a beast. Senator, that's well disclosed in our proxy documents in each of the years that I've been employed. Yeah, but what is it?
Starting point is 01:51:05 It's a big number, sir. Well, let me help you out. It's 32.8 million this year. Does that sound right? Yes, it does. That's a 45% increase over last year. Does that sound right? Yes, it does.
Starting point is 01:51:17 What is it you get paid to do, exactly? What would you say? I get paid to run Boeing Company. Yeah. So just help me understand that. Do you get paid for transparency? Is that part of, is that one of the metrics for your income? I think the board counts on me for transparency.
Starting point is 01:51:34 Really? Because you're under investigation for falsifying 787 inspection records. The Boeing's under criminal investigation for the Alaska Airlines flight. You were investigated by DOJ for criminal conspiracy to defraud the FAA. This is all in your tenure. This doesn't sound like a lot of transparency to me. What about safety? Is that a component of your salary?
Starting point is 01:52:00 It sure is, Senator. You know, have you seen the reports that the subcontractor that you used to make that doorpiece that fell out of the sky, that when the FAA went and toured the facility, they found one door seal being lubricated with Dawn Liquid dish soap and cleaned with a wet cheese cloth. Cheese! And another was being checked with a hotel room key card Does that sound like? Safety to you this guy's such a beast who's that girl on the left that job? Whoever that girl's I don't even know what her eyes look like but beautiful lower half anyway
Starting point is 01:52:38 But like going on with she's beautiful and then people you know he apologized right so he was here Apologizes to the families of people who died and crashes are Lion Air flight 610 of Indonesia in 2018 and Ethiopian flights 302 near Addis Ababa in 2019 in the manufacturers of the planes while members of both parties were grilling him This is does he turn around the one that I send you he gets up. This is the one where he turns around Yeah, and they all have pictures and photos and stuff check this out before I begin my opening remarks I would like to speak directly to those who lost loved ones
Starting point is 01:53:11 on lion air flight 610 in the ethiopian airlines flight 302 Oh, yes. Yeah, this is it. He gets up and turns around Well, he has to do it rob I would like to apologize on behalf of all of our Boeing associates spread throughout the world, past and present, for your losses. They're gut-wrenching. And I apologize for the grief that we have caused. And I want you to know we are totally committed to their moment John Barnett whistleblower and focus on safety for as long as long as we're
Starting point is 01:53:49 employed by both again I'm sorry well and so and just FYI you guys see that that's the whistleblower John Barnett which one is that John Barnett is the guy in the left people that committed suicide sure does he wear no not the shirt he's on the photo oh god that's his mother and his brother that her mother and brother so that are in there. Mother and brother. So this is what else was said in the testimony. He said that whistleblowers, the ones that are still alive, said that Boeing is cutting
Starting point is 01:54:13 every possible corner on quality and safety. They eliminated safety inspections with fewer inspectors doing quality inspections. The whistleblowers raised quality issues and concerns, they were reassigned, they were retaliated against, and they were physically threatened. So if they were physically threatened, threatening whistleblowers, who's to say that those three, is it two or three whistleblowers so far that have been, that died one randomly with some random disease and the other guy that shot himself in his car after he had to tell the truth? It's kind of weird. one randomly with some random disease and the other guy that shot himself in his car after he had to tell the truth.
Starting point is 01:54:45 It's kind of weird if that's a type of company that threatens people publicly, they get all these people alleged it all these whistleblowers and it was said in Congress if they threaten physical violence, who's to say Pat? I know we had the lawyer here who's to say that they didn't do what they did to this guy allegedly. You know what I'm saying? I don't trust them. Tom, there's two things here that were very striking to me. On one side you have Josh
Starting point is 01:55:08 Holly, who's absolutely grilling this guy. By the way, his 17 year old daughter, there's been 12 guys that have tried to take her out on a date. They never get past the front door. I wonder why that is. Yeah, weird. Like to meet my dad, Josh Holly. Can you come in here? I have a few questions. No, I'm good. You have two sides to Boeing here. The first side is you've got the commercial aviation side, which is airplanes that we fly in.
Starting point is 01:55:33 The second side is they are one of the five large defense contractors, which has rolled up almost 1,000 small defense contractors in the last 20 years. I believe those two numbers are correct. And so on one hand, Josh Hawley is grilling him over the commercial airlines. On the other hand, the United States government is giving Boeing billions and billions and billions of dollars a year for military aircraft, for missiles, for bombs, for all this other stuff. And so it's shocking to me that for the sake of the public stock,
Starting point is 01:56:06 because they didn't set out to cut safety. You won't find any emails anywhere in Boeing that said, we're cutting safety. They said, hey, we need to make more money. We only need two inspectors here, not four. But wait a minute, we can't complete the safety inspection. No, no, no, just make it two inspectors, not four. They were cutting costs and cutting corners. And in the end, that's what cuts safety. That's what happened here. I've always been of the opinion that there's too much of a moral hazard, and there should be certain organizations that are not public on the stock market because of the moral hazard. This is one of them. This is one of the things Airbus, and I'm not praising Airbus because it's the center of international bribes, European Airbus,
Starting point is 01:56:50 and all the consortium of companies that have actually competed, you know, unfairly against Boeing, which has led Boeing to cut corners into all this other stuff, which they shouldn't have been doing. But this is shocking to me that it took it because this is not the first hearing Boeing has had. There have been other hearings, and these people sat in the audience behind them with the pictures of all these precious people that died in those two crashes of the 737 MAX. So hats off to Josh Hawley for bringing it forward, but we got to remember who we got there. You know, Boeing is a hydra. It's a multi-headed hydra. And by the way this is this was two days ago Rob? Yeah the 17th. The 17th yeah I want to say something here okay so what did Josh Hawley say?
Starting point is 01:57:33 He says your salary is 32.8 million dollars and then he asked him what is did it not increase by 50 percent over last year and he said what? Yes. Rob, can you pull up Boing market cap this year and then go Boing market cap a year ago? Right now it's what? 107? All right, what was it a year ago? $157 billion. They're down for the year 32%.. Okay? So now obviously if you look at 2023, they spiked back up. Why did they spike back up? COVID, people are back
Starting point is 01:58:11 to flying. I remember on TSA, you used to report on the daily flights how low it was and how it got back up. But here's the thing. On one end, this is where capitalism gets confusing when these large corporations are ran by guys like this. You have a Delaware judge that almost prevented Elon Musk from getting a check that he earned for raising the company's market cap from $59 billion to $650 billion in six years, and they didn't want to pay him the money where he grew the market cap of the company. He increased the value of the company. He increased the value of the business.
Starting point is 01:58:47 This guy gets a raise of 50% and the company dropped 33%. As a shareholder, you have the right to ask the question to say, why is something like this happening and you're not doing a good job? These are the types of questions that I think about for a guy that's incomes going at 30 point 32.8 after everything that's going on. It's a little bit Frustrating for anybody that's a shareholder that actually uses Boeing to travel big difference between him and Elon Musk Adam the Japanese house before we go to the next story. So he's interviewing Josh Hawley. Shout out to this guy He's grilling the CEO of Boeing, right? He asked him how much money guy. He's grilling the CEO of Boeing, right? He asked him, how much money do you make? $32 million. And then from the scene in office space, remember that? He's like, so what would
Starting point is 01:59:30 you say you do around here? What did he say? It's fair to say that your job is to basically make sure that these planes are safe. Yes, that's my primary job. So rather than using nuts and bolts, you're using dish soap and credit cards. Oh yeah, that's accurate. The reality is this guy became the CEO in 2020. Was there a worse time for airlines? They're looking at their stock price plummet, they're looking at their market cap plummet, and he's like, all right, we've got to save money, we've got to cut corners. And just look at the reality.
Starting point is 02:00:01 There was more concern with the stock price going up than keeping the planes up in the sky. And Boeing is now tumbling and falling to pieces, and this guy deserves every single grilling that he gets from Josh Hawes. Do they then fire him, Pat? How long do they fire him, this guy? These types of size of companies, they don't fire that quickly. They have contracts. Typically, they'll hire somebody on, it's three-year contracts, five-year contracts, Tom you can correct me here, they'll typically sign guys like this through contracts that you'll have and if they fire him they have to pay the rest of the 18 months of whoever it is you're firing.
Starting point is 02:00:37 So it's not like, it's a cost immediately if you fire the guy. And the board of directors is ultimately responsible and usually the CEO is on the board of directors is often the chairman so if it's it becomes like um and This phrase is used it becomes what's called the Mexican standoff, right? We both have a gun on each other and you know, you shoot me My reflex is gonna fire and and we both die so you have oh you're gonna you're gonna toss me for this You're gonna throw me under the bus for this You guys on the board knew this you approve this we were all together here
Starting point is 02:01:10 I'm gonna bring something up here and then all of the tort lawyers come out and all the the the you know the The the corporate malfeasance, you know experts come out and so you have a little bit of a Mexican standoff That's right. You come to the exit and you go. Hey Calhoun. Look we got to make a change here. You've got your contract We're gonna pay it out We're gonna just paid him six million dollars in bonuses after the two planes went down to stay through the crisis at Boeing So if you think the guys are gonna get fired the two planes go down and then they give him a bonus to stay on For planes, okay, let's think about it. Who the hell wants that job that he turns around has to apologize planes go down and then they give him a bonus to stay on. So he gets rewarded for planes going down. Let's think about it. Who the hell wants that job? He turns around and has to apologize
Starting point is 02:01:50 to the families of dead passengers. People. And whistleblowers. But by the way, remember they now have a new chairman of the board and that's David Calhoun. That's him. No, no, no. Stephen Mollenkamp. My apologies. Steven Mullenkamp. David Calhoun is the CEO. Steven Mullenkamp is the chairman of the board. So they're making some changes on the tap into Steven Mullenkamp.
Starting point is 02:02:08 So Boying's new chairman, Steven Mullenkamp told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor. So they're kind of going through the process. Can you click on it real quick? Can you click on that article, Rob? So zoom in a little bit. I think you were right. So you're talking about the board.
Starting point is 02:02:16 So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board.
Starting point is 02:02:24 So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board. So you're talking about the board.oun's successor. Okay, so they're kind of going through the process. Can you click on it real quick? Can you click on that article, Rob? So zoom in a little bit. I think you were reading the shareholders. Re-elected CEO David Calhoun to the board of directors. A preliminary tally on Friday shown as he sought to reshare manufacturers' path of stability. And with this, Calhoun and Maart said he will step down by year's end, months after a doorplug
Starting point is 02:02:41 panel blew out mid-flight from a Boeing 737, so Boeing's new chairman, Stephen Malenkov, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor. Proxy advisor Glass Lewis has recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members. Interesting. So similar thing that's going on with Disney, Boeing is going through right now, and sometimes you bring a chairman like this,
Starting point is 02:03:08 and his main job is to lower the temperature and find a replacement. So I guarantee you, Mullencom's number one job right now that the board expects them to do is to find a new CEO. That's what they're doing right now. They're looking for somebody. So Vinny, if you're looking, maybe submit your application. I didn't want to say anything, but I'm not going to be here.
Starting point is 02:03:26 I'm just saying, if you think about it. I mean, you can do better than he is. For sure. You go out there and helping with both. Guys, get it tight. Guys, let's get it. Get it tight. Get the dishwasher soap on.
Starting point is 02:03:36 Rob, can you get that clip ready? MSNBC analysts suggest black voters shifting to Trump because of, ready, disinformation. You know that's an insult. I'll give you my view on how I read that. Mara Gray of New York Times suggested on MSNBC's Morning Joe that's noting that black men may be attracted to Trumpism more than black women and that this mirrors transcedent white voters, gay highlighted, not that she's gay, it's just the last name is gay, gay highlighted Trump's rising support among black voters asserting Donald Trump is not going to get 20% of black vote.
Starting point is 02:04:29 He's simply not, countering the notion of a significant shift. Go ahead and watch this. I actually think that this is a phenomenon that needs to be better understood. I think that the behavior of black voters, even in just polls right now, is quite interesting. It's something I'm trying to get at in my reporting. I think the answer is that we don't know everything yet, and we'll certainly find out more in November. My instinct is, first of all, that people forget.
Starting point is 02:04:57 Black voters are just like all voters. They too can be susceptible to disinformation campaigns. Black men especially, because there is a divide by the way in this polling in behavior between black men and women and their interest in Donald Trump. Black men may be attracted to Trumpism more than black women. That would be consistent with white voters as well. So that's another parallel to look at. I do think that this idea that there's going to be a wave of black voters voting for Donald Trump is highly unlikely, because black Americans know that Donald Trump is a racist.
Starting point is 02:05:34 And so I think that's something they understand implicitly. At the same time, I also wonder if the Biden campaign's consistent messaging overall about the strength of the economy, especially, and how good things are. While that may be true on Wall Street and indicators the economy looks strong, black Americans in their lives and their interests represented in that campaign, it does, I believe, just talking to voters, it really does trigger this sense that they are being left behind, that they are being taken for granted. And I think the Biden campaign and Democrats in general are going to have to work harder this time to get that base to turn out. Yeah. Can I go first on this one? Please.
Starting point is 02:06:26 This lovely lady is completely out of touch with the reality of what's happening right now. She's on MSME. You know, we can make the joke. Trump loves the blacks. I love the blacks. I also love the whites. I love the poorly educated.
Starting point is 02:06:38 I love the loves them all. Everybody love the blacks, but I'm going to make a prediction. Trump is going to get more percentage of the black vote than any president has done in the last 20 to possibly 50 years. Mark that right now. We're starting to see the chipping away of support for Biden, whether it's blacks, whether it's Hispanics, whether it's the working class, whether it's young people. And all it takes is, you know, 10,000 people here, a couple thousand people here in six swing States. We all know that where she is somewhat right is on black women.
Starting point is 02:07:12 Black women are not going in Trump's favor, but the black homies, the dudes, the fellas, the men overwhelmingly are starting to support Trump. Now is he going to get the majority of the vote? No, but all he needs to take it is from 10 to 15 to 20. That's it. Do you think that's possible? I do I actually think Trump will get more votes than any Republican in 2024 and then what will happen is in 2028 what Trump is likely no longer the nominee it will go back to reality when a different Republican comes in there. But I think Trump is going to get a large percentage of the black vote, especially men. And just really fast, why would you say that he's not definitely not going to get any of
Starting point is 02:07:54 the black female votes? Like what would you say is the large percentage? I'm saying, well, I'm just curious to why. I think men identify with Trump more than women. I think the biggest issue with Democrats, Biden, is abortion, women's rights. Look at all the data out there. But no group is a monolith. The blacks vote this way. The whites vote this way. The Jews do this. The Catholics do that. We're all individuals here. So she's lumping the blacks. This is what black people do. No,
Starting point is 02:08:23 that's identity politics. It's actually bullshit. That's exactly, exactly what MLK talked about against being. So people are going to vote for their best self-interest and that's totally okay. Yeah. And I just think, I mean, I don't know what, cause obviously look at the channel she's on. She's a, she's a talking head for MSNBC. She's obviously hasn't been seeing what's happening all over the country. I don't know. You remember the rally this guy had in New York, how many minorities were going absolutely berserk for Donald Trump? I mean, bro, if you need everything from economic policies to opportunities to criminal justice reform, to cultural social issues, everything that's happening,
Starting point is 02:08:58 bro, she's completely delusional. And I still, I can't believe it because it's the channel that we're on, but they're still playing the Donald Trump is racist, Hitler, all that shit. And I think people are just tired of it because the truth has been exposed, bro. We've had four years of the actual racist, dude, because look at Joe Biden's history. Look at all the shit that's coming out of his mouth. He's the guy. That's the racist guy.
Starting point is 02:09:21 But you're never going to hear any of that shit from him. You know, it's funny is words talk number scream And the first thing is this this chick should change her name to Cleopatra because she is the denial is up here if she is showing you the more domesticated a Strain of Trump derangement system. She is living in denial and real stats. It's not disinformation it's disinflation. That's the problem. It's dis damn inflation is the problem. Because if you look at the numbers,
Starting point is 02:09:54 and let's split it up. You know, let's go black women, Trump is up. Black men, Trump is up significantly. Black people over 40, he's up significantly. Black younger people, not as much, just a tick. But you look at it overall, and he's moved. And you've seen people that look at the aggregate charting when all of those people were uphold, and we've seen polls on here that even two weeks ago we had where you had, you know,
Starting point is 02:10:22 all the CNN person did was manage to hold their voice from saying, holy crap, when they were talking about the change from one election to the other. Oh, he was like 6% over here and now it's like 12% over here. Let me tell you, in a razor thin election, you can't lose 1% of anything you had last time. This was it here. We won't look through it again, but this lady was on flip out. Are you kidding me? She couldn't believe it. Yeah. I remember. So forget about it.
Starting point is 02:10:49 Let's say it's not 22. Let's say it's only 15. That's still is 50% more. Is this the older one? No, this, this is the one that was just, uh, this is just 20. But Rob, do me a favor while he's talking, uh, look at what happened in 2016 and 2012 and in 2008. I mean Obama took 95% of the black vote. Of course. So we get that. So look at the history of the Republican percentage of black vote. I think Trump again is going to get so much higher than it's maybe since maybe Bush in 2000.
Starting point is 02:11:18 I don't know. Check the numbers on that. Tom, you're super tight with the black community. Continue. Go ahead, Tom. It's the, well, I'm super tight with the numbers and the number the numbers are saying if let's say you don't believe the 22 Let's hair kid it back all the way to 15 percent. That would mean from 9 to 15 is 50 percent more African American votes are going to be are coming to Trump than they were before and I think it can
Starting point is 02:11:42 Probably be double because the numbers are there. But like I say, you said one thing that was correct, Adam, it's the adult black males have moved significantly. Adult black females, not as much. Look at that number right there. But the adults, black adults have moved a lot. Got it.
Starting point is 02:11:59 Thank you, Tom. Let's look at that, Tom. Look at that. 1932, black support for Republican presidential candidates 77% What happened from 32 to 36? That's the Great Depression, FDR. So black voters used to be full-on Republicans, drops to 28, hovers between 23 to 39 and 56. Then you got Barry Goldwater, 1960. Goldwater ruined it. Destroys it, goes from 32% to 6%. 15, 13, 17, 14, 9, 11, 10, 12, 9, 11, 4, 6, 8, 12. If he gets 18, it'll be the highest ever since Goldwater.
Starting point is 02:12:46 What's the highest number since Goldwater that we've seen? 17. 76. That's what? In 76? Who was in 76? Jimmy Carter? No. That was Gerald Ford. Gerald Ford. No, Jimmy Carter was 76. Carter won in 76. Yeah, correct. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 02:13:01 Carter won, but that's Gerald Ford. Yeah, but what he's saying is Carter is the similar case study of Joe Biden, which is helping the other side to get a lot of the African American. Look at Trump's numbers specifically. 2016, he got what percentage? Is that 8%? 8 or 9? 8.
Starting point is 02:13:18 8%. 2020, he got 12%. 50% more. Okay, 50% more. So if he just does 50% more now and he's at 15 to 18%, that's double than what he did 12 percent. 50 percent more. Okay, 50 percent more. So if he just does 50 percent more now and he's at 15 to 18 percent, that's double than what he did in 2016. That's all that matters here, is that Trump is increasing double from what 2016 was. Let's go to one. Bobby, can you pull up the Assyrian support for Republican presidential candidates? Huge vote. You gotta get that vote.
Starting point is 02:13:40 You gotta get the Assyrian vote. Can we see that chart Rob? Three families. Three people. Pat, we're almost out of here. While we're on politics, can we go one more thing? Yeah. Okay, over the past couple of weeks, did some moving. Found something in a garage. It was a box of stuff that my grandmother had. And had a ticket for the Gibson game. Gibson-Horan-Dyke.
Starting point is 02:14:02 And she had operated because there were only a few schools and a few fire stations way back when, Woodland Hills, California, she actually operated as a polling place out of her garage because she had a floral shop in her garage and she had a polling place. And so there's a few things that were kept there. And I found this box of stuff and I found some political memorabilia. Used to be campaign buttons that people would wear, you know, I'm with Ike and things like this. And this is the one from 1972, Dick Nixon versus George McGovern. And this is the one and it is, can we have it? Can we have close? Can you give me a close one here? It says lick dick in 72. This is what you want to
Starting point is 02:14:42 search. This is from the Democrats. This is the Democrats because they called him Nick Nixon and back in 72 while they're really going to lick them used to be a phrase for your team's gonna win and it was not negative. But now you look back. I am disgusted closer to your face. They put over here. This is kind of crazy. So you know what? Politics has always been crazy. I never thought the phrase lick dick would have been used by you on this podcast.
Starting point is 02:15:10 Especially your grandmother had this. His nana. Your nana. God rest her soul. I don't understand. This is 50 years old. That's unbelievable. Tom, I don't want to hear what you were doing 50 years ago. Well, at least you did it at the end where parents... This is the earmuffs last 30 minutes. Well, at least you did it at the end where parents, this is the earmuffs last 30 minutes, all the earmuffs. Anyways, let's go to the last part before we wrap up. If you are a waiter or a waitress or in the restaurant business, this has been a bad podcast for you.
Starting point is 02:15:37 Kevin O'Leary, we blame you. You started it and we went into it. We talked about a bunch of different things with restaurants. However, here's some encouraging news for you. There's this man who used to live in New York, now he lives in Florida, who is running to be the president in 2024, who wants you to pay no taxes on your tips as a waiter or a waitress. And it's very important for you to pay attention to this.
Starting point is 02:16:01 Go ahead, Rob. Play this clip. No tax on tips. Okay? It's done. Done! Leave him. And we need to spread the word so that every time you leave a tip for the next five months, you put on the receipt, vote for Trump because there's no tax on tips. I love him. Look at him. Yeah, that's what on tips. Look at them. Yeah, that's what's up.
Starting point is 02:16:28 Look at you. You see that? Yeah. That was done. See the screen? That was done by somebody. They voted. This is a person paying.
Starting point is 02:16:37 And they said, vote for Trump. There'll be no tax on tips. That's a person that was not, that was a tipster as opposed to a tippy. Listen, I want him to win so bad. I miss him so much. You have Joe Biden just passing out. Let me ask you a question. Let me ask you a question.
Starting point is 02:16:58 Rob, can you do me a favor? Pull up the following number. Total numbers of waiters and waitresses in America. Total number of waiters and waitresses in America total number of waiters and waitresses in America okay total number of waiters and waitresses in America what is the number I'm actually curious okay so 1.965 million voters not voters who really voters waiters and waitresses now seven percent women here's a question for you of the waiters and waitresses now seven years and women here's a question for you of the waiters and waitresses The question I got for you is what percentage of waiters and waitresses you think vote Democrat? Oh?
Starting point is 02:17:32 80% I think it's probably 80% Why would you say that I would say 70 80% well it's 70% women women overwhelmingly What do you think? 70? I don't know what the later vote really is. Guys, there's not a big difference between 70 and 80%. Let's say 70% to just make you Democrats happy here, okay? So 70%.
Starting point is 02:17:55 All right. If it's 70%, how many people really vote because of what their parents vote for or what their peers vote for. They don't really give a shit about politics. They're like, man, I think this party's going to be better for me. Who are going to be sitting there saying, bro, how much money you make this month on tips? $4,000. Why don't you pay tips on it?
Starting point is 02:18:17 But what is taxes on tips right now, Rob? Is there a specific tax on tips? Or you just pay whatever your ordinary income is? What is taxes on tips right now? No, no, I think there's a, hey, this is a good question. I think there is an implied. If your tips each month are $20 or more, they're taxable income. They're also subject to Social Security and Medicare tax withholding.
Starting point is 02:18:36 If you receive $20 or more in cash tips, report that income to your employer. Your employer will report your tips to W-2 on Box 7. Okay, so go a little lower to see if there's any, how much of your tips are taxed? Click on that one right there where it says how much of your tax are taxed. All cash and non-cash tips are received by an employee and subject to federal. Okay, so it's ordinary income, let's say, give or take. Yep, and the cash is down, I read about this. Tips mostly are on credit cards, so it's 100% trackable if it's all on all on credit cards and ends up on your tax. I see what you're saying. I think
Starting point is 02:19:07 I think that makes sense. I would say even 20% is cash, the rest is probably on card. Okay, out of that 1.965 million, what percentage of the 70% you think flips? Where does 70 go to? What does 70 go to? Does it have that big of an edge? If they're hearing that message because nobody's like CNN's not playing that MSNBC's not. Of course. They're definitely not playing that. What do you think it goes to? This is a part of America suffering in the affordability crisis.
Starting point is 02:19:35 I think the 70 goes to a 50. At least 50. Okay. Maybe more. So let's just say it's 50. Okay, go up a little bit. 50, 20% on 2 million, it's what? 400,000, let's say only 70% of them vote. 280,000 votes. It's really around 280,000 votes. That's
Starting point is 02:19:52 280,000 votes that you didn't have before. But it's such an interesting angle to take. By the way, if you're somebody that knows somebody who knows somebody who's a waiter or waitress, send this clip to them. Maybe they don't know. Share it with them. Say, it's very open, easy text with this clip. All you have to say is, did you hear about this? Question mark. Thoughts? Question mark. Did you know about this? Question mark. What do you think about this? Question mark. Will this change to influence the way you vote? Question mark. Send it in a text and just see how people react to it. Because there's a part of it where a person's going to sit there and say, man, I made $28,000 on taxes last, on TIP last year, and I paid, say, 20% taxes on the $28,000.
Starting point is 02:20:33 $5,600? You mean to tell me I get that money back? Yeah. $5,600, that's my car insurance and my cell phone payment. You mean my cell phone's going to be free and my car insurance? Yes. Dude, listen, I won't tell anybody, but I just may vote for this guy. And by the way, let me do some math for people. A restaurant owner has to pay the FICA and
Starting point is 02:20:55 Social Security, which is roughly 8% total, on the tip. If Adam or someone tips $20, I'm the restaurant owner, I gotta pay 7% on that tip to the federal government on behalf of the employee. So no tips is also helping PBD restaurant owners at a time where they desperately need help. That is such a good point, Tom. That is such a good point. Adam, last thoughts, we'll wrap it up.
Starting point is 02:21:24 Listen. Come on. This thought is inspired by Tom's lick dick situation just a second ago. No pun intended. The whole Trump speech right there, one of the top 10 funniest speeches I think Tom's done. Kids are talking about the tips and the tippies. It's like I can see him being Vince Vaughn in old school right now and he's just like, listen, let's just, you know, get back to my place and make a couple bad decisions and play a game of, you know, just a tip, just for a little bit, just see how it feels. No big deal. Okay. Uh, that's kind of where I think Trump was going with this, but here's the reality. If you make tips,
Starting point is 02:21:53 AKA cash, you know, all these people are not reporting how much cash they make, but that's the reality with the cash. So like, I don't think, I don't think this is going to make that big of a difference. Uh, just a tip. We'll see how it goes. I think it is. I think it is. I think because 80% of tips are paid by credit card. Listen, if you want to know, every time I go to Angelo's, Adam, you've been around me. How often do I have cash to tip people? Honestly. No, I always give the cash. No, no. But what I'm saying is, wait, I paid a $500 bill, you pay $10.
Starting point is 02:22:22 That's our group. I get that. But the way he said it, like he said, eye roller. I always take the burden of the tip. The word of the day is busted. I will carry that responsibility with me. It's a scarlet letter I will win. Very noble. Listen, I applaud you.
Starting point is 02:22:40 I applaud you. Just a tip, baby D. That's all I'm... I applaud you. But what I'm saying to you is, I don't have cash. Yeah, I understand. So I never, I don't, I don't, I, by the way, this was when he said one minute, I actually put a timer for you to do one minute. Alright, dang. By the way, for those of you that are going to be out there on 4th of July, this one's about to sell out and this one's about to sell out. Go to VTMerch.com, represent the flag, represent the Valuetainment gear, run into other people who say, man, I'm a Valuetainer too, because if they see this sign, the logo of Valuetainment,
Starting point is 02:23:17 future looks bright, you're part of good community. Again, go place the order. I think we've got four more spots left on the $300 order, because I think six more orders were placed. Having said that, Rob, tomorrow is Stephen Greer. I watched the documentary The Lost Century. I told everybody to watch it. Stephen Greer and I, two and a half hour podcast tomorrow.
Starting point is 02:23:37 Stephen Greer this week was Billy Carson. Tomorrow Stephen Greer. You can only imagine the conversations I'm having with kids right now. We're talking about aliens. We're talking about Trump right now. We're talking about aliens. Yes. We're talking about Trump's uncle. We're talking about Nikola Tesla. We're talking about teleporting. We're having very interesting conversations with the kids.
Starting point is 02:23:53 Have a great weekend. We'll see you tomorrow and then we'll do it again next week. God bless everybody. Bye bye, bye bye.

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