Some More News - Double Strike, Bill Maher, and EVEN MORE Burning Man Questions
Episode Date: September 8, 2023Hi. Dani Fernandez (@msdanifernandez) joins Katy and Cody to discuss how the WGA and SAG may soon be victorious against the Hollywood studios, the conspiracy theories swirling around Burning Man, and ...Vivek Ramaswamy's eight favorite songs. Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Some More News and Even More News audio podcasts: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews If you want to take ownership of your health, try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 Free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. Go to https://drinkAG1.com/MORENEWS. Factor, America’s #1 Ready-To-Eat Meal Kit, can help you fuel up fast with chef-prepared, dietitian-approved ready-to-eat meals delivered straight to your door. Head to https://factormeals.com/morenews50 and use code morenews50 to get 50% off. It’s always Labor Day for your butt — save 40% off ALL bidets and bundles by visiting https://hellotushy.com/morenews and using promo code MORENEWS. Sale ends September 11th.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome back to even more news the first and only news podcast my name is Katie
Stoll.
Hi Katie Stoll quick update on that we're actually the only podcast I just found out
that's the news that's the news that's
a really big news story i know breaking hi i'm cody johnson you heard it here first yeah i mean
i listen to this podcast is the only one and it's only news podcast how i get my news and then there
we go breaking news people love this thank you cody johnson joining us today again how many times has it been i don't know
at least a few is danny fernandez not question mark i was okay i need to explain the way that
that happened danny was was holding up her hand and it was like had like a quizzical look and so
i i don't know i added a question mark it. It's Danny Fernandez. I'm Ron Burgundy.
Three times, right?
Maybe three, four.
Three times, I think.
I think three sounds right.
Yeah.
Okay.
Three, Peter.
Here I am.
Wow.
You're like family now.
I am.
I am in.
Yeah, you're in the fam.
We got to come up with a term for that.
I don't want to steal other podcast terms, but friend of the pod gets used a lot sure sure sure we're not doing that we don't do that
enemy of the pod known mortal enemy of the pod
okay holidays we've got them yes jonathan also who said do you know who sent us that holiday that video that wonderful find
it was at razzy saldana on twitter pointed out that marketplace did a segment on the big business
of wacky holidays and spoke to thomas roy of wellcat fame um of wellcat fame if you listen
to this podcast every single week yeah this specific or i guess if you've watched that little video it is yeah you happen to catch this piece but he took he tells
the story about the beginning of their creation of wacky holidays and how they've made not much
a few thousand dollars off but yeah there is some big business anyway well that was fun thank you
what respond to your email you know what he didn't do? It's very interesting.
Respond to your emails and questions, Jonathan.
To the mainstream media, but to us, a little independent upstart podcast.
Wishing to celebrate holidays for the joy of celebrating holidays, and that's it?
And you won't even return our call.
I only asked him to do a little bit of free work.
That's it.
And he decided not to respond anyway september 8th is national iguana awareness day the days observed is the
perfect chance to learn more about the good keeping of your pet iguana jonathan properly
flagged if you have a pet iguana i hope you're aware that you have a pet iguana and know what to feed it.
Yeah.
You don't need a day to learn how to take care of your pet.
You should do that on the day that you got your pet.
There's no like how to take care of a dog awareness day.
No, you get a dog and you learn how to take care of your dog.
Counterpoint.
And I agree with you completely.
But counterpoint.
Maybe they just need to soften the language and be more inclusive in this holiday so that that it's not just for you know iguana pet owners but for all of us
because i don't know very much about iguana and i iguanas and i should have more of an awareness
i don't know how to keep a pet iguana i will never keep one but i don't iguana awareness day
katie well right come on i'm not a part of this holiday so well you can be
only if I get a pet Iguana
only if you get a pet Iguana
I feel like
no it's just like
rare pet
like they need more appreciation
I appreciate that
because
dog and cat people
we've ruled the world
forever
rightfully so
we always will
I know
we will
I hope that dogs have edged out
just a little bit more
as I was a former cat person I am one of those stereotypical where I like did a PowerPoint
in fifth grade asking my parents, like, I deserve a cat.
I should get a cat.
I was obsessed with cats.
Had like cat stuffed animals.
Of course, I got an orange tabby when I was in fifth grade.
Thought it was a girl.
Wanted to name her Crystal, as you do in fifth grade.
Turned out it was a boy, he turned into Snickers,
because he reminded me, I guess he looked like
the inside of a, what am I thinking, like a Kit Kat?
No, Butterfinger, he looked like he was a horse.
He looked like the inside of a Butterfinger.
So I had a cat named Snickers and Oreo.
Then when I was like 18, I got my dog Molly,
who I still have.
Anyone that follows me, she pops up quite a bit.
And it was a game changer. I'm sorry.
I've seen people convert to dogs.
I've seen people.
Over and over again.
And, you know, you can learn to love cats.
For sure.
For sure. Oh, cats are wonderful. We love cats.
But I don't think that you.
Why are you saying it like that?
I love cats yeah i don't think that you i don't know that i love cats this is the first time i haven't had a cat in my whole life but i there's a freedom in it guys there
just is in cats versus dogs you mean no no in in only having a dog but yes once we i would say
there's more freedom in having a cat oh for sure but like dogs are so social they're just like oh you take them to the beach
you like the dog can come with me yeah that is true dog is just like and he's a dog is definitely
constant companions but yes a cat will ruin your couch and eat your plants and throw them up your
plants throw them up and a cat will always shit in a box unless you want them to be outdoor cats and then
not come home okay this took a turn anyway we've got another holiday here we go here we go september
8th is pardon day a day to give and seek forgiveness pardon me for my stance on cats i
don't know also we just blew right past the iguana part real quick
but um it's okay rare pets we appreciate them pardon day congratulations you're you're different
than special we appreciate you by taking the whole combo over with cats and dogs exactly
pardon day so this appears to be related to september 8th being the day that gerald ford
pardoned richard nixon oh god so this is
pardon day so we're celebrating that i don't know we're mentioning it at least i like having a full
day dedicated to forgiving someone or yourself or like even reaching out for something that you've
been meaning to ask for forgiveness for it is mercury retrograde so please don't text your exes uh specifically me so
you want to put that in the description to make sure everybody knows
danny you're the best thing that ever happened to me um what happened what happened to us oh my god
uh yeah but i like that like oh i've been i've been, I've been meaning to, uh, make amends with this
person. So I'm going to use this day or I'm going to just forgive this person. It's clear that it's
haunting them and I have all the power and control. I don't know. This is getting very specific. Okay.
No, I like where you're going with this. This is Stani. This is what we love. I like that energy.
I like that insight. I bet there is. I was going to say, there's got to be like Forgiveness day, gratitude day
Things like that
Make amends day, there probably are specific days for that
And the use of the word pardons
Feels very official
It's very like, yeah
Mechanical
It's sort of like
Happy pardons day to you
What we do to criminal presidents
Criminal people But I like where you're going, well. What we do to criminal presidents. Yeah. Criminal people.
But I like where you're going with it, and I'm going to stick with that.
We pardon whoever made this stupid holiday.
I get Gerald Ford, I guess.
We forgive you, Gerald.
We forgive you.
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Hi there.
It's Katie Stoll from the show you're watching
or listening to.
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Dani. Yes. Hi. We're so glad to have you here. We'll chit chat a little bit. You have a new film in the static. Yeah, it's my short film.
Tell us a little bit about it. Yeah. So so this is so crazy. I actually filmed it last year. I actually filmed it, yeah, in September of last year. I got my EP, Ben Lopez, who's great. He's a great Latino mentor in the community. I was just, we met for lunch and I was telling him like, oh, I'm working on this show and I have this film and I blah, blah, blah. And I was like, I almost didn't mention it. I was like, I have this horror short.
almost didn't mention it. I was like, I have this horror short. It's about a woman who she sees a traumatic experiment in her office's laboratory that she wasn't supposed to see. And then she
has PTSD and we're meeting her in the film on her first day back at work. And she slowly starts to
hear her coworkers talking about her and her electronics. And so she starts, it deals with
gaslighting. And it stemmed from, well, what I was going to say is Ben was like, I kind of just want to
help you make this. And we ended up funding it almost entirely on our own. It was me, Robert
Butler, the third, who's the director and Ben just put all of it. So it's like a true indie.
We didn't even do a, even though Kickstarters are also indies, but like we didn't even do a
Kickstarter for it. I just kind of was like, if you give me some money to make this, I will make
this. And within like a month we made it.
Like we got the location, we got the cast, we got the crew.
We, I don't know, it was like on the ground, you know,
just reminded me of that really hardcore indie filmmaking.
So anyways, it stemmed from my grandparents leaving me a voicemail that kept going.
And I was like, should I keep listening to this?
It's like that fear where you're like,
you know, if you're in the bathroom stall
and then people come in and they're talking about you
and you're like, oh, I shouldn't be here.
I shouldn't hear what they're saying about me.
And I was like, what is the most heightened version of this?
Her coworkers, she thinks are trying to kill her.
And so, yeah, who hasn't had that thought right um
that my co-workers are trying to kill us every day all the time he does there's a lot of gaslighting
there's a lot of gaslight especially in hollywood that i've dealt with and robert my director has
as well so we bonded over that uh shot it you know edit it and then it premiered at la leaf
uh i think in j, that's a Latino
national film festival. We also got into Essence Fest. So we got to premiere it in New Orleans.
Amazing. It was at, yeah, the Michaud Film Festival. So please follow us, follow me and
Robert because we, as we're getting into more fests around the country and hopefully internationally
as well, we've been posting those, but it's, I'm just so happy. Cause it was like just this thing, this idea that I had that we ran and threw together. Um, cause we wanted
to finish it in a deadline and then now it's getting into a bunch of festivals. So I congratulations.
Thank you. Huge congratulations on so many levels. So many thoughts. Well, first off,
it sounds very interesting and I can't wait to see it, but how nice to be. Well, first off, it sounds very interesting and I can't wait to see it,
but how nice to be, well, first, yes. How quickly things can get done when you're not working with
a big studio, when you don't have a bunch of people who are clouding the actual vision,
when you get the opportunity and it's really reinvigorating personally, whenever I have that
kind of an opportunity, when you're describing it, I was like, have that kind of an opportunity when you're describing
it i was like yeah that's the best when you're working so hard and you really believe in it and
it's just magical but i am glad that like that must be a nice contrast to uh everything else
other stuff we're going to talk about yeah we're transitioning into talking about right now um
you know what i was going gonna say is it's so
weird that it came out like so it premiered during the first month of wga's strike right i was on
strike and so it just kind of felt very divine like divine timing of like wow i can't believe
that like the like i actually have something that i can promote and can devote my energy to while everything
else is shut down.
So I mean, in some ways I was like, damn, I can't believe I have to take it upon myself
to create this.
It's just, I feel like probably a lot of indie directors and people can relate to that of
like, well, if they're not going to let me do it, I'm just going to allow myself to do
it.
So yeah.
So I feel really, and I just want to say one other point about it that I, it has to do with, you know,
being a woman and being a woman of color. And actually a lot of the cast is queer. I felt like
we have an innate intuition when it comes to danger that society is constantly trying to get
us to ignore. And that's what I wanted to showcase. It's a woman who can sense that
something is wrong. And I feel we can tell that and that, that safety, you know, that we've
developed over centuries, like she's, they want her to ignore it to her detriment. And so I don't
know. I just wanted that message, especially for women. Yeah. Oh, I mean, I got a little tiny chill
when you were describing that just now i'm like yeah
no that sounds powerful it sounds really great um but a really smart way of of approaching the
topic too yeah and pivoting to the double strike and you are uh in both you are in both the wga
and in sag so i mean we were chit-chatting right before we start actually
say it record but how many so you've been hundreds of days now like 10 000 years um let's see wga is
probably day 128 i don't know when this comes out but yeah one one i think we're like 128
sag is 50 plus which went by real quick.
I thought it was like, yeah, SAG has been on strike for like a month.
No, it's been two months.
It seems, yeah, that seems longer.
Yeah.
I'm sure that there's more people out there too.
I don't know.
It is fun.
I obviously am in the mountains, and so I haven't been in L.A. very much.
But when I'm there, I've been there, and and it's very fun but it's also very exhausting and for everybody that has been doing and especially
you know showing up in such leadership capacities and being really consistent and it's it's honestly
it's hard to wrap my mind around the energy that it requires especially people need to pay rent
you need to work you need to be paying your bills
still. I don't know. It just. Well, I will say, you know, that that article came out very famously
about the anonymous exec that was like, you know, we're waiting for them to lose their homes or
whatever. And everyone was kind of like, LOL, we don't own homes. And they already had made it a
gig economy, to be honest. So I don't know anyone who wasn't used to going without work for long periods of time.
And so you're used to picking up other gigs or having relationships that like, oh, this
restaurant I used to work at or the movie theater I used to work at or whatever.
Like they know I might book a job and be there for a little bit and then come back to it.
So it just shows to me also how out of touch they are.
And I want to say that about some folks, some folks even in
our guild who have said stuff like, oh, well, I see both sides. And I'm like, you're so out of touch
with the working actor. I want to say we are a working class union. Very, you know, infamously
our statistic that over 87% of SAG's membership doesn't qualify for healthcare. You have to make at least about 26 grand to qualify.
So the majority of our membership
doesn't even make 26 grand.
So they are your average cashier, waiter,
bartender, nanny, whatever.
I think people think that everybody in SAG is Meryl Streep,
not, oh, the waiter who serves Meryl Streep in this,
the stunt actor who gets punched out,
you know, or whatever.
Like those, we need all those jobs,
which is also why we're fighting AI because they're trying to replace those with AI
by scanning them and like,
oh, well, you could be in the background
of all Gladiator 2 or whatever.
We don't need you.
But we need all those.
We are working class.
Well, yeah.
And I've said this on this show before but i'm gonna say it
again on a note on background actors one of the few ways that you can become a part of our union
is through background work so what are we talking about in terms of the future of the industry if
you if we're eliminating one of the few avenues people have to get their foot in the door also
like it's just like the idea of ai background actors like okay so you scan their face and then
you use them in other movies in the future are they like then like are they act are they acting
in the background are they doing a good job like can you use your ai as like part of your real
like look at my really great ai acting in the background of gladiator 2 i wasn't really in it i wasn't on set but look how great i'm doing uh it's such a weird mess there's just
it is and to this point i i it's so it's been frustrating we've talked about this before but
like that sort of this misconception that seems to be on purpose like what you're talking about
like yeah we're not talking about meryl streep we're talking about the person serving meryl
streep and we've it's so bizarre to see,
especially on like Twitter, obviously,
which is like a cesspool.
But like, it seems like a purposeful misunderstanding.
Anytime I see like Aaron Paul talks about how like,
he doesn't get anything for Breaking Bad on Netflix.
And I was like, whoa, you're a famous actor.
Kevin Bacon came out.
There's a quote from Kevin Bacon yesterday.
I'm just going to read it.
It's really short and simple because the concept is simple.
In terms of the rich actors, a very small percentage of our union is doing very well.
Most people are living hand to mouth.
Those are the people we are striking for.
My situation is not the same as the majority of our union.
It's so easy to understand that people who are famous actors and very wealthy are striking
so that people who aren't
can get a fair deal.
Like it all trickles down.
The whole point of a union is to raise wages for everybody and be able to have this influence.
If you're Kevin Bacon or whatever, it's frustrating to see people not get it.
At this point, it's very disingenuous when people are making that argument or,
you know,
trying to,
um,
I think there are some people that are not immersed in entertainment and,
you know,
pop culture and the way that we are and are somewhat confused or not aware
of anything related to entertainment,
what it takes or the fact that there are different actors on their screen you know that like how many people are involved with this commercial or that
production it's not just the stars they might not think of in the same way this is not an excuse um
it's just a very frustrating thing it's something that i've run up against you know conversations
up here too talking about the strike you know i've heard like well then don't be an actor don't and and i
say just what what do you what do you mean by that though do you want there to be no entertainment
because i know what you do is you come home and you watch tv we're in this bar right now
that's wedding crashers on the screen everybody's saying wait i love this part so what are you talking
about because what this matters for the development of culture you know i think it's a complete like
disrespect of the arts as well because the goalposts constantly get moves whenever i say
like oh 87 of us can't even afford health care um they'll be like well then don't sign up to be an
actor don't sign up to be a writer. Don't sign up to be a writer
and then complain about how much you get paid. And then I'm like, okay, well, are you saying only
rich people should pursue the arts? Because that's already what's going on. It's very skewed
towards one demo, I will say for the history of cinema. And then there's this like, well,
real hard workers are these people or whatever. I'm like, okay, well, even if I were to look at
immigrant migrant workers, like so many folks came here to give their kids a better life. And now that we're
able to actually pursue and have a better life, I'll just speak about my own community, the Latino
community. Now that we actually have Mexican directors and stars, and I wish I could name
some of the films that came out this summer, but had a Mexican star as a superhero, you know,
you're telling us, oh, no, no, no, no,
you need to go back to being a worker. Like you need to go back to doing labor. You don't deserve
to do this. And it's just like, you keep moving the goalposts, you know? And so it's like, are we
not allowed to pursue the arts? Are we not allowed to dream? And then another thing I kept seeing,
which actually, actually Francesca Ramsey has been great making a lot of videos. She was like,
what do you want me to make my next video on? I said, you have to address that they keep
saying teachers, it's teachers who should be the ones that are striking. I'm like, one teachers
are striking. Oakland teachers were on strike. If you want to show up to their picket line, you can
to who taught us how to write, who taught us how to act? My lit teacher, oh my God, I was like the stereotypical English nerd.
I was obsessed with my English teachers and growing up reading The Lion, the Witch, and
the Wardrobe and Pride and Prejudice.
And that is what got me into pursuing to be a writer and later an actor.
So you're spitting on them as well.
All of the kids that are coming up after us, we're striking right now to allow them
to even have a sustainable future to dream.
But like the idea-
And it's still gonna be hard,
even if it's gonna be hard.
It's gonna be almost impossible, but you know.
But it's one of those things that like,
oh, you live in America,
you should be able to be anything you want
until you are actually that thing.
And then it's like, shut the hell up, sit down.
And I'm like, the reason why we have a union
and we can strike is because we have power in this.
And so many folks are not even in our union.
I'm like, why do you care?
You're not paying us.
You're not the studio.
You're not the one, you know what I mean?
So I don't know.
That definitely, I feel I've gotten it
from every possible angle, every possible argument.
And now I don't reply.
Good plan.
I did 150 or whatever.
I stopped replying.
What's the point at this point?
Yeah.
It's weird also, all the things you just said.
Obviously, it's very frustrating.
But then you hear people who are actually in the guild say that.
I think you alluded to, I think it might be Bill Maher maybe.
Well, we're going to play that clip.
Oh, good.
Then I'll wait.
Yeah.
This is a good time to talk about that clip.
The strike is a perfect example.
Those guys would never go back.
This strike could go on until the 24th century.
They would stay out.
I feel for my writers.
I love my writers.
I'm one of my writers.
But there's a big other side to it.
And a lot of people are being hurt besides them.
A lot of people who don't make as much money as them.
In this bipartisan world we have,
where you're just in one camp or the other,
there's no in between.
You're either for the strike,
like they're
fucking Che Guevara out there.
You know, like this is Cesar Chavez lettuce picking strike, or you're with Trump.
You know, there's no difference.
Point of the strike.
There's only two camps, and it's much more complicated than that.
Initially, first, bipartisan is not the word there.
This bipartisan world we live in bipartisan means
like two parties like working together to get something done that is not what he's talking
about he's talking i think he's mean polarized whatever he's high in the clip probably it's fine
you make it that way by saying that kind of shit because it doesn't have to be that way like
you know that's the way you're perceiving it i don't know who he actually is
talking about specifically who is getting hurt first time i watched it i assumed he meant
you know all the people in the entertainment industry crew members or everybody else yeah
and now i'm thinking he's talking about executives that don't. I think he's talking about producers and execs.
I think he's talking about producers and execs.
And we should shit all over what he's talking about.
I want to say, like, yeah, I do care very much about all the people that are out of work right now.
People are struggling.
It's a big deal.
It's not the actors and the writers fault.
Yeah.
Every other day there's a new headline like yeah
this fucking streaming service is valued at tens of billions of dollars but like we can't give you
a little like it's an it's ridiculous and obvious how much they are holding on to when they do not
need to do that and hearing bill maher talk about it's so frustrating he's such a little weasel
what do you mean you're either sheik ravaraara or for Trump? Why is he bringing up Donald Trump
in this conversation at all? He has literally nothing to do with this. I feel like he's got
these personal interactions he's had where someone's like, oh, you disagree with this,
so you're Trump. It's like, why are you bringing that into this?
One, everyone is affected. And I want to say that we're not asking for money. Like you
just said, we're not asking for money that's not there. We're asking for what we're really talking
about here, less than 2% of profits. That's what this whole thing is about. They make billions of
dollars. So it's not money that we haven't made them and it's not so if they posted a negative or they
may they're like we don't make any money we act like we lot we would not get anything do you does
that make sense yeah like the like we have tethered ourselves to this contract where it's like we're
asking for less than two percent of profits and that's what this whole and they've lost more than
that it's been documented what we asked for in the millions, they've already lost
doing this process. That's how badly they don't. And it's not, going back to that famous article
about us losing our homes or whatever, it's not that they can't give it to us. It's not that they
don't think we deserve it. It's that they don't want anyone else asking for it. Because now that
SAG is, then IOTC is going to, the team start they see like oh i can ask that's why
we called it hot strike summer right you see that strikes work and that's what and it's already i
think who was it variety or somebody was like uh the the writers won like you've got to surrender
yeah there's some also a few quotes from i think from executives literally saying that of like
they're worried about it sort of trickling to these other industries and other areas of the world where like people feel like they can collectively bargain and exercise their power.
And they know that that's what happens and they're worried about it.
But I think like, too, just how much our unions bleed into each other for every one actor, right?
You have the crew, you have the makeup person, you have their lighting person, you have their
driver, you have their...
And so they have been really...
Not only, obviously, have they been on the picket lines with us, but they've also been
the danger of AI and thinking that you can replace the writer or the actor.
And you're getting rid of 18 other jobs that are connected to that.
So have we affected other unions by striking?
Yes, of course.
But also we are supportive in them striking and they will be completely affected if we
are wiped out.
Right.
It's kind of like Chris Kaiser, who's on the board of our W, I think he's our, is he our
president?
Sorry, Chris Kaiser.
Sorry, Chris Kaiser.
Chris Kaiser, famous WGA writer, he's very eloquent, was like, there's no point in rushing back to a job that might not be there in a year.
And so that's why we're so holding out so strong.
It's just like truly when you look at the sustainability the next five to 10 years.
And I want to say something that I'm sure everyone that listens to you is aware, but I just feel I have to say this.
AI is not this like mysterious ethereal thing.
It's stolen work.
You're working off of stolen scripts.
It can't just come up with something on its own.
So you're feeding it Guillermo del Toro, Martin Scorsese or whatever.
You're feeding it like these scripts to then come up with, Oh, I want a Martin Scorsese
esque style film. And I think, I mean, I think he would sue them, which I'm curious to see more of
those. And then once you get that, uh, bad imitation of a Martin Scorsese script, then you
feed that script into it and then you get a worse thing. Yeah. Yeah. But, but it's not, so it's,
it's feeding off of stolen work it's not like it's
coming up with it on its own it's taking our work without our credit it's very disappointing to see
i mean some everybody suspects it and knows it but like seeing that like oh they just don't like
art or movies or artists or shows like they don't care they don't like it they're not get into this
for art they got into this to make it a big business yeah they don't care if anything's good this is about power and control it's not about exactly
it's not about it being good they don't give a shit about culture they don't they're probably
aware of the implications who are we in 20 years if everything is a facsimile of itself and big picture, who are we?
Yeah.
How do people think critically?
Are people inspired?
Are people happy?
Are there's,
there's so much that gets lost,
but they did.
That doesn't matter in any capacity because it's never been about art.
Well,
right.
Cause they define them.
They identify themselves and define themselves by the number in their bank
account.
And if it's going up,
then, then that's who they are. Right. Like, who are we? Well, I'm a rich guy, you know?
Danny, before we started recording, you mentioned that you think it's going to be resolved sooner than later.
Oh, yeah, I do. I do. I believe that article that was like, we've won.
Yeah.
It's very obvious we won the public opinion even as much as we deal
with bs i mean it's it's also been insane to see people siding with billionaires that's so weird
it's weird mentality and i'm like you i i know you're not being paid i love bob eicher what
but yeah i think i think it will what i was going to say is in this time, in our downtime, I actually rewatched the BBC version, the British version of Pride and Prejudice.
You know, like, ooh, Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy.
Like, ooh, those like, will they, won't they vibes.
And I was sitting there and I was like, holy shit.
They're trying to do this with like, I give a fuck if two robots fuck.
Like, I don't care. You know what fuck if two robots fuck like i don't care
you know what i mean why is like oh yeah i care i was like no these two actors it reminded me of
christian stewart and robert pattinson when we knew that they were like hooking up behind the
scenes at twilight and then they had the scene where they actually did first like and it was
like that tension that's just like do you think i care if you program a robot to do that i don't
give a fuck but i do care about these two actors who look like they can't keep their hands off each other and so i was just
watching that like wow that's like gonna be the state of cinema i don't care you know about that
so that's just like the the jim and pam and the however how many yeah chemistry is real and like
the reasons that we have real people doing these things or like real people writing
about their experiences too like all these things are yeah funneled into art you know how things
you can try to make a viral video you can try to do a thing that hits the cultural touchstones
and catches but it doesn't work because it's not authentic. And you cannot bottle up that.
You cannot quantify it into a program or whatever and just fake it.
That's what art always will be.
It's kinetic.
Okay.
We have to take a real quick break, but then we're going to be back.
Well, to finish listening to that Bill Mark.
Oh, God.
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just a little bit more yeah the stuff at the end is i think uh more telling than his weird like
if you don't like it you you'll like Trump or whatever.
Here we go.
They have really morphed a long way from 2007 Strike, where they kind of believe that you're owed a living as a writer, and you're not.
This is show business.
This is a make or miss league.
And not everybody—
You don't think that, like, like they should that streamers should reveal
numbers so that they can oh maybe sure so yeah there's something about this uh stuff at the end
it's weird and gatekeepy and conflating a few things because he seems to be saying that like
if you you you think that like you're owed a living as a writer, which yeah, you're owed a living as any job,
people who should be able to earn a living wage.
But he seems to be framing it like,
they're saying like everybody deserves to like get hired
and be like in the club.
Like it's this very sort of gatekeeping sort of approach
to the whole industry where he seems to think
that like the strike is to like, we need to be hired. It's like, be hired it's like no no if we're hired we need to get paid fairly it's just a weird sort
of framing of the situation and i think it speaks to sort of like his weird like right-wing reactionary
uh viewpoints of like the way like hierarchy should work and like well i made it i'm in the
club right and not everybody can be in the club because if there was in the club then like oh they're all sticky and gross
and like i want to be in the special club does that make sense like that's sort of the vibe i
get from him saying that like well there's no demand that the wga or sag is making that everyone
gets hired to do a ton of work all the time it's still gonna be the entertainment industry and no
one's making that argument right like make or break it's like yeah if you make it in the industry which means
you get a job then you should be paid fairly that's what it's about yeah emmy award winning
writers on food stamps or whatever this shouldn't be happening yeah it's very weird um and he's
keep everybody off of food stamps somehow but you know this is just part for the
course for him though it's it's not surprising it's just like weird that like he seems to not
understand it or is purposefully like framing it weird because even in like some of the stuff uh
elsewhere in the clip he's like talking about like all these wacky things that they want done
and gaffigan's like what and he's like ah the philosophy of you know everybody deserves it's
like so you're saying you think that they're going too far with their specific demands because
their specific demands are wacky but you can't name anything you just sort of say well the
philosophy behind it is what i disagree with so you don't actually think they're going too far
it's just like when jim gaffigan brings up one specific he's like oh sure
that's all that yeah right like his whole approach to i think it's his whole approach to everything
honestly is mostly like vibes based like he doesn't like the vibes of the strike so he's
like well surely their demands are wrong too well name one i want to defend bill maher just say it
just say not at all i want to move on to other topics, actually.
But how do I express this?
Bill Maher is about his audience.
Bill Maher, that's what's important to him.
So to answer the Trump question, all of it is right now.
That's how that's how everything is.
It's like I'm going to equate
this to the left somehow i am going to equate this and relate it to what's going on at large
so i can piggyback some of that because that's what my show is going to always be about we're
talking about this well how can i make it fit this bill that's 100 what this is his vibes are
we're annoyed at the left and boy a lot of the left is in hollywood
and look at them they're out there pretending they're revolutionaries when he hasn't thought
this through in any any kind of a real way he's just talking yeah well right that's exactly he's
a reactionary he's just gonna have this and like he'll get some points from that. And that will, it's, but it's so lazy.
I'm good on Jim for trying.
I would say that Jim Gaffigan is far too polite in this clip.
He's being so, he's being so gentle with him.
Oh, I know. But even, but even his like pushback is very gentle, which is fine.
Be polite and stuff.
You're on this show.
But I think he should have been a real piece of shit. It be it can be hard to to be that person um yes i think we
should i mean i could talk this whole time about this with you guys but there's some other stuff
that's been going on the big news of the week disaster at burning man well it started off with
a climate protest which you know what i'm grateful for because I did learn a lot about the impacts of Burning Man that are definitely at odds with what Burning Man should be about.
You know, like, yeah.
Oh, I was just going to say I had no idea this wasn't a music festival.
Like there's no music involved.
No, no. I know other people on Twitter were learning that.
I was like, what?
I've been aware of Burning Man.
You just go out there, but I thought there was like, I don't know.
I thought like Link 182 was going to play.
I thought like MGMT was going to show up.
Like what?
Yeah.
Well, there's like music in the air, right?
This is not like there's no concert aspect of it.
I've never been to Burning Man.
You're not going to hear electric feel.
There's just an electric feel in here.
You know, I've never been to Burning Man.
I've always been a little put off by it,
but I've known a lot of people over the years who swear by Burning Man
and find it to be a really beautiful experience.
And it's about self-sustainability.
And, you know, you build up an art and connection and community and self-reliance.
But it's not really that.
I mean, it's a party in the desert.
Right.
And I'm not going to judge people for wanting to go to a party in the desert,
but I was very surprised at, where's the statistic, how many jets they take?
Oh, God, what?
800 to 2,000 private jets every year.
Just for, and I was like.
Well, like most things like this, it's sort of, you know,
maybe it starts a little low key. Maybe it's got like, you know, maybe it starts a little low key.
Maybe it's got like, you know, a lot of the granola vibe going on.
And then slowly it's like, oh, influencers go.
Oh, tech people go.
Oh, it becomes the place that you charter a private jet and you go to Burning Man.
I think that's sort of the point it's at right now, right?
Yeah.
But there's still a lot of...
So my friend's husband is an architect and built
the temple this year designed it and so my friends were there and seemed to have a ultimately have a
nice time but you know they're very good people we should say that the reason we're talking about
this is because there were very heavy rains and the entire area turned into a big mud hole and people were stuck there for days at a time.
Yeah, this isn't like us just like,
let's piss on Burning Man for a while.
No, no, no.
I specifically wanted to bring this up
because there was a very collective reaction.
It was the news story of the weekend.
And I'm sure people here made jokes.
I don't know.
I haven't seen anybody's Twitter.
I'm sure some of our listeners have made jokes and that's fun.
We enjoy having fun.
There are some things that I found.
I don't know.
I didn't like the immediate assumption that everybody is a tech bro.
While that is a big part of it, they're just good people that are there as well.
And I don't need to shame anybody for their version of having a good time, for their version
of spirituality and community.
And so, you know, in the back of my mind there was that but also it's remarkable how quickly
lies just spread and propagate online it is shocking funny it's shocking and funny and
not great it's not great i guess it should, though. Wait, what exactly happened, though? I'll let Jonathan describe it.
Well, I think you're referring to the host of True Anon, Brace Belden, who posted some
satirical tweets joking about, you know, a hemorrhagic fever, i.e. Ebola spreading at
Burning Man.
But this got this took off really quickly and spread around to
the point where the ap had to do a fact check saying no fema hasn't been sent in there's no
ebola at burning man they're going through a a bit of a mud it's just like you see these people
sort of like grasp onto anything because they you know everybody is sort of um not everybody but
many people are just like craving they like the government's doing
a secret thing and we found out about it and they're trying to like lock us down or they're
trying to hide like the information and so as soon as you have somebody i don't know if the
truenon uh account has a blue check um but i like there's an element of like oh blue check shared
some information so we gotta they're trying to cover it up and so there are a lot of tweets
like yeah the government's like i've seen all these like army trucks come in um and they jump
on it and then they find out it's not real and i i saw a few uh quote unquote big blue check
accounts be like uh you know i'm i think it's it's now more important than ever to start fact
checking and like fact checking gets a bad name these days but i think it's important and it's like you're just learning now that you need to
do fact checking because you didn't like like factcheck.org saying trump said something or
whatever like five years ago better now for sure god it is the worst um you know i saw some
a girlfriend of mine who i love and adore in case she listens to this but she posted something where
she was like i think it was intentional i think she was like, I think it was intentional. I think she was like, do you guys think Burning
Man, like the response, it was like to, it was like an experiment to see how we would survive
in like these climate crisis situations. And I wrote, I'm going to read it right now. I was like,
I think you're giving folks way too much credit. I said, most humans will choose pleasure over
preparation. Plus since our own
hurricane tropical storm didn't do much in la they probably figured they'd take their chances
and she said i do think it was intentional to let them suffer and i'm just like i really think
you're like i don't know what that i just yeah but it was fascinating to see like even my friends
were kind of like well it it's hard to there is so much happening all the time and
different influences and different opinions and people and we have we all have access to it and
it is fascinating we are living through a time and will continue to and i think it's going to
become more pervasive where you'll be really taken aback by things that people we very much respect and are good friends
and be like where did you get that yeah or i think even they're like as we're living for the rest of
our lives in unprecedented times um i think you'll because it was just like well why would they go if
they knew i'm like baby they're there have you met a human it's perfect yeah like have you met
most people like they went because they took their chances like yeah they probably saw like oh it's like have you met most people like they went because they took their chances like
yeah they probably saw like oh it's forecasted for whatever i already got tickets i already got my rv
i'm gonna go anyways right it's not even like have you met people it's like have you met burning man
people yeah have you met yeah they're gonna go to burning man but also it's you know but like you
already said nine times out of ten the storms here aren't what you think they might be but also was this
forecast as some huge i don't know i maybe wouldn't have expected this amount of mud
yeah i'm curious and you you're not a mind reader you don't know your friend's uh exact theory
but i'm curious because there's again there's a sort of urge to like i gotta
something's going on right there's like some there's a sort of urge to like, I got to there's something's going on.
Right. There's like some sort of plan.
Right. Sinister thing behind it.
Right. But it also oftentimes comes up against like this, like a contradiction of like, well, what do you like to do what?
So I guess my question is, like, do you think that they meant like, oh, they're testing this out to see how well people would survive in these conditions to see if they would survive or to see if like is it to see like if they would not survive and then people would like move on
or like because like the how much how much do they think the government cares about our survival
and if they were worried about it wouldn't they like try to like educate people on how to deal
with these or like like implement like some sort of better infrastructure to deal with this i was in
high school in texas during hurricane katrina and i can tell like we had so many implants that came
that came in because of that so i can already tell you how the government feels about our right
caring about our survival but i really i i don't know i also don't want to you know i don't want to be
your friend growing up i saw people going out when there would be like a tornado warning it was like
well i'm gonna go to buffalo wild wings and it's just like you know look yeah people want their
wings you know that's just how it is i don't know the human beings we're constantly asking ourselves why. They make some of the choices that they do.
But I don't think it was some big conspiracy theory.
Probably not.
You know the biggest conspiracy theory?
It didn't have music.
It's not a music festival.
That is a Bernstein, Berenstein situation.
Why are people even going?
Blow this wide open.
I had no idea. what are you doing all
day there is that a bandana effect where some people believe that burning man used to have
music yeah like 10 years ago they're like yeah wait a minute it's just you built you build the
thing and you take the drugs and you walk around it's never had garbage was there i saw machine okay i'm so sorry it was 2019 um i also just found out my i'm millennial uh my friends that
are gen z uh we were talking about i remember i messaged one of my girlfriends she's gen z i was
like you do you know who blink like tell me you know who blink 182 is and she was like of course
i do um because i had talked to some guy who is a millennial i want
to say he's right on the cusp of millennial gen z who said he never heard of them he was born
born and raised bullshit your fans can write me too if they he was born and raised in america
and i'm like there's no way you haven't heard the word blink with the numbers 182 connected even in
passing even on the radio there's no way and so i asked my girlfriend and she was like of course i've heard him she was like nobody likes you when you're 23 i like posted that
on my 23rd birthday and so i was like yeah of course and like travis barker with courtney
kardashian and she was like wait travis barker was in blink 182 and i was like oh they know him
through machine gun kelly through courtney this is trippy she was like
oh I thought he was made
in the same factory
that Machine Gun Kelly was
and I was like
no babe
he was
no he's been
so famous
oh that's so funny
fascinating
I just think it's funny
it's like the other day
yeah that Woody Allen
uh
a bunch of people tweeting
about Woody Allen
and like
people like
slowly realizing
like his history and like just like that phenomenon.
Like you're finding out about this thing.
Like, well, I thought we all knew this about this person growing up is that there will as we get older, we'll see more generations connecting the dots and being like, oh.
Speaking of out of touch millennials, I just have to mention this in passing.
Perfect transition. touch millennials i just have to mention this in passing uh perfect transition candidate vivek
ramaswamy for the uh gop um released his top eight songs playlist um amongst a bunch of other
candidates it was a bunch of candidates releasing and he participated and he released eight songs
and two of them were by imagine dragons and you know, people got their music opinions.
I don't want to, I don't want to
poo-poo anybody's opinions about music,
but I'm going to.
I can't imagine being like,
because he's like 38.
He's like, he's a millennial.
And I can't imagine being a millennial
and then hearing Imagine Dragons come out
when you're like in your like mid twenties
and being like, this shit's awesome. I like this it's like it's formative for me in my mind
it's just like well no that's for like younger people who grew up with them not for people who
had like developed musical taste and then after decades were like this imagine dragons like i i i
i love this so much i'm gonna include two of their songs with my top eight.
And it's fine.
Whatever.
Yeah.
When your musical tastes include Mozart and Woody Guthrie and then go to Imagine Dragons. Well, I think that the songs he probably likes Mozart.
He probably likes Lose Yourself.
I don't know about that.
I don't know if he does.
And he probably genuinely loves Imagine Dragons because there's two of them.
Yes.
I think the rest were just songs that he picked for.
This is my instinct based on nothing.
Songs that he picked to just seem like.
Oh, Woody Guthrie was chosen definitely because of that Rich Men North of Richmond song.
Like in response to that song song people like started talking about
woody guthrie more and then i think he's just it's just a cultural thing he's like well i'm
gonna do this like that maybe uh no he's no but like that's what the conversation sparked um
and i feel like that's why it's there um we don't need to talk about this anymore i just
no it was a that was a uh perfect way to wrap up this show thank you hey you're welcome thank you vivek
thank you vivek oh by the way the song was radioactive it's a song called thunder
oh my god i found like huge singles i don't know through that list i found out they had two other
songs danny thank you so much for joining us today
that was a really great conversation
this is where I ask people to plug things
things that can be plugged
one thing we didn't talk about up there
I can't wait for this to be over
I can't wait to shout my friends
work from the rooftops
it's so frustrating
and it's hard to talk around things i don't want to
reference what i'm watching i don't want to you know anyway but what can you share with us where
can people find you support you all the things i'm at ms danny fernandez it's ms d-a-n-i-f-e-r-n-a-n-d-e-z
on twitter and instagram and then um and i am danny fernandez onandez on TikTok which I'm trying to use more but uh yeah
my short film In the Static which is 100% indie uh like follow and it's not out on you can't catch
it on streaming it'll probably do its festival circuit first before it goes online or goes to
a streamer but if it's coming to a city near you you can follow me and find that out yeah and then you'll
know when it is on a streamer too true i wanted to say um imagine dragons pro union known i know
i made a snide remark when i saw that um that they were actually performing to break the strike
um and i got to push back on that i apologize um i you
know i appreciate that support from them i just hate that we'll take support from any anyone that
wants to show up on the picket lines and bring your guitar out cody yeah who else has performed
um i see the videos once in a while of when a band shows up at least Lista, our Latina WGA group,
we got a mariachi band to perform under Netflix.
I saw that.
On Cinco de Mayo.
And it was so funny because the other writers were like,
whoa, these guys just showed up to support us.
I'm like, that's because we paid them to do this.
We have to be very loud, which is fine.
But we have done little hits like that, I like to call.
We had dancers at Universal.
And then we had mariachis another day where we'll just like, hey, do you want to make some bucks?
We like fundraise it ourselves and get them to play for like their trumpets underneath Netflix for like 30 minutes.
That's really fun.
So anyways, that was for Cinco de Mayo.
So, you know, and now we're in about to hit Latino Heritage Month.
So you might see more of us.
Maybe I'll bring it back around.
We will.
Bookends.
It'll bookend the strike.
See who else.
Hopefully.
Perfect.
All right, guys, that's it for us today.
But this has been fun.
Is this a song I'm making up?
I don't know.
We're going to keep working on it.
We love you very much, though. Much, though.
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