Some More News - SMN: Why Are U.S. Elections So Long?
Episode Date: November 8, 2023Hi. In today's episode, we look at the election-industrial complex, why U.S. election season drags on for so long, and what we could do to lessen the influence of corporate money on politics. Sources...: https://docs.google.com/document/d/11uveT1kN2P2FeU23P7XARjyKpr0YEy9ItQiZTvkqbTQ/edit?usp=sharing Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here-- Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA If you want to take ownership of your health, it starts with AG1. Try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. Go to https://drinkAG1.com/morenews. Take care of yourself from the bottom up this holiday season. Visit https://hellotushy.com/morenews and use promo code MORENEWS for 10% off your first order. Don’t miss out on their Spend & Get event going on now through November 18.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, hi, hey, I'm fine, everything is fine.
Hey you, you made it, that's awesome.
I clearly almost didn't.
Thank you for meeting me here though.
Okay, so no time to waste,
we gotta get some gosh darn news going. Am I right?
So here's some more, the news.
I said it.
Okay, there's an election coming up.
All right, folks.
And by coming up, I mean in exactly one year from now.
You gotta cover that election though.
Yes, sirree.
You can't be last to cover the election.
No, sirree.
You gotta, you gotta, you gotta cover it since 2022, right after the midterms.
Yes, those headlines are all from 2022
because you gotta cover it every day,
all day until we all die at our desks of septic shock.
until we all die at our desks of septic shock.
Why can't we escape elections?
Yeah, hi again, it's still me. Not much time has passed, so obviously it's still me.
So okay, how are you doing?
Don't just answer, all right?
Really think about it.
Also, here's some more news.
Elections, which happen every few years apparently,
seem to be taking longer and longer and longer.
Campaign season now takes up the entire year,
if not multiple years,
even for the less important elections.
I mean, the former very good president
and guy who totally owns real valuable property,
Donald Trump, filed his candidacy for reelection
on the day of his very crowded inauguration in 2017.
Hey Don, how'd that reelection go for you?
Cool, how's the second possible reelection
gonna go for you?
Maybe better?
Oof, we'll see.
And okay, so yeah, that guy's an asshole.
But this is quickly becoming the norm.
Ted Cruz, everyone's favorite, least favorite guy,
announced his candidacy for president 596 days
before the 2016 election.
Nikki Haley, an equally terrible guy
who is not my favorite, announced her recent candidacy
629 days before the election, which again,
I cannot stress enough, has not happened yet
and is still a year away.
So today we're gonna maybe figure out
why these elections are taking so freaking long.
And yes, I can see you rolling your eyes and saying,
well, gee, Cody, are you gonna blame capitalism
for yet another problem?
And look, listen, look.
Yes.
Yes, I am gonna do that.
Okay, spoilers, I guess.
Because it's time to talk about
the election industrial complex.
Neat!
And look, listen, hi, hey, hey, listen, hey, hi, yes.
Yes, I'm aware that the phrase industrial complex
is something people love to throw around.
Military industrial complex, prison industrial complex,
that guy at my gym who keeps hogging
the elliptical industrial complex.
It was coined by President Eisenhower
to warn against the aforementioned
military industrial complex,
and has become a somewhat ubiquitous term
to describe a mutually beneficial system
where businesses become enmeshed
with political or social systems
in order to make a profit off of them.
So, you know, it's not my fault
if that describes a lot of bullshit we do in America.
And as an American, nothing is my fault.
So the election industrial complex
that we're going to talk about today is one cog,
albeit a large one, in the larger machine
that is America's political industrial complex.
That's right, a complex inside a complex,
like putting a Christmas village inside a mall.
The hubris!
Malls can't have villages, you festive freaks.
And things can't be inside other things.
MC Escher is spinning upside out of his grave right now.
The political industrial complex is itself
a massive self-perpetuating engine
at the heart of all of our frustrations
with the two-party system.
In other words, it's the disregard for actual progress
or public interest in favor of perpetuating
the business of politics.
Donald Trump would describe it as the swamp,
while ironically serving as the beefiest
bog monster of them all.
But I think you get the idea.
The election industrial complex,
a phrase I've already said too many times
and yet am going to continue saying many more times,
funny how that works,
is the industry within that larger system
built specifically around elections.
Duh, you might be saying.
Which is rude, so shush.
This industry includes strategists, pollsters,
TV ad makers, media buyers, and the actual TV networks,
not to mention the candidates themselves, all of their management, consultants, media buyers, and the actual TV networks, not to mention the candidates themselves,
all of their management, consultants, accountants,
and so on and so on and so on and so on.
Not in service of governing,
but rather devoted to being elected.
Ironically, the start of this monstrosity
can actually be traced back to early efforts
to rein in campaign spending.
New post- post Watergate rules
imposed stricter accounting requirements,
which meant suddenly every candidate
had to hire an accountant.
And those accountants had to hire accountants
and down the rabbit anus we went.
Remember last year when we talked about how hospitals
and the healthcare industry became profit driven
and the more administrators and math nerds you hire,
the more incentive there is to seek profit
from running a hospital so you can pay
those very same math nerds.
It's like that, except with election nerds.
Nerds, the square root of all evil.
The big picture here is that political elections
in this country are now a massive billion dollar industry.
A 2021 report from Public Citizen found
that across the 2018 and 2020 elections,
70 consulting firms made a collective $1.4 billion
with 90% of the money going to just 10 firms.
This is obviously gross.
Like that's so much fucking money.
What a waste.
It's on its face icky and bad that privately owned companies
are making obscene amounts of money off the backs
of a democratic process that in theory is supposed to be
all about giving a voice to the people
and letting us control how our own country is governed.
Rocking the vote and so on.
Yeah, rock it till you make it.
But as this pattern continues,
it's clear that the purpose has nothing to do
with rocking any kind of vote.
The United States, which is where I live,
has the longest election cycle
compared to other industrialized countries.
And that's in part because other countries have rules
to prevent this kind of hogwash.
Wait, that's not rules.
What's the word?
Laws, they have laws.
In 2007, Mexico passed legislation
which shortened their presidential campaign season
to just 90 days.
In Argentina, advertisements start only 60 days
before an election.
And in France, most presidential campaigns
are only two weeks long.
Two weeks, can you imagine?
What would we do with all that extra time?
Pass laws, debate specific policies,
play Baldur's Gate 3?
It's probably that last one.
Foppish vampires don't just fuck themselves, you know.
You gotta put in the work to make them feel safe and free.
But since here in the good old U.S. of A,
we don't have any laws like that,
it's pretty much open season
on when an election cycle starts.
And so after the break,
we're gonna look at the consequences of this system
and who exactly is positively affected
from a longer election season.
Quick hint, it's not us.
U.S., U.S., United St...
U, us, United States, us, U.S.
Oh, has anyone ever thought of that before?
Like some greasy weirdo who was president for four years
but only made that simple connection three years
after he was president?
Nah, nah, nah, nah, it's new, it's new. I just picked that up myself.
Excellent thought, me.
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Okay, we're back and we're talking about
the endless election cycle.
And we were exploring the consequences
that come from stretching our election season
into a star-spangled Ouroboros.
Well, in short, this benefits
basically everyone besides the voting public.
Not only do longer elections mean more money
paid to consultants and staffers
and other administrative types,
it also means more time campaigning,
which leads to a more lucrative advertisement campaign,
which benefits TV networks, advertisers,
PACs, et cetera, et cetera.
Trump's presidency may have undermined the foundation
of our national democracy,
but it was a huge windfall for television execs.
CNN posted nearly a billion dollars in profits in 2016
on the back of the presidential election.
And of course, Fox News has conquered the news
by hand feeding partisan election season politics
to the right, or you know, maybe, maybe, maybe
they're just really informative and entertaining.
Time once again for leftovers.
It's the Emmy winning cooking segment
I stole from Rachel Ray.
I kid.
Do you, Greg?
Do you kid?
Gosh, I love it when my late night comedy hosts
constantly look bored, miserable, put out by being there
and bizarrely uninterested in the jokes
they're in the middle of telling.
Now, a longer election cycle also incentivizes lawmakers
to campaign while in office,
spending more of their time eating babies
and kissing hot dogs instead of actually doing the job they were elected to do. as lawmakers to campaign while in office, spending more of their time eating babies
and kissing hot dogs instead of actually doing the job
they were elected to do.
People complain about this all the time,
but it's really worth stepping back and reflecting on it.
Congress literally spends more of its time
asking for money to get reelected
than it does passing legislation
or debating green eggs and ham or whatever.
That shouldn't be the case, but it is.
Once in office, a Senator typically needs
to raise around $10,000 a week
to fund their reelection campaign,
a process that can look like anything
from schmoozing with special interest groups
to schmoozing with super PACs
to writing those annoying emails
Bernie still won't stop sending me.
I have sent back so many nudes and he just keeps asking.
Starting to think it's not actually him.
I'm still gonna do it.
Power to the people.
The good politicians raise their money
by just doing some light insider trading
and spend the rest of their time working hard
to pass meaningful legislation
to help the most vulnerable people in the country.
Do not fact check that.
Meanwhile, the bad politicians also do the insider trading,
plus fundraising, plus spending their time passing laws
to make it easier to fundraise.
Earlier this year, Ron DeSantis signed a bill
exempting him from Florida's resign to run law,
meaning he could run for president
while still being the governor of Florida,
which seems kind of sketch.
That same bill makes it harder to know
where political committees in Florida
are getting their money from by loosening the regulations
on how often those committees
have to file campaign finance reports.
And, and, and, and, and, the bill also imposed
new and stricter voting restrictions across the state
and made it harder for nonprofits
to do voter registration drives because of course it did.
I mean, to be fair, he needs all the help he can get,
what with being extremely unlikable and off-putting
and having bad unpopular ideas.
And these are all the very practical, tangible ways
that this system gets gunked up by elections.
There's also the fact that these long election cycles
are just, you know, annoying and tiring.
In 2016, Pew Research reported that 59% of Americans
felt exhausted by the election coverage.
In 2016, little did anyone know that we were only
at the start of a nonstop political shit parade
that would drag on for the next seven years.
Seven years.
You know, I was once happy.
Were you, though?
Hey now.
No, I wasn't.
Good point.
And while people being annoyed doesn't sound like a crisis,
this is the kind of situation that could eventually lead
to even more voter apathy as well.
Currently, our turnout has actually gone up
in the last few decades.
66% of eligible Americans voted in 2020. That's not as high as other countries, mind you. And also that's for an election where one of the candidates literally looked directly at the sun
before and during everyone telling him not to. But it's an improvement, but it was also like
a big election. And you'd think that if voter apathy
is still an ongoing concern,
then it would be bad for our election cycles
to be a constant stream of noise.
The world is already filled with noise.
We all have these little noise squares in our pockets
that give us constant updates
about the most horrific things happening in the world
that we can't do anything about,
including the slow death of the climate.
It's extremely easy to completely burn out
in that environment, like our environment is doing, actually.
Oh, that's fun.
And then on top of that, we get the people
who are supposed to be doing stuff,
using their platform to campaign
about how they'll totally do stuff at some point,
so long as you keep hiring them to do this stuff
they aren't doing yet, but totally will eventually.
And by do stuff, they actually mean tweeting
that someone should do something while we all go,
wait, I thought that's what we hired you to do.
And then it just starts over again,
often with the exact same people who were running last time,
just running again.
And we're too tired with like our lives
to figure out why that is.
And a lot of that isn't new, mind you,
and part of the larger political industrial complex
we discussed.
But the problem has compounded
with the lengthening election system.
Hell, even when not officially campaigning,
social media has made it so a politician is always
kind of selling themselves to some extent.
And it seems easier than ever to play the part
while doing nothing.
You can just tweet about wokeness or whatever
and no one will even notice
that you're not actually governing.
And so the lingering question is why we let this happen?
Why doesn't anyone else run against these weirdos?
Why is it that people like Mitch McConnell
and Nancy Pelosi can embed themselves in our system
while anyone remotely new is instantly unlikable
and out of touch?
Well, that's in part because since political campaigns
are now its own industry,
you have to be at least a millionaire
to actually run for office in a lot of cases,
because it's like everything else now,
getting married, having kids, buying a house.
The price for simply existing has gone up.
So why not also the price of politics?
And so since the 1980s, the average cost of any election
has increased 555%.
That's a steeper rise than even healthcare
or college tuition.
Becoming a politician is now a luxury item.
And like most luxury items,
it mostly attracts unlikable dipshits
who just want more luxury items.
And so it's really no surprise
that Americans have completely lost faith in our government.
And that would be a real bummer if it was the end of the episode.
But no, we have another ad break.
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Then unbreak.
Unbreak.
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Oh, hey, you're back.
That's good. Keeping your promise
is good, and you promised you'd be
here. If you recall, before your promise,
we were talking about the current state of elections.
To sum it up, bad.
The current state is bad and long.
But of course, it wasn't always like this.
As I mentioned up top, because I'm a very good news guy
and set up excellent exposition,
we can trace the start of the election industrial complex
to the campaign finance reforms made after Watergate.
In 1974, President Gerald Ford signed off on quote,
"'historic amendments' to the 1971
"'Federal Election Campaign Act,
"'which established the Federal Elections Commission
"'and placed severe limits
"'on campaign spending and donation.'"
Can you guess how long it took for Republicans
to legally challenge those totally reasonable
sounding amendments?
Did you guess one day?
You did?
God, your hot mother and I are just so proud of you.
The courts upheld some of the amendments,
but struck down the limits on spending,
including independent expenditures,
which is money spent by an individual or group that's totally unconnected
from the campaign.
Can you guess what this led to?
Did you guess political action committees?
You did?
Good for you and your swelteringly hot mom.
Like a sauna she is.
See, it goes like this.
If a PAC intends to donate directly to a candidate,
there are set limits to how much money
can be donated to that PAC from an individual.
But if a PAC on paper claims they will donate no money
directly to a candidate, well, then anyone can donate
any amount of money they want, like some sort of,
like a super PAC, which we'll get to.
Then of course there's soft money.
A 1979 amendment by the FEC created this nifty little
soft money concept, essentially allowing political parties
to spend unlimited amounts of money as long as the money
goes towards so-called party building activities
or issue ads.
Hey, that sounds like a way to get around a barrier,
like a hole, like a loopy type of hole,
like a wall slit you fire arrows out of,
but can't get hit because there's a loop,
you can't get it yourself, the hole is very small.
And it's meant to go around something.
Gosh, I wish I could Google dictionary.
Because while the original point of the 1979 amendment
was to let political parties spend money on things
unaffiliated with any particular candidate or campaign,
they quickly realized they could just be identical
to ads for a specific candidate.
All you gotta do is put a little paid for text on the screen
and you are good to go.
Honesty, doing what's right, living up to his word.
My husband has come out strongly
to protect the victims of domestic violence.
That's from the swingin' 90s, hip cat.
And it's amazingly an example of an issue ad.
According to the Washington Post,
both the DNC and RNC would run party ads that were indistinguishable
from the Clinton and Dole campaigns.
And during those campaigns, the two parties raised
over $262 million in soft money, more than three times
what they raised in the previous presidential election,
and totally blowing the roof off the caps
theoretically set in place in the 70s.
You might notice that this sucks,
but it was looking to suck a lot harder and faster
and deeper and wetter several decades later
when the Supreme Court handed down their decision
in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
Dun, dun, dun!
Yeah, I bet you heard about this.
This is that good Thanos shit.
Citizens United did many things,
and we don't have the time to talk about all of them
in detail here and now.
But one of the big things the ruling achieved
was deciding that independent political spending
did not present a substantial risk of corruption
in our elections.
How did they decide that, you ask?
Oh, that's kind of a whole other episode,
but the short answer is money, money.
Justices who voted with a majority argued
that limiting political spending, even from corporations,
violated the First Amendment right to freedom of speech,
and that somehow independent spending wouldn't be corrupt
and would be transparent, which obviously.
As a result of this landmark ruling,
corporations can spend essentially unlimited amounts
of money on campaign advertising,
as long as they aren't formally coordinating
with a candidate or political party,
which seems like a pretty big,
one of the holes I mentioned, with the loops in them.
Wait, aren't loops a type of hole?
So it's like a hole hole?
A loop loop.
There's a term for it.
Really makes you think.
Anywho, the Citizens United ruling opened the floodgates
for Super PACs.
Despite the name,
these are not technically political action committees,
but rather quote,
"'Independent expenditure only political committees.'
Super PACs are to regular PACs
what super shredder is to regular shredder.
They're just roided out versions of groups
that technically aren't supposed to coordinate
with candidates and have an unlimited cap
on donor funding and spending.
See, we call them super because of how super and good
the Citizens United ruling was.
It's just like the Patriot Act, woo hoo.
So super PACs are allowed to spend as much money
as their little corporate hearts desire.
And they also have done that, they've done that.
They've absolutely done that.
Super PAC spending went from 63 million in 2010
to 1.1 billion in 2016.
Today, Super PACs have spent over $3 billion
on federal elections or 1.3 avatar the way of waters.
They have basically become a big funnel for candidates
to chug down as much corporate money
as their little greedy bellies can take.
And so that raises the question as to how they get around
laws saying that PACs can't strategize directly with candidates.
The answer, easily.
They get around those laws easily
because the laws are bad and outdated.
For example, there's nothing saying that Super PACs
can't invite candidates to outside events they are holding,
even though that's literally just an obvious campaign rally.
This is what happened with Rick Perry
and a round table event hosted by the Opportunity
and Freedom Pack.
Another particularly blatant example is when Jeb Bush
toured with his Right to Rise Pack raising money
before announcing he was running for president.
You see, it didn't matter that he kept heavily implying
he was running.
Legally speaking, he wasn't a candidate yet.
Sure, once he announced he was running,
he cut all ties with that pack.
After, they raised over $100 million.
Way to cheat, Jeb.
Pretty please, Klopp?
Also, I would be remiss if I didn't show this clip
after mentioning Rick Perry literally any time.
Rick Perry, watch him, he's a comer.
Excellent point, Mr. President.
There are a bunch more ways to get around this rule
that both Republicans and Democrats utilize.
The Hillary Clinton campaign unintentionally spelled out
a lot of the tactics nicely,
which in a lot of cases boiled down to using heavy innuendo
to donors,
like a mob boss fixing a race.
It is very easy and no one in power really cares
to change that because of the money you see.
And what's wild is that it's not like all this money
directly translates to a sure win.
I mean, we just finished telling you about how much money
Jeb Bush and Rick Perry spent for the 2016 election.
That isn't to say that political ads don't work.
In fact, they are probably extremely important
when an election is really close,
but there's no hard science on the subject.
So why dump so much money into this?
In part, it goes back to those nerds I mentioned earlier
and a self-perpetuating system that exists
to justify itself.
Because regardless of whether or not
the ad campaigns get votes,
they certainly turn a profit
for everyone involved in making them.
Here's an incredibly depressing quote
from a political advisor,
which I'm going to read to you directly.
Quote, you can do it in five minutes with three people.
You set it up and you have a treasurer and a whatever.
That's my two buddies and me.
Then we go to a couple of the candidates' wealthy friends
and say, hey, do you want to elect your friend?
Well, we've got a super PAC here.
You can give five, 10, 15, $20 million
and really have an impact on this race.
The donor doesn't know anything about what we do
or how we do it.
We're going to go full commission
and pay ourselves really well
because nobody's negotiating with us.
For all the donor knows, 15% is the standard deal
because that's what he's being told.
This is sort of like saying, okay, you guys,
the bank is open, there's no cameras, there's no security,
take as much as you need.
Super PACs raise these ludicrous amounts of money.
And then because they aren't technically supposed
to give that money to a specific candidate,
they're almost directly incentivized
to pay as much of it to themselves as they are able.
It's kind of like how utility companies
make all of their money off building infrastructure
rather than actually selling the water or gas.
These super PACs don't need to care
if the commercials they're creating
will actually push voters one way or the other.
The production of the ads themselves is a money machine,
not just for the PACs, but for the ad companies making them
and the TV networks airing them.
The networks in particular have it good.
Every year they get to have what's
basically a huge bidding war as they auction off the primetime advertising slots to the highest
paying pack. Now, you might accidentally think that since political ads aren't necessarily
effective, that means super packs aren't a big deal. But more than a funding loophole,
the actual value in these super packs is that they allow a handful of wealthy people
to spread around their cash
in order to directly change policy.
For starters, it's not just ads they're buying,
but political movements.
Remember Moms for Liberty?
They're the group that goes around
barging into school board meetings
to complain about critical race theory and mask mandates
and the existence of gay people and whatever else,
maybe green eggs and ham again.
Well, guess where they get their money from?
At least in part from the
Conservatives for Good Government PAC,
which gets their money from a bunch of other corporate PACs,
you know, real grassroots stuff.
PACs can also unofficially create campaign events
in a candidate's name.
And even if none of this works,
A, what a huge waste of money.
Again, so many better uses for money, folks.
But also, B, they still pumped a bunch of money
toward a political party and candidates
that no doubt still hold political positions, right?
If Ted Cruz fails hilariously to become president,
he's still a politician helping to make laws.
So it doesn't matter how effective that money is
in terms of individual costs.
If their candidate or their party is elected or not,
either way to them, that is money well spent.
You're buying access.
That's why most non-Super PACs send their limited donations
through a lobbyist who gets to speak directly to a candidate.
Ultimately, they are buying their time and attention.
These very wealthy people skipping to the front of the line
with their wallets.
So if you're, I don't know, just to throw out a name,
Koch Industries, and you've been funneling money
to GOP candidates through super PACs for a decade,
then the GOP might be theoretically, hypothetically,
very supportive of the oil and gas industry.
Again, in like imagination land, it's a theory, hypothetical.
In theory, perhaps, maybe.
So yeah, even if TV ads have diminishing returns,
there's really no overstating how damaging super packs
can be in an election season.
We haven't even talked about the fact that these packs
are way more free to drum up ass tons of misinformation
thanks to the internet.
Digital ad spending is obviously the next big thing.
And that can range everywhere from pre-roll commercials
to fucking fake social media influencers.
Yes, that is actually happening.
They are paying influencers
to back specific political issues.
And so going back to our premise
about why elections are unending,
well, super PACs play a huge role in this.
It's a multi-billion dollar industry designed
to embed politics into every facet of our lives
without us even realizing it.
From our entertainment to our freaking school board meetings,
we can't escape election season politics.
And to boil that down even more,
it's money and attention.
Money and attention are the reasons
why elections are unending,
which is what I said at the start of the video.
So, you know, it's full loop, it's full hole.
No, it's full circle.
All right, we end where we begin.
It's like Pulp Fiction, which starts with credits
and ends with credits.
And this is all to say that there are ways to fix this
that definitely won't happen
so long as our government makes it so easy
for corporations to involve themselves in politics.
For starters, we could just force elections to be shorter.
Japan has strict laws that place their election cycle
on the opposite extreme of the US.
They limit campaigning to no more than 17 days
prior to election.
Some experts have argued that such a short limit
doesn't allow for new ideas or fresh voices
to really sink into the public zeitgeist.
But there's probably a way to split the difference.
In fact, a study examining 113 elections
in 13 democracies found that longer elections
allowed voters to evaluate economic conditions
to inform their evaluations of parties in power.
And ultimately suggested that just six weeks
is long enough for voters to start absorbing information
on candidates.
So not one and a half years, sounds great.
Maybe we shift from 78 weeks to six weeks.
Also, maybe we should try public campaign financing.
It's a tricky idea because we'd have to accept
that our tax dollars will directly go to the campaigns
of people we do not like.
And Lord knows it wouldn't stop outside influences
from butting their way into elections.
And of course, a system like that, much like before,
would almost immediately be dismantled
by the people who don't want that to happen,
otherwise known as politicians.
So why can't we escape election season?
Because the people in power
are the same people profiting off of it.
And to them, the only side effect is the increasing apathy
of the individual voter, which frankly,
just makes things easier for them.
Trying to help everybody, it's hard.
It's easier if they could just decide elections
from a handful of rich people asking for tax breaks
and deregulation.
So this is all to say that while elections will no doubt
become even longer and bigger and dumber
like an aroused clown, we just have to keep showing up
despite any obstacles they put in our place,
which is why I set up this obstacle course in my home.
Huh?
All right, you fucker, it's time for round two.
Ha ha!
Oh no, I forgot about the marbles!
I didn't forget the marbles, you fool. I was prepared for them.
Part of the obstacle course was that you had to trip on the marbles, you fool. I was prepared for them. Part of the obstacle course was that you had to trip
on the marbles, I won!
Thank you so much for watching the episode.
Be sure to like and subscribe,
leave a nice comment or a mean one
if you're feeling mean today.
We got a patreon.com slash some more news.
We've got a podcast called Even More News.
We've got this show as a podcast called Some More News.
It's where the podcasts live and breathe
and dance around in the moonlight.
We got merch.
You can buy some stuff from there.
And that's the end.
That's the end.
That's the end. Not of the end. That's the end.
Not of like this show, but of this episode.
See you next time.