The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1700 Jason Momoa Vs Chris Pratt

Episode Date: March 31, 2023

Adam and Drew hear from a man going through the process of adopting in Germany and someone with thoughts on Jason Momoa. Next they take a dive into the speaking style of Willie Wilson. Please Suppor...t Our Sponsors: ForThePeople.com/Adam or dial #Law from your mobile device

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Recorded live at Corolla One Studios with Adam Corolla and board-certified physician and addiction medicine specialist, Dr. Drew Pinsky. You're listening to The Adam and Dr. Drew Show. Yeah, get it on, got to get on, Dr. Drew's Fudge Packer. Oh my God. Industrial or union? Your scab fudge Packer. Oh, my God. Industrial or union? You're scab Fudge Packer. You were placed when the union went on strike.
Starting point is 00:00:35 I always used to say, you know, people go, they'd use this term like, take a look backstage and see how the sausage is made. And I would say, you know, I really don't like that term because sausage, it just it feels like a little homoerotic or something to me. Why don't we just say, see how the fudge is packed? Yeah, that's much less so. All right. Speaking. Yeah but before we go to calls all right we're gonna call but i i've been thinking i'm thinking about this scapegoating thing and the cartooning and all that maybe there's not much more to say about it but um
Starting point is 00:01:19 i noticed a long time ago that the way audiences relate to celebrity is by rendering them into cartoons. Back when we did Celebrity Rehab, I noticed that everyone had a name that they used publicly that wasn't their real name. Their persona was quite different from how they projected themselves. But Steve-O, back in like, Jesus, 2011 or something, had an episode where they thought he had a cardiomyopathy and might need a cardiac transplant. And he came on Loveline. And people were like, hey, Steve, I'm sorry about your heart. Anyway, about my penis. It was like, whoa.
Starting point is 00:02:31 And they were just treating him like not as a non-entity, non-person. And I thought, geez, this is interesting how much it is the case that, which is really the fundamental mechanisms of scapegoating, which at its core is a narcissistic process. And so, again, all roads lead to narcissism. But I don't think we talk enough about the scapegoating mechanism because it's how people hurt other people. They gather together, much as they did at the law school in Stanford, and go at somebody. They gather together, much as they did at the law school in Stanford, and go at somebody. It's the guillotine, whatever you name it, through history, it's always been the same. And as, of course, always comes out, the guillotine comes out in populations that have had lots of trauma, then lots of entitlement. Yeah, I've talked about it on and off the air to you for a long time. It's a micro thing. It's a micro thing.
Starting point is 00:03:06 It's a personal thing. It's also sort of a macro structural sort of thing, which is I think here's what a lot of it. I'm totally convinced this is really what it is. Okay. You. It's envy is what it is. I mean, really? Yes, that's what it is. I mean, really? Yes, that's what it is. You are doing something that you realize is not.
Starting point is 00:03:31 The coolest. What? But I'm the coolest. You are. You are taking money from the government when you're able to work. You're taking money from another individual when you're able to work. You are suing a boss, even though even though you know there was no real discrimination. You're doing something that is wrong, and you're aware of it to some degree.
Starting point is 00:03:55 So what do you do? Everybody who steals an apple from Whole, from Whole Foods, what's first thing they say? Oh, these guys are so expensive. They gouge everybody. They, it's,
Starting point is 00:04:10 it's, it's immediately about the other person, how it doesn't affect, they have insurance, you know, whatever you see politicians saying it about businesses that were burned down. Yeah. Everyone constantly does the other big,
Starting point is 00:04:24 he's not going to miss it. It's a lot of like, you know, oh, you know, you sued Elon Musk for wrongful termination, even though it wasn't wrongful termination. But what's two million bucks to Elon Musk? That's a drop in the bucket. It's like ten cents. OK, why are you spending so much time about the other side and how it affects them? Right. And how it's nothing to them. How about you? What are you doing?
Starting point is 00:04:50 You took the money. You brought up the frivolous lawsuit. That was you. Yes. Why are you spending? I mean, Drew, I don't spend time on the other side. I just go, I got screwed out of this or I deserve that. It's because so-and-so's
Starting point is 00:05:07 bad. If you see too much so-and-so's bad, they're usually setting the table for their immoral behavior. Oh, of course. It's justified. The other person is bad. I mean, of course. There you go.
Starting point is 00:05:23 My point is, what's that have to do with you? It's the golden rule, right? You take care, you make everybody bad, and you act out on them. Isn't that the golden rule? All right, let me tell you about Adam over here, 37, from Germany, in the process of adopting. Nice. What's going on?
Starting point is 00:05:41 Gentlemen? Yeah. Hey, guys. Here, so I called, it's probably been three years ago and my wife and i were having trouble conceiving and even replayed a clip from our call on acs where the german government would then pay for fertility treatment after our third miscarriage my wife has now had her third and we've been to a bunch of treatment, and we're not a genetic match. They say, you know, the way abortions have happened, I've given blood and sperm and everything, and they just, the doctors here don't think it's possible.
Starting point is 00:06:15 She's 38, so, you know, time is ticking. Wait a minute. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Wait, what do you mean not a genetic match? What does that mean? It means that my wife had all four of her abortions within the first, like, seven or eight weeks. And for whatever reason, they don't think that her and I will be a match. You're saying spontaneous abortions.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Yes. Spontaneous abortions. I understand. Did they do – that's an insane thing to do unless they did genetic testing and then genetic counseling. Did they do that? We went down to a clinic a couple hours away from here and did blood work and went back six weeks later. And like I said said german is my second language i didn't totally understand it um we're not at the point that we're adopting though and
Starting point is 00:07:12 that's i guess where my question is because we're pretty we're pretty we're we're we're happy taking this route but my question is now that we're talking to it there's no private adoption agencies in Germany. Everything is done through the government or through the state. And they're talking about, you know, how do you all feel about adopting a kid who might have a history in prostitution, a history with addiction, a history of, you know, maybe if it's an older kid based on our age, like if there's having listened to hundreds of hours of love line. Um, I just have, I have more concerns, I guess, than my wife about adopting a kid who maybe was traumatized and it's not super
Starting point is 00:08:04 young. Yeah. Yeah. It'd end up being like Colin Kaepernick. I mean, probably not that bad, but it'd be bad. Well, wait a second. For example. Quiet. You're talking about adopting a 12-year-old who may have been abused?
Starting point is 00:08:22 Or like what age are we kind of talking about here? So we obviously don't get a pick. I've said the younger the better, but my wife is kind of more of the mind of, oh, we can help this kid out. We can provide a stable home. We can maybe kind of rescue a kid, and I'm a bit more concerned about that.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Yeah, that's a fantasy, right? You can make things better for that kid, but it's going to be, you're going to need lots of therapeutic services. And it's really challenging, for sure. If she's up for that. But loving a child, a stable environment for a child only does so much, depending on the history and all, on the genetics and things. And I think you're also saying you're worried about the genetic heritage, which, like anything else with humans, only about 60% of who somebody is is dependent on genetics, generally speaking.
Starting point is 00:09:17 So genes are not destiny. I think you can be a little more, maybe liberal is the right word, and sort of approaching young children that have genetic backgrounds that are problematic, provided there's not been any in utero injuries, which is the other issue if you're dealing, you know, from people with bad, you know, bad substance problems and that kind of thing. But these are all really serious concerns. And do the, do the, do you have to do it there? Can you come, can you apply to a private place or i we we could and we i think we could afford it as well we could come back to the states
Starting point is 00:09:54 and do more of a private adoption um i there's i i we don't have an address in the States anymore. My mom is quite old. My father's passed away and, you know, this is home now. I get it. It's hard, man. These are challenging questions because philosophically also you don't want to, you know, it's a hard thing to turn away from when people are in need also. And you're somebody that might, might help solve the problem. It's very difficult philosophically.
Starting point is 00:10:28 I understand, but your thinking is correct. At least you can be rest assured. Your thinking is good. And you're trying to figure out how to do this in such a way that it can turn out well. And that's just keep your wits about you as you make these choices. Okay.
Starting point is 00:10:44 Well, I wish I had something more discreet to tell you. Your wife really needs to have her eyes open as to what the implications are of adopting a younger person who's been severely traumatized. Not even severely traumatized. It's just that people have this fantasy that love and nurturing and stability heals all. And it doesn't, it doesn't heal much. It just makes the possibility of healing possible. It's kind of a fairy tale that we've spun for a lot of years, a lot of sort of Disney and, and Hallmark, and they've all sort of spun this thing. You know, we've always kind of done that.
Starting point is 00:11:29 And that is not true. Well, it's not impossible. That's the horrible thing. It's not impossible. I would argue it's not much different than a severe physical injury. You can put them into a place that has a tub with a door on it and a handicap ramp, and then we can definitely work on this thing,
Starting point is 00:11:51 but they still have this injury and you have to work on it and have to work on it. Prepared to trade in the Miata for a van with a lift in it. Right? Exactly. All right, Drew, we got another call here. This is Doug from Sacramento. Doug?
Starting point is 00:12:13 Hey, Adam, Drew, how you guys doing? What's going on, Doug? What's going on? Two quick things before I call to just shut me up, if you want me to get to my call. One, Jason Momoa is a douche. You always ask people, like, I'm curious momoa is a douche you always like ask people like i'm curious he's a douche he's a total douche in real life he's a douche bag he seems douchey
Starting point is 00:12:30 but i don't know for sure how do you know what kind of informs me on that is uh like i think it was uh who's that more republican actor who does like those sealAL movies, Chris something. Chris Pine? Oh, Chris, yeah, sorry. You're thinking of Guardians of the Galaxy, Chris? Yeah. Chris Pratt. Chris Pratt. I said Chris Pine.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Chris Pratt posted a picture on Instagram like two years ago or something like that and he had like a bottle of water in his hand and Momoa was like, dude, really? Bottle of water? And I wrote this thing and it was just weird. Like how he called him out in public and like, it was just so juicy.
Starting point is 00:13:13 Chris Pratt is religious. I think he's pretty Catholic and, uh, and he hunts. So that's enough. So what, what, what it ends up, what what ends up happening as i tell drew all the time um hollywood sort of they don't have the goods on him like they don't see him wearing a mega hat or find out that he's a republican or votes republican they just kind of go like you hunt yeah and you go to church yeah and you're against school lockdowns yeah okay we got a profile on you we know yeah we know who you are but we can't really say anything because there's really nothing but we can we'll take some jabs because we get it yeah you go to
Starting point is 00:14:01 church and you like venison. It's an issue. And by the way, you're right about everything COVID. So I like the fact that everyone who was right about all the COVID shit now is a scarlet letter. That person's an agitator. That's right. The scarlet letter is not right or wrong about COVID. It is you're an agitator. You do not go along with shit.
Starting point is 00:14:26 That's incorrect. Just because you tell her something. Are you tired? I'm so tired. I'm not, I'm liberated by it because everyone can suck my dick. That's the way I feel about it. If more people would join me,
Starting point is 00:14:38 then we wouldn't suck your dick or being like the coolest. We wouldn't have this problem. That's what I'm saying. Right. Oh, no. Oh, no. Well, Adam and Drew, actually, there's one thing about wokeness I actually like that I kind of respect.
Starting point is 00:14:53 I was wondering what you guys think of. This isn't what I called, but you kind of got me on a tangent here. One thing I like about wokeness is it kind of identifies the people I'd never want to hang out with. You always say, like, oh, the type of guy I can't hang out with, and it kind of shortcuts that, whereas that's a conversation you'd have three years down the road somewhere, and you'd say like, oh, the type of guy I can't hang out with. And it kind of shortcuts that. Whereas that's the conversation you'd have three years down the road somewhere and you'd be like, ooh, I don't like this guy. You just kind of have it within the first hour.
Starting point is 00:15:11 You can do that with nose piercings. Right. Yeah. Adam is predicting octagons and safe spaces, California and Florida. By the way, they fucked up our Germany and Florida by sending all the Californians to Florida and everybody else to Florida.
Starting point is 00:15:31 I know. But anyway, Doug, what do you got? Okay, so the reason why I called is you made this really funny statement, and I don't think it gets enough credit, which is the people that run the fastest cross the street the slowest. Yes. And I have a less funny version, but I think it's kind of like in the same vein, which is the people that enunciate the most mumble the most. And I can just kind of there's nothing worse than explaining a joke.
Starting point is 00:15:54 But my version is I called an Uber recently and the dude was of the same world of the fast runners. And I could understand a thing he was saying when he picked me up. And each time I had to have him repeat it like three times. And you contrast that, like if you watch 90 Day Fiance, and you have dudes from a big continent, when they talk to people, they go, listen, this is what I am saying. They enunciate every single word.
Starting point is 00:16:22 And then somehow when they come here, you can't understand a thing they're saying. So I like to be the one that's mumbled the most. they enunciate every single word and then somehow when they come here, they can't, you can't understand a thing they're saying. So yeah. All right. So you're saying, you're saying it's sort of like a Malcolm X, the way like he might speak, although I don't really,
Starting point is 00:16:37 but, but crisp and concise and pop, pop, pop versus Lil Wayne or somebody like that. And then you talked about that the other day. You actually played a clip of, I think it was like an L.A. council member, and you're like, I don't know what the fuck this guy is saying. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:16:57 Over and over. We played a clip. I don't think I played it for you, Drew. We can find it. It's in the computer somewhere, Ben. I played, thanks, Doug. I played a clip of a guy who was running for mayor of Chicago. And he wanted to get rid of Lori Lightfoot.
Starting point is 00:17:22 I don't know they made a sort of of three man and woman possibly run off. I don't know if he made the runoff. Lori Lightfoot is out, you know, because of racism, except for the three other people that got elected above her black. But either way, Drew, it's about racism. I always love the fact that this city is not ready for a black lesbian. Bitch, you got elected. Didn't you get elected in that city? Maybe you did a shit job.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Is that possible? Is that on the table? Not when you're the coolest. Not when you're the coolest. This guy was on, I think it was Tucker Carlson, and it was probably about four or five weeks ago. And he was running for mayor of Chicago, and he sounded like a sharecropper from the 1860s. And I was like, this is Chicago. This is the mayor of Chicago.
Starting point is 00:18:25 People have to understand you when you speak. It was comical. I can't remember. Adam, we have a guy that is the senator from Pennsylvania that has a profound aphasia. He can't speak because that part of his brain doesn't exist. Yeah, I know. But that's a hate crime. No, no, that's ableism for you to talk.
Starting point is 00:18:45 I understand. I understand it's ableistic to suggest that. Yes. California's Dianne Feinstein, who people are unsure of whether she can form thoughts or sentences. No, she's severely demented. And that is my question, everybody. How far into brain damage do we go before we say somebody is not up to a job? Should she be a truck driver? Should she be an airline pilot? No. Should Fetterman be an airline pilot? No.
Starting point is 00:19:14 Please. So where do we draw these lines and why? Is he still in the hospital for depression? He's something for something. I don't think we really know what that something is. All right. Well, do you have a spot, Drew? No.
Starting point is 00:19:31 But I know. I made that up. All right. Let's play this clip. I think you're going to laugh. Just listen to this guy. And Ben, you can figure out whether this guy made it to the top three or not. But this is him explaining they got to get rid of Lori Lightfoot.
Starting point is 00:19:47 Preferred candidate, an American hero, joins us tonight. Mr. Wilson, thank you so much for coming on. So when you said that police should be able to chase down criminals like rabbits, obviously we cheered. Did you mean that? Well, here's what I meant. I lost a 20-year-old son. He was murdered by a gun. These people need to be caught.
Starting point is 00:20:11 Too many restrictions on the police department. We need to take the handcuffs off the police officer and put them on the people who was actually doing it. And it needs to stop now. This particular mayor that we have right now just keep coming up with excuses, excuses. But people keep dying on the street. Nobody's doing anything about it.
Starting point is 00:20:32 But excuses. So, no, when we become mayor of the city of Chicago, we're going to put a stop to this crime. We're going to take them back, our police officer, men and women, and get the job done. I'm tired of it. I don't want to see no other family go through what I've been through, to lose a son or lose a daughter or something of that nature. We're going to stop it. I mean, crime is voluntary. You get exactly as much as you put up with. Everyone knows that. You're saying it out loud. You get exactly as much as you put up with. Everyone knows that you're saying it out loud.
Starting point is 00:21:07 You've been attacked for saying it by the media in Chicago. Despicably, I most voters must agree with you, though, I would think. Well, you know, it's basically how I feel. I'm tired of it. I look when you lose someone, the loved one. OK, you act out of your emotion. OK, yeah. When you lose someone, the loved one, okay, you act out of your emotion, okay? But we're not like crooks turn around the next week or the next day and commit a crime to someone else.
Starting point is 00:21:38 A mayor's first duty is protect its citizen, you know? Yes. And she can pay to do a job. If she cannot do her job, when you get paid to do a job, if you cannot do it, you need to be fired. Just point blank. We do that in corporate America, you know. Yeah. But this mayor is the worst mayor that I think she'll go down in history, you know. We have to bag our police officers, take the handcuffs off them, take some of these rules, take some of these policies off them, get them days off,
Starting point is 00:22:07 make sure we treat them like heroes that goes out and protect us. And we must do this on a continuous basis. And we must make sure that police officers... I fucking love this guy. I like him too, but he's not speaking English. I don't give a shit what he sounds like.
Starting point is 00:22:26 I know, you're so desperate. I know you're so desperate for somebody who just thinks halfway normally that we're literally. We are living in a world now filled with politicians that are hysterical, crazy women spouting out nonsense all over the place. And we have one guy that goes, please take the handcuff off. I'm all for it. I'm a thousand percent behind this guy. I'm sorry, Adam. We rarely disagree.
Starting point is 00:23:00 I love this guy. You get paid, do job. You can pay, do job. Then you do job. You don't pay. You get paid, do job. You get paid, do job, then you do job. You don't pay, you don't job. He's got a little facial droop there. He might have a Bell's palsy affecting his speech a little bit. So he might actually have a dysarthria that he has to be very careful. Well, you may be right.
Starting point is 00:23:19 So I think that's some of what you're seeing. You get paid. The content was clear as a bell, and it was right on. It was right on. You get paid. Do job. Protect citizen. This guy pluralized everything that shouldn't have been pluralized
Starting point is 00:23:34 and then went singular on everything else. Listen, Drew, first off, of course I would vote for this guy. If I lived in Chicago, I would vote for this guy. Oh, if I lived in Chicago, I would vote for this guy. And yes, he made sense. He made sense like a nine-year-old makes sense, which police crime stop. Fine. I get it. I'm not talking about that.
Starting point is 00:23:57 I said his speaking is insane. It's insane. And I certainly is. I will grant you it is a far cry from the days of erudition when people used to make a lot of how they spoke and the manner in which they speak. We don't do that anymore,
Starting point is 00:24:15 to be fair. That's true. He is he was fifth out of nine candidates with 51,000 votes. So I don't think he made the cut is what I'm saying. But anyway, well, maybe we'll just hear the end. Let's see if there's any of the police in the cuff.
Starting point is 00:24:33 Respect us and the citizens respect them. Right now, the police officer do something, they're too afraid that they do something, they'll get locked up. Of course, you cannot do your job that way. And look, crime has no color. When you commit a crime, it's hurt. So it has no
Starting point is 00:24:53 color. But if this mayor here cannot do his job, keep making excuses, excuses after excuses. People are tired and sick of this stuff. I'm one that running for mayor, I don't want a paycheck nothing okay i don't want to fix the problem for our citizen i want to make sure to encourage our police officer that no look we got the back covered and those people who run this street
Starting point is 00:25:18 going to commit crime again we're gonna catch them we're gonna we're gonna catch them, we're going to catch them. We're going to catch them, and we're going to make sure that they pay for what they have done, and let's get this whole situation right. Yeah, well, you'll solve the problem if you do that. Now, here's all I'm curious about, Drew. Yeah. And I know people don't like me for this behavior, but is there anything wrong with you as like, say the role
Starting point is 00:25:49 of a campaign manager where you go, you know, you should probably say citizens and stop saying citizen. Just say, just practice. Give me 10 citizens in a row and the next time you're talking about the police protecting police protecting the citizen, say police
Starting point is 00:26:13 protecting the citizens. Let's try that a couple times. To be fair, if he has dysarthria, let's get him a speech therapist, a speech pathologist. Something. That's kind of what I'm saying. I mean, I think people, it's a real thing. It's a real thing.
Starting point is 00:26:33 I, you know, I've coached people up my whole MFN life. They always listen to you, too. Always. And that's why they thrive. Always. And that's why they thrive. Always. That's why they thrive, because they always listen and they always thrive. Fine. People have coached me up a fair bit as well, and then I tend to listen.
Starting point is 00:26:58 So it can be done. And it's not really an attack. It's more like your campaign manager wants to win the race, right? Yeah. Yeah. And people are having trouble understanding you because you sound like a sharecropper from 1863. But there's a better way to approach it, which is, dude, your ideas are great.
Starting point is 00:27:20 I'm not sure people can understand them or hear them the way you're presenting them. So let's work on it. That's all. I'm not sure people can understand him or hear him the way you're presenting him. So let's work on it. That's all. And he seems like just a great, sincere dude, too.
Starting point is 00:27:31 I mean, that comes across, right? Well, look, the sad part is I would take him over Gavin Newsom to run California. Oh, in a second. I would take a pragmatic nine-year-old to do it. Just what's going on? You know what I mean? Well, crime, homelessness. All right. What are what's going on? You know what I mean? Well, crime, homelessness. All right, what are we going to do? You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:27:47 Like, I would take a pragmatic nine-year-old over Gavin Newsom because he has ideas and his ideas don't work. But I think his ideas are more for the cocktail parties than the actual process. I don't know. I mean, is there any? It's so hard to know with so many of these politicians because they are just slippery, right? I mean, again, they pointed Trump as the liar. He lies.
Starting point is 00:28:14 God damn. We're realizing just how much they all do. How's Adam Schiff looking these days with the shit he was pulling down on Twitter? That's okay, buddy. It's okay in the service of something that fits their side or something. Yes, it's the good versus the bad. Where it is. Well, it's back to the scapegoating mechanisms again.
Starting point is 00:28:40 It's the bad. We're fighting the bad. We are the good. They're the bad. Yes. As long as we stay in that position, it's going to be tough. Yeah, I don't I don't I don't get it. But you have to go somewhere where there's some adult that's semi pragmatic making policies. Otherwise, we just you know, we're Sanisco's got people just dying in the street
Starting point is 00:29:07 and we're arguing over reparations and it's it's a bizarre world which i like i said is a distraction to which is If there was somebody who was a junkie and a loser and unemployable and so on and so forth and the worst and disheveled and overweight and a mess. you don't know anything about this person, but, but they're a fucking shit show and a mess and a junkie and unemployable and everything else. And then, and, and,
Starting point is 00:29:53 and, and an alcoholic and a chain smoker. And, but you didn't know anything. And then that person, you said to that person, like, what's that person doing today?
Starting point is 00:30:01 And someone said, he's going out shopping for dress belts and pocket squares. You'd go, oh, we can't. Anyone who's going out looking at dress belts and pocket squares has to be in pretty decent shape, right? I mean, that's not something a crazed junkie would do. I mean, he's probably pretty far up the corporate ladder. So that's what California does. California has failing schools,
Starting point is 00:30:30 failing systems, garbage everywhere, and homeless, homeless, uh, literally dying and, and, and ODing in the street.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And they go, we want all electric trash trucks by 2027, which is the equivalent to he's out belt shopping and looking at pocket square. Yes. Yes. Yes. That's what we do. Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:57 We go, but there's garbage everywhere. But guess what? That feels good. Right. They can deny the other stuff. Right. I don't know how they do it, but they do it. They seem to just be in denial about it.
Starting point is 00:31:07 All right. You can go to adamcroll.com for all the live shows. Turlock coming up at the Community Theater April 7th and then April 8th. It's Fresno and Vegas and Oklahoma City and Monterey. Just go to adamcroll.com for all
Starting point is 00:31:23 the live shows. What do you got, Drew? One last thing, Adam. Did you see that graph I sent you about women and mental illness? Yes. Not good, my friend. What? There's a lot of discomfort out there. Who knew?
Starting point is 00:31:34 It's being acted out. Nobody could have seen it coming. But drdrew.com is where the podcasts are and drdrew.tv for the streaming shows. So, until next time, I'm M. Crowell for Dr. Drew saying, mahalo.

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