The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1837 Get Some Pimpin' in There
Episode Date: March 8, 2024Wrapping up the week, Chris jumps into the studio as Adam dissects Dr. Drew's abuse of the microphone, they discuss how giving away free money disincentivizes people, and the unexpected Oprah exit. Pl...us, Chris introduces the hyper vigilant to the hyper vaccinated. Please Support Our Sponsors: This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp, visit BetterHelp.com/Carolla The Jordan Harbinger Show - Available everywhere you listen to podcasts
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Adam Carolla is taking his world-famous Paul Newman race car collection on the road,
and the first stop is the National Automotive Museum in Reno, Nevada.
You can join Adam for the first-ever public exhibition of this amazing collection
of 11 of the championship race cars Paul Newman drove to victory in his over 40-year racing career, including the celebrated Porsche 935, in which
Paul finished first in its class at Le Mans in 1979.
This amazing automotive collection also features priceless racing memorabilia, including Paul
Newman's racing suits, his helmets, pictures, posters, and other artwork depicting Paul's
career, along with racing suits and helmets from Paul's teammates,
including Tom Cruise and Walter Payton. The premiere event is set for Saturday, March 30th,
beginning with a red carpet event at 4 p.m. with Adam Carolla and Nell Newman, daughter of Paul,
and the co-founder of Newman's Own Foods with her father. Following the red carpet,
Adam will conduct a tour of the race cars and follow that up
with a podcast taping of the Adam Carolla Show in the museum's theater. Go to adamcarolla.com
and hit the events page to get your tickets to this unique event and we'll see you in Reno
Saturday, March 30th. Get your tickets now at adamcarolla.com.
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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.
Drs., board-certified physician, addiction medicine specialist, and Chris Maxpad.
And see you, Chris.
Hey.
So a couple things.
Okay.
You'll know
that when Felipe Esparza's
microphone broke
earlier in the week
and first thing out of my mouth was
you may blame Dr. Drew
for that. For the fatigue
of the plastic that was constantly
knurling, gnawing at
and pulling and yanking on.
And I told you that on a Monday and 17 hours later.
Yeah, this is a Monday late afternoon.
Not two days later.
17 hours later, I sat down and the first thing I witnessed was Drew punching the top of the microphone
to try to get it to move down.
Because it was too tight.
Profusely punching it.
So if anyone wants to fucking know anything about me and what I know, not only do I know
it, it will happen right away.
I did not have to wait a week.
I didn't have to wait 24 hours to see Dr. Drew the top of the microphone that was like a baseball
midfielder it was like it's locked in a spot and the reason it broke is because drew cannot stop
manipulating it and he certainly can't loosen up the fly nut that i would have been afraid to do
lower it down which is built for lucy no i'm afraid to do that. But I will say, give me this.
So like in your car,
when you want to get the car seat to move back,
do you move it back
or you just put your shoulder into it
and mash it until it goes back?
I hit it back many times.
I want to hear Drew's defense.
No defense.
That's my point.
He's right.
And I immediately copped to it.
Learn from that, everybody. Learn from that everybody learn from that don't go i didn't literally hammer fist it's like i did it yes
the top of the mic and i and i just all it will do is break the piece of plastic that broke
with felipe esparza right i i i mean i don't know if this is the same gene or anything, but Drew's a fiddler.
Like, I see him fiddling with a lot of things.
Futser.
Futsing.
He's a futzer.
He has to intervene with whatever the status quo is.
Futsing, yeah.
All right.
But I know, this isn't about Drew's foibles.
This is about my accuracy.
But that's interesting.
I haven't thought about that since I was a lot younger, because I used to be worse.
Accuracy.
But that's interesting.
I haven't thought about that since I was a lot younger because I used to be worse.
And it has something to do with my general anxiety disorder slash hypomania or something.
But it is a thing.
All right. OCD-ish.
Moving on to more.
He doesn't want to talk about it.
It's okay.
Moving on to more about me.
All right. I also realize that I try to send signals to people for things that never – they never really come to fruition.
I think you may be optimistic.
It doesn't happen when you're explicit.
How could it happen if there's signals?
There's a like – no, right.
It never works.
But it's like I'll be like – if we're out of something in my kitchen,
you know, the butter tub, they're out of butter, right?
I don't make a note that says we're out of butter.
I take the butter tub and I set it on the floor.
On the floor?
Sometimes on the floor.
Sometimes I'll just put it in a weird place
and then someone will discover it and go, it's empty.
But they never do that.
They just take it off the floor
and they set it back onto the countertop and then some point i'll take the tub and i'll set it in the middle of the kitchen
floor again and somebody will walk in and pick it up and set it back on but they don't know that
something is trying to be conveyed to them correct and yesterday but can i can i will
free tell you there's something interesting embedded in that because that move is very passive aggressive and I don't know you to be passive aggressive.
So I wouldn't be, I wouldn't be thinking about messages.
You know what I mean?
And by the way, a passive aggressive person did that to me.
I'm like, I'd be like, oh fuck.
I got it.
They can't, can't they just tell me the butter there, but you still, you better, you better do something because they're going to get aggressive, aggressive.
No, I don't.
I, it can be perceived as passive aggressiveaggressive, but I'm not.
But you're not passive-aggressive.
That's what's so odd about it.
That's not what it is.
I'm not going to be there, and I want you to get more butter,
and I don't have a Post-it note or a pen here, so I'm just going to do this.
And also, it's a little bit of an IQ test.
I want to see how you process this.
Do you also leave notes?
Do you also leave notes? Do you also leave notes?
No, not typically.
You should do both.
You should do both.
I think then it would work.
That's my sense.
You don't have to do both.
You leave a fucking note.
No, no, I don't mean just for the butter.
I mean do both practices for different things.
I went to leave notes.
He takes notes.
I take notes.
I went to go – now, the reason I'm on this subject is I do this a lot.
It never works, but I do it anyway.
I went to go use the water cooler dispenser in the other office yesterday,
and it was empty.
And I thought, I don't want to replace this water jug, so here's what I'll do.
I'll take the skirt at the bottom.
There's like a doghouse that's in, and I'll lift it all the way up, and I'll put it all the way to the up position, and that'll expose the bottle.
And it'll also send a message.
It'll be, somebody jacked this thing up.
Why?
It was down.
Now it's up, and there's an empty bottle underneath it.
I would have received that message.
You would have.
Yeah.
All right.
And I wouldn't have received the butter message. I would have received that message. You would have. Yeah. All right. Well, I wouldn't have received the butter message.
I can't tell you why.
I went back in there today and the water bottle is still empty, but the door's closed on it.
And I'm like.
That takes balls.
But how is it processed is what I'm saying.
Now, I didn't say anything to anyone and I didn't leave a note.
I simply slid the thing all the way up into the position where it blocks the dispenser
and then the bottle's clearly viewable in there. I simply slid the thing all the way up into the position where it blocks the dispenser,
and then the bottle's clearly viewable in there.
It's weird, though. I would have received that message, but I would not have received the bottle.
You would have jiggled the bottle to see if it was empty?
I would have immediately assumed, changed the bottle.
Immediately.
Why is this door up?
I just changed the bottle.
It's all that ever means to me.
It's like, something's wrong here.
All right.
Byron, is that you?
Who's shoe is shut?
I changed it.
It's full. You just needed to I changed it. It's full.
You just needed to check the weight.
It is full.
I saw Byron do it yesterday.
I will confirm.
Oh, you changed it?
Thank you, Chris.
Yeah, of course I saw it.
I just tried it and it wasn't coming out.
I saw a problem and I fixed it.
I don't know what's wrong with it.
Yeah, Byron saw that skirt lifted and he went and changed the bottle.
I don't think so.
I'm going to have him go try it right now.
Check right now before he can switch it.
I'll go check and switch the bottle.
Did he really do it?
I did see him yesterday.
Oh, you saw him change the bottle.
Oh, I just went and tried it today.
I bet you have butter in your fridge too.
You don't even realize.
But it's interesting how the butter one does not get received,
but that one makes sense to me as received.
I guess it worked.
So I just went and hit it, and it was just spitting out.
No, I get it.
Like it was doing the day before.
Maybe he didn't do it right.
He didn't feed the tube, maybe.
It's like a new tap.
Or maybe it needs to be primed.
Yeah, yeah.
Because it's brand new.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Oh, here's a full glass.
You have to prime it.
Fresh water.
Okay, then my apologies.
Message received, and it worked. Good. Byron has extraordinary talents. Yes, my apologies. Message received.
And it worked.
Good.
Byron has extraordinary talents.
Yes, he does.
I know.
He can suck his own dick.
I'm aware.
Do a little bit of everything.
Why do you think we hired him?
All right.
So my apologies.
The message was sent.
All right.
The butter's obtuse.
I don't know.
Subscarer.
Subscarer.
Yeah, I get it.
I get it.
All right.
What do we got, Chris? All right.
So remember our boy Andrew Yang, and he was pitching universal basic income.
And then we got the COVID stimulus checks and things like that.
Well, there's actually a lot of different programs that are taking place across the country that are testing a no-strings cash as part of a social safety net.
They're doing it in Chicago.
Immigrants?
Stockton.
In New York, want to do that?
Yeah.
So they're about like $500 to $1,000 a month, and they're doing it for a year or two years,
and they're testing it out, and people are loving it.
Of course, right?
Right.
There's no stipulation what you can spend it on.
You can spend it on food.
You can spend it on education.
You can spend it on just a Disneyland.
Is it getting people to improve their situation?
It doesn't.
Based off the stories that they're putting in the article, it doesn't look like it.
They're still in poverty.
They're still poor.
Yeah.
But it is helping them out, especially with the rising inflation, the cost of food
has increased a ton, and things like that.
But I just want to get your guys' take.
Is this, I mean, I feel like I know what your take would be, but just based off of-
I don't think doing things for people helps them.
I have the exact opposite thought of what most people do.
I think the biggest mistake we made with homeless people is calling them homeless.
Because when you say these are homeless people, then you go, okay, well, then the answer is get them a home and it will solve the problem.
So then we put all our energy and we need low-cost housing. We need more housing. We need affordable housing. So we get solve the problem. So then we put all our energy, and we need low-cost housing.
We need more housing.
We need affordable housing.
So we get off the subject.
They're stung full.
They're on the street because they're junkies, 99%.
Look, they're junkies with serious mental issues.
And if we just called them junkies instead of homeless people,
then we would focus on getting them rehabilitated
and help not homes homes and we go well we'll put them up at the uh we'll put them up at the hotel
rooms yeah and they'll trash the hotel rooms and do slam more drugs from the hotel room
so i don't like the i don't want to help people by replacing something that is the wrong thing to replace,
which is when you are poor, you need to focus.
You need to work harder.
You need to kind of circle the wagons of your life a little bit.
You need to have roommates and others and sort of pool things and kind of work.
It's something you need to work with and work on. Now, giving people money, all that does is take a
little of the sting out of it and make them less compelled to go do what you have to do. And none of the stuff that's meant to help people
helps them big picture. Long term. No, I mean, you can go, look, these kids, it's really shameful
to them and it's embarrassing to them to get all these horrible math scores. So we're just going
to take these inner city schools and we'll just conjigger the numbers
so that a D is a B and an F is a C.
And you go, OK, but that's going to make them worse at math and less employable when they're
out of high school.
Like, yeah, but that's what we're going to do.
Like none of these things, none of it works.
None of it.
It just begets itself.
It's like you just need more money and
the people, you give
someone a thousand bucks a month,
they're going to be happy for about
four months and then at a certain point, that's
just what they deserve. And they're
going to start getting pissed off that it's not $1,500
a month. None of it works.
Now, if it did,
then I'd be for it. But it doesn't.
What about your notion of poverty or
poor being sort of a whole?
Remember you always talk about how it just keeps
bearing down and you get a ticket and then you get
your car impounded.
How about helping people out of that?
I, you know,
I was talking on
my show the other day. I've got three
motorcycles impounded and towed. You know what I mean, which was pretty devastating for me.
That was my form of transportation.
I would be fine with things like, you know, a speeding ticket is, you know, 255 bucks, which is not a big deal to me me but devastating to my former self when i was making
11 an hour it's fucking devastating i would be all for any kinds any kinds of breaks or sliding
scales or i i don't think you know driving in the diamond lane is 420 bucks to Drew and it's also 420 bucks to his gardener.
I would be,
and things like,
you used to be able to go to traffic school
in lieu of paying the fine.
That's what I used to do.
When I got tickets when I was poor,
it was nine hours of my day on a Saturday
versus 86 bucks or 110 bucks.
That was your time.
That was completely, I would go 100%.
I will give Sears $18 and I will sit here for nine hours because I don't have 110 bucks.
Right.
And things of that nature.
But of course, what the government, what LA do, you can't go to traffic school.
Now you have to pay for the ticket and go to traffic school just so you don't keep your
insurance down.
And pay for traffic school.
You know, things where you're trying to keep utility prices down, for instance.
I mean, the biggest impact is gas is fucking $5.50 a fucking gallon.
And when I see these poor Mexicans
driving their full-size pickup trucks
loaded sometimes to the brim
with tree trimmings or equipment
or something like that,
I mean, that motherfucker's getting
seven miles to the gallon on that thing.
And he lives in Sun Valley
and he's driving out to Santa Monica
to do a tree trimming job
and he's costing him $5.
The truck has a 26-gallon tank, and it just cost him $200 to fill it up.
I mean, that's fucking brutal.
So if you want to help people or the price of, you know, I went to El Pollo Loco the other day because I had a just, had been thinking about it.
A hankering.
A hankering.
I dispatched my son.
I said, go to El Pollo Loco. me two chicken breasts and a side of of of broccoli and uh and and two or three corn tortillas that's
that's that's all i want and you get whatever you want and i got two pieces of chicken side of
tortillas and a cup of broccoli no drinks no nothing else He got a, you know, Fiesta bowl, a chicken bowl or something like that.
Uh,
26 bucks.
I was like,
I didn't even order anything.
I'm at,
I'm at 25,
26 bucks here.
And we didn't get drinks.
Um,
now I didn't affect me,
but the guy driving the fucking truck,
who's got paid 200 bucks to put in the tank of that
and he's got three kids and they're going to pollo loco and he's paid 80 bucks uh that
shit's expensive i mean food is expensive now consider fast food place with a drive-thru right
right at a drive-thru yeah i mean to me that's the shit we need to focus on right not keep
jacking up the price of everything and then giving people checks.
But unfortunately, adding money to the system adds to the prices.
Yes.
That's all it does is jack the – so you're right.
They have to find other ways to give people a break without putting cash into the system.
Yes.
People are appreciating the break.
In fact, like Cook County, which is right outside of Chicago, they're saying, look, as soon as all this money fizzles out from the, like a lot of these pilots, they're getting their funds from philanthropic donations or they already have a COVID relief money for the city.
But once it dries out, they're like, we're still going to keep it going.
We're going to, because people are really responding to it.
Well, it is catching a break. But the other side's argument is, look, our college is so expensive.
Our health care is so expensive.
Our child care is so expensive compared to other countries that we need this.
But it could be maybe our focus is just directed around. Well, I don't know why college is 100.
Why is college 80 grand a fucking semester at a Ivy League school with a 25 billion dollar endowment like does anybody
want to know is any i i would it's it's it's vexing to me that all we do is talk about student loan
student loan student loan these guys get out of college they have 100 200 dollars a tune loan
that's all the politicians talk about. Okay.
Shouldn't the next question be,
why is it so expensive to go to college?
Do you want to ask that?
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris,
that's all you talk about is student loan.
Shouldn't we ask why somebody owns 200 grand for four years of college
and then look at Harvard and look at Penn
and look at whomever and
their multi-billion dollar endowments and go, wait a minute, we're paying exquisitely
rich entities tons of money?
I would like to answer to that, not why did...
It shouldn't be vexing that you run up a tab at the world's most expensive bar?
Yeah, you're sitting in a bar and it's one hundred and twenty nine dollars for a martini.
And you've been there for four years and then you get out and they go, why are you all this money?
What's going on? It's like because you're sitting in a bar that is charging an insane amount of money for something.
And then Joe Biden goes,
well, you know what I want to do?
I want to alleviate that debt.
Now, how about you look into the bar?
How about you talk, ask why,
and it turns out the bar is super rich.
So what do you think it is?
Well, that's their constituency. The Joe Biden Ivy League and all.
That's 90%.
They're all fucking pro-Hamas and shit over there.
They're all fucking woke and everything.
So you're not going to tip over that apple cart.
Those are your people.
But it should be less go to college.
A lot.
Of course.
It's like I heard it the other day and it always blows my mind.
It's that clip of Nancy Pelosi going, I don't really care for statues much.
And I go, yeah, but people are tearing them down.
Shouldn't there be a court ordinance or shouldn't there – I mean, an order or shouldn't this be discussed?
People are going to do what they're gonna do and i'm like that is the most insane answer a mob has taken to the streets at night and is tearing down statues and your answer
is people gonna do what they're gonna do well now why is nancy pelosi so fast and loose with a group
she didn't feel that way about the january 6 people. I don't think she said that about them.
She took a pretty strong stance against those people.
She perceives the people that are tearing down the statues as her people.
I don't know why, but they are, and she perceives it as that.
So she's going to do what they're going to do.
And then we're going to talk about school and loans
and repaying the loans.
Those are your people.
That's why they're not going to say anything
about why fucking Harvard,
why it's 86 grand a semester or a year to go to Harvard.
A place that has an endowment of billions of dollars?
Mm-hmm.
Weird.
Not a peep?
They're sitting on a huge pile of cash and you won't say anything?
Okay.
I thought you didn't like the rich people.
Oh, you...
What?
What is Harvard's endowment?
Oh, boy.
Drew, take care of your business, would you?
All right.
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You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger Show with the investigator who solved
a serial killer case that had gone cold for decades.
There was a definite spike in serial predator crime in the 1970s.
definite spike in serial predator crime in the 1970s. Joe D'Angelo was a full-time law enforcement officer. He's breaking into houses in the middle of the night, raping women or girls that are home
alone that he's binding up and sexually assaulting. He ended up committing 50 of these attacks in
Northern California between 1976 and 1979 and just disappeared. The last thing I did in my career
before I retired was I drove up and parked in front of his house. I didn't know he was a Golden
State Killer, but I debated, should I just go knock on his door? This was such a brazen, brutal
predator. He absolutely had to be caught. To learn more about how Paul Holes puts himself inside the minds of serial killers,
check out episode 725 of The Jordan Harbinger Show.
We don't like rich people.
I mean, did you see the thing with Harvard's 50 billion, 50 billion?
That's it.
How much richer do you get than 50 billion?
Anyone want to ask them why it's 80 grand?
than $50 billion. Anyone want to ask them why it's $80 grand? Why are these kids running up so much of a debt if you've got $50 billion worth of endowments? I haven't heard Kamala
Harris ask any of those questions. Would that be a reasonable question to ask?
Can you check, is Harvard needs blind? In other words, some schools admit on a needs blind basis,
in which case they pick up the fee through financial aid
and whatnot for a lot of the kids. Yeah, I'm sure they do scholarships and things of that nature.
Some of them really, like those 70% of the kids are on.
Really? Yeah.
Entirely blind?
Seventy?
Needs-blind. Yeah, so it ends up being a lot of kids.
Seventy percent?
What percentage of kids?
That seems a lot. That seems...
Well, what percentage of kids at Harvard?
That seemed like a good business model.
On financial aid.
Let's start with that.
Well, speaking of money, though, so Americans, they're spending the biggest share of their
income on food in three decades, right?
Since 91.
Super fucking expensive.
Whether at home or a restaurant, food just-
Hang on.
Got that number?
No.
No, sorry.
You gave him 18 seconds. Oh, I thought you saw him go over there and then run back. or a restaurant, food. Hang on. Got that number? No. No, sorry. You gave him 18 seconds.
Oh, I thought you saw him go over there and then run back.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
But also, did you see the thing with the Kellogg's CEO?
No.
Cereal for dinner.
Yeah, he was on CNBC, and here's a clip, and they torched him for this.
The cereal category has always been quite affordable,
and it tends to be a great destination when consumers are under pressure. So some of the things that we're doing is first
messaging. We got to reach the consumer where they are. So we're advertising about cereal for
dinner. If you think about the cost of cereal for a family versus what they might otherwise do,
that's going to be much more affordable. Got destroyed. Here's the reality. They did Coke
for breakfast. They tried that one for a while, too.
We don't like to mix it up.
Put the Coke in the cereal at night.
But if people are starving, like starving, he's right.
If starvation were actually an issue, yeah, cereal is a good alternative for calories.
Right.
We're not starving in this country.
Well, I don't even, I mean, look, he sells cereal for a living.
And MSNBC or CNBC or whoever, you make fun of this guy pushing cereal.
You assholes did shield for pharmaceutical companies nonstop for three years.
So you're casting judgment on this guy.
All you guys did was hammer checks from pharmaceutical companies and then try
to bully everyone into getting a vaccine
that they probably didn't need.
That's what you guys do.
We're going to judge him?
Yeah. When you went to El Pollo
Loco and you bought that chicken meal,
I bought a box of Rice Krispies because
my wife was making Rice Krispies treats for a
birthday party. It's like $11
for a box of Rice Krispies treats for a birthday party. It's like $11 for a box of Rice Krispies.
Well, okay.
Wow.
Unbelievable.
Listen.
It's expensive dinner.
Everything energy is expensive now, you know?
And when energy, look, when the price of diesel goes up,
then everything goes up, you know?
You gotta transport that cereal.
I don't get first off how did the idea that biden runs with bidenomics is
is insane and they're constantly trying to explain to us how everything's better it it is not there
is nothing that's good i mean your interest rates on buying a fucking house. It's literally like a $250,000 house, or let's say a $400,000 house.
Your monthly payment was, you know, $1,800 and now it's four grand.
Right.
And it's like, that's fucking huge.
Yeah.
Everywhere.
All the time.
Yeah.
Plus add another couple thousand to food every month can't escape
it yes i it's it's it's look you can't just fucking print money and by the way
you know biden's obsession is getting rid of loans for people of college degrees that's not
the people we're talking about who are eating cereal for dinner.
Yeah.
But I don't know.
This guy sells cereal, so that's what he's saying.
I mean, you've heard a story of people eating Top Ramen for long periods of time.
It's not different.
And I've had cereal for dinner a few times in my life. It's not bad.
I've done it.
I want to get your thoughts on this, Drew, because, look, we're here with Adam Carolla,
who you've named hypervigilant.
But there is a guy in Germany who is hypervaccinated.
Have you heard about this guy?
He has been vaccinated against COVID 217 times.
Interesting.
And there's official evidence for 134 of those.
The rest are self-reported.
And to the researcher's surprise, his immune system is fully functional.
I'd love to hear more about it. They should study the hell out of that guy.
That's interesting.
He has a large number of T-effector cells against SARS-CoV-2,
even more than observed in the control group.
These cells didn't show any signs of fatigue
and were just as effective as cells obtained from the control group.
So he has hyper-vaccination.
He uses hyper-vaccination as a strategy.
And he's doing it intellectually because he thinks it's the right thing to do,
or is he nutty in OCD?
I think it might be the second one, but he was also selling vaccine cards.
Oh, interesting.
That's weird.
Oh, he would get vaccinated, get the card, and sell it?
Yeah, I mean, there are reports of that, yes.
Oh, well, that sounds that, yes. I see.
Oh, well, that sounds like wise.
There you go.
Wise doing it.
But in terms of adverse side effects, I mean, I have no doubt that he's going to get decent
immune response.
But it'd be interesting to see what kind of adverse stuff happens.
No, but even after he was caught, he's still getting it.
Like, he has something they call hyper-vaccination.
He just has to keep getting it.
And I don't know who keeps giving it to him.
That's a good question.
He probably lies when he goes in there.
But has he had COVID? That's an interesting question giving it to him. That's a good question. He probably lies when he goes in there. But has he had COVID?
That's an interesting question, too.
Yeah.
That's a good question.
I mean, I'm sure.
There is no sign that he has ever been infected with COVID.
62 years old.
It's hard to document, but yeah.
Yeah, I really wouldn't know if I had COVID or not.
Yeah, guy in Germany, though.
Interesting.
Fascinating.
Yeah, well, he should be studied.
Yeah, keep an eye on him.
Yeah.
Oprah Winfrey.
Oh.
She's left the Weight Watchers board, or she's leaving, after she's admitted that she's using
a weight loss drug.
She's not naming which one.
But Weight Watchers is advocating Ozembic.
Right.
They are now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But she's saying that her doctors put her on a weight loss drug as part of her wellness
routine. Unspecified weight loss loss drug as part of her wellness routine.
Unspecified weight loss medication.
As part of her wellness routine.
I love the way they frame it like that.
Chris, that's too good.
Wellness routine would be more exercise and less carbs.
Yes, it would.
It's part of it.
It might be that, too.
No, that is a pharmaceutical intervention for obesity.
That's what that is.
Yeah.
And hopefully with diabetes to make it worth the risk. She told the board she won't be standing for re-election and concluding her nine-year tenure within the company.
And it's already plunged like 27% that she's left.
Well, you know what?
I bet she did it so she could with a good conscience keep using Ozambic.
I think she feels a little guilty about it.
She probably got off the train even though they're advocating for it.
Right.
guilty about it so she probably got off the train even though they're advocating for it right and she's also she's announcing that she plans to donate her financial interest in Weight Watchers
to the National Museum of African American History and Culture in DC okay wasn't that was that the
place that said uh they had their charter and it was like uh being prompt and uh being prompt and being the white traits.
Oh, yeah.
I think promptness and having ability at your job or something where it's sort of the white man's things.
Was that the place?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
They had something fucking kooky.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
Emmy will look it up.
But you do know that, I mean, you've said to me a million times that being prompt was on the considered racist or the dominion of the white man.
Prompt and logic and truth.
Those are things that, no, no, no, no.
For the African-American community.
Well, for anybody.
That's how they're going to thrive. That's how they thrive. The white man came up with those priorities. So, no, no, no, no. For the African-American community. Well, for anybody. That's how they're going to thrive.
That's how they thrive.
Old white men came up with those priorities.
So no, no, no, no, no.
I know.
The stuff that makes you employable?
That stuff?
No, no, no, no.
There's something, Emmy, on that at that museum.
I just remember.
I just remember.
But yeah, I do.
I do love it.
Okay.
Earnings. Oh, good. Yeah. I just remember. But yeah, I do love it. Earnings.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
They can maybe.
That and the Native Indigenous People Museum
is supposed to be very good too.
Maybe they can afford the Bishop Don Magic Wands
Rolls Royce to be transported over there for an exit.
I thought it was in El Dorado.
El Dorado?
I think it was in El Dorado.
That green one with the green wheels?
Hold on. Wow. Adam's seen it I think it was an Eldorado. That green one with the green wheels? Hold on.
Wow.
It's Adam Seed in person.
I've been in it.
Oh, my God.
But he must also have a Rolls Royce, because I swear to God I saw an Eldorado.
Green is for the money.
I know.
Gold is for the honey.
Okay?
Yep.
Green and gold.
Rolls.
Now, he probably has more.
Yeah. I mean, he probably has a Cadillac yeah i mean he probably has a cadillac
as well he does have a cadillac as well okay but his main the the car they're going to flatbed to
the museum oh yeah that's going to be the rolls yeah and oprah's going to have to pay for that
now oh look at that it is he's got both i see both oh no he can have more than one sure i know
so she looks like he may have a Mercedes, too, or something.
What is that?
He lives in an apartment.
These cars are parked in front of his house on the street.
On the street.
And not a great part of town, either.
That's so good.
I guess people know not to screw with it.
I mean, does any of this make sense?
Did you find anything close to that?
Not yet, sorry.
All right.
And did you find out how many people at Harvard are on?
That is DeVille.
DeVille?
Okay, that's the one I saw.
Mm-hmm.
That's the one I saw.
So anyway, they should have a whole...
Listen, you're talking about the black experience, right? Yeah. I want it.
I want it full. Can we see
the cornucopia, the full
array of the black experience?
You're going to have to get some pimping
in there if that's in fact
what you're doing.
You know what I mean? Yeah,
sure. The 70s.
Let's get into the full experience
of the 70s.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, if we're going to examine the good and the bad and the dirty and the clean, if we're just going to do the full enterprise.
So if you were going to do a museum about Italian-Americans,
and Adam Carolla is the chairman of the board,
we're going to do Mafia?
We're going to have to have, here's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
We're going to have to have some Ferraris, and we're going to have to have some Fiats.
Because, sorry, they come from the same place.
You know what I mean?
The full spectrum, full transparency.
Okay?
Okay.
Okay.
Have you seen the new F1 Netflix thing, the new season?
I have not seen the new Drive to Survival.
That's so good.
It's all the, it's so good. It's the best.
I can't stop watching it.
I'm going to watch it.
All right.
You can see me over at Kimmel's Club coming up
and also West Palm Beach at the Palm Beach Kennel Club coming up.
March 22nd and 23rd, doing a bunch of shows there.
Just go to amcrow.com for all the live shows.
Bakersfield, Chicago, Salt Lake City.
What do you got, Drew?
Subscribe to the Rumble channel and check out drdrew.com.
And until next time, it's Adam Crowell for Dr. Drew.
Say it!
Oh, Chris Max Paddle.
Say it!
Mahalo.
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