The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1893 Trans-Parenting
Episode Date: July 18, 2024Dr. Drew kicks off today's show continuing to discuss the recent attempt on President Donald Trump, they breakdown gender reveals and joint birthdays. Plus, the issue with sharing the problem versus s...ingling an individual out, and another failed attempt at transparency in California. Leave us a voicemail: SpeakPipe.com/AdamandDrDrew OR Click the microphone at top of the homepage, AdamandDrDrew.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.
The toes are gonna blip, blip, blip, da, da.
The eye bobs in, brits trying to stick,
and stick, smack, smack, smack, smack, smack,
smuggy, smuggy.
Oh my.
So we actually did not talk about President Trump
being shot, per se.
Sort of an extraordinary thing.
It's one of those things you remember where you were
when it happened.
Yeah.
And I was at a gender reveal party for my son's pregnancy.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Gender reveal.
I know.
I'm not into that stuff, but yes, it was the whole thing.
And I know.
I know your family was way into it. I know your family was way into that stuff, but yes, it was a whole thing. And I know your family
was way into it. I know your family was way into that stuff.
Who cares? First off, if it's a girl, you cheer. If it's a guy, you cheer. So already,
who cares?
You know what's interesting though? I was telling Susan, I go, you know these parties,
they're overwhelming for me. She's like, what? I go, yeah, they're overwhelming because I
never experienced... We celebrated nothing in my childhood. Not
Christmas, nothing. Not zero.
You had to do something for Christmas.
Oh, I had to... I remember as a kid sort of forcing the issue, like saying, you know,
we got it, let's get a treat. They would occasionally a bit of a little Hanukkah something, but
no celebration. No... We wouldn't gather with people, there was no meal, nothing,
no, nothing, zero. Birthdays, sort of, maybe when I was a little kid. And it was always met with,
hey, you don't want to celebrate, do you? I was like, no, I don't, because I don't know what that
is, I don't know what that would look like. I, listen, you and I share the same feelings of, um, uncomfortableness.
It's weird, isn't it?
Oh my God.
When you're around that stuff, it's like, I don't know how to behave.
I don't know what to do.
I don't know.
Well, I just sit there, but I don't like it's, it's uncomfortable.
It's overwhelming to me.
It's over.
It's like too much.
It's like, it feels, and, and I guess it's because I can't, it's emotional and it sort of overwhelms
me I guess, making note of something, you know what I mean? Celebrating something. I'm
not used to it. It's very weird.
Well, I mean, I guess you could break it down this way. I was trying to think about this
the other day. I have no idea when either one of my parents' birthdays are the date of their birthday. I have a suspicion
that I could narrow it down to a month, but I would have no idea what the date was inside
of the month. And I realized that must be because we never – they didn't do anything.
Right. Never celebrate.
If we did something, we'd do it. We did – we had little bits and pieces of things.
We would combine my birthday with my sister's birthday.
Perfect.
She was, at the time it made sense to me.
Like she was born May 9th, I was born May 27th.
Like what are you gonna do, buy two cakes?
Come on.
That's a lot to roll with.
So we would just put them together.
And then sometime in June,
we'd go to my grandparents' house.
And the big deal was, which I didn't,
again, it was a big deal, is you could request a meal.
So we didn't do meals per se,
or like traditional meals or normal meals.
Request a food, you mean?
Request a bacon.
You could say, I want bacon.
And mashed potatoes.
And for that day, you could get mashed potatoes.
Now you couldn't get mashed potatoes other days, obviously,
because that would involve mashing potatoes.
And that's a lot. mashed potatoes other days, obviously, because that would involve mashing potatoes.
And that's a lot.
And it wouldn't go, we never ate out or anything,
so you could request a type of a cake,
like a pineapple upside down cake, which I enjoy,
and mashed potatoes and chicken or something.
So that's what you could do.
And that was a thing.
And then-
What if it was significantly different from your sister?
Was there sort of negotiation?
Because I can imagine.
It would only be one and we'd have to figure it out.
And it would be a Thursday night in another family.
You know, like a regular, like when I'd go to my buddy Chris's house, he'd be like,
what are we eating, pork chops?
Whose birthday is it?
Nobody's birthday, it's just we're eating pork chops.
But it's Thursday, you know what I mean?
Mashed potatoes and pork chops.
It is interesting.
I know we get a little negative
on the overly self-esteem endorsing stuff,
but celebrating know, celebrating
somebody, you know, it's an emotional sort of thing, right? You're sort of
singling that person out, you're kind of expressing a feeling toward them, and
you might even gather other people. None of those things, that was not in the
lexicon in my household. We did a little bit of Christmas the night before
grandma's house. She never bought a tree but she would decorate them. I smell
your grandfather at work. He would decorate the rubber tree plant which is
not good. You used to say that your mom bought a branch of a tree and
tilted it on the wall. I mean God, I just say buy, found a branch of a tree and tilted it on the wall. Bought one?
I mean, I just say buy, found a branch of a tree.
Well, you know, what you said was between bought and brought, which kind of meant is
brought a tree.
Yeah, we had a very kind of unattractive pine tree in front of my mom's old house.
Not noble.
It's rotting.
Part of the pun, because noble is, I think, a pine,
but not ponderosa, you know,
like that kind of thing you'd paint,
you know, like kind of scraggly.
And then we just cut, my mom cut the branch.
Could have been my stepdad, I don't know,
just whacked the branch off.
Which, like, at the time, at the time I was like, I guess it'll do,
because I was looking at the pine tree,
but then I realized when you cut it down,
it's very one-dimensional, it's very flat.
And then of course we didn't have a Christmas tree holder,
you know, the base.
No, no, no, you just lean it against the wall.
We just lean it.
Did you have lights?
Did you have lights?
No, no lights, right?
I don't recall.
I don't think it would withstand the weight
of a string of lights.
Did you put any kind of decoration
or was that all to be handmade stuff?
There was popcorn to be strung.
I think I remember stringing some popcorn.
It's like the old west.
It had elements of the old west to it.
Well, there wasn't a lot of difference between those days and the old west. Well there wasn't a lot of difference
between those days and the old west.
We had a telephone, one telephone,
and we had a TV set, but in terms of the home,
nowhere, there wasn't any elements that weren't.
Two doors, one for the office, one for the living room.
Oh my God, I had Joe in the next room.
I went and ran down my dad's junker house
the other day and took a picture of it,
but he went on Zillow or Redfin or something like that.
And this place is undescribable,
but I think it was about 650 square feet,
single-family home.
It's weird.
It's always weird to me that you would
construct a home that small,
because the thing about building a house is
the cost difference between 650 and 1,000 really isn't that much once
you're going. You know what I mean? It's really not that much.
When you hear about the suburban sprawl in Los Angeles, there was a lot about speed.
They think boys were coming home, we had to build a bunch of houses. So I wonder if that
had something to do with it.
This could be it. I'm showing you the picture.
Maybe there were, F'm showing you the picture. Maybe the roof even, oh Jesus.
Yeah, that's where I lived, and I haven't put a lot of work into it
since I moved out.
And it's a one bedroom, one bath,
650 square foot, as far as I remember.
But no, we just lived a certain way.
Let's do that one.
And no, there wasn't-
Like the daughter family.
Well, what it was, party.
Daughter party.
Well, there was the daughter family that, yeah.
Oh, that went through the past.
I think, yeah.
So, all right. So what was it? Well, we didn't really okay. Well, what is the bottom line here?
We look it wasn't all financial
It wasn't all financial at all. We didn't we didn't do joy
Yeah, you did. Yeah, you know what I mean? Yeah, you know people and here's the other here's thing
I would notice we didn't do fun. We didn't do fun.
Well, when I say joy, I kind of extend that into fun
or vice versa, fun and joy, joy and fun.
Fun for kids, woo!
You know, that's it.
It wasn't, we didn't do that.
And it's free.
And it always kind of drives me bonkers.
It always had when people try to break it down It's free and it always kind of drives me bonkers.
It always had when people try to break it down
along some sort of socioeconomic line,
which is it doesn't cost money to be silly with your kid
or have fun with them or have a sense of humor
or whatever that thing is.
I remember we were in Mexico and went out
to the outskirts in a Jeep and saw people living in mud floor huts essentially or sort of cinder block homes.
And there just was joy all over the place.
I could see it.
It struck me.
I went, oh, that's right.
If you have relationships and you have family, you got all you need if it's functioning.
And then if you remember, the president of Mexico was asked by a US reporter, well all
this fentanyl down here, why don't you have a fentanyl problem?
He said, we have families.
Immediately.
Our families are intact.
And on top of that we have religion and spirituality and that's it.
And that's so people don't do drugs.
I was like, boy.
All right.
We were talking on the last show about the Mayorkas interview, and I want to know what
the problem was with the person coming over the border and murdering somebody, and then
his answer was, we're going to prosecute that person.
Another example of great journalism here.
Great journalism.
Here we go.
Should this man have been deported?
A few thoughts.
First, Margaret, first and foremost, an absolute tragedy, and our hearts break for, and our
prayers are with the family
number one number two and importantly as a prosecutor having prosecuted violent crime
and other crimes for 12 years one individual is responsible for the murder and that is the
murderer and we work very closely all right hold on law enforcement. Hold on a second.
She wants to know why this person's in the country.
He's explaining that there's one person and one person only that's in charge of the murder.
That's the murderer.
All right, well, let's extrapolate that to the guy who tried to kill Trump.
Just him?
Or maybe the Secret Service plays some role in this yes
Yeah, oh if you're in charge of not having assassins on the roof and the assassin on the roof kills the presidential nominee
Is that just his problem? That's just on him one person all right, so if you
run a
Penitentiary yeah, okay, and there's a wall around that penitentiary and you go,
we do not let convicted murders outside of this penitentiary, but you did let a convicted murder
out. You're the warden of the penitentiary and you said, I'm going to swing the gate open and let
this guy out and we're not going to look for him. and then he murders a woman who's jogging. Is that only? So that's just on him. That's just on him? And then
if I say to you as the warden, why did you let this guy out and you say, we're going
to prosecute him, that's not an answer. He's in charge of the gate around the penitentiary.
And he let the guy in and then let him in some more and then let him go in the middle
of the country.
And the person that's interviewing him wants to know why.
Not whose fault.
Yes, he killed someone.
It's his fault.
By the way, plenty of local boys who kill people,
and it's their fault too. But you're not in charge of them being let in. That's why she's asking you,
by the way. Run it back under them. Listen to that. But listen, she better fucking follow up
the fucking question. That's what I'm saying. Yeah. But before you play it, I have a really
specific reaction to him. I feel like he's like...
I expect him to start blinking Morse code one day, like he is a prisoner in that administration.
I got this distinct feeling about him that he is bridled in some way.
Imagine if somebody said to you, like Drew, you need to be the head of surgery at Johns Hopkins, right?
You went, okay, but you can only use a spork
and a butter knife, you know?
It's not gonna be effective.
And you go, you shut up.
You're that new head.
Use skills.
Use your persuasion skills.
No scalpels and no rib spreaders.
And you just be like, oh fuck.
And then another patient died in the operation
They got to bring you up. They go now we're gonna ask you questions. That's what you would look like, right?
It's like I'm in charge of the border, but I can't implement anything. So I'm fucked. I just got this feeling
I mean it may not be all that but I definitely have that feeling about him. All right, let's
Should this man have been deported?
feeling about him. All right, let's...
Should this man have been deported?
A few thoughts.
First, Margaret, first and foremost, an absolute tragedy.
A tragedy?
And our hearts break four and our prayers are with the family, number one.
Number two, and importantly, as a prosecutor, having prosecuted violent crime and other
crimes for 12 years, one individual is responsible for the murder
and that is the murderer. And we work very closely with state and local law
enforcement to ensure that individuals who pose a threat to public safety are
indeed our highest priority for detention and removal. But are you
saying there that the federal government had been informed about this individual
and the alleged crimes he had committed in those states because he could have been deported
if that was the case?
Was there a breakdown in the system?
So Margaret, there are a number of cities around the country that have varying degrees
of cooperation with the immigration authorities.
We firmly believe that if a city is aware of an individual
who poses a threat to public safety,
then we would request that they provide us
with that information so that we can ensure
that that individual is detained if the facts so warrant.
Oh my god.
Yeah, I just love the fact that you announced we're sanctuary city and then ICE comes to
pick the guy up and you go, now we're keeping him.
We'd rather have him roaming the streets here than give him to you because you're going
to do something with him that we don't want.
Jesus Christ.
By the way, Sanctuary City is the tip of the spear and the coup de grace of Chick-Think. It's
1000% Chick-Think. If people want to know what Chick-Think is, it is Sanctuary City. It starts off
with statements. No human is illegal. Well, the one who's in your
living room with a machete is illegal while they're in your living room with the machete.
During that point, or the one, the guy's on the roof with the sniper rifle who is trying to,
you know, kill the president, that guy's illegal, for the time he has the rifle, folks in the crowd aren't.
But yeah, if I try to hop the fence and get into Hungary,
then I am illegal.
I'm not, if I stay in the United States.
By the way, if I try to get my way into Canada,
then I shall be illegal in Canada,
but I'm not an illegal person.
I'm doing something illegal.
But they fall in love with some sort of adage
that's basically retard gibberish, you know,
where they go, no humans, like you're gonna nod, you know?
Oh yeah, that's a good point.
Right, we welcome everybody.
Build bridges, not walls.
Not walls, all right, so they do all the chick think.
Then they lay out some sort of thing
that doesn't really exist,
but it's a kind of a pablum that gets repeated enough.
These people do more to contribute
than take from the system.
They're like, they don't pay taxes.
In general, they don't pay taxes,
and they get a lot of benefits from the system.
So they're higher contributors than folks
that are born here who do work and do pay taxes.
They say something that's weird and sort of,
then they pick something that's sort of a little unprovable
which is the crime rate between the migrants
and home, they'll mix something around,
which, okay, neither here nor there,
because it's like, okay, so you go,
okay, for every,
for every catalytic converter stolen,
turns out 100 citizens stole those catalytic converters
versus 25 illegals granted.
But that's still 25 more than would have been stolen.
Now it's 125 versus 100.
So it wouldn't really matter if it was one, it would just be more.
The murder rate amongst the people that were born here. Yeah, yeah, but there's still dead people
because people came here.
So there's that.
So anyway, it's pure chip think gibberish.
And then when the shit goes down
and somebody from Texas or Florida goes,
oh, okay, so your sanctuary city.
Well, fine, we'll load up the bus
and we'll put them over there and they can drop off in your city. so you're sanctuary city. Well, fine, we'll load up the bus and we'll put them over there
and they can drop them off in your city.
Then you start going insane.
Which is, that's the end of the Chick Think part
where you wanna know what's going on.
What's going on here?
That's my favorite Chick Think part.
It's like you scream what's going on.
And by the way, good news in California,
Newsome just signed the law this morning
making it illegal to tell parents, schools to tell parents if their child is transitioning.
Yeah.
They're not allowed to say anything. Illegal.
Put those teachers in jail.
He wants transparency, doesn't he?
Well, he wants trans...
Transparen-ting.
Yeah, transparen-ting. That's what he wants. Transparenting. What would be the harm?
By the way, that is what you're wasting your time with.
And we've got everything else solved in California, so yeah, we're going to keep the feel-good
stuff going.
Everything else is taken care of.
I mean, you know, we've got a place for people
to live by the beach now if you want to pull a van up to the Pacific Coast Highway. We
got plenty of sidewalk space for people to flop on and play. We'll give you the drugs.
We'll give you the drugs. Welcome to Utopia.
All right. Take a quick break. Be right back after this.
All right, well anyway, so Newsome's got the thing where it's illegal for, by the way,
how many rules do we need?
You know what I mean?
I feel so overwhelmed by this state.
It really is something.
You gotta homeschool people.
We're now at that point.
Oh, for sure.
We're now at the fucking point where you just have to homeschool.
That's very evolved now too. It's a whole system online and you have social spaces for
the kids to meet up after the afternoon.
Yeah.
Other like-minded kids. Yeah, it's not... To me, it always seemed like this weird far-right
of religious extremism kind of thing at one point. It is not that, it's just an academic experience.
Yeah, well, it used to be that way.
And what it was, I mean, let's break it down.
You ready, Drew?
Yeah.
When you and I went to school,
or and beyond even not going that far back,
the curriculum only was offensive or objectionable to 5%
of society, right? Because it's like, I want them to study the Bible. Well, they're not
gonna study the Bible, but they're gonna do US history.
Right.
They go, well, I don't want my kid being an advisor, but that was 3%. Or evolution was a big thing.
Or evolution, whatever that thing was, right? So you'd go, well, 3% of the populace disagrees
with you not having, teaching evolution, not teaching the Bible and creationism and things
of that nature. So that was offensive to a fringe, small minority
of parents that didn't want to raise their kids because we're Jehovah's Witness and we don't want
to raise our kids in that thing, and they were playing rock and roll music in gym class, and,
you know, that's the devil's music. Fine. Now, certainly in places like California, 50% of the parents disagree with their bat
shit crazy curriculum, right?
So we're going to have drag queen story hour.
We're going to have books about transitioning read by teachers with blue and pink hair.
We will make it against the law for the school to inform you that your child is going by
different pronouns and transitioning.
Now you've got about 62% of the parents going, fuck this.
This is nuts, right?
So then you're going to get a burgeoning homeschooling group who aren't religious nut jobs, they're
just regular folk who completely disagree with everything they're doing.
Like, you know, California's half Hispanic
and they all disagree with all this bullshit.
They hate all of it.
So why would they, you know,
want to involve themselves with it?
Plus, there's no vouchers.
I was thinking back,
with it. Plus, there's no vouchers. I was thinking back and maybe Amy can find it, but maybe Byron can find it. I don't know. Remember, was it Barbara Boxer's daughter when I was
asking about vouchers or homeschooling and she gave her stupid tell Adam that 80s are
calling and they want their programs back?
Yes, that's her daughter, yes.
Bitch. And by the way, you were puss.
I was.
We were the world-class puss during that interview.
But Drew was interviewing Senator Barbara Boxer.
She just, I think,
stepped down. Stepped down, I think.
California Senator Barbara Boxer.
Yeah, and the daughter.
And, and the daughter, you're doing both. Yeah. And so you wanted to me to ask a question and my question was why are they
against vouchers and school choice. It's a pretty good question. That was in
2013 or 14 or something. That was a decade ago. At ago. But I asked, yeah, I asked to ask that question.
Drew half-heartedly floated it out there
and then had no follow-ups, but okay.
But that was the old Drew, this is the new Drew.
And also, the old way of doing things doesn't work
because the old way of doing things
relies on a certain integrity of them
and their answering of the questions, which they do not do anymore. So you just have to
keep going with them.
Yeah, it's interesting. I'm embarrassed by that interviewing style of that era, like
that I didn't follow on that. I didn't really even listen to them. I just assumed they knew
what they were talking about.
It was the old, you had to do it. I mean, the problem that would happen
is when you'd run into a world-class dim-bulb narcissist,
like Gavin Newsom, he has an unlimited capacity
to go in a circle, which is a bizarre way of saying things.
You know what I mean?
So it's like-
Yeah, you're not used to it.
It's like, oh, okay.
It's like you're talking to a nine-year-old and you go, there's grape juice all over our
new white tablecloth.
What happened?
It got grape juice on it.
Well, how'd it get grape juice on it?
Because there's grape juice on it.
Well, how did it get?
It was in a glass.
So then what happened?
Then there's grape juice.
Well, but didn't a glass fall over?
There was grape juice in the glass and now it's on the tablecloth.
Well, did you knock the glass over onto the tablecloth?
There's grape juice on...
Well, first off, there's a lot of grape juice on a lot of tablecloths.
People should know it's not just this tablecloth.
It's grape juice, it's red wine.
Grape juice is very stained.
It stains. It stains. There's tobacco stains. It's grape juice, it's red wine. Grape juice is very stained, stained.
There's tobacco stains, there's staining going on.
Grass stains, I don't even have to, iodine.
There's a lot of staining.
So Newsome is one of the few guys who has the capacity
to go in a retarded circle for an unlimited amount of time.
One could argue maybe I have that capacity too because I have the capacity
to ask someone the same question an unlimited number of times until they answer the question.
He has the capacity to never answer the question. He just kept going in a circle.
And then tries multiple techniques. Hi Adam, good to see you.
Well, that was his latest one. That was his latest one. So Drew is asking Senator Barbara Boxer, her daughter, about school choice and vouchers and then she gave, the daughter gave
a condescending answer to the question. She gave a non-answer. I don't think there was even an answer.
Just tell that, oh he's up for that, then tell him the 80s are calling just that's a joke. Sorry, but I would
You would not call that a condescending answer Oh condescending for sure. I just said a condescending answer. Okay, I think that
Covers what she did. Well, I want condescending response. Exactly. Well, I mean answer like she answered the respond
Okay, all right, Drew. Come on get your shit together
She gives a condescending answer and then drew has no more questions and then they move on but I would argue that
You know, I first off. I don't know why there's a weird time stamp on school choice and vouchers
It seems now more than ever kind of kind of thing. It's always
Traditionally helped black people
and brown people, they're the ones who want it the most.
You guys love black people, right?
Right, you do, right?
White, rich people, don't you love the black people?
And I think about why I said non-answer
because I'm really tuned up now to the non-answer answers.
You know what I mean?
It's like that I find that
just insufferable. So it immediately makes me like I have a physical reaction to it now.
Yeah. So different times. All right. Well, maybe we can find that clip for the next show.
It exists somewhere, Drew, because you played it for me when we came back. And then I probably
went nuts on it at some point. I thought I was proud of it.
You were?
I thought I was telling you that I had done my job.
Terrible.
Well, you'd done your job and that you brought it up.
But there is no such thing which is, oh, okay, so this is a talking point from the 80s but
why isn't it a valid question?
Do you think this helps kids?
And if you don't, then why are you against it?
You gotta articulate that.
Okay, and then they do this whole thing
where it's like we're taking money out of the system.
It's just the money follows the kid, that's all.
If you think you can get it done at half the price
and get a better education, which is what you can do, if you do in the private sector, is what you can
do with everything in the private sector, then let's do it.
Why are the outcomes better?
Why are the outcomes better? And then also, all you guys ever talk about is how bad the
system is and how bad the school system is and how the kids are ten, you know, they're
five grades below reading and it's a failure.
Well, that's your system then.
All right, so you're calling it broken.
Well, the system's broken.
Okay, system manager, who keeps telling me
the system is broken, I'm just asking for another system.
All right, we'll play it for the next show.
You can go to Amcrourl.com for all the
live shows. It's gonna be Kimmel's Club July 25th, gonna be Carpenteria at the Alcazar Theater,
that'll be the 27th. Dawson will be doing his jam up there telling his jokes. Just go to Amchurl.com
for all the live shows. What do you got Drew? Ask Dr. Drew Tuesday, Wednesday at 3, Thursday at noon,
sign up, subscribe at Rumble and Dr. Drew.com for everything else.
And leave us a voicemail at speakpipe.com slash Adam and Dr. Drew.
So, until next time, I'm Adam Kroll of Dr. Drew's Science.
Mahala.
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