The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - AJ Benza Joins The Adam and Dr. Drew Show (The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics)
Episode Date: March 30, 2024In this episode of The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics, the fellas discuss the impact of overturning Roe v Wade, the wildness of "Cancel Culture" and AJ Benza stops by to talk all things pop culture. ...
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Welcome to another episode of the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics.
I am your host Big Brother Jake aka Jake Warner, my government name.
Let's dive right in.
Up first, episode 1593 titled Legacy that aired on July 4th, 2022.
In this clip, Adam and Drew discuss the overturning of Roe vs. Wade and how their
political views are accepted in some states while frowned upon in others. Check it out.
I'm sort of, I, again, when, when people get so emotional about stuff, I kind of have question
marks over my head a little bit. Like, like why is the most emotional group in the states where things are not only not changed
They're actually more protected their governors have taken measures to really protect things
So they're most emotional on the coast that's California, New York
California, New York has
Not not in danger of going down the Mississippi Road on this.
Not at all. In fact, they want to pay your tax dollars to bring them on in.
Yes, we will leave it to the states and the progressive states will extensively become
more progressive when it comes to abortion, which is because they will have to do something to counteract
something that's not affecting them or changing, which is the move they're going to have to
make because they're going to have to show, they're going to have to grandstand.
So New York and LA will then or California will become abortion tourism towns and then we will provide Gavin
Newsom is going to buy plane tickets and lodging to ostensibly people from Mississippi to come
here and have an abortion that we who live in California will pay for.
Right. And if we don't pay for it, the businesses might be able to pay for it as well. So there's
lots of resources being allocated, which is good.
And I think the red states that are going harshly anti-abortion are going to create
lots of circumstances that they don't anticipate. I mean, there are so many medical circumstances
that they're going to have to contend with. One of the things I get emotional about is
interfering with the practice of medicine. And they have to let doctors protect the patient and the fetus.
Let us do our job or make the right decision on behalf of both.
And they're interfering with that.
And of course, here we go again.
This is where things go bad always.
Yeah.
So most abortions are done with a pill or half?
Pill.
More than half.
More than half.
Yeah.
Yeah. Why no pill in Mississippi?
That doesn't make well, okay
It's really Louisiana is the bad one and here's what I have a I worry about as it pertains to no pill first of all
The the no pill thing. I mean the pill itself has issues on both sides on the left
Please stop talking about people
with coat hangers and dying in back alleys.
That's not how it's done.
Pill, it's a pill, vast majority.
And people will be more focused on getting that pill now
because of the lack of access to procedural stuff
in the later parts of pregnancy.
Where you have a lack of access to the pill?
Yes, you have to go to California.
What's really uncertain right now is, can you have it mailed to you from California?
And if you accept it...
Well, can you or are you?
Because...
Well, if you accept it, what risks are you taking is the question.
Makes sense to me that people would get the pill sent to them from a friend or a family
member or somebody in one of these more lenient states.
That makes sense.
Of course.
But the question is if they get caught, what risk are they taking?
I don't even think that's even been established yet, right?
How long until you can't take the pill?
Really, it's first trimester.
First trimester is the pill, really.
And that's when most people have their abortions.
And people are going to have to really, really pay attention. If they're later or if they have, you know,
all kinds of, there are all kinds of medical
misadventures that can happen, you know,
both in terms of the development of the fetus
and the genetics of the fetus and the position
of the fetus later that are gonna have to be
allowed to be treated by physicians.
But we'll see.
But as it pertains to the pill,
the other thing is that concerns me is it seems like the pro-life world,
and by the way, I don't have a horse in the race.
I weirdly am not emotional about this,
except as it pertains to interfering
with the medical practice, but it seems like
the real pro-life has sort of really backed
their position to life begins at conception, right?
Wouldn't you say that's the predominant argument these days?
They used to horse around with implantation and now they're just, at least the potential,
the unique potential exists at conception, right?
So what interferes with implantation is interfering with the life.
It's a murder in their point of view. So what interferes with the implantation is interfering with the life. It's a murder in their point of view.
So what interferes with the implantation?
Well, the abortion pill.
Guess what else does?
The birth control pill you take normally,
IUDs, emergency contraception,
all these things interfere with implantation.
So if you're gonna be a purist with this,
they start, you might go down a path to outlawing
birth control pills, which is insanity in my opinion.
But it's, again, if you're too extreme on either end, if you're too extreme on the pro-abortion
side, you're aborting a child that has its legs sticking out during delivery and just
killing it.
And if you're too pro-life, you're getting rid of everything that can manage and prevent
pregnancies.
So I'm calling for sanity on both sides.
That's what I'm looking for.
Yeah.
Well, both sides are going to gravitate toward their side.
Yeah.
And so they both are gonna seem sort of extreme
because nobody's for abortion,
partial birth abortions or any of that.
It gets ghoulish at a certain point.
And then nobody wants the outlaw of the IUD or birth
control or whatever I mean not nobody but you know nobody reasonable right so
I think the problem I heard somebody talk about this on Twitter or something
who knows anymore the problem with a lot of the stuff is
You know, I don't know Bill Clinton
1993, you know safe and
Necessary and in rare or whatever was kind of the democratic approach to abortion, you know
It was sort of so basically what it was is there was a time when the Democrats were like look
Abortion's bad. Nobody wants an abortion. Nobody hopes for this for their children, but we understand it's necessary
And so what we what our approach is we we'd like it to be
Rare as rare as possible. That's Bill Clinton's tweet right there.
Abortion should not only be safe and legal.
His tweet, because it was 93.
Oh, this is his statement.
Abortion should not only be safe and legal, it should be rare.
That's an actual quote from 1993.
All right.
And I would...
96, sorry.
96.
All right.
So then the majority of Americans went, yeah, okay.
Safe.
Okay.
Good.
Legal. Got you. Rare. Yeah. Okay. went yeah okay yeah safe okay good legal gotcha rare yeah okay that's the society I'd like to live
in yeah and but they kept going and they just kept going and then it just became it's 100% the
woman's choice and she can do it whenever she wants and it's her body and you know up into the
And she can do it whenever she wants and it's her body and you know up into the
Into the third trimester, you know, that's her that's her choice and
So then a lot of Americans got off got off board with that. I mean they got off that train They're like no, I don't I don't think that's you shouldn't have eight and a half months. No, no, no abortions then
Because that would that's how most Americans think that's the same way most Americans think no birth control pills. No, no abortions then because that would that's how most Americans think that the same way most Americans think no birth control pills
No, no, no, we want that. Yeah, that's fine
But but isn't this whole thing a movement away from centralization and federalism and just let the states
Adjudicate exactly what you're talking about. Yes, isn't that just the whole thing? It's and we live in California
We're we've decided to do it this way. Well, it's Well, it's funny because the ones who are complaining the most are like, it's the end
of democracy. It's like, no, no, this is democracy. Let your state vote for what they want.
It's specifically the Constitution's purpose is to form a union of, at the time, 13 different
countries and to sort of weave them together in some sort of collective
not to have an authority over them. Yeah. Right. Or are we disagreeing? We want to have that.
COVID taught me I don't want a lot of centralization. I don't want a lot of centralization either.
And then we're going to get to this point which we've been getting to for a while which is
if your business and your business is you're progressive and you know, you're probably not gonna open up a
storefront Louisiana and
Maybe if you're very progressive and you live in Louisiana
You may want to think about moving to New York or or California. Good luck buying a house
But you know, you'll go to one of those places where everything
is super expensive. So that is kind of how, and conversely, if you live in California
and you run a business, you might be thinking about taxes. That's just going to segregate
that way.
But let's stand back from that and think, I don't know how to frame this except to say it's one of the unique
things about this country and maybe the reason it has functioned so well is this has always
been the way, right?
You sort of pick where the state or the territory you want to be in and you act locally in your
democracy.
Practices practice locally and you know and then the state and then something
weaves the states together collectively. Interstate commerce and things that
happen between and amongst us has to be sort of regulated. But the massive
federalism, maybe it's good that it's pushed back. I don't think people are
thinking that through,
whether they like that or dislike that. We've gotten to this point where, you know,
we want the president, we want the Congress to vote, you know, create some stuff so we can stop
this or fix that. You know what I mean? Like, we got to get some gun control laws in here. We got
to get some stimulus money going around. We got gotta get COVID taken care of, you know.
So president, Congress, vote and fix it.
You know what I mean?
We're not, I don't, look, if I thought they did a bang up job
in that department, I might lean a little more that way.
We just got done with COVID.
It was a shit show.
I don't like that.
I'm with you on that. I think
You live in a state and then that state could be florida or could be california
And then you go do these people?
By and large represent my feelings. Uh, fine. There's you know, there's a financial side
There's a sort of moral side, you know, there's a freedom side, you know, I would
have much rather been in Florida for COVID because the lockdowns didn't represent how I felt.
Right.
Now...
And really the biggest excesses were perpetrated by our state.
Yeah.
And our county, really, if you break down to it.
Look, Howard Stern was living in the right state for how he felt about
COVID. Yeah. Adam Carolla was not living in the right state for how he felt about COVID. Right.
Ben Shapiro was living in the right state because he went to Florida. You know what I mean? So that's
just kind of how it's going to be because whatever the next pandemic is, and we'll probably have one
every 17 weeks now
I don't want to live in the state where they shut the beaches anymore. Monkeypox. Yeah, I don't want to I don't want to be in that
Welcome back and thanks for tuning in to the Adam and Dr. Drew show classics. Up next we go to episode 1477 where guest podcaster and author Megan Darm stops by and
they discuss the crazy phenomenon of cancel culture.
Take a listen.
Megan, are you with us?
Hi guys.
Hi guy.
Hi guy.
Yep. Yep. Yep.
So the podcast, The Unspeakable and this week's guest, Dr.
Drew and Paulina, his daughter wrote the book, the book, The Problem with Everything,
My Journey Through the New Culture Wars.
It's available on Amazon.
Megan, kind of explain your status now and what the progression of it was or the journey
was sort of within the system in terms of what your old life was like and what your
new life is like.
Now, just to set the table, Drew and I have been through this to some degree as well, but anyone who's ever listened to me knows
I was never the toast of the New York Times
or the socialite, you know, Manhattan set.
So I was never really in it.
I just got pushed all the way out of it and Drew as well.
But talk about your journey.
Well, I haven't changed at all.
So I don't think I'm canceled.
I think I'm kind of post canceled.
I think I was canceled before I started.
So it all comes out okay.
Well, look, I've been a writer for more than 25 years.
I've been writing essays.
I've been an opinion writer.
The reason I got into this business
of writing and expressing ideas was because I thought it was interesting to say things that
were surprising or provocative to people or invite people to think alongside me as I look at the world
maybe in new ways. And somewhere along the way, the job description changed, and suddenly being a writer, a sort of person in the world
with public ideas, it became just kind of going along
with a certain tribe, identifying your tribe,
and then adhering to that doctrine.
And that's like completely the opposite
of why I do my job, or why I started doing this.
No, I concur.
And I think to my friend, I think about my friend Dennis Prager, who used to write op
eds for the LA Times.
And it seems laughable now.
But back in the day, they went-
So did I.
Right.
You wrote one about Adam.
I wrote one about Adam.
That was for 10 years. They said- That's right. That's how we know each other Adam you were the subject of one of my most popular
Op-eds in the LA Times I and those that's a million years away in a rearview mirror of a car
We don't even own anymore
So this notion of and the conceit was well they wanted
Essays from the left and then they wanted essays from the right.
They wanted to hear what both sides were thinking
because they were a newspaper
in a major metropolitan city.
Now, that is completely gone, and you have, by the way,
the op-ed stuff that comes out of, or the opinion, whatever,
that comes out of the editorial stuff
that comes out of Los Angeles Times is now just Looney Tunes.
They're insane.
I mean, there's one that I always cite and I think I cited in a book of mine where they
were talking about school shootings and they literally said, well, if the teacher had a
gun then what?
It would have prevented five kids from dying or eight kids from dying.
So instead of 10 kids dead, you have two kids dead. What's the difference? It's like, well,
eight kids, you fucking retard. That's what the difference is. You're right. You're putting
this on paper and somebody's approving it. And no one raises their hand and goes, what
the fuck about that
The guy who went into the Wii Spa who went into the female side of the Wii Spa corner of the times
Had LA Times had male
Appearing genitalia, but it was a she it was a she who had
Appeared to be male genitalia on a woman. Is it your genitalia a social construct? Oh, god damn. Be a little more creative about yourself. Here's the question, does anyone read
the Times anymore? I mean, like, what's their circulation? Like, who looks at that? I'm not,
I gotta take the fifth there. You know, some of my best friends worked for the LA Times. You know
what's so funny? I mean, I was a columnist there for 10 years. I look back on some of the columns I wrote, I can't believe they ever got through.
They would never get through now and no one batted an eye at the time. I remember writing
stuff about, I wrote a column comparing when during the 2008 election, comparing Barack Barack Obama to an Eames chair and Hillary Clinton to
an old sofa. And it was totally fine.
Oh, you know, we're comfortable with her.
She's an old sofa, but Barack Obama's the shiny Eames chair.
Now, can you imagine now?
Yeah, so people should know that the Eames chair
is a sort of Euro, I mean, it wasn't,
they're out of Venice, I think, but that is very euro and sleek and of the time.
But I wonder if there's even like a racial component. Now that just came out of my mouth.
I'm like, I bet somebody could find a way to. Yes, Ames chairs are black. Ames chairs are black.
You would be absolutely escorted in for. Yeah, they are. Yeah, I know.
You can get them in Walnut. I hadn't even thought of that.
Look, they just called Larry Elder the black face of white supremacy.
I know, that was an amazing headline, incredible headline in the LA Times.
And by the way, it was not particularly diminished here.
It was sort of digested as, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
He's the black face of racism.
Well, I mean, maybe that is the ultimate
in a level playing field if we can get enough black men
to be the face of white racism.
You know, maybe that is their journey toward equity.
Maybe that's the ultimate equity.
Right, well, if you don't see color,
then you're erasing the other person.
And so if you're a black person
and you have internalized racism,
that makes you sort of indirectly a white supremacist, right? Well here think about it. So here's the question for you, Megan.
I was just at an event with some fairly woke people and I had one of the wokenista gals who I'm good friends with and known for many years.
And she was following me around the vent
and she just kept saying,
you gotta stop talking about like X, Y, and Z.
Stop saying whatever.
And I just kept saying, I say whatever I want.
That's what I do.
And she'd go, yeah, but stop it, stop it.
And I kept going, I don't care.
I just say what I want. I it, stop it. And I kept going, I don't care. I just say what I want.
I'm not defending it.
I'm not saying I wouldn't have more money
in my bank account.
I'm not saying anything.
I'm just saying I say what I want to say.
That's the only way I can answer your question.
Who are all your ex friends at the Times
or your current friends at the LA Times
who have decided to start telling,
start saying what people
told them to say, or they, if it's not implicit, it's, it's understood.
Who are these people?
Why are they journalists?
Well, there are people, it's not just journalists, it's people in academia, it's people in corporate
America, it's people in HR departments.
I hear from people every day.
I'm sure you do too.
I get dozens of emails a day, people telling me
I'm afraid to speak up, I'm a teacher,
I can't say what I think, I'm a lawyer.
There are utility workers who have been canceled
because remember that story, the guy in Southern California,
like a utility worker, he had his hand hanging
out of his truck driving along and it was construed
as a white supremacy symbol,
the way he had his hand.
And somebody took a-
You do the okay thing or the two-finger thing.
Yeah, which who also like, who knew that that was a thing?
And somebody took a photo and it went viral.
But the, you know, the real tragedy there
is that the company fired him.
Did they really fire him?
Before, I think they temporarily fired him.
And it's because they would rather answer to what is really
a very small minority, a very loud people on Twitter, than actually use their brains
and investigate.
So leadership does not step forward.
That's the problem.
No matter where you are.
I think there's a bigger issue.
We've talked about it for a long time, Adam, is that people are afraid to be adults and
afraid to live up to the authority of the position they're in
So college administrators are afraid to be seen as authoritarian people who run businesses are afraid to be seen as somehow
Not cool because you're you're exerting your authority, which is that your job?
Which is actually you're in your job description and so people are allowed to run a mock and there's no leadership. Right, but what I'm saying, let's just say beyond fear of gainful
employment or lack thereof, and that's an important thing, and there's
being ostracized, you know, in your community, family, peers and friends and things like that. What makes somebody like you,
and to some degree a Bill Maher,
and to some degree an Adam Carolla,
just say what they wanna say anyway?
Not totally affected by the stuff that seems to,
it affects, it's like we're living in a house
with a horrible radon gas problem,
but Megan Domm is not affected by it
and everyone else is laying down on the floor.
Why are you not affected?
Okay, I have a couple of theories about this.
I think we all might be a little bit autistic.
A little bit, like we don't really care.
And also I think that it has to do with our temperament.
And you know what's also really interesting? Have you noticed that there are more men in
this kind of space than women? There are more of you, there are more Bill Maher's, there
are, you know, a lot of the sort of public intellectuals who talk about race are black men, John McWhorter, for instance, Coleman
Hughes, there aren't a lot of women speaking up. And I think that's because the social
penalties for this kind of thing are such that women, women get it harder and women
are sort of programmed to care more. Yes. Yes.
I'll push back a little bit in saying,
I don't think we're harder on women.
I think they're harder on themselves, and they care more.
That's what I'm saying.
I think they care more.
We have noticed.
So I think that predisposed to caring more.
Adam, I've noticed our female friends
are sort of late millennial age, are very fearful of the mob and Twitter.
Like, don't say that, don't say that. They'll say something. It's much like your friend was
telling you, just shut up, just shut up, just shut up. They're very aware of the reaction of the mob.
And much like me, when I meet someone who says, I don't care for lasagna, I can't wrap my mind around it. They keep saying to me, you need to X, Y, and Z, and I go, I don't care.
And they go, but you have to.
I mean, come on.
And I go, I'm not interested.
I'm not interested.
And they go, they're way more interested than I am on my behalf.
And it doesn't even compute with them. That's the
whole point. I don't go, look, maybe I'll take a little hit financially or personally
or socially. I'm not interested. I'm going to say what I want to say. I'm a comedian.
They don't go, oh, okay. I respect that. They do not accept it.
Yeah, I think we just have to not care. And the idea that women get harassed on social
media more than men do, that's just not true. That has idea that women get harassed on social media more than
men do, that's just not true. That has been proven untrue. That is one of those myths
flying around out there. And like, anyway, who cares? That's like saying, I've received
death threats on Twitter. How is that possible? Like, I feel as if my life is in danger because
somebody tweeted at me. That makes no logical sense.
We'll be right back with more of the Adam
and Dr. Drew Show classics.
We are back with the final clip of this episode,
so let's get right to it.
We check out episode 1077 with AJ Benza,
and that aired on May 17th, 2019,
and they talk all things pop culture
AJ Benza what's happening? I like a lot of drug talk a lot of drug talk
drug talk from yesterday
Fame's a bitch or fame is a bitch. Sorry. It's Monday Wednesday and Friday on podcast one
is a bit sorry it's Monday, Wednesday and Friday on podcast one. And I'll say this about AJ can also sign up for his Patreon and get podcasts every day. AJ breaks down a lot of
scandals and the tragedies of Hollywood. And AJ says a lot of things that sound outrageous,
but no one ever no one ever walks them back. Like what? Like what? I've said a lot of things
that over the years, I've never been sued. sued well like what I'm kind of saying is just like remember Jose
Kinseko is like I did Roy's without Rodriguez and I did Roy's with that guy Roy's with that guy everyone
Oh, please is a merchant the good name of this guy's a lunatic. No one sued him. No, he's right. Did anyone sue him?
No, because he did commonly done you get sued look if you don't do it and then you sue him? No, because he did it. Commonly done. You get sued. Look, if you don't do it, then you sue him.
But nobody sued him.
I'll tell you something.
Five months ago, I had a story on my Patreon that, from a great source that he said, five
months ago, nobody wants to play with LeBron James in LA.
Magic Johnston is going to get thrown out of the Laker organization because he has sexual
abuse allegations that come out of him like flies and the Lakers have to pay women off
more than once.
He said Luke Walton will be out as coach and Jason Kidd will replace him.
Now I thought everything was right until yesterday said Ty Law is going to be the coach, Ty Lue.
And just before they broke it, he's out, he's done.
They even had a cake that said Lakers on it and now Jason Kidd is the name. Everything this guy told
me was true.
How?
And people thought I was crazy five months ago.
How does an inside source work?
You just, look, you have to know who to get close to. It takes a long time to develop
a number of people like that. But generally, any type of story that's breaking, whatever
field it's in,
I know I'm a phone call away from getting really close to it, and then it's just a matter of,
you know, the satellite people I know around that person. Yesterday, today's show, I'm sure
you're friends with them, so I don't know. It doesn't matter, I mean, you know what you know,
but you know, Kim Kardashian's body at the Met Gala was so, now I think from the waist up,
she is one of the most beautiful
specimens in the world. From the waist down it's like a dinosaur, like it's just a pegasus, too much.
So why should she look this way? So I've been looking at it investigating and I found someone who says eight surgeries in 2018,
eight procedures in 2018 alone to take the fat out of her stomach and her back and put it in her hips and ass.
And the lower ribs removed.
I don't know about that part of it.
You would know more about that.
That can be done.
I've heard that's what she's got done.
What does that mean?
I mean, I've...
To look the way she'd look at that.
She's accentuated that.
I'm looking at pictures of her.
I mean, she's...
I had heard multiple sources that there was fat put in certain places.
Yeah. I'd heard multiple sources that there was fat put in certain places. Yeah, and it's obviously to Kanye's specs, whoever was before him, but he's molding this
into what he wants exactly her to be.
Drew.
Yeah?
I got a cultural question for you.
Yeah, I know what it's going to be.
By the way, when you said, Waste Up, I'm fine with that because I take all my sexual notes from the song
one night in Bangkok where he and that Maury head announces that I get my kicks
above the waistline sunshine it's the gayest eight seconds ever recorded I
don't care if you got two
Two bears going bareback and once behind the other it's still not as gay as Maury had
Saying that one line about getting his kicks above the waistline
Yeah, it's the gayest thing ever recorded in human history. Do you know that?
I know do I've been like, it's what you're cultural.
You gotta Google it. Gary's gonna find that Murray, Murray head, sorry.
But here's my thing. It's actually from a musical.
Oh well. That'll do it.
Called Chess. Oh boy, now Drew, that's the gayest thing.
Yeah, now it's got gayer. Move over Murray. There's a new gay sheriff in town. His town's not gay enough for the both of us Jerry Jerry. That was a trap to see if you were in fact the gayest man on the planet
That's from a musical sunshine. Whoa, so I
Try to think about this a lot
The the black men and the sort of tractor beam that is the rump on the women.
And as a guy, I'm a boob guy and I like an ass, you know, but I'm just like, it's not
the bigger the better.
Not bigger than mine.
Right.
I prefer.
And then I sort of realized.
Uh-oh.
What did you realize?
I thought, well, really what's stopping me from being an ass man and I wouldn't reach the vagina
That's what I'm thinking. I'm thinking you've got a hand something below the waistline sunshine
Yeah, if that's gonna be if that's your weapon of choice sure kind of ass sure
You're gonna need a tool to handle that and I'm saying put aptly put you take a look at guys
Who work on smart cars and you goes you look in their toolbox?
It's one size right you look at the guy who's or diesel mechanic. They've got big breaker bars and stuff
You know, I'm gonna go one inch drive breaker bars. They have to they're working sure you see what I'm saying drew
Yeah, we got more ahead
I mean Mary has a musical or the video
The case act ever God forgot about that is that from a musical Jerry check me out
You better pray you're wrong.
Now all the time I've thought about it and I do come back to that.
Is there anything there?
I also think that in different regions of the globe we evolve as humans in different
directions and maybe certain preferences evolve with that.
I think that's the reason why I date a lot of black girls and a lot of them tend to like
Sicilians, dark Italians Italians and Italians like black girls
Except when we're growing up from my generation you really couldn't talk about it
My father died when I was 21 and then I was able to experience it. We're looking at the musical chess and
That line is in the musical chess one night in Bangkok the whole musical the whole song is from that
Oh, I didn't know the whole song was from a musical
Yeah, the musical came before the song. No, the song was in the musical
All respect for Murray head
This says it's a song from a concept album and subsequent musical chess
On the Murray train, okay, so yeah, I've seen stories about sort of asymmetry in the buttocks sticking out this far that
way and coming out that far the other way.
It's sort of a is a society.
It's interesting because on one hand, we never stop beating ourselves of the head with evolving
and women and my little girl and I'm going to tell her she can be president and it's
never all the blow hearts just beat, beat, beat the drum equality, equality, equality,
no glass scene, I'm not going to go to the world where every woman has a chance.
But the ones who dominate are still Kim Kardashian with no way
So the huge ass and putting fat injections and making money on Instagram
Look, yeah as much as we try to be getting a law school degree
Right as much as we try to be this society. We're still that society, right?
You know what? You don't have to pass the bar exam in LA right in California. Yeah, it's a different kind of test
Isn't it? No, I got passed the bar. I thought California is one of like four states. That's the only state
It's one of four states where you don't have to go to law school, but you that's okay. That's what it is
All right, okay
I I got this word of warning to
Garagas and in any attorney listening out there you better fucking hope she doesn't pass that ball
She well because oh my god all, I hate, I hate DJs
and I hate electronic music.
And if they ever try to sell it to me,
like in some kind of art form, I go,
or Paris Hilton can do it when she's super hot.
With no fucking background and no experience
because she can fucking push a button on a smartphone
just like you can, douche.
Now she can't play the oboe in the fucking Philharmonic,
but she certainly can do what you do because you don't do anything so this is what law
will be better fucking hope Paris Hilton can't do what you do it's time yeah for
you to fucking quit the business and when Kim Kardashian passes the bar it's
gonna be a bad day for Mark Garragos I'm an attorney like Kim Kardashian yeah
like her Laura Wasser has held the title is probably the most beautiful LA attorney for a long time Kim Kardashian
She gets that rank. It's gonna be a close call. Laura's the famous divorce attorney. She's great
Yeah, we always did a TV show together. We were gonna do like a gossip
Kind of team up together as a guy girl kind of thing like 15 years ago, but didn't work out. Yeah, she's great
She's great. And so I'm thinking more about again again, my mind's kind of spinning about this sort of...
She's going to be a guest on Reasonable Doubt in the coming weeks?
She's a guest on my podcast, right?
Yes, she was.
Yeah.
Oh, didn't know that.
But they're like, Britney Spears is in trouble right now.
Oh, I was going to ask you about that. I think she's in real trouble, especially...
I mean, this is her mental illnesses. If it were not not for her dad's conservorship, she'd be in the homeless
conservator.
Well, I heard that it was even much worse than we thought.
TMZ tends to protect her for some reason.
I'm not telling you the whole story.
The father was so adamant about her getting more treatment, staying in that ward.
He said, he canceled the Vegas show that she was about to have and said, you can blame
it on an illness of mine. Yeah.
And that's what she did, but apparently it was not about his illness at all.
It was strictly about her fighting the meds, not taking them.
And you know, she gets out a couple days ago and we see her driving a car on the phone,
getting on the 101.
That's all for this week.
Thanks for listening to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics.
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