The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - Jordan Harbinger Joins Adam and Dr. Drew (The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics)
Episode Date: March 23, 2024Jordan Harbinger joins the show and the fellas also discuss Dr. Fauci's emails and non-binary and transwomen that play in women's sports. ...
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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 1432 titled, This is How Smart People Lie, it aired on June 6th of
2021.
In this clip, Adam and Dr. Drew discussed Dr. Fauci
and some of the emails that surfaced regarding Fauci
and how the pandemic and the public may receive
the info that was on the emails.
Check it out.
I figure we need to talk about Dr. Fauci
and the emails a little bit.
And I wanna get some of your thoughts.
What's going on there, bucko? So the emails and Fauci and the emails a little bit and I want to get some of your thoughts. What's going on there bucko?
So the emails and Fauci
Let me just ask you first you have any thoughts about that you've been
Thinking about it reading that stuff
Yeah, it's you know, it's the usual if you watch CNN
It's nothing to see here. And if you watch Fox, this is damning evidence, right?
You know, it's it the
The emails don't feel
Real like smoking gun gotcha like aha, right?
And they're you know sort of tastefully worded
But if you drill down on them a little,
you will see some truths sort of trickle out
in a kind of eloquent way.
Yeah, well, the problem is it stands out in relief
against some of the public statements.
Yes, that's the issue.
That's the issue.
He doesn't really think masks are very effective.
The only, there is one part of of it which is, you know,
somebody contacted him and said, hey, I think, you know, some virologist or
something said, I think this thing's coming out of Wuhan. And he did a sort
of email to his associate that said, like, hey hey tomorrow we got work to do and
something that no one has said but it's kind of interesting a little bit which
is this sort of cryptic hey we got we got work to do. That day is a Saturday.
And all I'm saying is, is it's not unthinkable
that people work on weekends, for sure.
But if you get a note on a Friday,
you know, if I got a note on a Friday
that was kind of neither here nor there,
I might say to my assistant, Matt,, hey Monday, let's talk about this. But
I wouldn't go drop everything you're doing. We got work to do Saturday. Yeah. It suggests
a little level of urgency. Yes. Unless, unless the only pushback would be they were doing seven days a week during the pandemic routinely.
Yeah, I mean, it's not not not unthinkable.
Yeah.
Well, first off, I don't know that they were doing seven days routinely.
I know, you know, Fauci was showing up on the Sunday talk shows and stuff like that.
But I don't know that the you know, meaning I work weekends too, but I don't
tell my lieutenants, hey, you got to work too on Saturday. That's I'm going to go do
meet the press on Sunday. Yes. Kind of thing. So I don't, you know, again, it's not a ha,
gotcha. It's just you get this email saying, hey, we think it's coming out of Wuhan. And
you don't go, Hey, that's an interesting thought. Maybe it is coming out of Wuhan, and you don't go, hey, that's an interesting
thought, maybe it is coming out of Wuhan. You just say thanks, and then you say to your
lieutenant, hey, we got work to do tomorrow.
And then whatever that work is, that's redacted. We're not going to, you're not privy to what
that conversation.
Oh, I didn't see that. That's interesting.
Yeah, what it was is, and again, I'm not a scholar on this subject,
but it's basically we need to get everyone on the phone and the conversation of everyone on the
phone, that's classified. And he then went on to argue that the certain genetic quality of
particular structures in the virus were consistent with animal viruses. Yes. And
so he went he went that direction based on objective data. It wasn't like he
just invented it out of whole hog. He went that way because now maybe he was
had a cognitive bias for some reason against the Wuhan lab theory and you
could argue that he should have said well here's the thing that bothers me, is it from the beginning
the attitude seems to be towards the public, you can't handle this, you can't handle the truth,
which used to be something that the right was criticized for, right, for being, you know,
treating the public as some sort of... We do it with like wars, you know what I mean? You cannot handle, you know, an orphanage was hit by a grenade and we're not going to
tell you about that because you can't handle that.
Right, but now you can't handle this is still going on to this day as it pertains to, for
instance, the vaccine.
They're not being super transparent about what's going
on there so people can make informed consent. We're supposed to be getting informed consent
for medical procedures. How do you, how are you informed unless you have a transparency?
But it's, you can't handle it, just get it, just get it, which I understand that there
may be a greater good at hand, but it's a pretty interesting ethical stretch. Not only that, people like me that have had COVID,
really no indication, no evidence that we need the vaccine.
So in a sense, us getting the vaccine is being, is utilizing an unnecessary
medical procedure, which is considered anathema. Like you never do that, you never
give people procedures they don't need. And yet, I'm clearly did
that. The government required me to get a vaccine to leave the country, even though
I don't need it. Okay. Well, that's the other. So here's in my mind from a lay person, here
is my general overarching sense of the thing the thing being the the entire
Chapter we're in the fowl. Okay. Okay. Okay. I'm a lay person. Yeah
when I start
Hearing that everyone needs to mask up
but it doesn't really matter if you pull your shirt over your face and
You know if you're on a flight
You know we'll hand out the pretzels the mask will come off and then we'll hand out the drinks
Um as a lay person now it all feels dubious to me. How important are these masks? How functional are these?
Let's put it as a guys wearing paper masks that they had shoved in their jean pocket
You know while they're walking from the long-term
they had shoved in their jean pocket, you know, while they're walking from the long-term parking
at the airport to the,
and then they clumsily put the mask on,
but it's not hooked over both ears, you know,
that's down around their mouth
when they're eating a sandwich,
like standing by the baggage carousel.
Little, weird little things to me, for instance,
LAX, the largest group gatherings in LAX are the baggage carousels.
Those are, according to all the science, that should have been ground zero for spreading
of the disease.
Okay, bags are, there is no social distancing going on in a baggage carousel.
The Starbucks at LAX, they have a Starbucks down on the ground floor
The Starbucks is 32 feet away from the baggage
Yeah
so you see a long line of people waiting to get the Starbucks and then a huge group of people gathered around the baggage carousel and
Everyone who got their Starbucks has their mask around their chin holding the, drinking out of it whilst waiting for their bag to come around.
Yep.
Okay, you are not encouraging people to wear a mask if you have this Starbucks that's open
right across the way from the baggage carousel.
And again, half the people around the baggage carousel are wearing their mask properly,
the other half aren't, and none of them have a proper mask.
They're all different forms of masks,
but most of them are just sort of paper throwaway masks,
and you can see daylight coming through the side cheek pocket
and stuff like that.
So it struck me as a lay person that this mask thing,
this you know, you have to wear it,
this is gonna stop the spread, blah, blah, blah.
I immediately went, I don't see evidence of that.
We're way too casual with this.
Here's the interesting thing.
So there's multiple interesting parts of that observation.
One is when you walk into the ICU to take care of a COVID patient, you're not pulling
your mask down to have a drink.
You're keeping your mask on when it really matters.
Yeah, I said when you're spraying lacquer. You're not standing in in the locker booth taking a sip off a Gatorade with the thing around your chin
Now what they told us if you remember was that the mask was to protect other people
Right and the only thing that they really well, that's what they could told us. They said
No, I disagree and they said wear a mask
They didn't specify it's for everybody. All right, but when they were saying it they were saying well They said no, I disagree and they said wear a mask
It's for everybody right but when they were saying it they were saying well, it's really it's the droplets you put out We want those droplets of stuff. What happened was is you said
One said some said
I'm an American I choose not to wear a mask when I walk down the horse trail and they said it's not for you it's for that that that was their rebuttal right to people going
this seems like theater wearing a mask on a beach yeah to you it does this is
for others you're gonna infect other people and back to the ICU this is it
gets controversial because you go back to the N95 mask in the ICU that in any
five is to protect you, not protect the patient.
And there's good evidence, I interviewed a woman who said the N95 was better at creating
aerosols.
So in terms of exposing other people to the virus, an N95 mask may have made things worse,
which is why we were not being recommended to use N95s all the time. would protect us but might make things worse for other people which is really kind of an interesting thing
There was never played up by the way. Let me circle back to something. Yeah
Fauci did the you don't need to wear the mask and then he did the well you do need to wear the mask
I just said that because I didn't want there to be a run-on mask. Yeah
the run on
94 percent of the people I see wearing masks are wearing paper disposable nothing masks was he
worried about a run on those masks for a minute for a minute there was actually a
shortage of surgical masks for a second but. But that was like a five minute window
while we worked on distribution.
Yeah, those things seem pretty ubiquitous.
They were.
All right, keep going.
So the other thing is that when you look back now
at the pandemic, I mean, look at the curves.
Just look at what happened in the winter, right?
All the lockdown was then.
The mask, the lockdown was in full effect when we had the big
outbreak. It wasn't in effect because we had the big outbreak. It was already in effect when the
outbreak started. Remember? No Halloween, no Christmas, ba-ba-ba-ba. God, I never listened
to anybody ever about anything. And by the way, you were exposed to somebody with COVID
on Christmas. We had dinner together Christmas Eve. I was sick that night. Didn't transmit.
No. Didn't transmit. Most because we sat outside and...
Yeah, whoever. I mean, mostly because of who knows. We sat at the dinner table for two
hours first. Exactly. So let me... So the outbreak is this, is what it is, and then when we actually have an effective
treatment, which is the vaccine, it just goes down.
So when you have an effective treatment, you see what happens.
It falls off.
So how can you say the masks are effective, especially when, again, I'm not saying don't
wear a mask, I wore a mask, got COVID wearing a mask, but whatever.
Maybe I didn't transmit to a few people because I wore a mask when I was out and about. But the mask in all the studies,
there was a famous Danish study in the New England Journal of Medicine that was considered to be the
gold standard, and it showed 15% efficacy. Right. Many of the other studies showed no efficacies Yeah, so the best case is that it was a 15% on the margin so okay
We wear it for that 15% maybe they did the same thing with masks as they did with kids
You know like oh, there's a 10% chance your kid could die or it's 0 to 10%
Oh, it's point zero one whatever okay. I get it. I just don't get why other people don't get it
Welcome back and thanks for tuning in to the Adam and dr.
Drew show classics up next we go to episode 1408 that aired on April 11th
We go to episode 1408 that aired on April 11th, 2021 and podcast one's own Jordan Harbinger stops by and he had some advice on how their life could change if they just change their
basic morning routine.
I don't know if they were that receptive, but take a listen.
All right, Jordan Harbinger.
Welcome to the show.
Host of the Jordan Harbinger show available on Apple Podcasts and Podcast One as well.
Good to see you, Jordan.
Hey, likewise.
Thank you.
What are you thinking during this whole catastrophe we're living in?
Yeah, look, I tried to do, I tried to make the best of it and I was like, okay, now I'm
going to get in shape and I'm going to eat bacon out of a bag like Dr. Drew and I'm going
to get up at the crack of dawn and you know
I started doing the morning routine thing that we see advertised everywhere and I started to feel
Kind of like crap like worse than it than the crap that I might normally feel like getting up when I don't want to get
Up and I realized that this morning routine thing
Might not be that scientific and so I decided to get up, and I realized that this morning routine thing might not be that scientific,
and so I decided to sanity check it against some of the coaches and scientists and doctors
on the Jordan Harbinger show.
And turns out, surprise, surprise, the morning routine is mostly exaggerated BS.
I think some people are more sort of biologically geared up to that for whatever reason.
My affect is better if I'm up in the morning.
I'm just better.
But I don't necessarily work out in the morning, though I find that, again, I like to get it
done so it's, again, better for me.
But that's it.
It's more of an emotional thing than anything else.
Yeah.
It turns out that you're dead on, right?
All these folks that get up at five o'clock in the morning
or four o'clock in the morning and then they did,
I gotta swim 18 miles and walk seven miles
and then go for a bike, they do a triathlon
before they hit the office.
You're right, it depends on whether you are predisposed
to getting up early, surprise, surprise, right?
Or working late at night.
And I always thought night owls were just people
that couldn't get to bed on time and therefore couldn't get up on time and therefore worked better at night. And I always thought night owls were just people that couldn't get to bed on time
and therefore couldn't get up on time
and therefore worked better at night.
And it turns out Daniel Pink did a whole bunch
of research on this.
He's a well-known author for those of you
who are sort of uninitiated.
This guy went, all right, why can't I do this
because I'm productive and I've sold a bunch of books
and he's a speaker and author.
And so he tried to mimic these routines
and got into the scientific research
and it's just not the case.
Like most of us, I tried to organize my life
around these strict morning routines
at different points in my life.
The more I tried to live up to the external idea
of how my day should look, the less useful
and the less enjoyable my day became.
And it really, like a lot of self-help,
became that self-help that just makes you feel worse
instead of better.
Well, my only argument or pushback would be
not a morning person.
You're not?
Eh, kinda in between.
I'll do, I work construction for a million years,
you know, the job starts at 7 a.m.
and oftentimes you're driving, you know,
you're not going to one office
place that's you know three miles away so you're working in Hancock Park and then Malibu you know
you see me valley you know so you got to get up and yeah get on the road and then I did morning
radio I did nighttime radio I'll just do whatever it is you tell me to do. But I will say this,
as opposed to going to bed early and waking up early versus going to bed late and waking up
late. The things you do for the last two hours of the evening versus the things you do versus the first two hours in the morning are
Much less productive oftentimes and sometimes destructive. So if I just stay up late
There's a very good chance. There's a drink in my hand and there's a very good chance at some point
I'll get a hankering for some peanut butter
Whatever this is when I was just watch the love boat to
hankering for some peanut butter. Strangely, this is when I always watch The Love Boat too. I'll be watching Starsky and Hutch and drinking. You know what I mean? No one would label that
as productive time. You're not doing that in the morning.
For sure. To get up in the morning, I don't turn on Starsky
and Hutch and pour scotch. So to me, yeah. Well, yeah, that's what weekends were made
for Michelup. But you know what's interesting to me?
So it's really about, it's not about eight hours and it's not about you're not productive.
It's like think about what you do after 10 o'clock versus after 6 a.m. if you got up
early versus 8 a.m. or whatever that two-hour switch is.
I've gone to work a lot in the dark with my headlights on.
I mean, a lot, done that a lot.
Didn't notice that that really improved my mood necessarily.
There's something for me about getting up
right just after sunrise.
It's like I need to see the sunrise,
I need to hear the birds,
that like noticeably changes my affect.
Isn't that weird, is that part of the deal? That is part of the deal.
Actually, most people, it turns out, fall into this range.
I guess you'd call it normal.
There's probably a fancy word for it
somewhere in the scientific literature.
But normal is after the sun gets up,
the birds are singing and they're light streaming
in through your window.
And that's kind of where most people fall into it.
Now, there are naturally night owls.
There are people who's most productive
three to four hours of work,
or two to three hours of work any given day,
are from like 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. period.
There's not much they can do to change it.
Just like there are other folks
whose most productive time is 4 p.m. to,
or sorry, 4 a.m. to 7 a.m.
That said, most people who think they're most productive
in the morning, they are only most productive
in the morning because of external circumstances,
not because of their sort of internal clock.
In an ideal situation, you can match both of those up.
Like, look, you guys have kids, I've got a little kid,
it's no surprise that productive parents are like,
yeah, I'm productive at 6.30 a.m. after I drop my kid off at swim practice
until 9 a.m. when my phone starts ringing
because my boss has given me a bunch of crap to do
or emails start coming in.
That's normal, but it doesn't mean
that you are naturally predisposed
to being at your best at that time.
It just means that the rest of your day
is kind of a hot mess and is gonna dump
crap in your lap at those times.
Here would be my humble suggestion.
First off, there's interesting studies about
even if you're wearing a mask and your covers over your head,
the sunlight still affects you.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, you know, on your feet and stuff.
But that makes sense, it's time to wake up.
But you also have to be on a pattern of society. Because I would argue
that if your deal was I go to bed at three, four in the morning and I wake up at 10 or
11 in the, sorry, three, four in the morning, right? You know, wee hours and I sleep in.
That's my schedule. I'm a DJ, a nightclub DJ, or whatever it is. Well,
the rest of society starts getting up and moving about 7, 730, 8 o'clock. You shall
hear construction going on down the road. You shall hear the backup beeper, the garbage
truck. You will a whole variety of societal society has decided, well, we don't work at a strip club.
We get up at, we get moving at 8 a.m.
Thus, your last three hours, you're fucking fighting it.
You are fighting it.
I used to do Love Line, come home at 12.30,
go to bed at two o'clock.
If I tried to sleep till 10, well, that's fine.
That's eight hours, but I'm fighting the last two and a half hours because the fucking garbage trucks going up the street and the neighbors are arguing
The kids are dogs are barking or whatever that thing is
So it's not just eight hours versus eight hours slide it this way you go to bed at 10
You get up at 6 a.m. You're not fighting it. There's nothing nothing waking you up
You're not getting your restful sleep
your last couple hours if society's awake around you.
I agree.
Jordan, there's another thing I've noticed,
and I don't know if this is real or not,
but it sure seems like people that are uber successful
are in that four to seven a.m. group.
If you're the kind of person that does not need to sleep,
that seems to have an advantage in terms of productivity. Yeah, so I noticed that
too and my counter argument was the same thing. I said to Dan Pink, who was
studying this, I go, look man, it's kind of undeniable that all these Navy SEAL
guys are up at the Krakadon, all these CEO folks are up at the Krakadon, and he
noticed that too, and one of the things that he wanted to control for was,
the conclusion that he came up with essentially was,
these people that get up at that time
are kind of forced into it usually in the first place.
If you're in the Navy SEAL, they're waking you up
at whatever crack of dawn.
Anyway, everybody's getting up,
there's pressure to do it then.
CEOs are getting email, if they're on the West Coast, they're getting phone calls from China or whatever,
or Europe or even just the East Coast at that time,
they have to be up for.
But most of the people who are up that early,
that is more a symptom of those people's work ethic
and structure of the day as opposed to the cause of it.
I'm gonna disagree, I'm gonna disagree
because I've been very jealous of those people
my whole life because
when I was in medical training, I had peers that only needed four hours of sleep a night.
And I needed six or seven.
And it was very disturbing to me that they were like no problem up all night on call
and working the next night.
No problem.
It's very rare that you meet those people.
It's rare, but they're out there and they're always very successful.
And they will always tell you the same thing.
I've been that way my whole life, they'll say.
Yeah.
When I was a kid, I'd read books all night.
I couldn't sleep.
I hate sleeping.
I don't like sleeping.
And they're always a little hypomanic, too, by the way.
I agree with that.
I see what you mean.
I think we're talking about two separate things.
I was talking about people not who need less sleep by nature.
That is definitely a thing.
I can't remember what they're called, but you're right.
There are people who needed four hours of sleep
from the earliest they can remember
all the way until they probably die young
because they don't sleep enough.
But the people that I'm talking about
are people that still need eight hours of sleep,
but just happen to get up at 4 a.m.,
but they go to bed at 8.30 p.m. or 9.30 p.m.
Or they're on email till 11
and they're just not sleeping enough.
Yeah. You know, I have a unique perspective on certain things because
I've been rich and I've been poor and I've
Had jobs where I had to get up early and jobs where I didn't have to get up
And I've had a lot of a and B coverage of myself so I can I have a good I
Feel like I'm a good test subject for a lot of this stuff.
When I was 19 and living in my dad's garage
and there were no jobs to be found
and I had nowhere to go and nothing to do,
I would sleep in,
because there was just no reason to get out of bed.
Low grade depression meets I have nothing to do.
When I'm in the midst of a project, for instance, a building project or something
I'm really intrigued and really, I'm up early, I want to jump on it, I'm gonna
get on, and the same person biologically, one is I can get up but where do I go?
And the other is, is oh I'm gonna get to the job site
because I got ideas.
And that transcends, we always kind of talk about
night person, morning person, all kinds of,
how about motivated person?
Well, you said biologically the same person.
I would say genetically the same person,
but two different biological states.
One depressed, the other excited.
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 841 titled, An Old Man Freaking Out About the
Man, which aired on July 5th, 2018, the fellas talk about the
impact of non-binary people and the impact it's having on women's sports.
Here's the clip.
I'm not signed off on calling a young employee them.
A young male them, which I've heard tales of.
My thing is if it's a medical student, I ain't got time for nothing except if you get in there and you hang that IV and take care of that patient.
I am binary with dudes and chicks. They're females and they're males.
But let's just say the world wants to be non-binary.
That's right. Well, it turns out the male to female transgender women at high school are kicking the shit out of all the females.
Male to female, right.
The cis females are getting their ass kicked by the male to female transgender individuals in sports.
Yes, there are stories of them winning foot races and beating them up in the octagon, and there's a lot of stories about that. So I've been wondering, and I wanted your thoughts on this, in this non-binary
world, how can we have binary sports? You can't have men's and women's sports
anymore. You can't have a binary sports system in a non-binary world.
Well, Title IX, I guess, was an attempt at least initially. That was separate but equal.
Now...
Right, but that was still saying, look, the men's football team may bring in 20 times
as much as the women's croquet team, but they need the same funding or whatever it is.
Separate but equal.
That was another mistake.
But that's still binary.
Riddle me this.
If you want a non-binary world
non-binary world you can't have binary sports it doesn't make sense
you have to have sports with criteria body weight
muscle mass muscle physiology bone mass height you have to have weight classes
and things like that because the binary piece just doesn't work anymore.
So these girls that are kicking the crap out of,
these transgender females that are kicking the crap
out of the cis females, well, they'd move up
into some class of something else,
where they'd be competing with people like them.
Right?
Isn't that the way you'd have to do it?
Well, you understand that most of this,
most of this is based on people wanting to say binary, it's not a binary choice, and cisgender.
You understand, the only reason this is caught on is not because people are overly concerned
with people that are undergoing a transition because it's a very small percentage
of human beings.
This is the left wanting to control, exploit, whatever the language.
See this is them saying, this is not a binary sexuality, it's not a binary decision.
I know cisgendered couples that also think in a non-binary way sexually and they go,
oh, you've discovered new words and you'd like to share it. Okay, Your Highness genius, please,
what other new words have you come up with down from the mountain? Let's see. What do we got here?
Oh, okay. We have binary, we have cisgender. What about the school to prison pipeline? Is that?
That's outdated.
Oh, we're not using that anymore?
That was a millennial idea.
Systemic racism.
Oh, there's a new one.
Oh, you're a genius.
You're such a fucking genius.
Oh, great, you went to college.
Now, come up with some fucking thoughts, would you?
But you can't have.
I mean, this is not...
But you've got it. you've got transgender females.
We've got a little bit of it, but they're in love with the language.
I said that, I've always told you that, Drew, it's coming, right?
You understand these people love the language.
Well, you know it all came from a guy named Derrida,
which is a post-structuralist analysis of language.
It was about language to begin with.
I've always known it's about language. It was the. Here's there's two things. I know. Yeah, there's two things. I know
all roads
lead to narcissism or grandiosity or whatever all this stuff like like
these people
Comedians are sending tweets out talking about the kids at the border. I said, my wife
was telling me about this. I said, you want to know my last two tweets were? Somebody
posted me a tweet said, Adam, your genius turns out peeing in the sink could save millions
of gallons of water. And there's a new device where you pee in the sink and you wash your hands at the same time
and you save millions of gallons of water and I like reposted it like saying like that's right
I'm a genius and then somebody fired back and said yeah but you don't wash your hands and I reposted
that. Self-deprecating. Yeah it's funny. It's funny and it's making fun of me for being a slob peeing in the sink and not washing my hands.
I'm not making
I'm not I'm not making announcements about the kids on the border
and how someone needs to do something because as a parent it's unacceptable.
Don't we feel better now?
Well, I feel like a champion now because I made that proclamation that someone needs to do something
about what's going on at the border. As a father, this is not the America that I grew up in. Okay, so now that I've made that
proclamation, all roads lead to narcissism and the language controlling is more the narcissism.
But you know the Jacobins in the French Revolution, that was their thing. Tolerance, language purity, moral purity, they forced it until they started
chopping each other's heads off. Right, well that's where we're heading. That's
the, that's the, and you know what was happening then before that happened?
Horrible childhood trauma. Oh, and now my, oh my, oh my next, my next, Pete, my next, uh, arrow in my quiver and the third one is angry at dad. You've gotta
be angry at your dad.
Well, when you're your dad, the whole world you're angry at. Yeah.
That's right.
The world of society.
Well, what you're angry at is the man.
Yeah, the man, right.
And the more the man.
Literally, literally the man.
The more the man becomes a man, like, like, you just take a look at, uh, Trump. Trump
is a cartoon caricature of the man.
That's why he's inspiring all this crazy hatred versus, I disagree with this policy or maybe
I agree with that.
I don't know.
He saved me some money and some taxes.
Have you been saying that or is this a new thought right now?
No, I've not been saying it much.
It's an interesting construct.
But here's the thing.
Anytime there's something that feels like it's more.
There's something more, some emotional reaction.
When you are, I'll give you an example.
Do your piece of business and I'll give you an example.
All right. Now I'm going to give you some confusing terms like MS piece of business and I'll give you an example. All right.
Now I'm going to give you some confusing terms like MSRP, invoice, list price, dealer price.
Do you have any idea what any of that stuff means?
I really don't.
Wonderful.
Maybe MSRP.
But I'll tell you what I look for is true price.
Yes.
Just like the name, true price from Truecar.
You know exactly what you're going to pay because it is a true price, including fees and accessories. That's before you ever get
to the dealership, the True Car Certified dealership. You know it's a true price,
you know it's a great price, True Car shows you what other people's paid for
the car you want, they lock you in that price for actual inventory, inventory and
True Car Certified dealers lot, whether it's new or used, and the True Car
Certified dealers set their true price competitively because they want to
win your business. It's a competitive price, so it includes fees and
accessories, it's a fair price because you've seen what others have paid, it's an
actual price for actual inventory, and it's priced competitively so they win
your business at that particular TrueCar certified dealer. So when you're ready
to buy new or used, visit TrueCar to enjoy a more confident car buying
experience, some features not available in all states.
All right.
So let me explain, Drew.
When you're at this supermarket and there's a person in front of you and it's like a lady
and the guy is saying these coupons for the Greek yogurt expired
and the woman starts crying. Literally starts sobbing.
You know it's something else.
Yeah.
Something else is going on in her life.
And it didn't happen on Tuesday of that week. There's some other, her dad is of Greek descent
and abandoned the family and the yogurt is now creating a bridge back to the
Greek yogurt and the Greek man.
All right.
Whatever.
Whatever.
There's something going on.
Okay.
Now, when you have Donald Trump and the president, you have him as the living embodiment of the
man.
Like literally in stature, in hair color, in eye color, in every living
imposter's mannerisms, everything is he's the man. You know what I mean? Now you could say
like well Barack Obama's the president, I said but he doesn't, he can't check all those the man
boxes, you know what I mean? So he gets up there and just quickly by the man
What do we mean by that because why didn't why didn't Barack Obama represent the man he's an attorney he's a law professor
He's he's sort of an authority, but you know what?
He's he's half black and he's waifi and mannerisms are not authoritarian
Exactly. It wasn't authoritarian and Trump mannerisms are not authoritarian. Exactly.
He wasn't authoritarian.
And Trump comes off authoritarian.
Okay, got it.
Right.
So, when you...
The reason people go... have a visceral reaction, whether it be at the supermarket or whether
it's Peter Fonda screaming, I'll take his kids and put them in a cage and put pedophiles
at 78 years old.
Wow. I would kill
myself. Hey man, we just want to do what we want to do. Yeah man. Did we play that recently?
It's been a long time. Come on, we're pulling it out. We want to get high. That's what we
want to do. We're going to party. Oh my God. It's always funny if you see the guys on the
right. They're like, Roseanne had to quit her job, but he gets to continue having a
career. I'm like, no he doesn't. Not really. I mean, he can show up at a Harley Davidson rally and get
1500 bucks from a local dealer, but no, he doesn't continue to have a career because he didn't have
a career before this. That's all for this week. Thanks for listening to The Adam and Dr. Drew
Show Classics. I've been your host, Big Brother Jake, host of the Big Brother Jake podcast here on the Podcast One Network. Remember to check back each week for
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