The Daily Zeitgeist - Aunty Fa, The...Help? 6.8.20
Episode Date: June 8, 2020In episode 646, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian and Nerdificent co-host Ify Nwadiwe to discuss the fear of Antifa in this country, The Help, Space Force, and more!FOOTNOTES: Tiny Town In Washing...ton Gets Ramboed Up, Traps Family Over False Antifa Scare Viola Davis on What āThe Helpā Got Wrong and How She Proves Herself Donation Resources WATCH: Jungle - House in LA Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, and culture in the new iHeart podcast,
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New episodes every Thursday.
What happens when a professional
football player's career ends
and the applause fades and the screaming fans move on?
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
For some former NFL players, a new faith provides answers.
You mix homesteading with guns and church.
Voila! You got straight away.
They try to save everybody. Hi, everyone. It's me, Katie Couric.
You know, lately I've been overwhelmed by the whole wellness industry.
So much information out there about flaxseed, pelvic floor, serums, and anti-aging.
there about flaxseed, pelvic floor, serums, and anti-aging. So I launched a newsletter. It's called Body and Soul to share expert approved advice for your physical and mental health.
And guess what? It's free. Just sign up at katiecouric.com slash body and soul.
That's K-A-T-I-E-C-O-U-R-I-C. com slash body and soul. I promise it will make you happier
and healthier.
Hello, the internet,
and welcome to season 137,
episode one of Dirt Daily Zeitgeist,
a production of iHeartRadio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's shared consciousness and say
officially off the top
fuck the Koch brothers, fuck
Fox News, fuck Rush Lim brothers, fuck Fox News,
fuck Rush Limbaugh, and fuck Buck Sexton.
It's Monday, June 8, 2020.
My name is Jack O'Brien, a.k.a.
Love, love my poo.
You ate and liked my poo.
Now racism's through.
And liked my poo.
Now racism's through.
Because you ate my shit.
That is courtesy of the help, the movie that I watched on Netflix.
And now you see the Matrix, huh?
Now I see the Matrix.
And I'm thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray!
Miles Gray, a.k.a. where are these other ice cream companies at?
Because I see Ben and Jerry's saying it with their chest.
We must dismantle white supremacy.
Shout out to Ben and Jerry.
You know, even though you're in kind of a weird state in Vermont.
But you're doing, looks like you're doing the Lord's work by saying the hard bit by saying white supremacy, not just we stand with black communities. You say, you know, we're actively taking a role in dismantling white supremacy.
Thank you for saying that, because that's the kind of talk that needs to be more common.
And we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by one of the very faces on Mount Zitemore.
He is the hilarious, the talented, the it's been too long, iffy, waddy way.
Nowadays, everybody want to talk like they got something to say, but nothing comes out when they move their lips.
Just punch your barish.
Motherfuckers act like they forgot about iffy.
How y'all doing?
We back.
Like they forgot about waddy way.
See y'all on the Reddit.
Making the Mount Rushmore memes.
If you don't put my face on it, you ain't a real fan.
You ain't a real fan.
That's true.
Shout out to the Zeit Gang that stops by the Twitch.
Shout out to Timeless Coffee from the Zeit Gang who dropped some coffee for your boy.
It's time.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah.
They hooked it up with the Coffee Zeit Gang and they always say something cool. they leave a cool note uh usually something what's timeless coffee it's an open
local yeah they they first hit me up when we last had our conversation about coffee and i said i was
uh i was gonna get the the the grinder and all that stuff and i've since then oh right since then
i've fully uh upgraded uh miles and jack no
because i straight up tried to do a pour over literally as soon as we started recording i was
like oh yeah this is a five minute process uh i'm sorry it was a flex it was a flex he was like okay
now that i have you both here uh i'm gonna go do a very slow The slowest way to make coffee Hey do you have that kettle
Oh yeah I got the gooseneck
What's that called
Gooseneck kettle
Oh gooseneck kettle yeah
Cause I just have like a big awkward one
And whenever I watch like precision barista videos
I'm like I can't get it
Yeah the gooseneck you need it for them swirls
Cause you wanna work your way inward outward
And also I got the scale too
So it's like I'm cooking yay I put the scale put the chemics i got the chemics put
the chemics on the scale i got yeah yeah and then you know going that going that uh that order you
don't even need to tear because you know how much the chemics way you just quick well i got this
dope one that if you have it already whatever you have on the um scale when you turn it on, it automatically tears it.
So I just pop the Chemex on, start it, and it's at zero.
And then I use the Intelligentsia app where it does the ratio for me because I don't want to do all that.
And it has the timer within the app.
Oh, yeah.
See, I need something like this to fully get my mind off of the current app.
Oh, yeah.
I feel like I could go into a
i already have i have so many scales uh for other things uh but i just need that goose neck i got
the chemex and i think i guess i maybe i'll go to hand grinding i want to like from all zeitgang
there was a huge debate about it and for a lot of people like it's really the process aspect that
makes it more satisfying not that like objectively or not whatever coffee's i can't come from oh yeah well they because they
the other theory is that it actually is better because uh the like electronic grinders like
burn the things because they're moving so fast so they like it's like they cauterize the cut in the
coffee whereas the hand ground like you get the oils without having the cauterization.
Yeah, yeah.
This type of combo is what made me leave the blade grinder behind, and now I have a burr grinder.
So now it's cut right, and it has an adjuster for the type of grind that I want.
So sometimes I'll mix it up, do a French press.
Sometimes I'll mix it up, pour over.
And now I have some espresso beans.
And so I'm going to do the super espresso.
And I have the percolator, the French joint, the little metal one.
It's called something else, but you know which one I'm talking about.
The Italian one, I mean, not the French one.
So you got that burr grinder.
Yeah.
I see you, Gucci Mane. I'm unstoppable. What is a burr? Is a burr grinder, like, does it? not the french one uh so you got that you got that bird grinder so so i'm gonna see gucci main
unstoppable what is a bird is a bird grinder like does it uses flat blades so it you get a more even
grind across because the blades it's random and so you won't get and you you can really do you
really can tell the difference almost immediately because when i use the blade grinder you'll see
some like bean chunks but with the bird grinder they're all just ground like i
there there's no leftover you know it's definitely the difference between using a grinder and your
friend picking out nugs and every time i'm like i got a grinder man i'm trying to get the most of
this yeah trust me bro you're wasting money yeah you got all those crystals now that's not in the point oh can you just rub those into your gums yeah yeah yeah
yeah after uh after i'm done just do whatever you want man boof it and try anything yeah
boof it's a new day uh all right if you were gonna get to know you a little bit better in a moment
uh first we're gonna tell our listeners a few of the things we're talking about. We're
going to talk about the Antifa panic that is sweeping the nation, just the overall white
supremacy of the way this is all being covered, the way that violence, when it's done by the
right and white supremacists, just isn't seen as big a story as it is when it's done by anybody else we're going to talk about the help
which i watched because i was confused as fuck about why that was it was number six when i
looked on the netflix top 10 apparently it was number one for a bunch of the week it was the
number one piece of content on netflix and i was like i remember that movie sucking terribly like being a
terrible movie how did that happen so uh i have some theories on that miles you watched space
force or started watching first two episodes in the middle of episode three now yep so we'll talk
about that uh we'll talk about you know just some proactive things that people can do uh all of that plenty
more but first if he uh we like to ask our guests what is something from your search history
uh that is revealing about who you are this is gonna be the wildest search history history answer
that i've ever had on the show just draw for it i'm gonna let you know i'm glad everyone's sitting
down because this is the wildest shit that i've saw in my life and i had to search and see what what this was all about
until this day it's an open case if anyone has any more information let me know but there is a
woman on tiktok twitter and instagram who goes by i am dung six uh And then I had to look up her website, iamdung.com.
And she, just to put it frankly,
rubs shit all over her face and body
and says that it gives her a closer connection to God
because it removes her ego.
And I was so sure this had to be a bit,
and then I wasn't actually looking at a human
covered in shit
and it turns out
there's no evidence
no wink
no links to any other site
so I think
I don't know
I don't know if Miles
is looking at it
Iamdunk.com
I cannot believe yo i have to it's i she's got the
she's got the face mask yeah i i don't know what it's about uh you know if anyone is listening
sees this and recognizes that person please check in with. I don't know what's going on. Yeah, this, her read me, it says like, I am dutifully sworn pessimistic when I consume
dung.
It serves as a reminder how I love to demonstrate my affection, respect, and faithfulness to
God and not what is expected from my audiences.
What you do is your business and your freedom.
I shall take into consideration I will not be held liable or accountable for your actions.
I don't know what.
It's so. I think this is just the whole way i found her is my friend posted like a one an excerpt of her tiktok where she was like i'm so excited i just got from buffalo
wild wings and i got the mango habanero and i'm so excited to see if you can taste the spiciness
in feces and i was like, this has to be a bit.
But then she had the website watermarked,
and then I went and I was like, no!
I was like the Maxwell dude.
Right.
Wow.
Not too long ago, I received a concerned welfare notice
phone call courtesy by my college counselor.
Oh, my God.
It was the first sentence on her blog.
See, this is where you're starting to see somebody struggling
and we have such easy access to like put content that's what i was thinking because like it's
really it starts getting really disconcerting like she has a thing about the laws of the 12
commandments and it's like all on some like deed like i know more than god exactly that's when i
was like oh where's this so yeah if i i and this is blowing up on tiktok
and stuff i it must be because uh i did see an article about people doing it for blackout tuesday
and i didn't even bother seeing what the blackout tuesday post was that the the headline was enough
for me i was like goodness gracious oh boy so yeah that's that's that's my search history this
raised a question uh in my mind your two girls one cup was a phenomenon uh years and years ago
what but i just love that sentence two girls one cup was a phenomenon
people were i love that read of it for sure what what that was fake right that was real it
was just scat porn and that's why that's what made it uh what made it hit so hard is because
you it starts off where you think it's gonna be regular porn so you know you getting ready
you start leaning back in your chair and they're like psych right they're eating poop it was real
yeah but were they that was real poop i i believe
that's what they said i mean because the it was like from a yes because you see scat company you
see unless they have new technology because look uh look if i could i could use words but
i i remember seeing the video mic ain't no, ain't no way you can make that shit. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Literally. You see the production. You see the production.
Yeah.
The production of the props.
This is a thing.
I mean, this makes sense to me.
I've been talking about all these different ways that our culture is lining up with Germany
right before the rise of Hitler.
And, you know, scat is a huge thing in Germany.
And Hitler was obsessed with scat so he was uh yeah yeah real into it and his biggest like the thing that he was most concerned about
was his flatulence um that he was very very strange uh things that you find out when you
hey do you scratch the surface there. Rather not hear about Hitler's,
you know,
habits of entertainment that he likes to get into.
Yeah.
If you would,
it's something you think is underrated.
Oh man.
I,
you know,
underrated.
There's a,
you know,
I got to come through and,
and,
and give,
give,
give left to the underrated.
I've been fine.
I think,
gosh, there's so many the reason i say this is because i've been buying so many appliances
uh during this quarantine and i gotta say you know it's been hyped up so some people were
gonna be like are you sure and i'm like yeah it people i don't think people know it goes as hard
as it does air fryers i just uh got the air fryer attachment for my Instant Pot.
And that thing goes, I wish someone really, really drove home how much of a staple that would become in my home.
I got a little four-year-old.
She likes to snack up on stuff.
I air fried some crinkle cut fries.
We're in the game.
We're in the game.
So who was on recently?
Another person was preaching the air fryer gospel,
but they had just gotten it, so they weren't able to fully sell me on it.
Oh, they just got it, but they weren't chefing like me.
I said they just got it, but they weren't chefing like me.
Oh, maybe it wasn't Zig?
I know I've heard him talk talk air fryers before
wait so what is the when what was the thing you made the first time and you said oh
okay i made a korean fried chicken and so uh and i was like i was so uh so confused if it will work
because if you don't know what korean chicken, instead of using like, uh, a batter, you use a corn starch on it. That's how you get that crispiness. And I was like,
without oil, I don't see how this is really going to pop off. But not only did it crisp up,
not only when I made that sauce, that is by the way, one of the hardest difficult sauces
because there's so much sugar and corn syrup in it it's ready for 30 seconds
and then after that it's burnt so you gotta have it you gotta have the chicken ready to go and i
thought i was gonna be smart and like while it was frying have it ready to go that thing was
okay now you gotta you make the you make the the fried portion and then you then you make the sauce
toss it in there and toss and when i say that thing was
hidden i was like oh kyo-chan who yeah yeah you know this is me uh yeah so i made that i made the
crinkle cut fries in that joint i definitely uh fried up some some more chicken it i'm i'm running
it through all of it and it's just it's solid. It just gives you that perfect crisp with,
you know,
to,
to go off the box without the oil,
but you get that nice crispiness that you're looking for and you don't have
to use any oil.
You just throw it in there,
mix it up,
season it.
I don't understand like physically,
like the physics of how.
Me either.
I,
I,
as I use it,
I'm still trying.
Cause you just hear air.
All you hear is air.
It sounds like a vacuum is on.
But you open that shit up, and the shit is crispy.
So, you know, science.
Okay, so if we're going to get into it, air fryers use a circulation of hot air to cook food that would otherwise be submerged in oil.
The air fryer's cooking chamber radiates heat from a heating element near the food, thus cooking it more efficiently if fan is generally used to circulate hot air so it's just a hot air tornado oh okay
huh um what is something you think is overrated oh man i think uh i think what's what's overrated
right now is uh is is brands coming out and in support you know i feel like i feel like uh run that check you you a whole
ass business i don't need a tweet i need a i need a donation receipt give me receipts show your works
uh show your work as yeah yeah you know because we're getting a lot of stuff i think uh grant we
were talking about this grand theft auto has gone offline for two hours and that stuff i like
because it's like it's a disruption of someone's day enforcing them so that one you can you can
get away with but also rockstar run that money you're getting almost a million dollars a day
from these kids running their parents to think about how much of the culture is infused in those
games i know especially grand theft auto like my god oh yeah come on now so it's it's so
that that's what it is it's like it is nice i'm not gonna lie it is nice seeing i think especially
me who does so much stuff in the game community it is nice kind of seeing you know um people come
to come together and and be like this is wrong but really there are people who need monetary
support right now.
And I've been donating like crazy.
I've been seeing a lot of people donating like crazy.
Twitch is doing what Twitch does best.
So many people are doing charity streams and making good money for these causes, which is dope.
Dr. Disrespect is going to be donating all his earnings this month to charities.
And it's been cool like like with me it's like if you have a platform and you are a quote-unquote influencer
yeah you can do the lip service i think goes further but when you're a target a major corporation
that accepts money money is going to do more for me than seeing you do a blank blackout tweet or a black on black text about how you stay with black people,
especially when lots of these companies are now getting dragged by employees retweet and be like, oh, word?
Oh, word?
Here are all my complaints that somehow made into that special file.
But like, yeah, I think it's also because we're all i think because as people we're
all trying to do what we can right like you have a platform you're trying to do what you can on
your platform we have this show we're trying to do what we can on this show rather than like
completely burying our heads in the sand because i think well either way i think our our morals as
people wouldn't allow that to happen yeah um especially being black too like this is that
was never gonna happen yeah but i think we what we want is to see everybody do as much as they can from what their position is. So if you're a company, guess what? You siphon money out of the consumer's pockets and a lot of black dollars are spent at your business.
see something that seems requisite because if i'm taking the time to make every day trying to be honest about the news and have opinions that people can like that will resonate with people
then target needs to do their version which i would be like what's what's to say you can't give
up a 30 of your profits right do nothing also because it's been proven uh see nike and when
you do things like that the community supports you even more
because they want that money that they're spending to go towards that so really that's why it's so
weird to me where it's like look even if you wanted to be this like sociopathic weirdo you
can do it just for the money that you're gonna make you know that's why i think people don't
realize how easy it is it's a good. You get people going in your stores.
So at least do it for that, you know?
Well, yeah.
Well, because I think companies and entities are so used to cynically operating like that,
of just being like, all right, box checked, did the black tile.
But yeah, it can go a lot further.
And you can communicate what those things are through the action.
And I think that's seen by saying people aren't asking for you to stand with them in a post
we're asking you to actually demonstrate that you understand what we're what all of this is is that
we're calling out systemic racism and so now everybody if this if this campaign is working
take the moment to understand how that's operating in your world and then actively show us steps that you're saying like, oh, okay, I get what you're saying.
Okay, I know how to do this.
I can confront a coworker.
I can lovingly speak to a parent and say, just so you know, a lot of the things you told me as a kid, it took a long time for me to actually realize a lot of those things are wrong.
And it took me a while to even come past this.
Those are the kinds of things that I think we want to see.
So for a company that has billions of dollars, at least millions of dollars. Yeah. And it took me a while to even come past this. Those are the kinds of things that I think we want to see.
And so for a company that has billions of dollars,
it's at least millions of dollars. Yeah.
Yeah.
And I feel like their reasoning,
they probably wouldn't say this out loud,
but their reasoning is the shareholders.
That money is tied up to...
You hear a lot of the corporate people blame Wall Street
and the expectations of
wall street but that is like that there's a reckoning coming there too because the the way
that wall street just kept flying uh during the pandemic when everybody was losing their jobs uh jim kramer the mad money guy uh who's that's as
financially sophisticated as i get uh but he he made the point he said uh at the end of last week
that the pandemic was one of the greatest wealth transfers in the history of our country. Yeah. And it's still the rich getting richer
and the corporations and Wall Street
insulating themselves so that they can't lose
because they're writing their own rule books.
And that shit is, there's something coming.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
It's white supremacy and capitalism
because the white supremacy,
there's ways to figure that out.
And then when you think about like, well, whenever people are like,
well, we don't have the money to do that,
or we don't have the money to do that,
that's because then we have to continue to say, well, why not?
Oh, well, because we're beholden to shareholders who expect that.
And look, the way these companies are traded,
like we have to show a certain amount of financial health for people to want to buy our stock what the fuck does that mean you have
wait but you i'm pretty sure i'm looking at your ledgers and you have like hundreds of millions of
dollars just sitting there yeah yeah but that's then we have to keep going then we have to lay
people off you know then you take less but i think that's the next step is like we're learning
people are learning how to articulate how to stand up against police brutality and seeing like, oh, right.
Now that like white people see like people that look like their aunts, uncles, grandparents, fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers, cousins get brutalized by police.
That piece is starting to come together too and be like, oh my, what the fuck is this?
But then that financial question is the next part too, because a lot of the reasons why people don't have money is because other
people do.
And then we have to address the inequities in that system too.
Like it's a big,
we got a fucking mountain to climb baby.
But that's what I'm saying.
Get your fucking stretch up,
get your hands chalked and get those carabiners ready.
Cause fucking,
we got to keep like,
we have to go to the fucking top of this thing to bring it down.
Yeah.
Yep.
One step at a time, one day at a time.
Ify, what is a myth?
What's something people think is true, you know, to be false?
I think Miles is kind of hidden on that.
I mean, there's this, you know, there's this kind of everyone's like, you know, police brutality is bad, this, that, and that.
But when we hear defund the police everyone starts to slow up where it's
like well we need the police and really we don't i think there's a really good infographic going
around showing the history of the police showing this and i was just talking about this with someone
earlier today when we just like when you think about car chases like like with all the technology
and all the tracking that we have the systems we have in
place you know do we really need five ten police cars going at dangerous speeds through civilian
roads to chase down one car when we have a helicopter that already costs so much to fly
anyway that's up with them that can just follow and then have this person because cars need gas
the cars don't run forever so if you if it would just take you to actually sit down and and i think
a lot of the problems is it's it's almost this brute force tactic when it comes to policing and
that's the problem and it's at its core for me there's never any planning these like it's never like okay what's the best most efficient way to go about this the safest way it's at its core for me. There's never any planning. There's like it's never like, OK, what's the best, most efficient way to go about this?
The safest way.
It's always like, OK, let's grab their gang armor up and let's run in there and just do whatever we want.
And then you like it's so interesting because a lot of people have been asking like, oh, you know, well well the funny thing is like all these white families
they're like this is so hard to talk about with my kids and people asking me about uh what i'm
telling naomi about this and i was like well to be honest naomi i'm not i'm letting her uh be uh
just in her world of sesame street and abc mouse the reason being is because my kid's black. This is a wall she's going to walk into eventually.
So if I can let her just to have this like free few years of not knowing and experience
what racism is and then have that conversation when she inevitably comes to school and be
like, hey, some kid called me nigger or some someone's being weird to me.
I'll be like, oh, OK, Well, it's time to have this conversation.
Because it really is like it's something we deal with.
And we're seeing live how cops operate, something that I'm sure me and Miles have known for a long time.
One of my first lessons in this was when I was in Compton, this cop was chasing these dudes in my apartment complex
and he runs by and they run after him and he ends up running down this cold this nearby it it's it's
like a you know how some houses uh have property and then they're all the way they're they're
deeper into the space but there's no through line like he ran down it and it was kind of closed off.
And we just, we just hear like a bunch of gunshots.
They, in so many shots, they shot their own canine.
They shot the canine and they plant, they, they, they it was wild to see what
happened with our own eyes and then see what was reported.
And what happened was they caught him down there
and just started firing on him, killed him.
And then they said that he shot the police dog
and that's why they shot him.
He had no gun on him.
We saw.
And what made it worse was the family that lived
in that inlet area, they were gone,
but they let us come in their house
and they shot so
much they that there was bullets riddled all over their living room and they said luckily they were
at church because if they were at home if they were watching tv they would have just been shot up
and that's the same story man you know what i mean like it's it happens so much and the and
the police are able to like you know obfuscate and try and just describe them murdering someone
as like man then he shot the dog and like we had no choice and that's because the people that they're
that hold them to account are their own yeah we're like all right so what happened here so like what
are we gonna what are we gonna say here so he probably shot the dog all right here yeah okay
it really is slip and fall there's no and that's why we have no and that's why like these
reforms are so important so like when people are like let's ban chokeholds i'm like hold the fuck
up man that's again that should have happened decades ago we're past that and again the police
have completely ceded their right to say that they're an entity worth funding uh in any meaningful
way like again we have to like you're saying if the police especially for black men you'll never have i've never seen a cop say sir
can i help you not at all and if and if it was it was just a sneaky way to just see where i'm going
where i'm coming right where you're going yeah oh you lost i'm like okay don't fucking concern
troll me dick i know what the fuck i know where you're i know where this is going but like this is i think it's all about being able to shift our
how we look at things right there's like even there's a like for example the police right
siobhan thomas who is a writer tweeted out she writes our rick and morty said for my friends
and followers arguing for reforms of the police instead of major defunding ask yourself this have
the police ever actually helped you or anyone you know or is your idea of the police predominantly been formed
by movies and television because yes there are people who've committed crimes unfortunately i've
had issues with in past relationships where like uh someone i was dating needed actual like law
enforcement help and it just never came yeah just didn't and let's just
talk about the fact that you know they want to pretend that you know we we use something someone
brought up that was good is we often use unarmed unarmed black man unarmed but who cares if if
they were armed how many times are we looking at these videos of armed white men who have murdered
who have hurt people who are somehow still able to be brought in without being shot.
How many times? We see it so many times, yet we have to point out that the black people who are
being slain are unarmed as if that makes a difference. Because it's true that they have it,
there's just zero compassion. They see it as sport, they see it as a chance. It's almost as if they hear that this, if the
suspect is black, they know they can go in guns blazing. It's the same. It's the same idea that
made to, uh, an off-duty cop and his son drive down on a black man. Like it was hunting season.
Like it really, it really shows. And so they do, they, I think you should should if we can make them go through so much before they can even grab a gun.
You know that. And I don't want to hear any of this like, well, what about this, this, this and this?
Someone just showed a survey. Only 48 cops were killed last year.
And then half of those were accidents that happened on themselves.
of those were accidents that happened on themselves so that means 20 something cops are actually at risk out of the hundreds of thousands of police so with those odds i think
you do you shouldn't have access to an m16 shouldn't have access and if you're this cavalier
about calling in the national guard and other agencies then what the fuck do you need guns for
if you're gonna if you're gonna call in over some peaceful protesters, you don't need guns. If you can't even-
Because it's not what it's about. You know what I mean? It's just about saying, oh, well,
we have people starting to band together across class and racial lines to actually identify a
common thread and it's us. So we're going to have to put that down because we need our money.
Oh, yeah.
And we need to keep expanding our police force. mean especially like when you think about la the crime rate and new york i think crime rates been gone
down by 75 since 1992 why do we need more cops like what's i don't i don't even understand the
logic path of that there's less crime more cops 75 less since 92 but that's not what they're
telling themselves like we talked on that uh we
talked earlier and on that behind the bastards about that david grossman guy who goes around
training them to uh think that they are their lives are like eight times more in danger there's
this thing that this like cop speak that you hear like i even hear people around me be like,
well, I heard this from a cop.
Cops love to act like they have this inside track
to some information, and it's always fucking bullshit.
The people I know who are, I know two cops,
they were shitty people in high school.
Right.
And I don't even fuck with them.
I just remember when Facebook was cracking and that first couple years out of college, I'm like, oh shit, that dude's a cop.
Okay, yep.
Yeah, no, it's a well-known fact that people would join the police force with complexes and they plan to use them to lash out on citizens.
But they're not going to lash out on every citizen.
They're going to lash out on black citizens who they feel can't climb whoever their target i mean it could just be women it's
or latinos whatever yeah people of color in general you know uh yeah and and it's so obvious
when two weeks ago we got to see the same quote-unquote protest but this time we got ars
are strapped around people and we're not met
with the same level we're not met there's two the the misinformation is so transparent and clear
we have videos of police trucks dropping off bricks we have videos of people looting when
you pay attention to the video they are not black yet you yet you have people playing this video, reporters playing this video and saying Black Lives Matter when they isn't a black life on camera. It's wild. It's like the fix is in, but it's not working. And now they're scrambling, which is why, which is why, you know, the CNNs and all this stuff, they're they're not going to make it through it either, because you just see how quickly they lean to whichever side they feel like they lean to lean to to make the
slant.
It's just ridiculous.
All right.
Let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
All right.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts, separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago, when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI
in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current.
Available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, fam. I'm Simone Boyce.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And we're the hosts of The Bright Side, the daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that is guaranteed to light up your day.
Every weekday, we bring you conversations with the culture makers who inspire us.
Like a recent episode with Latin Grammy winner, podcast host, and TV personality Chiquis about making a name for herself as the eldest daughter of beloved singer
Jenny Rivera. I'm not afraid. And I think that that's why I've been able to kind of do my own
thing and not necessarily stay in my mom's shadow because I'm not afraid of stepping out of my
comfort zone and shaking things up a little bit because that's the only way I feel that you're
going to make history. Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who, on October 16, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia.
I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere,
a podcast that unhurts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price. and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere starting September 25th on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I've been thinking about you.
I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session.
24 hours.
BPM 110.
120.
She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago. We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing they're just dreams dream sequence is a new horror thriller from blumhouse television iheart radio and realm
listen to dream sequence on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And yeah, Miles, you brought this story forward that I hadn't read,
but I have read other stories like it
that really underscore that it seems like
we could be on the precipice of
just all-out chaos like a yeah like virtual civil war we're on a knife's edge for sure yeah um and
this story really you know um so what happened was there's a multi-racial family uh and including
like a couple there was a 16 year old daughter daughter, the mother of the husband in this couple,
and they were in this town
in, I believe, it's
Forks, Washington.
Yeah. So what is that? Is that where
Twilight's from?
Oh, I don't
know. Anyway, not
important. Might be where the green room
is from also, though. The
Pacific Northwest is fucking scary. So they're in Washington, and this was happening in clallam county and they were they were these
people were shopping for camping equipment they're going on a camping trip then suddenly when they
come out of the store they were quote accosted by seven or eight carloads of people in the
grocery store parking lot the people repeatedly asked if they were members of antifa and the way
this outlet says an amorphous militant
anti-fascist movement has become a bugaboo for some on the right the second part i did with i
don't know but whatever uh and amorphous as well and then so then the family said they're just
there to camp and they were like trying to move their car around these people and go to the
campsite and then they said a couple cars were following them and they believed these people were armed following them and when they got to the campsite uh these people basically they that
were camping this family they heard gunshots and chainsaws and they're like okay we got to get the
fuck out of here and they packed they put their camping ship back together tried to drive out
and these people had basically blocked the road by chopping down the trees to block their car in, to box them in.
And then these high school students came and got them out and moved the trees and helped escort them to the sheriff's office.
But it's like, what the fuck?
So this is what's happening.
People will see a multiracial family with children.
And the conclusion is that's Antifa who's trying to kill us. And we
need guns because Antifa is here in the form of this multiracial family. That's what the people's
perception is. And when you look, the story goes further back to be like, why the fuck did these
people, what in the world gave them the idea that Antifa was going to be there? So there was a guy
in a town over who said, basically did a post that said,
you know, it's going to go down here in Sequim, Washington.
He said, you may want to show your face to make sure this is a peaceful demonstration
and declare all lives matter.
And then complete, like that basically got the whole area of few towns all riled up
off of this guy's Facebook post, this guy who owns a gun store.
And then his next post were like these maya culpa videos where he was kind of
being like,
cause nothing happened.
Like it was all bullshit.
Um,
and he was saying that,
that he had asked people to protect them from Antifa infiltrators based on
quote Intel he had received.
And then this is something he said in the video quote,
I was told a protesters were here.
I was told Antifa's here and gonna trash the town
i had this all this intel and then basically then goes back and he said i need people this is the
guy who started the first place that i need people to bring it down a notch including me i'm sorry i
got pretty jacked up about what's going on in our country right now that guy did have the wherewithal
to be like whoa i know i got it's at least articulate i know it's so funny and i will you know as much as i
hate to i will give credit for credits due because it's so hard nowadays to get people to admit fault
but it really is like yeah this is the shit that gets people killed and i wish that
there was someone near who who can say that where it's like bro this is this is getting people
killed and i think we do need to, like,
we need to crack down on people doing that,
that stuff.
Like we need to,
you know,
like the same way you got Trump saying when people looting,
shooting,
like if we have cool,
we know people are going to be so afraid to move on Trump.
But at the very least,
when people are posting videos,
we need to be banning these accounts.
We need,
we need law enforcement.
I mean, not like they're going to ever do shit for us, but we need to be banning these accounts. We need law enforcement.
I mean, not like they're going to ever do shit for us, but we need some type of someone to step in and do something.
And that's what's so funny is when people are afraid of law enforcement and they're like, well, who's going to take care of this, that, and the other?
Where's law enforcement when a woman is sexually assaulted? Where's law enforcement in these cases? Where's law enforcement when people
are trying to report stalkers and online bullying, which leads to that same person
murdering them? They're never acting on it. So that's why it's like, they're not out here trying
to put their life at risk. They're out here trying to have a license to kill, which is why we need to dismantle police bill of rights.
We need to get rid of that.
If you kill someone,
if like,
how the hell is it that if a doctor kills you or injures you trying to save
your life,
we can sue the shit out of them.
But when someone is actively making an attempt on their life off of a bad
judgment call
they get to walk free that on paper just the map don't make sense yeah that's why i think more
people can figure that out and i think this story also underlines just how how important it is for
people who have these kinds of like the capabilities to take life that they can actually see like what is actually going on
because these people are just hopped up on a narrative of like fox news and just saying
antifa is going to hear to run our town out and that's it and everyone's prescribed that's the
same thinking everyone's on and because everyone's looking at it one way that's why black people are
treated as a monolith where all black people are a threat. And it's the same, the police are responding in the same way. That's why the police
system, the system of policing as it is now does not work. And that's why a lot of people are like,
we need more social workers. You know, a social worker can look at a black or brown kid in like
in an inner city area and say, I understand why this kid is frustrated. I understand why they're
actually in
the streets because there's so little opportunity here that this is just the logical next step for
them trying to survive and then but the police come and go this kid's a fucking oh shit they're
trying to fucking get me ah what the fuck you know what i mean the we have to begin seeing things a
little bit more clearly too because it just we're jumping to conclusions
all like left and right um and yeah just to the point about facebook being used to
like facebook has been we've talked before on on this show about facebook being used to
cause genocide against uh minority groups in other countries. And more and more, as our
institutions break down, that is what's to separate us from those countries. We don't have
the military leadership now. The commander-in-chief is not going to stop it. In fact, he's going to encourage it.
Like, what is, Facebook is not going to stop it.
And it's a very, very dangerous tool that, you know, like you said,
I really feel like the country's on a knife's edge right now.
Yeah, I mean, that was just an image of someone, like,
I think the scarier ones aren't even the images coming from these major towns the scarier
ones to me are these images in the small town where you have these smaller group of protesters
just trying to show solidarity there's one of someone just walking down like a neighborhood
and there was just a group of these you know army cosplayers with army little guns right there and
then as you walk down and then you see the cops sitting there fine it was like you ain't gonna go and tell these people like hey we're here we don't need you to have your
guns like that's the stuff where i'm like second amendment man second amendment man it's like i
don't it's like no and it's so funny yeah they say in second amendment national guard coming in and
they quiet as hell and it really just there's that meme yeah of like the shiba dog that yeah
on the internet brolic is last week had the fucking tack vest on AR-15.
It's like, tell me I'm on lockdown.
And then like the next one, little puppy with the MAGA hat.
It's like they're clowns to me now.
They're like truly, truly, truly clowns to me because you really do see all that like chest puffing of like, you can't tell us to stay inside.
And then within a week, like not even even it ain't even been that long within a week
walking around telling people talking about some
well you should obey curfew
should listen to the oppressive military
police what the fuck you talking about
weren't you just outside
that's because freedom the freedom is not
that word is not used in the same way
for those people what it is and what's so wild
to me is it's so very
clear that it is a group of people that
believe oh laws don't apply rule these rules and laws aren't for me they're for they're for them
they're they're for for the black people they're for the people of color but for me a white person
these laws aren't for me i can do what i want this is my country i have freedom oh that's for them
and really and it's and and at that point when you can't even catch yourself and really i want to
be like oh it really is like these dorks don't even know what they're saying you know it's just
like this tweet i saw on facebook post where someone was like um all jobs matter to someone's
blue life pattern point and they're like well all jobs aren't under attack right now so why would you and it's like and it's like y'all are so y'all just really are that
dense and yeah and it is and it comes from a thing that i brought up before where it's like a lot of
this inherent racism is also coming from a place of selfishness you just refuse to see outside of
yourself you're seeing what's affecting you because you can't feel the effects of racism. It just doesn't exist to you. Because yet a lot of these people, hella Christian,
but they need to be able to see and feel the racism in order to believe it's there. And it's
not until it's someone they know, it's not until it's someone they see, it's not until someone
close to them gets hurt that they get to see that side that side it's the same way when a lot of uh
a lot of women were like this is how old i was when i first was sexually assaulted or this is
how old i was when i first was sexually harassed you had a lot of dudes being like oh this is
serious then even though it's some shit that they've been talking about all the time you know
it's it's the lack of of empathy that is so apparent i think right now that is kind of the most disheartening
thing is like it's like some of y'all you because there's so many times you just watch a twitter
conversation play out and then someone's like oh i get it it's like it's just because you refuse to
have empathy you you just you saw another people and you had to make up excuses and also a lot of
these people are inherently afraid of conflict but when you're a person of color and you have to make up excuses. And also a lot of these people are inherently afraid of
conflict, but when you're a person of color and you were born, your life is conflict. That's,
that's all, you know, but when you, when you, when you have, you have a privilege of avoiding
conflict, you don't want racism to be real. You don't want to address these things. You don't
want to live in this world where things are bad for some people. You don't want to live in the existence that maybe you have it better than others because you have the privilege
of not knowing conflict. Whereas as soon as you walk about this earth as a person of color,
you are in conflict. As soon as I walk in a room and based on the people, based on the way the
people in the room are looking at me, I know whether I'm wanted there or not. Conflict.
If I go into a store, if I go into a restaurant, someone looks at me, my know whether I'm wanted there or not. Conflict. If I go into a store, if I go
into a restaurant, someone looks at me, my service based on how I look is there. Conflict. If I want
a loan, I walk into a bank just based on how I dress. Conflict. The fact that I got to cut my
hair if I want to get a certain job. Conflict. All my life is conflict. I can't do shit without
having to worry about how I'm perceived by other people that's conflict but if you go
about your life where you never have to think that and then for once you have to worry about that oh
yeah you gonna avoid that shit like the plague you gonna avoid that shit like covet 19 if you're
not a dumbass well but they are so unfortunately yeah just kind of going back to the original story about the truly terrifying right-wing people,
eight cars full and then cutting down trees to trap the people in,
which is something I saw with people in Maine with something around COVID-19
and right-wing people trapping people in by cutting down trees. Anyways,
there just seems to be a concerted thing happening with right-wing people doing violence,
the backlash to the uprising being horrifyingly violent from the police, and the mainstream media
just actively ignoring it. I was watching the local news uh newport beach protest like one of
those small ones 50 people a dude drove through a crowd of protesters trying to hit them and it was
it was not an accident but they pulled a toddler out of the way at the very last second it was like
it's on video of this dude and then they, oh, he must have been drunk or an accident.
And then he was like, no, I was trying to kill them because they're, you know, challenging my white supremacy, essentially.
Just a 50 something, you know, white dude and a mini Cooper.
There's there's that video of you were talking about how high school students had to come in and like help that family
out those high school students like trying to put up you know black lives matter signs in maryland
and that guy like looks like he's like in his 50s or 60s and like wearing that like midlife crisis
biking gear oh just attacking them yeah just attacking them with his bicycle and being like give me give me the tape
uh like the literal the literal tape they were taping things up with and like they're children
and he's he's like going after that it's it's truly terrifying and people like be it seems
like they are actively weaponizing the white supremacy of the mainstream media because they
know that the mainstream media doesn't give a fuck when they commit crimes or at least it's not a
it's not a viral sensation on the mainstream media so we need like social media to to publicize it
yeah it's true and like i think even you know the other thing i'm seeing too is i saw a video of this woman i think in newport or huntington beach in orange county she was tearing down a george floyd
memorial because she said this was this was a setup by george soros and antifa and that's straight
up q anon talk yeah yeah and that's the other thing i'm seeing is like this some of these people
they have looks in their eyes that isn't just like i'm a nasty racist there are i i was actually kind
of my breath was taken because i've seen plenty of racist white women mixtapes before but this
this was particularly like she she really looked she believed that like antifa and
george soros are trying to take her life and her business and that these are all distractions and
like people she got doxxed and i saw like her instagram page she's like ask me i was like i'm
hashtag unemployed because of the hashtag plandemic and all this other stuff. And you're like, I see. There's a whole other way that people, again,
such a brilliant way to avoid the actual conversation
about capitalism and white supremacy.
Just go to QAnon, and the reason you don't have your job
is because George Soros and Antifa planned the pandemic
for you to lose your job, and that's why you're out of money.
The deadliest civil war in human history, I believe,
is a Chinese civil war fought when a cult rose up
and thought, like, was supporting somebody who claimed he was, like,
Jesus' brother.
And, like, there's really, like, some cult vibes going on
in this country right now.
It's scary.
And I think that's the thing is...
Human is real.
We say it, like, half flippantly that white supremacy is a
death cult but we're seeing it you know what i mean like there are some people who look so scared
by seeing even like other white people agree that black lives matter that they are starting to break
because they're like it didn't used to be like that and you know what i'm glad because it seems
like a lot more white people felt it was okay to say that they're not racist i don't know why that was a tough thing but hey it's actually it's the it's the coolest take you
could have right now just fuck racism yeah yeah uh all right let's take a quick break and we'll
be right back this summer the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, fam. I'm Simone Boyce.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And we're the hosts of The Bright Side, the daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that is guaranteed to light up your day.
Every weekday, we bring you conversations with the culture makers who inspire us.
Like a recent episode with Latin Grammy winner, podcast host, and TV personality Chy's about making a name for herself as the eldest
daughter of beloved singer Jenny Rivera. I'm not afraid. And I think that that's why I've been able
to kind of do my own thing and not necessarily stay in my mom's shadow because I'm not afraid
of stepping out of my comfort zone and shaking things up a little bit because that's the only
way I feel that you're going to make history. Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist
who on October 16th, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now.
The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia.
I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere,
a podcast that unhurts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere starting September 25th
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I've been thinking about you.
I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session.
24 hours.
BPM 110.
120.
She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this? We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And I watched The Help because it's trending in the Netflix top 10.
Oh my God.
People were tweeting.
They were like,
get the fucking help out of the Netflix top 10.
What are y'all doing? So it just hit Netflix a couple weeks ago. were people were tweeting they were like get the fucking help out of the netflix top 10 what are
y'all doing so it just it just hit netflix a couple weeks ago so that's partially like why
it was on people's minds but also i mean it is it was the number one movie for a couple days like
at the peak of the george floyd protests like that movies are never the number one thing on netflix but the
help was the number one thing and so i watched it i i saw right away i had seen it before when
it first came out and i saw it before when i said it was one of the best movies i'd ever seen
uh it's a masterpiece uh no it really gets you thinking yeah so i saw it back when it came out
i remember like having a lot of these thoughts but in this context like you see right away
why this movie's so popular at the moment it's entirely shot through with like the thesis that
racism is something that bad people actively go out of
their way to do.
And there are the good white people and the bad white people.
And Emma Stone is the white savior who comes and gives the black maids the
courage they need to tell their story.
and,
but there's like,
just racism is so easy to deal with.
It's just right there. And it's like just racism is so easy to deal with it's just right there and it's like on the
surface just being mean and like there's nothing you you just have to like kind of punk this girl
who's like a mean overt racist and everything is like good snap out of it again yeah basically i
think i get it man it's if you're a person who's
experiencing some level of white guilt uh and don't want to go too deep the help will do that
as no because look it's told again it's it's from the perspective of white people so great as the
viewer like okay good i know yeah i'm in the driver's seat as a narrator here and it's about
oh and look we're doing all right. And I get that.
I'm sure that feels good to a certain extent.
But it's just even funny when you even think about it.
Just the title already conveys the perspective of this entire film.
Yeah.
It's supposed to be tongue in cheek.
But if it was supposed to be tongue in cheek, it should have been told from the perspective of the, quote, help.
Movies don't need narrators like novels need narrators they need uh the person from who who's there observing the story
movies don't unless it's a movie about a non-white person then white audiences just need a white
person to like experience the story and like be there to observe it it's it's wild the the movie's
movie's a fucking mess also just like from a movie perspective like the you know acting the writing
is really bad and they're good actors involved in it it's like a good cast but it's just a
kind of a fucking mess and it really is like one of those things where you're like,
oh, racism is like movie steroids.
It's like catnip for white Americans,
this idea of a white savior coming in and helping the black community.
And it also others the racist South, like the racist past.
It's like everybody's smoking but they like comment on that people are playing bridge and like there so there's like a lot of like
anachronistic stuff thrown in to be like this is back then see we've come a long way uh and
yeah it's just one a couple bad ladies and like some racist like background like cops and bus drivers and
everybody else like if you just treat the black people around you like human beings then you are
like you've solved the problem that's basically it and also it's mostly it's mostly your point
right feeding people poop go ahead all of these
things help further the narrative of we've solved the problem yes they never end with and it
continues to this day yeah yeah you know like that's what all those feel good movies that like
black people like man fuck that's that's for white people to feel good about shit it's not that's not
real because at the end it like like it resolves like even the conflicts with characters who you're
like oh that person's racist you're like oh great not racist anymore oh i can breathe back to the
world well yeah i think it that's kind of the biggest um issue with these movies is a lot of
these racism movies make make racism a peer-to-peer issue and never an overarching, structural, systematic problem.
And it seems like if you can convert one racist, then all of a sudden all the races are good.
There it is.
And it's like, no, trust me, I've converted a lot of races in my life.
Right.
And it's bigger than that and and i think um even like when you have
these like biopics of like martin luther king and mlk there's this feeling that like they beat it
at the end you know it's a very weird thing even if it even though the movie ends in their
assassination you know uh and that's i think that's the problem is like in media it's
hard to it's hard to capture that and i think the closest we've gotten to capture it with even with
some of its problems is black klansmen because it ends and it has that kind of like hokey oh we did
it and then it immediately shows you footage from not too long
ago of charleston and what went down so we did this period piece that that takes place in time
and you're like and it has ends in a feel-good way and then spike because he spike reminds you
oh no this is still going on by the way all this shit we were fighting and it's and it's almost
done beautifully because all the things they were saying and all the talking points throughout the movie are even shown within the
clips that's like yeah no this is years ago and they're still talking like this and still getting
away with it right well that's the genius of a lot of the media too is like it's meant to sort of
extinguish the flames of outrage that burn within us sometimes yeah you know because if the help
ended with you being like
yeah and like uh unfortunately like her family couldn't get on there like if it if it ended with
some real sober take people would walk out of that movie and be like oh my god that's really
fucked up yeah right you know but movies aren't meant to make people uncomfortable so it would
rather than be like and it was all solved even though even though martin luther king was
assassinated yeah you walk out of that movie being like maybe i do have a dream it's like i don't know if you really saw what the
fuck happened yeah this guy was going up against it and got snuffed out yeah speaking of spike lee
the when do the right thing came out the end when uh mookie throws the trash can through the window
a lot of critics were like, why would he do that?
Like, that doesn't make any sense.
He didn't need to do that.
And Spike Lee was like, this is representative of something that is coming.
There is an anger.
And people were like, I think it's overrated.
And then the LA riots happened like a month later.
Yeah.
And it was like, yeah. That's why I was even though you know we are so burnt out of reboots a do the
right thing reboot would hit right now uh and i even got the title i call it to the right thing
uh you know but just go re-watch that movie it's a fucking master i know but i mean he's out here trying to remake movies
anyway so yeah right so did helm remake that that would be that would i'd love to see that
because yeah it is it's uh it's it's bubbling up and something's bubbling and it's so funny because
it's bubbling i as someone who was at a protest as someone who was, you know,
there,
it seems like,
you know,
we're getting all like worked up,
but in the end it's like,
no,
it's,
it's,
it's definitely the other side trying to push it.
They're trying to get there.
They're trying to garner.
And that's the experience of being,
you know,
black.
And that's why I tend to be a non confrontational a lot because like my dad always growing up, he was like,
don't get angry. Don't get angry. Don't get angry. Cause you know, you have this sense of justice,
especially if you grew up as a nerd, you have this like undue sense of justice. You think that,
you know, you, you almost buy into the propaganda that, you know, bad people will be taken care of.
And really that's not the real world. And so, um, I would just get angry. My dad's like,
don't get angry because
people will make you angry and use it against you. People will make you angry. And that's what
you're seeing right now is the reason these cops are trying to hit us and all this is because they
know if something happens where if we attack these cops, if we lash out, they're going to use it
against us to try and justify it, which is why they these i'm i'm just going to go out and say it it's not tinfoil hat it's the setup they they had actors
in the protests who were starting shit and you have people who were on the ground at these
protests who were like oh yeah we weren't there they literally planted a cop car in la they
planted it i don't give a fuck this is not a conspiracy theory everyone who was there you
can't you can't try and plant something in Hollywood.
We know set decoration.
We know, you know.
So when you have this, like, old-ass cop car there with spray paint on it and A-cab.
And then, unfortunately, this is still LA.
So you know people are using it for a goddamn photo shoot.
So then when those pictures come out, it looks like they did it.
You know?
But, like, it was set there, you know, and it's and it's pathetic.
And that's that's that's why it's like you resist the urge of trying to get that perfect shot for the gram, because these are all, those dumbass kids were going to kick in the windows and try and snatch shit.
They were kicking in windows and snatching shit at cool kids before this.
You didn't think they were going to use this opportunity to loot those stores?
Get out of here.
And I remember the homie had the video out of his window.
He lived on Fairfax.
And everybody I saw running with a box was white.
I saw not a single black person i'm sure there was some because when opportunity strikes you
still that way i mean i think when we get bogged down and trying to even like parse through like
who the good looters are the bad looters are we've completely taken the conversation away from what
we're like look the looting is gonna happen i'm sorry yeah but there's too many broke people and
people are fed a diet of images that say you need to own this this and this to be happy or to look good
yeah and guess what if you don't have any money and a fucking 700 box logo supreme hoodie is out
of your reach you're damn right you're gonna fucking break in there because society told
you you're not shit if you don't own that stuff so guess what they're taking from me well now i'm
taking from them bet and that's how it works And so that's why like the conversation always has to come back to like, and this is the tool. Another tool of like this whole white supremacy toolbook is like, we have to keep talking about this issue. And it's so clear. And like you're saying, like, especially for black people, like the whole thing is set up for to provoke us to prove that we are the animalistic depiction that they have
painted of us.
That's all.
They just need that confirmation bias fulfilled.
So everything's about provocation.
And whether if it's me at a private high school and the,
and the Dean taking me out of class to tell me my haircuts too weird or some
shit like that,
I'm trying to get,
it's all to fucking get you to act a certain way
and act out
and then be like,
you see,
and that's what I gotta do.
That's what I gotta suspend them.
It's all like,
and it's all this game.
And I think that's what,
hopefully people can see that
because yeah,
it's a lot of stuff out there
that's just trying to
further people's confirmation biases
about what outrage looks like,
what a person of color looks like,
what people look like
when they're mad, what mad people even look like when they're mad what mad people
even look like they're trying a lot but it's it's clear like in the most peaceful things i've seen
it's really heartening to see all these allies come out here or even in like boise idaho all
the all these like why i don't expect that, but wow. Okay. Something's happened.
Something's going on.
Yeah.
But that's the thing.
I think we're still trying to figure out,
okay,
there's some,
what's,
what's going to be the best way to,
to move this forward.
And that's why on the show last week,
we were kind of being like these movements,
like,
you know,
the eight can't wait stuff.
That's too incremental for right now.
I think these were things people have been asking for already for decades that
now it looks like we have enough public momentum that we can solve problems rather than
doing these sort of Band-Aid fixes that help skirt the real issues, which are talking about
real police brutality and white supremacy within that. Straight up. Miles, is Space Force good?
Yeah, and that's it. No, okay, so Space Force, yeah yeah pivot to space force really quick so i watched space
force the greg daniels uh steve carell vehicle for space uh and i didn't i didn't mind it there
was a lot of people hated it look i i told people from the beginning i'm in i'm in an airplane right
now everything that is on my screen i like yeah i'm in an airplane right now everything that is on my screen
i like because i'm in an airplane yeah so even this i was like when tani came on i said look at
her edges are fucking oh god they have they took care of her my first thought and i was like thank
you yes and then i got taken out in a scene where like ben schwartz was like taken off by military
goons for trying to tweet something and like that brought me back into the real world oh my gosh there are moments that i felt really
uncomfortable because like there are these sort of these characters that are representing like
these branches of the military and how like flippant they talk about like invading countries
or like blaming something for another thing i'm like oh i got one for you yeah there's like a
tonal thing though too that i realized that might be
fucking with me is that it's kind of it bugs me when i see the old kind of humor of like
like just calling out that we know it's bad yeah right and it ends there and the joke's like ben
and we showed you we knew it's bad because that's that guy's stupid and we laugh yeah and that
actually i was like i was starting to get really really pissed. Not even directly in the context of Space Force, but even other things I've watched throughout the week of like in comedy especially, of just leaving it as like we're smart enough to see the problem rather than using the humor to fucking eviscerate the stupid idea.
And actually get somebody to really use humor to make your point.
Because when you just go that then everyone goes
oh yeah that's right our military does just sort of like unilaterally invade other countries without
any kind of support from other nations or yeah we do like just seize private citizens because
you know the government doesn't want a secret yeah i mean that's the way i felt that is on
who shot you we've been going through the fast and furious franchise and the way,
like,
like there's a scene in the,
uh,
the reboot fast.
Well,
quote unquote reboot.
The,
the,
the,
I think that's the fourth movie fast and furious where he's trying to get,
you know,
this race with the guy and he like the SWAT team rates his house and then
plants drugs on him.
And it's supposed to be like a,
ah, yeah, got him. And it's supposed to be like a, ah,
yeah, got him.
And it was all because,
and what was funny is just even taking a further step back.
It was all because he lost the race and he clowned him and he was like,
Hey,
nothing's going to beat American muscle.
And luckily,
you know,
the character was white.
So it's still like,
it was still,
but it was like the cavalierness of like,
yeah,
we're just going to do to further our need to get in on this.
We're going to falsely accuse this person of drug dealings.
Plant the drugs.
And then it even goes even further to me when they're like, you know it's not going to stick, right?
He was like, I don't need it to.
Because it was like, oh, yeah.
Then it made me realize, yeah, this character is white.
He's going to get off on this because if this was a black guy, it definitely would stick.
You know, it just, it's
one of those things, and I couldn't get to the
newer movies fast enough when they're
no longer cops,
you know, or working for cops. They're more so
just secret agents, and it's in a
fantasy world. And another global police force.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. They're just
in a fantasy world. We don't have to work
because, like... No longer tethered to
anything resembling yeah because he's straight up what makes it suck is like he's lapd you know so
so like it's like oh yeah but i mean i don't think any of us are out here capable for la yeah
begin with anything so it's like oh my gosh yeah but i think that's the thing i'm realizing too
is like just to that tweet from siobhan thompson about how just how much media informs just how it's like it really is the greatest marketing it's the greatest marketing for our
military like i've not it's only a few movies where you're like oh that's an interesting look
at how police like work and even how they see themselves like interacting with the thing
because it always just it always basically helps set up the binary of cop good whoever cop is
against is bad it doesn't matter because the binary of cop good. Whoever cop is against is bad.
It doesn't matter because the cop is always good.
And I think that people are starting that sort of perception of how the police operate is starting to erode.
Again, because that old man, dude.
They shoved that old man down a buffalo bleeding out of his ears.
When you see his head leaking, bro, that was too much.
Unbelievable.
The things that you're seeing in the cynic way i look at it
is like well hopefully they'll understand now that it's a white guy you know like hopefully
they'll understand how fucked up this is because now you can't just now you now you can look at
that and see your uncle tommy you know like like because that's what it takes for some people um
but yeah no it's it's wild i but you know i i you know me i'm just uh optimist
to my core so i'm liking the things like uh nypd officers resigning left and right uh you know we
did get the officers charged but the battle isn't done and that and i think that's what they're not
ready for they they're like they're like yo we about to we we look we arrested i was like cool
because y'all forgot about brionna Taylor you know I'm on
Aubrey the new person who was just
killed by the NYPD you know it was like
it's like yeah this is getting
it's gonna get late we ain't done
just yeah like because a lot of people
are out here we're ready to read fucking Arya
Stark's fucking list yeah basically
yeah go through there I cannot
wait till we get this motherfucking
Garcetti out your dad was a cop bro you ain't fooling nobody fuck kill too uh if he it's been a pleasure
having you man where can people uh find you follow you hear you see you oh you know me it's uh it's
if you wadi way twitter and instagram if these on twitch um yeah you you'll catch me in super punch
monday through friday uh live on twitch at night we've been raising money for the naacp fund uh
the legal defense fund so uh you know uh it's gonna be done by the time you hear this so you
can't but on your own right donate uh and uh you know i'm retweeting all types of uh you know donations i'm even for
for my horny dogs out here i got a lot of homegirls who've been like look donate some money
oh yeah i'm gonna show you the tits so look it's i know it's deep in the teen uh so so look i'm
helping the simps out let's go uh and is there a tweet or some other work of social oh yeah you know there is this one uh
is by the homie yay for zig uh he did this tweet that cracked me the fuck up which was uh it's a
tweet of um king batch i will say coming from a good place he's trying to you know get the word
out trying to trying to be a an ally it's him like covered in the names of
people who were killed by the by the cops and and he's like saying something i still haven't
watched the video because zig's tweet took me out he retweeted he goes look his heart is in the right
place and we all dealing with this trauma in our own way but every black person that sees this is
still gonna say this nigga look like a chipotle bag and i'm gonna laugh every single time they do and uh he does
look like a chipotle bag in this video uh where he has uh people's names written all over him
uh i'll put it in the chat so miles can uh enjoy as well uh but yeah uh that that's a good tweet and zig has been doing uh also good retweets
and all that stuff yeah zig's the best miles where can people find you and follow you
oh okay yeah he really it It's definitely Chipotle time.
With that, it's unfortunate.
But yes, you can find me Twitter, Instagram, PlayStation Network, Miles of Grey.
Also, my other podcast for 20 Day Fiance, talking about 90 Day Fiance with Sophia Alexandra and her co-host of her other podcast, Private Parts Unknown, Courtney Kosak.
She's, I think, another one of those comedians out there who's swapping donations for nudes.
So we got, let's see, a tweet that I like.
So this tweet is from at ChrisLoveBCT, and they write,
ACAB in Finnish is K-pop, and I can't stop thinking about it.
Wow.
It's all coming together.
wow it's all coming together that's yeah i mean those man k-pop twitter even though y'all are some nasty doxing people who go way too far sometimes it's just so weird the like there's there's that
other tweet that was basically like the avengers that have formed on the internet of like these
people coming together like to to show up for george floyd and everybody else
like it's really uh something else oh actually earlier i was talking about ben and jerry's
because they basically posted just said we must dismantle white supremacy and if you go to their
website they have a very well i i'm like bravo to you for actually like writing something like this
uh and then in respect that tweet blew up a lot of people people are like, well, I'm never buying Ben & Jerry's. Yeah, go ahead. So then there's at Angel Teeth.
And I think it's at Angel Teeth, but it's spelled T333TH.
It says, every other basic response.
We stand with our black employees.
Smiley face emoji.
Ben & Jerry's.
We got to fucking smash white supremacy.
Fuck the KKK and fuck you.
Black Lives Matter.
Our new flavor is called Fuck the Police.
It's got blueberries.
It's got blueberries. It's got blueberries.
Let's see.
At Fart tweeted, when someone has the word sarcasm or snark in the bio, they are less
likely to understand the actual jokes.
This is one of the great mysteries of the computer.
And Sujata Day tweeted
Studio executive once told me
her all-white staff was diverse because
of their, quote, diversity of thought.
And somebody
retweeted that and said that Bill Simmons
told them that.
So, shout out to
Bill Simmons.
Well done.
You can find me on Twitter at Jack underscore O'Brien.
You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist.
We're at The Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website, DailyZeitgeist.com,
where we post our episodes and our footnotes.
We link off the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on.
Miles, what are we going to ride into this week on today?
I mean, all of us are stuck on our own in a house in L.A.,
so we might as well do that track by Jungle House in L.A.
Ooh!
I love that song.
It's like I was watching it again for some, like, I don't know,
some video game company was doing a rendering
of their photorealistic GTA V up-resing,
and it had this song under it, and I was like, oh, this song actually goes.
And it has great vocals on it, because the falsetto of the lead singer I really love,
plus the really kind of slow, methodical instrumental behind it.
It's like, I don't know, it's like feel-good, but also helps you feel a little bit,
so you can kind of listen to this song and take it wherever you need to so why don't you all right we are gonna ride out on that
we'll be back this afternoon to tell you what's trending and we will talk to you then bye How do I know
You'll be somewhere and it's all right now
As we sing You'll be so good, it's all right now Ask me soon
But you won't say bye
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare. Can Kay trust her sister
or is history repeating itself? There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing. They're just
dreams. Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Curious about queer sexuality, cruising, and expanding your horizons? or wherever you get your podcasts.
New episodes every Thursday.
Hi, I am Lacey Lamar.
And I'm also Lacey Lamar.
Just kidding.
I'm Amber Revin.
What?
Okay, everybody, we have exciting news to share.
We're back with Season 2 of the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network. This season, we make new friends, deep dive into my
steamy DMs, answer your listener questions and more. The more is punch each other. Listen to
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Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Just listen, okay?
Or Lacey gets it.
Do it.
Do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from?
Like what's the history behind bacon-wrapped hot dogs?
Hi, I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejon.
Our podcast, Hungry for History, is back.
And this season, we're taking an even bigger bite
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Saying that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba,
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Listen to Hungry for History on the iHeartRadio app,
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