The Daily Zeitgeist - Clinical MDMA > Racism 06.22.23
Episode Date: June 22, 2023In episode 1505, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian and host of #GoodMuslimBadMuslim, Zahra Noorbakhsh, to discuss…GOP Back On Their F*ckery…Debt Ceiling Edition, Racist Takes Molly…Realizes ...Being Racist Sucks? Stop Ruining Costco, Joe Biden and more! GOP Back On Their F*ckery…Debt Ceiling Edition Racist Takes Molly…Realizes Being Racist Sucks? Stop Ruining Costco, Joe Biden! Woman's $800 Costco Shop Sparks Fierce Debate: 'Thanks, Joe Biden!' LISTEN: Questions by MaetaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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There's so much beauty in Mexican culture, like mariachis, delicious cuisine, and even Lucha Libre.
Join us for the new podcast, Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12-episode podcast in both English
and Spanish about the history and cultural richness of Lucha Libre.
And I'm your host, Santos Escobar, emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you stream podcasts.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit, where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves, the biscuits. I was a lady rebel.
Like, what does that even mean?
It's right here in black and white in print.
It's bigger than a flag or mascot.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Captain's Log, Stardate 2024.
We're floating somewhere in the cosmos, but we've lost our map.
Yeah, because you refuse to ask for directions.
It's Space Gem, there are no roads.
Good point. So, where are we headed?
Into the unknown, of course.
Join us on In Our Own World as we uncover hidden truths,
navigate the depths of culture, identity, and the human spirit.
With a hint of mischief.
One episode at a time.
Buckle up and listen to In Our Own World on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Trust us, it's out of this world.
Hello, the internet, and welcome to Season 292, Episode 2 of
Dirt Analysts, Ike Ice!
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Production of iHeartRadio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into American shared consciousness.
It's Thursday, June 22nd, 2023.
Oh, yeah.
You know what time it is?
You know what time it is, Jack?
I know exactly what time it is.
Oh, good.
It's good to know because it's 20...
Wait, what is it?
The 22nd.
Yeah, I knew that.
It's National Onion Rings Day.
Okay.
Shout out my...
Thank you.
One of my favorite, actually.
I think one of the more underrated fried foods.
National HVAC Tech Day.
Obviously, with the heat out there.
Shout out to everybody keeping that heating, ventilation, air conditioning systems all in check.
National Chocolatey Claire Day.
Also, World Rainforest Day.
And National Kissing Day.
Kiss your babies.
Kiss your loved ones.
I was out until Rainforest and Kissing.
There you go.
There you go. you go well miles my name is jack o'brien aka come grimace come grimace grimace come come come grimace grimace
grimace come come tell me that you're loving it and put it on my tongue that is courtesy of
salvador jolly on the discord okay politely spelled it c-o-m-e
which was nice of them even though we we know what's really up also some people are going out
and tasting the grimace cum milkshake and it almost seems like they think they're doing it
on our behalf oh like i i have gone bravely to the arches to taste i just want to make sure it's clear we're
not endorsing this product we're just saying that it is clearly grimace come that if that is
intriguing to you as it is to me that's great but that's embrace yeah embrace embrace it but just
don't don't be mad at me when it tastes i think one of the reviews was purple bubble gum and nui nui how do i know on a wee on wee yeah wow an idiot fucking idiot over here
i knew that for some reason wasn't clicking today. You're a big philosopher, baby. Why'd you drop the ball on that one?
N-U-I?
N-U-I?
N-Y-U?
The university?
I'm thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray!
Oh, wow.
Ennui, baby.
Anyway, Miles Gray, a.k.a.
Look, this is from Chris Yamaguchi, man, because we did.
What's his face?
A lone muskrat.
Yeah.
A lone scum was out here saying, you know, cis gender is now a slur.
So allow me to introduce myself.
Miles Gray, a.k.a. Siskel and Ebert, a.k.a. Sissy Cis Demeanor Elliot, a.k.a. Sisyphus, a.k.a. Sissy Spacek, a.k.a. Twisted
Sister, a.k.a.
System of a Down, a.k.a.
Sister,
Sister!
Thank you to Christy Yamaguchi, man, at
Waffle House for those wonderful
a.k.a.'s and all the other people who hopped in that
thread. Wonderful stuff. Yeah, yeah. Biz came
in with Sisterhood of the
Traveling Pants. Yes.
It was pretty good.
Another good.
What was it?
At Drew Gots.
Put Cisco like that thong, the thong, thong, thong.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And Sister Christian, Night Ranger.
Sister Christian.
Cause you're motoring.
That song is everywhere these days.
Is it?
Yeah.
It's in air.
I believe. It's pretty prominently featured in air,
but I feel like once it had its boogie night scene,
it was,
it was over for all those other hoes.
Oh,
100%.
Like journey.
Fuck out of here.
Journey.
Anyways,
miles.
Yeah.
Thrilled to be joined in our third seat by a very funny comedian activist
she's the host of the great award-winning podcast good muslim bad muslim the senior fellow on comedy
at the pop culture collab uh she's written in the new york times wrote and performed a piece on
something called fresh air for some lady named terry gross it is the hilarious, the talented Zara Norba! Zara!
Yo, I had a crush on the Grimace as a kid.
No. Did you?
Why?
Yeah, the Grimace and the Hamburglar were like my early pan jam.
Like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, what's up?
You had like an awakening looking at Grimace?
A little bit.
Okay. In bit. Okay.
In retrospect.
Yeah.
Now that I appreciate my weird and kink.
Yeah.
I'm like, okay.
I don't think I knew.
Justin, let me get a screen share really quick because I just want to bring images of this to the forefront.
Okay, here we go.
Okay, so let's.
Yes.
Oh, look at that purple.
Oh, yeah, this one can get it with the teeth.
Oh, baby.
Oh, no.
Grimace with teeth is really troubling.
Yeah.
How did that happen?
I mean, I don't know, Jack.
Speak for yourself.
I'm like, aye, bite me, dude.
Aye, aye, aye.
Bite my whole shit, baby.
Although without the teeth, also troubling.
Because his mouth just looks weird and...
I like this one.
Oh, that's a good one. Grimace's mouth is a whole problem yeah yeah okay you know what grimace with shades on okay yeah grimace can get
it he's like kind of giving perpetual duck face like he looks like he has lip filler yeah like
do we know grimace's gender is grimace gendered i think grimace is like i think
grimace is non-binary yeah yeah yeah yeah okay so they can miss is like purple teletubby like
early purple teletubby like yeah and he was always sort of like gyrating yeah he was a little yeah he
moves a little bit more dynamic than the his amorphous form would have you believe where the hamburger is always kind of sneaking around and yeah what about the hamburger something
something about that this like there's always like so deviant oh it's just very clear to me
they were both so he was just like a bad boy so, there's something devious. Oh, like right here? Yeah, look at that. Ooh, ooh, ooh. Yeah, just ooh.
What's up with these burgers?
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah, we're looking at an animatronic.
And the big movement that they've given him is his eyes going back and forth.
Shady eyes like ooh, ooh.
Let's make a kinky sandwich.
And they're just burgers with so many preservatives.
And top it off with a grandma's cup milkshake.
Why not?
Yeah, why not?
And sawdust.
Anyway, what's new? Zara, what's new with you?
You are breaking a record here
or at least approaching
a record. I'm so excited about
breaking records. Yes.
Among the most pregnant
people that we've ever had.
I'm pregnant!
37 weeks and 3 days! you go wow already dilated that
two centimeters dilated look at you this child is coming on and i have covid
what is why i sound like this the dedication i'm so dedicated yeah they wanted to induce me and i told them to wait until
i do this spot well you did run you ran it by miles and i and we were like that actually
you know two you you ran it by us a couple weeks ago we said two weeks is not that much time
for us to book a backup guest and so yeah why don't why don't you work and then this morning
when you're like guys i have covid have COVID, I was like, and?
Yeah.
We got a show to record.
Yeah.
But I appreciate that.
Oh, we're not recording this in person.
Sorry.
Is that why you're sharing that information with me?
Because otherwise it doesn't do that.
It sounds like a YP, not an MP.
Not going to tell you about it.
But how is it?
How are you feeling?
You're right there.
You're on the doorstep.
Feeling good.
Yo, you know, I feel surprisingly well right now.
All things considered.
I'm glowy.
My hair is voluminous.
Oh, my.
It's popping.
Yeah.
Is that how that's pronounced?
V-L-O-U-M-E.
Is that volume?
Pronounced. Oh, my.
Velluminous.
I-O-S.
Velluminous. I-O-S. Volume. ItUI. iOS. Voluminous iOS.
Volume me.
It's actually volume me.
It's very volume me.
And what else can I tell you?
I'm walking a ton.
Yeah, good.
That's great.
And like, you know, just really feeling this.
I've been taking hypnobirthing classes.
Damn.
What is that, like a genre of music? It could could be there's like a lot of meditation and chanting it's okay it's really
fascinating there's some of it that is like a little bit you know like cis white woman feminism
of the 70s some woo woo that's like okay let's you know some of it is a little bit ableist and it's like
pain is the devil and don't think about pain pain is just fear and actually yeah and so i'm a person
who had chronic pain in her 30s and i had to work my way through it and so like i dig a lot of the
lessons about it of like they provide you with the most visualizations i've ever gotten in a birthing class so like i know at every single stage of my labor what my uterus is doing why
how what's going on what are the potential and i have pictures they do like i i had classes with
like play-doh and like tactile shit. Holy shit. Oh, wow.
Is it like you're giving your baby that experience
through your connection or that's just for you?
No, it's just for me.
It's so that I go in knowing because with pain,
when you don't know what's going on,
it's more painful.
Right, yeah.
Because that's how pain works.
It's sort of a general, it's kind of like anxiety.
When you have an emotion you can't identify and you're just anxious.
Sure.
Yeah.
But once you identify, oh, I'm pissed at you.
Right, right, right.
You know?
Right.
Oh, this is my uterus contracting.
This is this happening.
Exactly.
That's good because you're building up this like psychological scaffolding for you to
like reinforce your mentality going through what is going to be an experience like any other that
i unable to imagine or experience but yeah the hardest oh my god i've ever seen a human being do
like just so so incredible so badass i had so much anxiety going into like the birth of my kid
because like i'm like how do i help you know what i mean but this is everything they give us so that it stops being sort of like
monumentous and grandiose or on the flip side terrifying and anxiety provoking and instead
lives as this like very natural very biological organic thing that your body is primally
ready to do that like yo folks women in comas give birth right and it's all about like relaxing
which of course cut to the day i give birth and i'm like screaming out the window
we had a whole birthing plan stabbing my husband
this is the worst pain i've ever experienced in my life!
You're like, give me an epidural.
You're like, psych, give me that needle. We're my husband.
This is for you.
Oh, man. Let me do it.
Yeah. Oh, well, I'm
very excited. Very excited for you.
I'm stoked. I'm actually
genuinely excited for labor.
I'm an extreme sports junkie. I'm very curious about how this is going to go. I'm taking bets if y'all think I'm going to cave in the first five minutes or if I'm going to ride it out.
to assess how much you'll stick to it.
But if I see your birthing plan and get a little bit of background
on how other labors have been in your family,
I might give you over under
on how long the labor might take.
My mom, I was three weeks early.
She gave birth to me in two hours, first kid.
Wow.
Holy shit.
So the second kid was-
No epidural.
My sister, she came two weeks early.
No epidural.
She birthed my sister in an hour.
Yeah. Damn. My brother, three hours. My little sister, four. two weeks early no epidural she birthed my sister in an hour yeah damn my brother
three hours my little sister four oh and you're the oldest i'm the oldest i came in two hours
wow okay i'm thinking you know i don't know again i don't i'm not gonna i don't want to
speak on that i don't know now my mom was 17 and i am 43 years old, folks. Wow.
Okay, a little bit different.
Yeah.
So 26 years right there?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, what's that differential on the pelvic floor?
All right.
Well, we are going to get to know you a little bit better in a moment.
First, a couple of things we're talking about.
We are talking aboutans being back on their
fuckery with regards to the debt ceiling i'm trying opposed to the pelvic floor the debt
ceiling we're going to talk about molly being used to address racism we're going to talk about
joe biden ruining costco other concerns on the right currently. All of that, plenty more. But first, Zara,
we do like to ask our guests, what is something from your search history?
Okay. This morning I searched, can I have overnight French toast in 30 minutes?
What that means?
Okay. So I do this thing regularly where I'm a Gemini. I always forget to pre-prep
and I don't do the pre-prep for the food that I want,
but I still want it. Oh, you mean to like soak the bread for French toast? Yeah. Cause you have
to for overnight French toast. It's phenomenal. You soak the bread in the egg mixture with the
cinnamon and everything. And then the next morning you pop it in the oven for 15 minutes and it's
just like ready. It might be like 45 oh shit i didn't i never even knew it
like that oh my god it's phenomenal wow okay i've never done that that's i've always known it just
like on the spot like you got your stale bread or whatever that you're trying to turn up and then
oh you are missing out on the soak it is so custardy okay oh custardy And it's got that like sugar char.
Yeah.
Yeah. Like a little creme brulee kind of little action.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm in.
Oh, and you were trying to say, can I speed this process up?
Can we move this along?
The very American like, yeah, but I need it right now.
Can I turn this grape juice into wine in the microwave over the next 45 minutes?
I may have also Googled that once in my life.
How quick grape juice become wine?
Right now, please.
Yeah, yeah, right now, 30 minutes.
And I'm imagining that that search rendered maybe your heart slightly broken.
A little bit.
I'm in denial still.
Yeah.
Couldn't you do it with some some kind of pressurized...
I'm just saying like scientifically, right?
Couldn't you put something like a pressure cooker?
Maybe that?
You and I are in sync on this because my next
move was going to be to look up the Instapot.
Yeah. Right. It feels like an
Instapot-able thing.
Or like a pressurized environment where you put
the mixture in the bread and you pressurize
the container. It's like a stock trading floor? Like high pressure the mixture in the bread and you pressurize the container.
It's like a stock trading floor.
Like high pressure situation.
Yeah, it's just like forcing the infusion.
I have a rocket scientist friend at JPL that I hit up for these kinds of moments.
And?
Yeah.
Were they any help?
Every time.
Oh, okay, great.
Except for this one.
That's amazing.
What is something you think is overrated?
Okay.
Whenever people talk about pregnancy they're
always like it's like an alien growing inside of you right yeah that's your baby
well that's the thing is it used to be that way in a real safe kind of mental picture right and
i had this whole process of sort of like coming to terms with this like birthing because so for I was like freezing up and not able to actually plan
for my postpartum and third trimesters and delivery because I was just like freezing up.
I was so scared all the time. I was like, I can't do this. So the first thing I did,
if you want to do this too, it really helped me to get past the like alien baby mentality into something
more natural i started watching a lot of anal sex porn yeah that's what i was gonna suggest i'm glad
you got there on your own just a lot i was just talking about this to like really understand the
movement of the perineum and how it expands and it can stretch and what the human body is
capable of just in terms of pressure down there.
You know,
it's a phenomenal thing.
And a lot of,
I watched a couple of like,
you could look up backstage anal sex preparation.
Okay.
Yep.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Get that O-ring ready.
Listen,
there is some professionalism back there that i
am impressed with yeah and now you know i think this is correct but the baby doesn't come out of
the that one though right i don't wait oh really wait i'm actually i could use confirmation on this too yeah no here's what butthole babies are a thing
if you tear yeah oh sure sure sure yeah yeah yeah of course and then it's sort of it's just all one
one big cloaca but this is what i was so scared of was like the tearing and the you know and i
wanted to understand like, how,
how is there a way where it's not going to just be horrifically painful and
tear and all this stuff.
I wanted to get myself out of the fear of it.
And then my husband was like,
I understand you going to these anal sex sites,
but you could also watch birthing videos.
So I started watching.
Yeah.
That might be more one-to-one.
And that blew my mind
because the OB literally reaches in
and is like, she's right there
and touches her head.
Yeah.
And pulls out a whole human.
And I had this moment where I was like,
yo, it's not an alien.
It's not a picture in an ultrasound.
I just was like really humbled because I was like, all of us come from underqualified women's vaginas.
None of us know what the hell we're doing.
Yeah.
Birth is like this noble thing.
But we're all just like we're so organic.
Yeah.
This is this is so mammalian right right and that connects to my
underrated yeah that's the alien thing i wonder if there was a strong uptick in that after the
film like that because oh i'm sure the most visceral image maybe in film history is like that chest burster scene so and i i do think that
things like that really burrow their way into into people's unconscious well and here's the
other thing i learned about midwife activism is that so in check this out in the 40s and the 50s
the popular thing to do was to just put women under general anesthesia.
Right.
Just knock them out.
Just knock them out.
And they would put them on under like purple and twilight, which if you're not familiar,
those are the drugs they give you so that you're like still cooperative, but unconscious.
Yeah.
And the hypnobirth story is she goes in.
I totally forget her name.
Mangan is the last name.
She goes in and says, I want to deliver naturally.
The doctor says, sure.
She wakes up with a baby in her arms.
Wow.
Right.
Like that's how little they listen to anything women had to say about their own bodies during
birth.
Right.
And it was a part of the feminist movement to have birth naturally.
And that became bigger in the 70s.
Lamaze came around.
Right, right.
And so did Alien around that time.
So I bet there's a link up.
Oh, yeah, that does.
Yeah, that makes sense.
What is your underrated?
Okay, we need more birth stories, folks.
Yeah.
Like, I can't believe how, like, i was at the shoe store buying shoes and i was
like well i'm eight months pregnant so my foot is growing and the this chick straight up this
20 something chick straight up just goes i oh i don't know how to relate to you at all
look i gotta i'm fitting a lot of shoes today
wait what was the interaction exactly you're like hey you can stop talking I'm fitting a lot of shoes today. I don't know how to relate to this. I was like, what on earth?
Wait, what was the interaction exactly?
You're like, hey, I'm pregnant.
You can stop talking.
I can't relate.
I don't know why you're still talking.
You know I can't relate to this, right?
But okay, go off, I guess.
Your feet or something.
I had hired this dog walker to help me walk the dog.
And she just kept asking me how if i was scared
and like why i wasn't more scared you know and i just was like why aren't you terrified right
like these aren't even men asking me these questions you know what i mean these are young
women and like and and and even like friends of mine who because I've been so far in a lot of friendships that are without kids.
Right.
You know, I'm 43.
I don't have a kid.
And so a lot of my friendships have been with like childless families.
And I've dug it.
And, you know, we go on vacations and use our money in ways that are awesome.
You know?
Right.
And not Fisher Price.
Though I wouldn't anyway. i just i just feel like we
need more birth stories out there it's like you know alien animal husbandry or just like
nothing you know what i mean yeah exactly i feel like there's a like they when there is a birth scene in a movie, it like some just auto fill like text AI just takes over.
And it's like the woman's there pushing and then like being mad, yelling at her husband.
And that's like the only version that we have is like, shut up.
And he's like, oh, no, are you oh no are you okay honey yeah and like that's it
and one of the things i've been digging about my hypnobirthing class is all the meditation that
women do in the videos in their videos women are all like really quiet really meditative really
introspective and you can see them sort of like internal and bearing down right and it's not
this like screaming fiasco that i feel like is designed to scare the shit out of women yeah for
sure absolutely yeah yeah i remember we watched some birthing videos around the birth of our first
and yeah just some people are able to just yeah meditative quiet like just and i don't like that that certainly wasn't what
happened in our case but it's definitely a good story to have contributed to the overall
right of how this can go well and you know not that i'm opposed to screaming and throwing darts
at my husband sure yeah as it's happening you know that's fine too. I don't think I've seen that. I was thinking,
yeah,
I could like create a bullseye and just like,
yeah.
It's like a really powerful nerf cannon of some sort.
Lift your shirt up.
Show me the target.
You're like,
yeah.
I had him painted on his chest with Sharpie earlier.
Now let me see if I can get one in here.
But yeah,
I totally agree.
My mind was completely,
so much of my perception around pregnancy and childbirth was informed by fucking 90s movies.
Exactly.
Like nine months and shit where I'm like, ah!
Like, that's what you think is fucking going on.
And then you talk, like, then I talk to my other friends and relatives and people who I respect who have gone through this maybe one time or multiple times.
And I was like, they're giving me really good advice. And I realized how much of that shit seeps into your
brain and completely just changes what exactly this whole thing is. And once I was able to sort
of get past this like media informed idea of what it meant, I was able to enter this more like
peaceful, calm, like loving part where my energy wasn't fear, more like how can i use my love to make this
process the best way possible and then enter into this without necessarily having like the fear of
someone screaming at me or accidentally grabbing my penis because i think it's my hand like in all
the movies in the 80s grab someone's hand i forget what movie that do you know what i'm talking about
there's a movie no but that's totally what i'm going to do on nine months or something and like someone's giving birth and someone's like grab a
hold of something and this woman just grabs the dude's crotch and just like and the guy's like
and she's like you have a very big finger and i forget what that is i'm sure zeitgang will know
exactly what i'm talking about but anyway uh oh my god you don't understand i have such a nice
husband i used to play this
game with him called open up your legs i'm gonna narrowly miss your balls and i would make this
and he would do it every time he would open up his legs and he'd always be like oh i hate this game
how does he win that game yeah what are the rules It's always about whether I win or lose. That was the why.
Whether he flinches. He's a cis
man. He's a cis white man in the world.
Sorry, Justin, can you
take that out?
We don't want to run afoul of Elon
Musk's morality police.
And then one day, we were at dinner
with friends, and I was
like, you know, he always lets me play this
game. He just lets me, and we're all cackling. And he was like, hey. So then the next time, I was like, you know, he always lets me play this game. He just lets me and we're all cackling.
And he was like, hey.
So then the next time I was like, open up your legs,
we're gonna narrowly miss your balls
during a boring documentary.
He was like, no.
No, I won't.
And I was like, damn.
I love that it's just done
for your entertainment purposes.
It's not, it's just like when you're bored. I thought it was like, you know, it's just done for your entertainment purposes yeah it's not
it's just like when you're bored i i thought it was like you know you you were mad at him or
something there's a lot of things that i can get him to do in that labor delivery room i have to
really think about yeah how i pray cash those yeah but they're like so what's your birth plan you're
like all right so first of all i tell my husband to open up his legs i'm gonna nearly miss your
balls i was just asking if you wanted like a peanut pillow for your legs or if you needed a yoga ball.
No, I'm good.
I'm just going to narrowly smash him in the crotch.
Next, I just yank on his hair as hard as I can.
He's not allowed to scream.
I've got this Grimace and Hamburglar costume.
We're going to get freaky.
I was asking my OB. It's in my birth plan. and Hamburglar costume. Yeah. We're going to get freaky. Yeah.
I was asking my OB.
It's in my birth plan.
Can you dress as Remus
for the last few pushes?
Oh, my God.
That would make my day.
That's amazing.
All right.
Let's take a quick break.
We'll come back
and we'll talk about some news.
We'll be right back.
I've been thinking about you. I want you back in my life. We'll be right back. 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.
Hello, everyone. I am Lacey Lamar. And I'm Amber Ruffin, a better Lacey Lamar.
Boo. Okay, everybody, we have exciting news to share. We're back with season two of the Amber
and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network. You thought you had fun
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and we're back we're back and uh the gop back on their fuckery what's the latest miles it's not
much here but i just want to i just want to mention this because again the fuck face wing
of the republican party the freedom caucus they were, they were like, they're like, this is bullshit.
The debt ceiling.
We fucking hate this.
We need to we need to cut all spending, especially the social safety nets.
But remember, they did make a deal.
The Republic, they did a deal.
They figured out.
Remember, they said it was going to be real bad for the economy and if we don't make this deal the last minute they made the deal and republicans agreed to fund the government and pay you know any
outstanding balances so forth but guess what now they're deciding they can fuck shit up by going
after appropriations bills to cut spending so these are the bills that are essentially that
spell out exactly how these budgets are how the the money is spent. So their little fucking, you know, clever logic here
is saying like, well, you know,
I know we agreed to all these figures
in the debt ceiling bill, you know,
and like that, but to us, that was just a cap.
You know, that just means we could go up to that amount.
There's nothing to say we can't go below that
by like $120 billion.
And that is now the logic that they are parading around in some of
these committees which is basically saying like we just agreed to that being like a number the
top number and meanwhile like every other sane human being is saying like how is that a fucking
deal if you say this is the number we're agreeing to for this debt ceiling and then you renege on
that after the fact and be like actually no that just that means that that's that's just like that's just the highest so this is going to be
an issue obviously with the democrats and the white house and also the senate uh because they're
always the ones who have to like end up seeing these bills and be like fuck man like what are
we what is this like don't they know how to just fucking do the bare minimum uh spoiler alert they
don't and senate republicans aren't even really happy with this because even like some of
their like they've somehow awoke from their MAGA coma in the Senate.
And you have people like this senator.
I don't even I don't even bother to figure out who it was.
Let me tell you exactly who it was.
Oh, yeah.
John Kennedy, who is famously not the most consistent senator that we have said, quote, If you propose a compromise, you need to tell the truth and tell people exactly what the compromise is.
I can tell you that senators are tired of getting the compromise, voting for it or even not voting for it and finding out later that wasn't the truth.
So this is him complaining about this last minute switcheroo.
complaining about this last minute switcheroo.
Exactly. From the Freedom Caucus freaks
who are like, this is how we can get,
this is how we can extract our pound of
flesh or whatever. And even Kevin McCarthy
is like, yeah, I mean, I guess
I get that logic,
but I had to kind of make a deal with them
to keep my gavel that's really cool.
So there's that.
Yeah. So bringing a bigger
and bigger gavel to work every day.
Yeah.
So try and take this.
It's so fucking heavy.
But yeah, I get away more, more brinkmanship on the way.
And systemically, this for some reason, this reminded me of like the conversation we were having in our episode where we interviewed, you know, where we were talking about big sugar in the sugar industry and how there was... A nominal episode.
Thank you.
Yeah, great podcast, by the way.
Everybody should go listen.
But early in the episode, Celeste was talking about how early in the season, they win a victory.
They sue on behalf of all these sugar cane workers and get get this big settlement for sugar cane workers like 50 million dollars. And it's a huge win. But then the side that is like capital and private money and private capital just pushes back and just keeps pushing. And they have more time and more energy and more weight in our world because they're able to just do it so
like even it's just like even a small win like getting them to let the economy keep moving and
like having spending for these programs like they there's still a way for them to claw it back
there's still a way for them to just make any any victory on
behalf of like social spending and social welfare into a loss because the system is just set up to
favor any anything that is going to get in the way of you know social welfare and allow people to
like it's just better for them to have a thing where they're just like,
no,
we just privatize everything.
And,
uh,
why,
why are they such cartoon villains?
I don't know.
I mean,
cause we're,
we're at that phase too,
where we really have people who have no business.
None.
Civics.
Yeah.
You know,
at the even most basic level who have basically racist memed their way into congress
exactly like that's how they
got there yeah and then like okay
what do you want to do with these budgets so like huh
I don't like Joe Brandon
they're like oh no
okay well this is bad
how because there's a lot of people saying
oh yeah if we have another government shutdown
that won't be that bad
yeah it would be but again this is the back and forth uh that we're we get to witness
firsthand as we welcome new life like a whole party of i want to die alone yeah truly yeah
it's like the same mentality i don't care i want to die alone let me die alone. Yeah. Well, speaking of racists,
one of them has taken Molly and realized that they were racists and that being racist sucks.
White supremacy badge?
What?
What?
Are you trying to tell me that the villainized drug of the 70s that was the smoke screen
to cover up the Korean War
actually turns out to be good?
It just
might, but don't hold your breath now.
Wait, I didn't know Molly was
even around in the 70s. I mean, I knew it was
first starting out as a party drug in
Dallas, but isn't Molly...
Molly is like the...
Is Molly... Is MDMA... I molly is like the mdma is molly and is mdma i thought it was we shouldn't
use the street term for ecstasy okay mdma let's be let's be a little scientific here i say molly
because you know i'm out here in the streets yeah but it's it's mdma it is being treated as a
psychedelic that is like being researched heavily not as a thing that you just like give out to people,
but as a therapeutic instrument that where like during a therapy session,
you are given it.
And then there's like a guided therapy session in which the kind of,
you know,
effects of the MDMA help you come to terms with different parts of your emotional
like scaffolding and like how you've been built and how you've built yourself kind of accidentally
and haphazardly in the dark of your unconscious like you now have access to that stuff and
whereas like during normal therapy you're just talking to a person and it can be difficult or take time.
I guess it's like the thing that you hear a lot is that it's just a shortcut to like get into a lot of these issues that people need to be able to address.
And that takes a lot of time and a lot of like breaking down barriers to get to.
The best analogy I heard for it was that because mdma it fills your receptors with
love drugs right it's like a love drug it's people explain that it's sort of like when you're
wanting to dive into trauma just raw like that with a therapist one-on-one it's kind of like
pouring an empty pitcher right and and and trying to drink from that cup right versus with
mdma then you're actually sort of filling the pitcher with water you're filling your receptors
with good feeling and then tackling the trauma right and i have a few friends that it was
absolutely life-changing for yeah it's i, we see the research constantly how it's helped,
especially with people like with PTSD and soldiers,
with stress and like trauma as it relates to like racial abuse and shit like that.
It's like all we see are like positives here.
Yeah.
There's a psychedelic science conference happening in Denver this week, actually.
And like there's just so much learning.
And so it's a very exciting time
for people who are in medicine and like kind of interested in using these tools like the research
that's coming through is that it's like a a very powerful tool yeah and a great documentary by
michael pollan yeah on netflix uh during which i was narrowly missing my husband's balls.
Oh, so not the most engaging. You got a little bored there.
Some parts I was like, I get it. I get it.
I get it. I get it. All right. Ball smash time.
I narrowly miss.
I mean, narrowly miss, narrowly miss, narrowly smashing them. But this story is from,
comes out of a recent study in the unit from the University of Chicago, where researchers were looking at how mdma was like enhancing the pleasantness of certain types of physical touch
and one participant stuck out to the researchers there was named brendan because at the end of the
trial this guy brendan filled out the final questionnaire and at the bottom of the form
when they're talking about like how do you feel going like after this whole experience wrote
quote this experience has helped me sort out a debilitating personal issue.
Google, Google my name. I now know what I need to do. When they looked at that, they said,
holy, wait, what the fuck does this person mean by I now know what I need to do? Like,
go talk to them right now. That phrase is scary as fuck. Yeah, because they also Googled,
they Googled his name and found out
that like about a year or two prior to this study,
he was doxxed by like Antifa,
like researchers who are basically trying to put out
all these names of prominent Nazis
and white supremacists in the US.
And he was one of them.
He led a very prominent group in the Midwest.
So they were like, what the fuck?
When they asked him, they're like,
yo, so what's his plan? White supremacist guy. Now that you've had some like MDMA, he said,
quote, just realize love is the most important thing. Quote, I felt in that moment that all of
my priorities in my life were just so messed up the way I was interacting with people, particularly
people who are close to me. But there was also an almost euphoric feeling, a feeling of love.
And I concluded that was the sort of feeling that I should strive to permeate across the world. So they're like, oh, okay. His background was,
you know, in high school, he leaned liberal, but then he got to college, joined a frat of like
affluent white guys that were conservative. And then that being around those people slowly sent
him down like that radicalization rabbit hole of like
hey you should read this book hey you should check this podcast out hey you should check out what
they're saying on fox and next thing you know he's leading a you know he's in fucking charlottesville
like with a tiki torch wow like leading people yeah so now this isn't to say like mdma is a
cure-all because this guy was in a period of like serious self-reflection after being like outed, losing his job and like his like relationships, like close relationships began to fall apart.
But he said that really had him in a state where he was trying to figure out what was going wrong, since up to that point, he thought he was on like a good trajectory with all this nonsense.
And many experts like agree.
They're like, yeah, intention is the key
here when using psychedelics. It's not like you can just airdrop a bunch of MDMA on the state of
Florida and then we're going to move on. You have to have the intention to at least be open to
looking at your own life and be in a period of self-reflection. Because again, this isn't some
magic racism eraser. And it's also not a pill that you take
and have this insight.
Again, it is part of a like total program of therapy
where you're working with a therapist who knows you
and has a sense of like where you're at.
And it's, I feel like there's just going to be a tendency
for Americans to be like, all right,
so I take this thing and like
things are good again it's like a i take it like tylenol and we're good no it's actually part of
working on yourself which is uncomfortable this just makes it gives you an ability to do
uncomfortable work a little bit more freely yeah exactly and there's like you know one of the
researchers that were spoken to for this article from UCLA was just saying like, you know, all psychedelics have the potential to help
people get in touch with new perspectives for other radicalized individuals. She says a drug
like ayahuasca could be useful because it's like taking sort of a good hard look at yourself in the
mirror. She goes on to say, that's why ayahuasca kind of has a reputation of doing to people kind
of showing them maybe where they screwed up and how they got there in a compassionate way
like which is also important there's all kinds of studies of doing this on cops with ptsd
yeah that have been highly successful it's like more prevalently used in the UK. There's lots of research studies on it there.
Right here. It was like it became demonized like Nixon demonized it all.
And it became part of the like smoke screen.
Yeah.
Look at LSD.
Look at all the, you know, hallucinogenics.
Not.
Yeah.
Not creeping inequality or that kind of shit.
Yeah.
It kind of blew my mind that the guy who invented the PCR study
found it during an LSD trip.
What's the PCR study?
Like, you know, PCRs,
like the molecular...
PCR tubing?
What is it that you do for COVID?
You take like a PCR test.
Yeah, polymerase chain reaction?
Yes.
Oh, got it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
He visualized it in an LSD tripd trip oh because that's how you visualize
dna samples right that's like the whole yeah that is how they yeah francis crick actually the guy
who discovered they couldn't figure out the structure of the dna double helix and he had the insight of the double helix shape while tripping on lsd and also after reading a
bunch of research by a woman who had already figured it out and he just i guess he he got a
lot of credit trifecta yeah yeah but i think again like it's it's interesting to hear this guy brendan
talk about too because he's all saying like this isn't going to solve our society it's not like this is a cure-all, but it is clear it helps people.
He goes on to say, quote, a lot of these guys who end up in these movements have a history
of doing MDMA.
Yeah.
He's like, but you have to have the right framing and mindset because that's the only
way you can be somewhat open to reconsidering your own ideologies.
He said, quote, it helped me see things in a different way that no amount of therapy
or anti-racist literature ever would have done.
And he still says he struggles with like these beliefs that he has, but he's completely like
has been able to sort of step outside of this like white supremacist ideology.
Like, oh, this doesn't serve me at all or what I want like my life to be.
So it's a very like interesting story i
know a lot of people like the shorthand would be like all right mdma for like everybody that that's
the thing uh but we what we it's a it's a combination of things that really help people
but the the version that he did is a clinical like you know under under medical supervision
and that stuff is much harder to do in the United States than in other places because, to your points, it's been demonized. And so that is the thing that it can be useful in a society where they're willing to just accept what a powerful tool it can be for therapists.
what a powerful tool it can be for therapists but i don't know i say i'm kind of on the side of everybody let's try it because right now a lot of people are doing that with adderall
right and treating it like the drug that's going to fix all my behavioral shit and i see and i see
it all the time and i and there's so much else that adderall does too that is like so detrimental
and by the way the like myth of the swiss cheese brain is actually like an adderall side effect
not not an lsd mdma psychedelics side effect right yeah that was like a whole uh propaganda
train yeah back in the 80s and 90s so for the way that like we americans do stuff i'm
just like i don't know maybe more of us should just be like smoking pot and doing mdma oh yeah
it should be it should be less stigmatized and less illegal for sure i'm just saying if you're
gonna pick if you're gonna polarize yeah rather than going the route of like cocaine and adderall
and coffee right but those help you those help you do work those help you do work and
look at all these phenomenal scientists that got shit done on lsd right right that's how it works
but pipe down about that because then we might not have need for other pharmaceuticals. My bad, my bad, my bad. But yeah, totally, you can see the values of our society
based on what drugs are illegal versus illegal.
Yeah.
I'm just saying that the legalization and the stigma
makes it much harder for therapists.
Like therapists are afraid of losing their license.
It's very few people that get access to this type of therapy and this type of like
official sanctioned, like well-designed therapy work that this person had had access to.
So, yeah, it just it needs to be destigmatized across the board and made more less illegal.
And just like thinking right about like the unpacking your trauma, right? Because so
many of us, we go through shit, and we just lock it up, we leave it in the back of our minds,
and then wonder why it permeates, like it ends up festering and affects other dimensions of our
relationships and personalize have nothing to do with even that specific event that happened.
Right. And the power of being able to examine that is a huge part of having any kind of growth,
because most growth is not happening, because we don't have the ability or the openness to reflect on these things we've been through because it's so deeply uncomfortable.
And it kind of reminded me, there's like this recent clip.
I hate to bring up Tucker Carlson, but he was on Megyn Kelly's show.
And the way he talks about his mother's death, you're like, this is exactly what the fuck, like, goes on with people.
Right?
Like, I'm just going to play this because he's so casual about this.
And I don't, like, I understand, like, there's a lot to do with, like, his own abandonment issues with his mother, et cetera, et cetera.
But hearing someone talk like this, you're like, man, this motherfucker could use some molly.
But anyway, this is just, like like hear him talk just about his mother um but you know our mom was not a fan of us and was pretty direct about it and
you know that's obviously hurts when you're little but then i realized you can't control it you know
you just can't control it and your mother doesn't like you okay boohoo you know it sounds really
terrible and the day it actually happened when his mother i got this call like she's dying and in in this weird little town and set on a farm
that she lived on in southwestern france and and she was basically french at this point spent her
life there uh you should go visit her and so i call my brother and he's like what no you know
my son's got a soccer game and i said i feel I feel the same way. I don't know this person. And actually, this sounds cold or whatever, but I had already kind of made my peace with this over many decades, over 35 years.
And I didn't fall apart at all.
I went out to dinner.
I mean, I felt sad for her, I guess.
I don't know much about her.
She was an artist.
She had shows, okay, I guess, and all that.
But she wasn't part of my life.
I wasn't part of hers.
Yeah.
This explains so much.
I didn't fall apart.
I just built myself brick by brick into a horrifying monstrosity of toxic masculinity.
It's so wild.
I didn't fall apart, though.
I didn't fucking care.
I'm here.
I created a whole set made of wood and I screamed from it.
Also, did Tucker Carlson just say
he's an immigrant? Is he French?
No, he's talking about how his mom immigrated
to France.
She's basically French because she left.
His mom expatted.
His mom's a hippie who left them at a very
young age to hippie it up.
At six six his mom
was like you kind of suck and that's he he has that well the other thing too is he's i think
he's also referencing the fact that later in life his mother hated his politics and famously like
it was after she passed away right she was also an heiress she had a lot of money wow and when she passed no no swanson is
who uh was his father remarried yeah got it but when his mother passed her estate was sort it was
sort of contentious where the money was going and him and his brother fought her husband over the
money despite him being like i don't care about her i've moved on him and his brother they had a
long protracted legal battle over her estate.
And what happened was later on,
they found her will in a book that she had handwritten and she had only
left her Tucker and his brother $1 each.
Oh,
so they got something.
But,
but still like,
it's like,
you can tell all of this like pain swirling around,
like,
you know,
clearly she,
they had a contentious relationship, but he was also like, I need that fucking money, too.
That's the only thing that actually matters.
You know who else talks about their mom like that?
Bob Durst.
Oh, yeah?
Yep.
Bro, Robert Durst?
Yep.
You said Bob.
That was so casual.
I was like, hold on.
You're kicking it with Bob?
Right.
I mean, I did watch that
whole documentary.
Just burping up, yeah,
after having memories of my mother.
But yeah, I mean, like, again, these are,
you just sort of see examples all the time
and I'm not trying to lay everything, like, you know,
that Molly's a cure-all for. A lot of sociopaths
and psychopaths will cite
their relationship with their mom
as the reason for their behavior.
Yeah, and it surely has to do with his very misogynistic worldview.
Yeah, because they don't understand empathy, but they are clued into pity.
Right.
And so that's one of the formative ways that they look to access sympathy.
Well, look, he wasn't really bummed out by it at all.
He went to dinner, okay?
Next question, Megan.
Next question.
Moving on.
I also think it's funny that he,
like, it's almost an insult to his six-year-old self
how he responds to it.
You know what I mean?
It's like, you now, you're going to, like,
tell your six-year-old self that, like,
you didn't dissociate you just
weren't bummed out by it at all you know it didn't bother me uh it did it did there's no way it did
it but again hey we get it that's where you were forged in like the fires of like a marvel villain
truly like it would be too on the nose for a marvel villain. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It would just be like, alright, that's a little pet. His hippie mom
left him and then
didn't leave him any money.
And he went on TV and was like,
my mom didn't like me
and I'm fine with that.
While like, you know,
just like fucking steamrolling
over like just a lifetime
of pain.
I'm fine with that. I didn't fall apart.
I'm together.
I'm rock solid.
All right.
Anyways.
All right.
Look at my wood set.
Let's take a quick break to marvel over Tucker's wood set,
and we'll be right back.
Mm-hmm.
I've been thinking about you. I want you back in my life. back. 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,
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When you think of Mexican culture, sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Lucha Libre WWE superstar. Join me as we learn more about the history behind this spectacular sport from its inception in the United States
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We'll learn more about some of the most iconic heroes in the ring.
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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.
Season two. Season two.
Are we recording? Are we good?
Oh, we push record, right?
And this season, we're taking in a bigger bite
out of the most delicious food and its history.
Saying that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba
and the piña colada from Puerto Rico.
So all of these...
We have, we think, Latin culture.
There's a mention of blood sausage in Homer's Odyssey
that dates back to the 9th century B.C.
B.C.? I didn't realize
how old the hot dog was. Listen to
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And we're back we back and uh costco has been trending on twitter for the past couple days after new mexico state lawmaker stephanie lord posted part of a receipt from a recent trip to the store slash time vacuum costco uh she spent eight hundred dollars and
blamed joe biden just you know despite the fact that he's not i don't think he's been
a manager at that particular costco but uh the tweet thanks joe biden 799 dollars and 38 cents Joe Biden, $799.38 for one full cart at Costco with 58 items.
Holy shit.
And only nine non-food items like paper towels, plastic bags, trash bags, and razors.
Is that a Republican man that thinks cost a lot?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
But it's Joe Brandon's fault.
It's Brandon's fault.
So 58 items, that works out to an average of 14 per item
which actually makes total sense for costco right 58 items is a lot of items to buy at costco like
like she is tetrising all of those items that That's about three carts, yeah. Yeah, that is a lot of shit.
Yeah.
Yeah, Costco is just so, like, that's what,
a 58-item Costco trip is what you do once a year, hopefully.
Most of them are food items.
Is that what she's saying?
She said are not.
Yeah, most of them are, no, she said most of them are.
Only five, like, non-food items.
Oh, only nine non-food, right, right, right. Yeah, nine, gotcha. Most of them are... No, she said most of them are only five non-food. Oh, only nine non-food.
Right, right, right.
Yeah, nine.
Most of them is food.
So 49?
Yeah.
And what, you buy what?
You got a couple...
How many rotisserie chickens
did you get?
I mean, probably not that many,
Miles, because...
That's a hell of a baby shower.
I feel like she is not aware
of the good value items
at Costco either
if she's averaging know averaging out to
$14 an item but
I don't know it's just such
and then people were like yeah that's
first of all like the things you get at
Costco are like lifetime supply
of toilet paper
where's the fucking itemized
receipt
give us the itemized
receipt I need to see literal fucking
receipts madam how much you want to bet that's beer and wine yeah she doesn't want to show that
it's all fucking kirk signature light beer yeah and she responded when people were like could we
see the itemized receipt ma'am she just raged and was like, triggered progressive left wingers.
And like, I don't know, this just seems to be we it happens all the time.
But just this it's the same thing with Elon Musk declaring cisgender a slur.
You know, it's like we're being attacked by by these words.
But then when it comes to, you know, the hundreds of thousands of people who are harassed by actual hate speech every fucking day on Twitter.
He's completely silent.
But when it comes to like a descriptor of his, you know, the fact that he is cisgender or that this person who's complaint who complained to him is cisgender.
You know, he's just the most brittle soul on the planet.
You know, he's just the softest, most sensitive snowflake.
But they have somehow,
and I do feel like they've like somehow won that argument.
Hopefully it's changing, but it does feel like-
The perception you mean?
Yeah, Just that,
that perception in mainstream popular culture is still that,
like,
I don't know,
people are too sensitive.
Cause that's still the status quo.
You know what I mean?
The status quo.
We're not there where everyone,
yeah.
We're just not there yet.
Yeah.
We're,
yeah.
We're people,
we all agree that everybody deserves the same amount of respect and autonomy.
That's just not the status quo.
So because of that, people who are still fighting for it are like, what is this?
We're fine.
But yeah, I mean, again, also, you let your transphobia show hardcore when you're like, cisgender's a slur.
How dare you?
Okay, fool, we get get it go back to your
fucking whatever you fucking do i don't understand that like you're biologically
who you also identify as and you're mad yeah well you're using it to other me because you're using
that to be mean to me by pointing it out in context that I don't like.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Is there a history of oppression for the cisgendered people of America?
Right.
This is like the other thing of like, this is why we need MDMA in our water.
I've decided.
I'm all the way there now.
Yeah.
We also need to get him interested because he has like a like very dumb guy who thinks he's a smart
guy brain and i feel like we could get him really interested in the titanic and he also is very
confident in his ability to build submersibles remember when there was that cave rescue
and he was like well i'm gonna bring in this submersible and it's gonna
save everyone and people like looked at the submersible and they were like that's not gonna
work at all like here we we have to like go through narrow corners and that thing is the size of a
fucking minivan bro and yeah that so he i'm just saying there could be some efficiencies between
these news stories that
have obsessed people over the past if we could get elon musk interested in them put him in a submarine
i'm just saying just you might enjoy it down there yeah yeah or being like yo bro you know
what could happen bro you could find atlantis this shit open homie i believe in you bro of
all the people i feel like you could go to the bottom of Mariana's Trench and figure
it out, homie. Be brave enough.
Cameron's been deeper than you. Oh, you think it's cool
that you've been to space? Cameron's been
deeper than everybody in the whole world.
He's just a dude, dog. You gonna let James Cameron do that?
You gonna let James Cameron fucking hand you that L?
Make you look like a bitch?
That's what I'm saying, is all these
folks floating around
with empty pictures and their mama's mad at
them and they haven't gotten over it and they don't actually know what being mean means yeah
they're just sad yeah totally they're very ticklish they're just scared of anyone touching
them they're just like no don't stay away from me
just like balled up like a fucking fist their whole body is and then yeah you just can't do
anything this is why i roll with the hamburglar and the grimace and we grind on each other and we
cuddle it's a good life there you go alright Zara such a pleasure having you
thank you so much
oh my goodness
this is the best
this is the best
vaginal send off
yeah
before I launch myself
down my canal
oh yeah
and birth another human being
into this world
that is like an ayahuasca that's if. That is like an ayahuasca.
That's if you give birth on an ayahuasca, you're actually giving birth to yourself.
That would be wild.
Where can people find you, follow you, hear you, all that good stuff?
You can come to my house.
There you go.
Yeah, you can come to my house or, you know, hack into my phone and watch my birth with me.
Wow.
and watch my birth with me.
Wow.
Yeah.
Or you can go on Twitter,
Blue Sky,
and Instagram at Zara Comedy,
Z-A-H-R-A-C-O-M-E-D-Y
pronounced comedy
if you are Jack O'Brien.
We'll get out of some N-U-I together.
N-U-I. N-U-I. And we'll get out of some Inui together.
NUI.
Enui.
Wish me luck, folks.
Wish me luck out there.
All the luck.
When I come to, I'm going to be working on my book.
Oh, nice.
Okay.
There you go.
Yeah.
I want to see that baby.
Is there a work of media that you've been enjoying?
Yes.
Okay.
Everybody watch this.
It went viral for a hot second in like a pocket of young women but like everyone everyone fourth grade and above needs to watch
this tiktok that is a woman putting a ping pong ball inside of a balloon you blow it up and it mimics the baby inside of the uterus.
Whoa.
Yes.
And then as she blows up the balloon, she lets the ping pong ball settle at the neck of the balloon.
It closes off the air.
That's the baby at the base of the cervix.
And then she pumps the top of the balloon.
This is fabulous. She pumps the top of the balloon this is fabulous she pumps the top of the balloon those are uterine contractions that thin out the neck of the balloon and that's how you give birth she
gives birth i did it at home and i popped the balloon twice which is how you tear oh wow like
she didn't even have to tie it it just holds
the it holds the hair and then the way she's pressing on the balloon right now those are
contractions and the contractions actually help you give birth to the ping pong ball you see that
it's phenomenal facing okay that's the baby coming out of the vaginal out of the cervix and the vaginal canal
yeah and then the and then the ping pong ball just comes flying out yeah if you if you push
too hard you tear that's what i terminal velocity that's terminal velocity easy easy take it easy
that's so wild because that is such a simple demonstration oh my god that like helps not make so much of it abstract.
That makes TikTok worth it.
The whole existence of TikTok is worth it.
Turns out that woman, she's just wearing
scrubs. She has no medical training.
Is that real? No, I don't know.
That's how TikTok is.
I'm wearing scrubs. Y'all are going to believe it.
Miles where can people find you? Is there work
in media you've been enjoying
Yeah yeah find me at miles of gray
At at based life forms or social media platforms
Find Jack and I on our basketball podcast
Miles and Jack got mad boosties
Talking to NBA
But also find me and Sophia Alexandra
On our trash reality TV show
Podcast for 20 day fiance
The reality TV is trash
Not the podcast.
I don't know.
I mean, it could be trash.
It's up to you.
I have the beholder and all that.
So check that out.
Some tweets I'm liking.
I got a couple, actually.
The first one, Sarah at Knights Gravity tweeted,
I'll say I got that dog in me and it's Snoopy.
Yeah. Yeah. You got that dog in me. And it's Snoopy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You got that dog in you.
And then another one at GLD Vittorio tweeted,
the reason people are having a hard time finding sympathy for the submarine passengers is because it isn't a situation that could happen to anyone.
No one is afraid of a friend or family member accidentally spending $250,000
to go crisscross applesauce into the USS jigsaw.
Yeah.
It kind of feels right.
It's like such a dark story and yet like also so absurd that like,
yeah.
Yeah.
I mean,
the tweet goes on to say,
I'm not saying it's normal to lack empathy for people we can't relate to.
I'm saying psychologically it isn't instinctive because this circumstance is so far beyond being a conceivable threat or apprehensible horror on a level past cognitive dissonance toward refugees or the poor.
There it is.
Yeah.
There it is.
All right.
You can find me on Twitter at Jack underscore O'Brien.
A tweet I've been enjoying.
DJ Fuck at Eggshell Friend tweeted,
Baby on board?
With what?
What's he down for?
He's on board.
What's he down for?
He's down.
Ride or die.
Hey, Jack.
Yeah.
I want to play a game with you.
Uh-oh.
Open your legs. Open themoh. Open your legs.
Open them thighs.
Open your legs.
I'm gonna narrowly
miss your balls.
There it is.
There needs to be like a
jazzy 1970s game show
theme that comes up when you're like,
I'm gonna narrowly
miss your balls. Like you say, I'm gonna narrowly miss your balls. Like you say,
I'm gonna narrowly miss, and then the crowd all
goes, miss your balls.
Today's
contestant is a radio
DJ from the Los Angeles area named
Jack O'Brien. Come on down.
You're like,
it's like Price is Right, where you're like, oh, me?
And you run down
and just
throw my legs open.
Are you excited? Yeah!
Yeah!
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.comcom where we post our episodes and our
footnotes where we link off to the information
that we talked about in today's episode
as well as a song that we think you might
enjoy. Miles, what song do we think people
might enjoy? This is like
some nice sort of, you know, new
age housey kind of R&B
track from the artist
Meta, M-A-E-T-A.
And it sounds like
a Catronata type production. I'm not sure if it's a
Catronata beat, but obviously Catronata
style is very popular right now.
You know, people like that house sound.
And this track's called Questions.
It's a nice track. Good vocals, just a fun
upbeat track just to start getting
your weekend going. So check this one out.
Alright, well the Daily Zeitgeist
is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
That is going to do it for us this morning.
But we are back this afternoon to tell you what is trending.
And we'll talk to you all then.
Bye.
Bye.
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