The Daily Zeitgeist - Humane Policies Actually Work?!? 10.18.22
Episode Date: October 18, 2022In episode 1353, Jack and Miles are joined by L.A. City Councilmember for Los Angeles's 4th district, Nithya Raman, to discuss…. How To Be A Progressive In Modern America, Unhoused in L.A., Crime, W...hite Supremacy and more! Myths and Realities: Understanding Recent Trends in Violent Crime Rural America Reels From Violent Crime. ‘People Lost Their Ever-Lovin’ Minds.’ Murders Are Rising. Blaming a Party Doesn’t Add Up. The Red State Murder Problem Community and the Crime Decline: The Causal Effect of Local Nonprofits on Violent Crime LISTEN: Baianá by NIA ARCHIVESSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
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Hello, the internet, and welcome to season 259, episode 2 of The Daily Zeitgeist, a production of iHeartRadio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into America's shared consciousness.
It's Tuesday, October 18th, 2022.
You know what that is?
National International Legging Day.
So it's not just for the people in this.
If you rock with leggings, it's your day. It's National Chocolate Cupcake Day. National Noging Day. So it's not just for the people in this. If you rock with leggings, it's your day.
It's National Chocolate Cupcake Day.
National No Beard Day.
And National Pharmacy Technician Day.
Shout out to the people working in the back.
Shout out to the pharmacy techs.
Was that a no beard day?
Yeah, I don't know if that means just shaving it off.
It just says, yeah, just being clean shaven.
You know, this probably, probably again it's about way to
about time we got some recognition out here yeah or without those of us or like me who cannot grow
a beard so i'm like yeah every day is no beer day for me uh well anyways my name is jack o'brien aka
guess who's back back again stalin's ghost tell a friend uh That's Curse of Christy on Gucci Mane.
Talking about, who was that who said Stalin's ghost?
I think it was Cernovich.
Mike Cernovich.
Weird Mike Cernovich.
Coming back.
Coming with the strange attempt at poetic license.
I'm thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray.
Yes, it's Miles Gray.
Straight from the Mile High City,
but keeping his title of the Lord of Lancashire,
Hideo Noho, North Hollywood's very own.
Thank you so much.
In the building.
In the building.
Well, we are thrilled to be joined in the building-ish.
Virtually.
Virtually.
In the virtual building of the Internet Zoom Protocol
by an urban planner,
former executive director of times up entertainment
and currently the city council member for la's fourth district welcome back to the show nithya
roman welcome welcome thank you that was such a great that was probably the most enthusiastic
reception i've ever gotten hey we we go off here this is. Very happy to be here. Thank you so much. Hey, the last time you
were here, you were running. And in what the LA Times calls a political earthquake, you won.
I'm sure you've probably heard that by now. But yeah, you won. Congratulations.
Thank you. It's a big deal. It's a big deal. Yeah. So now you're just wielding power for the past couple of years.
How's that going?
Anything new going on in the city council?
I haven't had the most stressful week of my entire tenure here so far.
Yeah.
We're just getting started.
You stayed and you kept your appointment to appear on our Second Rate podcast. We are truly grateful.
Well, I disagree with you that it's a Second Rate podcast and I'm very delighted to be here.
Because it's Third Rate. Thank you.
All right. Well, we're going to get to know you a little bit better in a moment. We had Ugo on, by the way, recently and his underrated was Little Nicky. So just so you know what the bar of this Sandler movie, the Sandler movie at Little Nicky was like, I don't know, man, it's just like my favorite movie. I can watch it repeatedly.
said it was his favorite movie i think he said it was his favorite or like one of his favorite movies of all time and like didn't really he wasn't like you know because of this or because
of that he was just like i just really love that movie it was kind of awesome um i did endorse him
and now i'm rethinking yeah yeah you gotta you gotta ask what his favorite sam the latter day
samler film yeah yeah i it was interesting because of that i was like
looking at where it falls it was like right before punch drunk love very interesting and yeah after
water boy and he was like you know what i'm gonna go full funny voice for all two hours of this
movie anyways that's not what we're talking to you about we going to ask the question of just like how to be a progressive
in modern America, like the just generally, you know, we struggle as a podcast. We talk about how
American society seems to have an immune system that is allergic to anything having to do with
socialism or progressive social policies and that is addicted to profit. And so
just as someone who's been in there for a couple of years now and like almost a couple of years,
yeah, almost a couple of years coming up on a couple of years, like just kind of getting
your stories from from from what it looks like from the inside. We're going to specifically
talk about, you know, the unhoused crisis in L.A., white supremacy,
which has been a subject that has come up a lot
with regards to L.A. City Council recently,
crime, all of that.
We might even get into Rainbow Fentanyl,
the latest Halloween freakout on a national scale,
which, just spoiler alert, is a bullshit media panic.
But the DEA guy said.
I know.
It's rainbow.
They're going to give it to your kids.
Drug dealers love giving fentanyl away for free.
Anyways, before we get to any of that, Nithya,
we do like to ask our guests,
what is something from your search history?
My recent search history?
Yeah, just whatever you're willing to divulge.
Well, before the grimness of this last week, and I want to avoid that week's very dark search history.
But I was most recently Googling and surprised to find that The First Wives Club, which is an old movie, whether it was actually about president's wives, as I thought it was.
And it turns out it's not. It's about the first first wife that was divorced from the wealthy guy.
And how those first wives got together and exactly revenge oh okay which is like a way more
fun movie premise and i was delighted to find that this was the case because it kept being
promoted to me because i've been watching a lot of like i can't watch anything new
it's too much to process i've been watching like when harry met, Legally Blonde, Clueless.
You've Got Mail, maybe.
You've Got Mail.
This kept getting promoted to me.
And I was like, why would I want to watch this movie?
And then it turns out, oh, my God, it's perfect.
Barbara Bush and Nancy Reagan start robbing banks together.
Like a set it off type scenario.
The tipper gore can't get in the crew.
Right. A lot of tension there yeah yeah oh i
kind of like first like first wives that like that version did you not watch that film i didn't watch
that film no i just remember the posters because they were all wearing white like they were their
outfits there was like their the marketing was like here here we are. It's because Goldie Hawn and Diane Keaton and Bette Midler, right, I think are the three?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But the thing is, like, if they're all wearing white, doesn't that make you think that it's about, I don't know, suffragette?
Ghosts.
We went two different.
It was either suffrage or ghosts.
It was either suffrage or ghosts.
Well, that's what, like, I was trying to picture, like, a club made up of first, you know, the first women, first ladies of the, from U.S. history.
And, like, I feel like to get any sort of critical mass, you would have to go to the afterlife.
So that's where my mind went, was ghosts.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
Right.
Well, look, it turns out we were all wrong.
Right. Well, look, it turns out we were all wrong. Right. And it's about women exacting revenge for being divorced.
From beyond the grave. What is something you think is overrated?
So I, you know, well, I guess we might talk about this later, but my district in city council is pretty large.
It now stretches from
northern silver lake to recita and so i spend a lot of time driving and i'm always late and i feel
like here's the thing i've learned i do my makeup in the car so i think doing makeup at home
is overrated wow you're and you're able to be able to drive and do your makeup? I do it at stoplights.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm not dangerous about it.
Okay.
Because I remember.
Yeah.
I remember sometimes like seeing like when when I was in the midst of like my long commutes when I was like working the west side and I lived in the valley going over the 405 creeping.
There are always people doing their makeup.
There are always people doing their makeup. And I was always like, man, with the stop and go, I always admired people using like a eyeliner pencil so close to their eyeball while like hitting stop and go traffic yeah, my foundation, my blush, that's kind of all I wear.
But yeah, I'm not reckless.
Are you thinking about all the times you did your makeup in the car, Jack?
Yeah.
No, just like all the stories.
The other time I hear like these commuting hacks is from like people in medical school.
time i hear like these commuting hacks is from like people in medical school like and it's just like ways to squeeze things in on your commute like to multitask and like when my wife was going
through medical school like their trick was like on the commute when you're at a stoplight you like
now you put the car in park and nap until until the car behind
you honks. And then that's what wakes you up from your nap. Because that's just how it's it's truly
crazy that that's how we've decided to train doctors is like, we're gonna we're gonna make
you sick, both like physically and spiritually. And that's the only way you get to take care of people right
that is so much darker than yeah yeah i've definitely had the same thought that like why
i'm gonna start seeing people driving behind the other direction with eye patches because of how
frequently i see people doing makeup while they're driving you know, apparently it can be pulled off with aplomb.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What is, what's something that you think is underrated, Nithya?
So, I have been really enjoying Bosch, the TV show.
Okay.
Yeah.
And I actually, I don't know if it's underrated.
I think the people who find it really like it.
Yeah.
But.
The people of LA really like it like i i
feel like it's a there's a strong appreciation in that and people i know who are like really into
la as a city love bosh because right isn't it i i have not dove in yet but it does like feature
it's like shot on on location throughout los angeles right i'm like well it's shot on location throughout Los Angeles, right?
Well, it is shot on location throughout Los Angeles.
I will also say that a shockingly high percentage of the murders happen in and around Council District 4.
Oh, wow.
Which is not true, actually, for crime stats.
Right.
Running an op on you.
Okay.
Yeah.
They're like, just look at Bosch.
It's out of control.
It's out of control.
Look what's happening to Sherman Oaks.
People are dying at the Hollywood Bowl.
People are dying.
Yeah.
That's right.
People are murder.
Another murder at the Hollywood Bowl.
That's what it's called.
For people who aren't from LA, that's like the premier concert venue.
It's like that, the Greek, and...
Then obviously like Staples or the Forum for Jackie and Tor events.
But yeah, the Bowl is like our, you know, any video game that depicts L.A., you have to build the Hollywood Bowl when you're rendering for sure.
But it's also weird the idea of someone getting murdered there like i think this this i think believe that this individual was murdered in the pedestrian
tunnel on the way to oh going underneath highland yeah yeah yeah yeah okay yeah but anyway but
there's like a lot a lot of council district four references so it's right yeah and do you when you're watching that are you like or or you're
just kind of you're you're able to buy into the to the fantasy of like do you do you are you ever
like i'm kind of bosh i could i could turn my job as a city council member into like going around
and murder she wrote in so some various crimes i It's a totally voyeuristic.
Escapist.
Yeah, escapist.
Yeah.
For sure.
I think if it was like too close to what we were seeing in LA,
I think I would have more trouble with it as a relaxation.
Right, right.
And the other, actually, can I do a serious one that I find underrated?
Yes. Right. Right. And the other actually, can I do a serious one that I find underrated? For sure. Which is there's a documentary series called Philly D.A. about Larry Krasner.
Mm hmm. And that's it's one of the best things I've watched in the past like two years. And it's
it's amazing. And it was so real and so potent as a piece of filmmaking. I had to pause it numerous times, you know, just because of what's happened.
You know, it was like too much for me to process, especially given all that, you know, all that's happening in America right now.
I just was like, oh, my gosh.
Yeah.
And I think very aligned with some of the questions that you were asking Jack earlier about.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
Progressive politics and the future of america and
progressive da's yeah they that feels like the it's like the low-hanging fruit for a lot of
people to go after or trying to explain away certain hills to be like well it's the progressive
da that's the issue actually right right and we've seen that here in los angeles with the
attempted recalls of george gascon and you know i think it's really relevant for a lot of what's happening
but it also talks about his office and management and you know it's it's a complicated complicated
thing that he's dealing with over there right right and yeah and the given the recall of San Francisco's D.A., and like that just the idea they were like, that's he's lost control of the city. Like, I feel like the rest of the country was so all over this narrative that progressive D.A.s in California were like, you California were causing an apocalypse.
And now when you talk to people from outside of LA,
they're like, how do you live there?
It's crazy.
I live in a version where I'm actually,
I know my neighbors and stuff.
It's not as freaky as the people with an agenda
want to make it seem.
But yeah, there are issues that definitely have to be solved.
Like anyways.
Yeah.
And I don't, you know, I don't think you ever, you don't ever, you know, I don't think you
get anywhere talking about crime and people's fear and sense of safety in a city by dismissing
it.
I think you talk about what are real solutions to addressing it.
But anyway, yeah, the fear mongering is also very real.
And I think there was a little bit of just creating a bogeyman around these.
Right.
Because, you know, they put in a new DA and the same things are happening as before.
Right. Yeah, yeah.
In San Francisco.
Of course.
All right, let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back to dig into how to be
progressive, how I am be progressive. They've broken my brain. I don't know how to even deal
in the modern United States. So I want to hear how you're thinking about that in one moment.
one moment. I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult. And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed. Together, we'll be diving
even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and L.A.-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview dancers, church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling firsthand accounts, the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me For I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
have followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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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 our recent episode with dancer, actor, host of Dancing with the Stars,
and now novelist, Julianne Hough.
I feel really whole. I feel like the last few years I've really unraveled a lot,
which is part of what this book is about.
And I really feel so content, which is a word that used to scare the crap out of me.
And I love that word now.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And we're back. Yeah, so something that we just kind of keep coming up against,
whether it be with regards to, you know, crime statistics during the pandemic that we've already kind of
made reference to and that a lot of that got blamed on progressive DAs. A lot of it got blamed
on the Black Lives Matter movement. And, you know, and now the statistics are coming out and, you know, people are actually looking at things and seeing that crime went up everywhere in the United States, whether it was a progressive DA or a judge with a noose in like the woods somewhere, like the crime went up all of those places and in urban areas and in rural areas yeah that's
the other you know like i think actually homicides spiked in rural areas even more than they did in
urban areas right and you know it's it's starting to seem like a lot of these informal and formal
you know social networks that we all have with going places, seeing people, these like third
places that aren't our home where, you know, once those went away and people just had more time and
were shut up in their home and also everybody started buying more guns, like, you know, those
things were all contributing factors. And also a bunch of crime statistics disappeared for for the year
2021 well more so that they weren't like you know jurisdictions in like florida and pennsylvania
and california which are massively represent like a lot of these statistics weren't using like the
new standardized way of reporting that the fbi was asking for as they put together their annual
statistics and that's why they're like, even
now, if you want to make this sort of claim, like you're dealing with incomplete data at best.
But right. I didn't even know that. Yeah. So so just like so we have this narrative,
like we say, like there are these policies and these social, you know, things that we should
be investing in that went away during the pandemic. And it turns out they're enormously popular or enormously
important. And without them, like things get really bad really quickly. Very straightforward
story to tell people about, you know, progressive politics. And instead, the version that comes back
to us in the mainstream media is that it's either progressive DA's or it's that like the police were defunded even though
they were still super duper funded like it's just like i that story in particular where there is a
truth that is pretty straightforward that can be told and answer all these questions and that just like doesn't get told is one of the examples where
i just feel like america like the body of america rejects anything having to do with socialism
and is addicted to this idea of violence and anything that can drive a profit like militarization
of the police can so i don't, like, just sort of a vague,
like, you know, comment. Yeah. Please. Well, you know, I, I, what I can speak to is what
I've been dealing with here in Los Angeles. And I think we had this very heated conversation in 2020 about police and
the role of policing in Los Angeles and a call for, you know, real changes to how we respond to
or utilize policing here, here in this city. And then, you know, I think in the, in, in, after the election in,
in November of 2020, slowly there started, you know, becoming a backlash around really talking
about increases in the number of homicides, increases in crime across America in Los Angeles.
And what is very true is that those numbers have gone up, as you mentioned, and that they've gone up
regardless of jurisdiction. They've gone up in urban and rural areas. They've gone up across
cities regardless of their policies, regardless of whether they have progressive or non-progressive
DAs. I mean, there has been a rise in homicides across the entire country. And that's the reality
of the moment that we're living in. And so in response to that increase,
there has been a push locally and nationally
for more police, more police on our streets,
more money to policing.
And so you had this kind of, you know, whiplash moment
where after this intense conversation
around the role of police and how you deploy them in cities,
you had this very intense backlash that came forward.
And for me, what's been really, I think, as someone who's trying to navigate these
conversations and legislate in these conversations, is that here in LA, we couldn't hire more
police even if we wanted to.
The LAPD is facing such intense staffing
shortages and they're not unique among city departments, right? So across the entire city,
as in the private sector, there are intense staffing shortages facing the city. And in fact,
LAPD has been allocated for a certain number of positions in the budget and hasn't even been able to fill them because of attrition and because they're not able to hire up fast enough. So retirements have been so many that they haven't been able to hire up to match that retirement numbers.
Like when I go out and talk to constituents and constituents are telling me, you know, I feel anxious. I'm seeing the news. I'm seeing all these. I really want to talk to them about, OK, we're in this moment. The solutions that have been proposed for decades, which is let's add to the police, let's add to the police, let's add to the police in response to your fears. That's not that's not possible right now because of this moment. So how do we think about what is really going to make you feel safer? And I think a lot of those things that were discussed in 2020 are exactly what we need to be
investing in right now. It's, you know, how do we respond to homelessness without police involvement?
I hear from my, the senior lead officers that are kind of in charge of various parts of our district
that 40 to 60% of their time is spent
responding to calls about homelessness that are not related to violent crime or assaults. It's
just, there's an encampment here, you know? And so they're going out and doing that work.
But are they the right people to be responding to that? Is there a better way that we can be
responding to calls about homelessness that, you know, that really tries to get those individuals who are on the streets on their path into a home. If you're
talking about traffic response, you know, what are we doing in terms of monitoring traffic safety
when you have a collision? Does armed police need to come out and respond there? Or can we send
someone else? Or is there ways of doing traffic enforcement that doesn't involve armed police as much? Because there are DOT traffic officers, Department of
Transportation traffic officers as well. But how do we think about that in ways that really remove
police from areas where they have been before? Mental health crisis response.
Are there many, many situations where we're sending armed police out when we don't? And so I think for me, it's like, let's have a conversation about safety. You know, let's have this conversation about what it really means to have a response to safety that that that really responds to the needs that we have in Los Angeles and response to the conditions that we're facing here.
that we're facing here that doesn't just go to this you know ultimately if you're hearing from politicians that oh you're not feeling safe we're going to add police like that's at this point
i can tell you that that's a lie in la right because it's just you're saying functionally
not possible it's not possible because it's just not possible we can't go to that well anymore
right so so in order to have a conversation about what response to the very real
challenges that we're facing in Los Angeles right now need to be, I think we just have to have a
very different conversation. And I think we have to be real with constituents about that. We have
to be real with Angelenos about that. And I think I would imagine that many other cities across
America are facing these same challenges. Right. And I'm curious because, you know, like with with police budgets, I know you voted to increase them.
And I know there's probably more nuance around it than some people.
I feel like some people just say, I can't believe she voted to increase police budgets.
Yeah, just full stop, because they felt maybe on the campaign, this was something you were fully invested in.
felt maybe on the campaign, this was something you were fully invested in. But for one reason or another, that there are things like caps on how many people can be, you know, hired or the
ability to hire more people or that certain raises are built in based on like union agreements.
How like you like earlier, you were saying it's like you're now you're in this position where
you're trying to navigate that and legislate based from that position. How do you sort of
what do you put
forward to people who may have been like really looking at the idea of police, like increasing
police budgets bad? So therefore, I can't I'm not going to think much more about it because
like you said, 2020 had a lot of people just very invested in this one or at least one dimension of
altering how we respond to certain emergencies in our city.
Yeah. And the first, I think I really want to say that I receive a lot of criticism about my work.
I also receive a lot of support, but I receive a lot of criticism. And I'm very,
if people are disappointed, I just want to say, this is not me saying they don't have any right
to be disappointed or whatever. I, whatever. Like I understand. And
I'm, I'm out here trying to navigate this in the way that one person out of 15 can and,
and really deliver the best results for the people of my district at this moment.
And during the budget process, I put forward some, you know, long pieces of writing about why I,
you know, what my relationship to the budget process was.
But the one thing I do want to say about the Los Angeles budget, when that budget vote is not an
up-down vote on the police budget alone, it's an omnibus budget. So it's like all these things.
And there's a huge amount of negotiation that happens as we move through it, where you're
saying, okay, how much money am I going to get for the planning department? How much money am I going to get for building affordable housing in Los
Angeles? How much money am I going to get for active transportation? I'm really a big proponent
of bike lanes and traffic safety measures. And I actually can't get those implemented in my
district because we don't have staff at the Department of Transportation to design those
measures on our roads. And one of the big things I fought for in that budget was more people
to work on active transportation measures. And I got that. I got that as part of the budget process.
And yeah, like the police funding was a big part of the budget. It has been historically a big
part of the budget. And there were raises baked into it that increased the numbers of how much money we were committing to the police force. And looking at that and looking at what I was able to get out of the budget, I moved forward with it. Because I think when you're negotiating on it, you're saying, okay, I'll support this if we can do this, this and this. Right. And I get like, you know, it's like any, like, you know, there are omnibus bills at the federal level that, you know,
certain items are like poison pills for some legislators and some aren't. For you to see like
a version of Los Angeles where we can legislate in that way. And we are saying like, without,
you know, all of like the, to address all of these needs that we have while
really being able to like have a laser focus on, you know, realizing, well, the direct increase
in police budgets doesn't correlate to our increase in our safety. How are we able to
sort of streamline the process? Because I'm sure there's many, there's so many voices that come
into that process that I'm sure it's, it becomes chaotic. Like what are,
you know, like, I think that's why a lot of people, when we look at how we can change things, we always see how the established process is basically the biggest hurdle into like meaningful
change. And I'm curious, like, what's the version that we need to be thinking of that allows us to
have these conversations where we can't say, you know what, we have enough votes on the city
council. We know that like having more invested in social services and people who are trained in
responding to crises like this, that we can do that in a very easy way. But I get that there's
so much entrenched power, but I'm curious as someone wrestling that what's, you know, like,
what's the vision of that for the future? So I think one of the things that people have to
understand about the way that the LA city council is set up, and this may not be relevant for your national audience, but is that
a lot of the work of determining what projects move forward and what programs move forward
is done through committees. And I don't sit on the Public Safety Committee, but I think the people
who sit on the Public Safety Committee will have a lot of power over what happens in terms of our response to public safety issues
in LA. So the key things are the council president assigns people to various committees.
And if you've been following the news, you know who was our council president until very recently.
Yes. Nuri Martinez.
Yes. Nuri Martinez. And so she assigned me to the housing committee, to the homelessness and poverty committee. So these are all committees that I think are really important. But I'm not, I don't sit on the public safety committee. And I think that committee is really responsible for trying to bring up and ensure that departments are following through on alternative responses to public safety, right?
Right. And without that committee's leadership and its chair really pushing forward on those, it's going to be hard to see progress. So the reality is a lot of the power on those issues sits within that committee. The committee chair determines which motions get heard by the committee and move to the full council. have right now a coherent alternative response system in place in Los Angeles, right? So that's
the other reality of the moment that we're facing right now is that there's all these great ideas.
There is a pilot program in Hollywood and Venice called the Circle Program, which is supposed to
take some of the 911 calls that are coming in and moving them to unarmed response. There is a mobile van that's
supposed to be housed at fire stations and go out from there. So there's all these different pilot
programs, but there's no coherence around thinking about what are these programs doing? What are they
actually changing as we move forward? Are they effective? What's
the most effective? How can we really invest and expand in them beyond the pilot phase?
I actually put forward a motion earlier this year, which just is making its way through
the committee and the council asking for exactly this, you know, and I think this is,
in addition to thinking about police budgets and police presence, I think we
also need to be thinking about how do we actually fund staff and increase the capacity of these
alternative systems to actually respond to issues in Los Angeles. And that's, to me, that's like
the thing that we do need to be focusing on in a very real sense. Like, you know, getting back to
your first question or the introduction that you had, Jack, is like, how do you exist as a progressive in this space? I think one of
the things that we need to be doing as a movement, as a progressive movement, as a big tent progressive
movement, is to be talking about what we want to see, not just what we don't want to see. And I
think being really clear and focused
about what those goals are, and then going out there and fighting for those things, wherever
they show up on council or supervisorial or county agendas, you know, that that's the kind of work
that I think we need to be doing as a movement in order to really move forward. Cause it's not
just about saying we don't want this. It's about building the world that we want to see.
Right.
What do we replace it with?
I heard you talk about like seeing somebody.
I think they were in your district having a mental health crisis and a solution finding somebody a way to call somebody
who could come help that wasn't a police officer pointing a gun at that person and so and i couldn't
find it yeah i couldn't find it by the way so i and this is as you were you were a city council
member i'm a sitting city council person and i'm i'm i'm watching a person have a crisis on the
streets and i call the department of mental health which is controlled by la county so I'm a sitting city council person and I'm watching a person have a crisis on the streets
and I call the Department of Mental Health, which is controlled by LA County.
So mental health response in LA is not controlled by the city.
It's controlled by the county.
I called LA County and not only did they not come, they never even called me back.
And the reason is because despite the fact that we have an enormous homelessness crisis, despite the fact that some, although not all, certainly not all people who are experiencing homelessness have mental health vulnerabilities, some of them do.
And the reality is that we need street based mental health outreach and street based response to mental health issues. Right.
And despite the reality of that, that we've been grappling with in Los Angeles for many, many years now, the county has almost no mental health outreach teams that are rapid response like this and has no capacity to respond to calls for help in that way.
And so for the entirety of the San Fernando Valley, for example, that enormous area, there is one mental health outreach team that the Department of Mental Health funds.
Yeah. Pardon my English, but yeah, it's, that's bullshit, you know? Yeah. I think you were saying that like when you talked to somebody, they were like, we're still like dealing with yesterday's
calls. And it's like, that's, that doesn't really, it doesn't help me. It doesn't help us at this
moment. And so like that and that, and you know, when I ran for office, one of the things I really talked about was saying, I want to have a system of responding
to homelessness in my district, which tries really to move it into the hands of trained
professionals. Right. Is there is there like a tension? Right. Because we all know it's like
we don't need the cops to be responding, you know, like and they're like, you know, we'd love to not
be responding to this. But is there. They say that.
They say that.
I know.
But they say that.
Right.
And then.
But they're like, we need more money.
But they like this.
We need more of that.
Like what's how how does where does the rubber meet the road in trying to get the stakeholders to understand?
It's like because we talk all the time as observers of just the news and looking at, you know, crime statistics or how crimes even reported like breathlessly by
the LA times or in Los Angeles magazine, that absurd publication, like at what point are we
able to really get this message through? It's like, you know, that we always talk about. It's
like, if there, if there was a correlation between how much we spent in crime, there should be
negative crime. Right. You know, like, so that's what I'm curious
to see how those conversations play out. Like, because obviously you have a living entity as
like the police department who's they're saying, like, well, we need this money. And do they look
at giving away some of this responsibility as making them more vulnerable to like saying,
well, then what do y'all do? You know, like, i'm curious to know how they're rationalizing or the debates
that you hear when there are people who advocate for this is why it needs to be this way this is
why it needs to be this way when you know logic or basic analysis would say like it seems like
there's a myriad of other ways of things we can try because we've been doing it this way forever
and the results are the same i mean we even heard joe biden in a speech be like we don't need to
defund the police we need to extra super duper fund the police because they because they do because there are mental health counselors and like giving listing all these things that they're bad at that they shouldn't do that they don't want to do. So it's like, yeah, I don't know.
I don't know. Yeah. I mean, I think for me, like I'm always trying to think about this and how you talk to constituents about building support for a better way of doing things, a more logical way
of doing things. And I think one thing that I would say is that I think often when you're talking to
constituents, a big complaint that you hear is, you know, I had an incident of violent crime or
I witnessed an incident of violent crime or I witnessed an incident of violent crime or I
had something happen to me and the police didn't come fast enough, you know? And so when I hear
that, I think one of the things that that's a moment when you can say, okay, look, you had
armed violence happening. That may be a space where armed police are appropriate responders, right? But for everything
else, we want to make sure that we are taking that off of LAPD's plate. And I think in that
conversation, so that they can respond more quickly to your instance of armed violence,
where you didn't feel like you were supported or you felt safe. And so that's like, for me,
didn't feel like you were supported or you felt safe. And so that's like, for me, in terms of trying to think about building a case for that better world, that's not just an argument that
I think has a lot of power. I think it's something that I think instinctively people understand.
I think we don't move forward as a city unless we're able to really have conversations about
safety and about these issues in ways that don't undermine people's fears.
And I said that before.
I just think that that's like an important way, a part of how we move forward in building
that new future.
Even if, you know, you may not think that those fears are legitimate or
based in the statistics, or I just feel like in order to have a conversation that's really fruitful,
I think we all have to respect each other's kind of where you're coming from. And I think we can
make real progress, real measurable progress on doing exactly those kinds of things and taking armed
police out of mental health crisis response on taking police out of, you know, your everyday
homelessness response. And you're going to have real widespread support for that. Those changes
that can transform people's lives. I mean, like, let's just be clear that if we're talking about
vulnerability to police violence, and that that's something that you care about, making sure that police are not your first line of response to calls about homelessness is really important because I think, you know, last in the last count, a third of all victims of police violence were homeless in L.A.
Right. You know, so how can we have how can we make concrete progress on these issues? How do we do that?
which is like well what do you you don't feel safe because of x y and z well this is actually how we solve it because i feel like this la is really or i think most cities are at this place
where people have either the really aggressive violent solution to a problem and then there's
a group of people advocating for something that like acknowledges the people's like someone's
humanity as a solution to it so like for example like again in la there's so much talk of like there's
such a weaponization of the unhoused people like the unhoused community here for political points
i have neighbors acquaintances around the city that seem to not be interested in solving the
issues that accelerate the growth of the unhoused community like they don't really care about a
fort like they don't understand they don't understand stuff like they just see homelessness and they go, oh, my God, what are they fucking doing over there in City Hall? And that's where it ends. And there's like a really specific type of Angeleno, right? Votes Democrat hangs all the right signs outside of their home. But when it comes to talking about the unhoused, their only idea to contribute is some version of get rid of them or like, I don't want to see them or they are dangerous.
And right now there's like this Caruso supporter who's like going around LA
videotaping people that are living on like on the street and just like shaming
them and narrating to the camera.
This is why we need to vote for Caruso.
And the comments are like an intellectual war zone,
like on these videos.
But you know,
I'm curious for someone who's been advocating for trying to solve this in a way that makes sense and isn't just,
well, ship them out somewhere or like just be more brutal and say, hey, you either take treatment or
you live on the streets again or whatever. You know, a lot of people have all these really
messed up mantras. I'm curious if you've seen a shift in these kinds of attitudes or what,
how do you even connect somebody who's like seemingly being like i understand all these other problems but i just can't quite cross the intellectual
rubicon into seeing an unhoused person as a human being that is unfortunate and is worthy of some
kind of help rather than saying this is a nuisance because it's either a nuisance or someone in need
of help is helping right and i think we can never abandon the base.
You know, I think my entire campaign, my entire time in office has been built around the idea that you if you center unhoused people in your response to homelessness and if you center their dignity, that that we actually have, you know, that that of all, that that is a moral imperative,
you know, no matter what, right? That is a moral imperative. That's just step one.
But the incredible thing is that if you do it that way, if you respond to homelessness in that way,
that you actually address homelessness more effectively, than, you know, there's two dances
that we put unhoused people through here in Los Angeles. One is a sidewalk shuffle,
where you break tents on one sidewalk, people move across the street, and then they move back.
And then there's the movement from sidewalk to jail and back to the sidewalk.
There's the movement from sidewalk to jail and back to the sidewalk.
And neither of these actually addresses homelessness, neither of them.
And so if you want a long-term solution to homelessness, if you want to see our way out of this crisis, there's no way through it that doesn't center the dignity of those people
who are living on the streets and ensuring that your response is tailored to those individuals needs.
And I think I think one of the challenges that that I I feel like I push back on and that I always have conversations with residents across the district about is like I have no I believe that homelessness is not a good thing for LA. It's not, it's worst for the
people who are experiencing homelessness, but it's bad for our entire city. Like I want, I'm here
because I want to end homelessness, you know? And I think just, just making sure, like, I think
that people understand that the goal of this work is not to keep people on the street, but rather to
much more effectively help them navigate their way off the streets.
That alone is a game changer
in having those conversations.
Because I do think there is a bogeyman there.
You know, am I saying that word right?
Is it bogeyman or bogeyman?
I've always heard bogeyman,
but bogeyman also adds like a,
I think it's appropriate for like our top gun zeitgeist
because bogey is like the the bad plane that's gonna come shoot
you i like mispronounced words all the time and so i just realized this i was like this is the
second time i'm using it and probably mispronouncing it again i like it but yeah but like to me it's
really just there is this i i think persistent feeling that if you are fighting back against the sidewalk shuffle or
the jail to streets circle, that what you're actually advocating for is for people to remain
on the streets. And in fact, it's exactly the opposite. It's exactly the opposite.
I mean, you've talked about structural kind of problems with regards to
addressing homelessness that feel like they then trickle down to the individual level,
like with the sidewalk shuffle. District by district, when you entered office, there was not...
There still isn't. There still isn't.
District was... Okay. so each district is responsible for
addressing homelessness within their district which leads to makes it very easy for your answer
to be move them to a different district right yes like exactly so and and the incoherence of this
is mind-boggling so is that something like how how are I guess I'd love to shift to things that
you are seeing work and things that are giving you hope for like addressing this as you're coming up
on like the two year mark? Like what are you seeing work and actually gain traction? Well,
a lot of that changed this last week. Right. Sure. Yeah. I mean, let's
let's talk about this last week and just like what it was like from your perspective, because I mean,
they were talking about redistricting you on in that meeting where they were also just using
cartoonish, you know, movie villain, anti-Black racism in a way that seemed like it was just
the the accepted culture like i mean abhorrent language and and and homophobic tropes yeah you
know over and over again home of the use of homophobic tropes it was so upsetting the use
of anti-black language by the way also you know they they made fun of Oaxacans in Koreatown.
So it's also anti-Indigenous, anti-Semitism. It was covered all their bases.
They hit it all.
Yeah. So, you know, it was abhorrent. It was an abhorrent conversation. And, you know, I think obviously my first instinct and response was to just the level of outrage that I felt on behalf of my colleague, Mike Bonin's son and his family. Mike and his husband, Sean, knew no bounds.
backgrounds and I think just and I was heartened to see that so many people showed up in whatever way online in person via emails via phone calls just to say like we reject this so wholeheartedly
like this is so not Los Angeles you know so I think that I just want to say that it was really
like moving to be witness to that.
And yeah, that's important to note.
But this, you know, I think obviously I'm still grappling with it, grappling with the implications of what happened.
And a couple of things I wanted to share is, you know, as you think about what we've been
discussing in council for the past year and I don't know, I don't mean I'm I think I'm
at month 20 or 21 right now. I can't remember
on the council and the priorities that we've been discussing on. So, you know, Kevin DeLeon
chaired the homelessness and poverty committee. Gil Cedillo chaired the housing committee,
which also encompasses renter protections. That's where we discuss, you know, keeping people housed,
you know? And then Noreen Martinez was the
council president, which means she set the agenda for what we discussed in the full council.
And I think about some of the discussions that have occupied us and that have been some of the
most conflict-ridden over the past almost two years. And I think about our focus on enforcement
as a response to homelessness and our constant discussions on how we expand the scope of enforcement with regards to homelessness. And that occupied so much of our time on council.
what those priorities would have been had the people setting the agendas not expose themselves as racists.
How would that,
how would our agenda on homelessness and poverty look like if it was being set
by people who had,
who had the best interests of every single person in Los Angeles at heart?
Right.
You know, and I think, I do think it would look different.
I think for me,
I've identified over and over again that a key part of why we're not able to address our
homelessness crisis is housing. We simply do not have the shelter beds or the housing units to
house all of our homeless people here. We don't have a we don't have a system that's designed to
do that. New York City has more homeless people than L.A. County, but way fewer people on the streets.
They have only like 2000 people who are on the streets.
And the reason is because they have a court case that mandates that they create the number of shelter beds that they need for every single person who is experiencing homelessness in that city.
And so they've had to do that and they've just done it.
And here in L.A., we've never done it.
And here in LA, we've never done it. Even right now, despite the fact that we've made more investments in shelter and in housing
over the past few years than we ever have in Los Angeles city history or county history,
for that matter, we still don't have enough units, beds, whatever, to house our entire
homeless population.
Houston, which has reduced its homeless population by an astonishing, I think,
60% over the last few years, has three times the number of housing units that they have
unhoused residents. So you see the difference that we have in our response and you think,
why weren't we talking about this the entirety of the time that I've been here,
instead of the other thing, which is telling people where they can or can't camp.
Right.
Right.
Because ultimately enforcement like, you know, that that helps the police stay busy.
That also helps people who might be, you know, maybe averse to building affordable housing or getting behind that, too, that I'm sure they're like, well, let's I'm into enforcement because I'm I'm sure there's also I mean, I know there's plenty of NIMBYism going on, too, where people are like, well, there's no way I can live.
But, you know, with these people in my community, I but you're so your solution is just to kick them out rather than to say, well, there is a way for them to actually move out of, you know, being unhoused and potentially to be able to have a job or not be living on the street.
Does that seem like a good option? But it seems like a lot of people just immediately see also
help as being like, well, that's going to mess up my property value.
Well, and I just, yeah, I just want to say one thing, Miles, which is that
I have a, I actually think Los Angeles is better than what we heard on those recordings.
For sure. You know, and I think you're right that
there is NIMBY pushback on specific homeless housing units. But I actually think if you look
at the history of our votes on resources for homelessness, on making sure that people have
what they need in terms of addressing the lack of shelter beds or housing, like we vote for it in droves.
We vote for it overwhelmingly.
Like Los Angeles is a city that gets behind housing
and resources for homelessness.
And I don't wanna let the actions of these three people
take that away from us.
Like we were, this is a, you know,
I really believe in the city.
And I think that they were misguided in thinking that the agenda of the city needed to be focused on these issues. And I just keep being struck by real estate, the real estate
industry's role in this. And just it feels like real estate is so such a powerful force in L.A.
And the real estate answer has always been, you know, just anywhere but here, like use the police to take the problem the crime the unhoused person anywhere
but here like is is that something you see like on the ground like in in these meetings like
that that you're on like do you do you see like those forces at play or is it like more kind of cellular down to the dna level than that or
how do you think about that like the relationship between the real estate industry here and how we
respond to homelessness yeah yeah and affordable housing and everything because it's yeah so you
know i'm so i'm an urban planner by training and i've looked at the history of affordable housing
construction in america for a long time yeah and I will say that we've built more affordable housing here in Los
Angeles over the last few years because of things called basically density bonus programs, right?
So the way that it's been happening is that you basically provide private real estate developers
the capacity to build a little bit higher if they
add affordable units to their existing constructions.
Right.
And as a city right now, again, I'm just operating within our existing context.
I don't have the capacity to fund a huge amount of public housing.
In fact, I have almost no money for affordable housing.
And so these density bonus rules are really the only way that we're
creating any kind of affordable housing stock here in LA. And that's the reality of the context that
we are in right now. I think if the president or at the federal level, they made changes so that
they were really funding a public housing program the way that they did in the last century, I think
that we could make real
progress on building more affordable units here in Los Angeles without having to rely on the private
real estate sector. But we're not in that context right now, right? And so, you know, I think for me,
the role of the private real estate industry is a very complicated one. I think there are people who
are very focused on policing as a response to homelessness, but I think there's also a lot of
nonprofit developers, even some for-profit developers who are trying to provide Section
8 units who are saying, we want to partner with the city in doing better and
responding better to this issue. And I think what we need to be setting up is a system where
we don't have the private real estate sector either bribing their way through city politics,
which is what happens all the time, or having outsized influence on decision-making in the
city. And I think those things can be
achieved through smart interventions in campaign finance reform and in really changing how we
organize our ethics commission and our rules on lobbyists taking part in these public conversations.
And I think that that's how we minimize the role of any profit seeking industry on how we decide our priorities for the city.
Right. Right. Yeah. Well, your job sounds hard.
I feel like I talked way too much. I mean, this is like, but this is kind of what we're always talking around on this show as we're, you know, talking about like observing and making strange human body based metaphors about what's wrong with America.
It's very, very interesting and, you know, complicated and just good to hear from you now, you know, 21 months into the job and hear the challenges and where you feel like you can improve and just what it is, what it's like in there.
So I appreciate you taking the time.
Yeah, and for me, like, again,
in thinking through that initial question that you brought up around progressive power
and what it means to be a progressive in America,
one thing I really want to think about
and talk about as we move forward is,
what does that look like in terms of material change
for the people of my district
and the people of my district and the
people of Los Angeles? And how do we design a policy agenda that gets us there? You know,
and that's, that's what, that's the conversation I want to be having with people who care about
these issues going forward. I want to be having that with you and your audience and with the
public and with constituents who care deeply about this. And the exciting thing for me in some ways, you know, this has been a very hard time, been a very hard be and how we coalesce around that shared
agenda and really use our power at every moment of decision making here in the city to push for
that change yeah vote for ugo let's get let's get more progressives on the city council for sure
but did he leak the tapes according to los angeles magazine is that what they said oh yeah
dude like front and center.
It's like absurd.
That's why like this city, again, that's what I'm like.
It's just the most ludicrous, ludicrous conspiracy theory.
I'd hate to be a politician in LA because there's just so much, so many ways for people to try and derail like a legitimate push towards something that's
constructive and even like the same way they're trying to even undermine like the coalition
they're like oh black and latino the alliance between blacks and latinos have already been
fraught until now and it's like ask anybody who's actually in the streets or any activists like
they're people know what time it is like you you have to be arm and arm with each other that's the
only way things are are moving but it's interesting be arm in arm with each other. That's the only way things are moving.
But it's interesting to see how
even with this controversy too,
there's a lot of like,
you know, fuel being thrown on the fire
to try and make, you know,
make it seem like something else.
I also just want to say that
I think the system is really gross and awful.
But Angelinos are amazing.
That's it. That's it.
That was my only comment.
Okay.
Bye everyone.
Actually,
we did forget to take our second break.
So let's take a quick break and then we'll come back and say our official
goodbyes.
I'm Jess Casavetto,
executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series,
Dancing for the Devil,
the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed. Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and L.A.-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling,
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Forgive Me For I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
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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,
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Every weekday, we bring you conversations with the culture makers who inspire us.
Like our recent episode with dancer, actor,
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And I really feel so content,
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Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
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And we're back.
And you were just saying that the system's gross and that's all you have to say on that.
The system's gross, but I also I think that Angelenos are amazing.
And you're absolutely right that people on the street,
they don't, they absolutely don't agree with what that vision of, you know, of a contentious fight between black, black Angelenos and Latino. Like it just doesn't, that's not how they read
the world. That's not how they read the city around them. And it's clear that at that level
for the Nys and Gills
and Kevins of the world,
that's their worldview
of how power works.
And there's clearly another version
where people look at the ongoing issues
and say, well,
these aren't actually the solutions to these
and working to them,
like working with each other sincerely
is actually how we're going to
get some like material change,
as you're saying.
Yeah.
And that's the only way
but yeah yes exactly yeah it's a really troubled time but you can see that there's a lot of
possibility on the other side and i think that's at least the part i lean into without becoming
fully nihilistic about being a lifelong angelino yeah well where can people find you follow you
all that good stuff nithya uh yeah you can follow the council office. You just look up CD4 Los Angeles on any of your social media platforms.
I do some of my policy thinking on my personal stuff.
So I'm usually at you can just look me up Nithya for the city or Nithya V. Raman on Twitter and Instagram. And I also wanted to plug the United to House LA ballot measure,
which is amazing. And it can actually give us the money to build exactly the kind of affordable
housing and homeless solutions that we need to get us out of this moment of crisis. And that's
going to be on your ballot. You should already have your ballots at home if you live in L.A. And it taxes real estate sales over some number of million dollars. I mean, it's not going to impact ordinary people.
Right.
And it's going to generate a lot of money for all the good stuff that we need to be building, the concrete stuff that we need to be building.
So United to House LA, vote yes.
There you go.
And is there a tweet or some of the work of social media
you've been enjoying?
Oh, gosh.
Or a show.
I mean, you know.
Some other work of social media that I've been enjoying.
Social media is art.
Is your currency.
What are you enjoying?
Oh, allow us to tell you that.
Yeah.
I want to hear from you.
I need enjoyment.
Tell me what you're enjoying.
We'll give you a break.
I will.
Look, you can find me at Miles of Gray on Twitter and Instagram.
Also, check Jack and I out on Miles and Jack got mad.
That's a basketball podcast.
also check jack and i out on miles and jack got mad basketball for our podcast and also if you like 90 day fiance check me and sophie alexandra out on 420 day fiance it's the predictions episode
this this week because the season is beginning for the nba yes yes wait for some real off-base
predictions from us um some tweets that i like let's see see. First one is from Koss at Koss Stein CAAA underscore
tweeted as a hater.
I'm so happy Tom Brady
came out of retirement.
Watching him go out sad
is even better
than I could have imagined.
And I was liking that one.
And then Miss Hollywood
at Carter for real tweeted
a fake passed out
on my three year old daughter
and she still didn't call 911.
She punched me in my face
and yelled,
you can't die right now.
That's ridiculous also like maybe my worst nightmare as a child you know what i mean like right when i i should be like watching my parents sleep and stuff oh man okay yeah they
i'm i'm always tempted to do that to be like like, how'd they react? How would they react? But I don't. Yeah, they don't need that comment.
Yeah, I've yet to pretend I was dead for my four and six-year-old.
For your weekend at Bernie's emotional test?
Yeah, yeah.
All right, some tweets. I've been enjoying old Tom at Yucky Tom tweeted.
Got high and went to the gym and I turned to my buddy and said,
who's this guy supposed to be, Steve Pineapple?
And when he said what, I realized this was a character of my own creation
from deep within my subconscious
and not a reference burn anyone would understand.
And that just brought me back to the weirdness
of being high back when I was also not good on pop.
Big spooky dad tweeted,
I went to the silly goose convention
and they all knew you,
which is just a good thing to say to people.
And then on the subject of local politics, you know, as this is a good way to put put something in terms I can understand.
Brent Tadarian tweeted a picture of a T-shirt at one of the baseball games that was happening this weekend.
Said this shirt makes a really good point. and the shirt says the mayor from jaws is
still the mayor in jaws 2 it is so important to vote in your local elections facts how he how he
weathered that storm of being like we're keeping the damn beaches open shark attacks be damned and
then like three people got eaten in front of everyone.
It was a spectator
sport.
His comms team must have been
putting in work.
Spectacular comms team.
One of the best to ever do it.
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.
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.
Hey, Miles, what's a song that we think people might
enjoy? Oh, man.
I'm telling you. Okay, so this is...
I'm back on my drum and bass thing. Okay, I know sometimes you were like, Miles, why... I'm back on my drum and bass thing.
Okay, I know sometimes you're like,
Miles, why are you listening to so much drum and bass?
Because sometimes it feels freeing to listen to drum and bass
while you're bicycling around the city.
Okay, and this one is a fantastic mashup of a Brazilian track
that I think is...
I want to say...
Let me just make sure I know who the original track is
oh yeah so Barbatoukas
who's like the Brazilian version of Stomp they have a track
called Baiana and then this
artist called Nia Archives
did a drum and bass remix to it
and just as somebody who loves Brazilian music
and drum and bass it was just a very pleasant
surprise to hear so this is Baiana
by Nia Archives
listen to it while you bike
maybe do a little freestyle you don't have to freestyle over it surprise to hear. So this is Bayana by Nia Archives. Listen to it while you bike.
Maybe do a little freestyle.
You don't have to freestyle over it.
I'm not trying to put people in danger out there.
Especially if you can't freestyle. Maybe freestyle,
bike, and put on your makeup. All at once.
That would be truly amazing.
If someone was doing their makeup while cycling.
If so, send video for proof.
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That is going to do it for us this morning.
Back this afternoon to tell you what is trending
and we'll talk to you later. Bye.
Bye.
I'm Jess Casavetto,
executive producer of the hit Netflix
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Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. I'm Keri Champion, and this is season 4 of Naked Sports. Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
Listen to the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is season four of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry, Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's basketball.
And on this new season, we'll cover all things sports and culture.
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