The Daily Zeitgeist - Impeachment...Again, Walmart’s Positive Impact? 1.25.21
Episode Date: January 25, 2021In episode 797, Jack and Miles are joined by producer and writer Joelle Monique to discuss the impeachment in the Senate, recharge rooms for healthcare workers, The Walmart Effect, a streaming content... check-in, and more!FOOTNOTES: Democrats say they will send impeachment article Monday These Recharge Rooms Are Helping Health Care Workers Cope The Walmart Effect: Testing Private Interventions to Reduce Gun Suicide Pixar’s ‘Soul’ Records Historic Nielsen Streaming Win In Christmas Bow On Disney+ WATCH: Connan Mockasin- I Want Troll With You (Gentle Dom Remix) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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In California during the summer of 1975, within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles,
two women did something no other woman had done before,
try to assassinate the President of the United States.
One was the protege of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nickname Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer this
season on the new podcast Rip Current. Hear episodes of Rip Current early and completely
ad-free and receive exclusive bonus content by subscribing to iHeart True Crime Plus only on
Apple Podcasts. 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.
MTV's official challenge podcast
is back for another season.
That's right.
The challenge is about to embark on its monumental 40th Season Battle of the Eras. Join us as we break down each episode, interview challengers,
and take you behind the scenes of this iconic season.
Listen to MTV's official challenge podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, the internet, and welcome to season 169. Nice. Episode one of
The Production of iHeartRadio. This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into
america's shared consciousness it's monday january 25th 2021 uh we won't go through the
covid yes y'all know what it is it's it's bad in america it's better elsewhere. My name is Jack O'Brien,
a.k.a. I play Switch like a motherfucker.
I'll put you under.
I go hard in the paint.
I do not show restraint.
I find shells on the beach
and I sell them for cheap.
You know that asshole Tom Nook
owes me some money.
That is courtesy of Christy Yamaguchi-Maine.
And I am thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray.
Trump out of office and Bernie in mittens.
Blue state of Georgia, Q Shaman in prison.
Now all I need is my COVID vaccine.
Come on.
These are a few of my favorite things.
When the blunt sparks, when the clouds go.
Okay, I made up that last part,
but shout out Rob Cunningham at Matt Demigod
for that wonderful favorite things.
That was a classic.
That felt good.
I mean, it was one of the
greatest hits CD. I didn't even
look, Rob. I appreciate this.
I see this happen on the discord where people are
really conscious of syllable count
on the AKAs because the seamless
ones are just syllabically
locked in and there was
a little bit of back and forth in this.
But shout out to everybody.
But Rob, thank you for that one.
Needed it.
Nailed it.
Well, we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by the brilliant, the talented,
Joel Moniz!
Hey, hey, hey!
Hey, y'all.
What's up?
What are you doing?
What is up, Joel?
Oh, man. It's a brand new day i'm gonna say brand new day twitter has it got me twisted because they're like listen don't get too excited
it's new kind of like old stuff and that's how we got here in the first place i'm like
right but can i be a little bit what if i'm like 45 just real happy that that one guy is gone you
know and things are looking better a lot happened day one a lot
of a lot of moves were made optimistic cautiously cautiously optimistic it's like because it's those
things where it's like here we go it's like yes the keystone pipeline it's like but what about
the dakota access pipeline and it's like yes what about these other things and you're like what
about the children in cages that were done by executive order you could all okay let's look there's a lot of other shit to get to but i feel
like these are the things we can also get to but yeah i feel the same way i think more than anything
like you know i was i was talking about last week is like it truly felt like coming out of a cave
and yes like being so used to the darkness and then coming out and trying to like like have the
wherewithal or understand like is sunlight good do i like this because i know it's good but what
the fuck is this so there's sometimes when i'll like have something dangerous happen or like live
through a dangerous event and like look back years on and be like man i can't believe
like that that was scary i can't like i felt that way immediately i was like i can't believe
that motherfucker was president like at 1201 like when he was no longer around wow this feels
much better i can't believe he is uh ever was president um yeah it just shows so much on even on like you know as
much as people listen to the show and be like yeah you guys managed to keep the news like so
listenable and upbeat and thank you for that and while we're able to do that it's i can't i can't
tell even listeners how much of a burden is lifted when i'm not thinking the first thing I'm going to have to discover is some
fucking next level of cruelty or just terrible way of running things. And now that that's gone,
I'm like, okay, so now I'm just going to have to be as scared, but just keep the eye open as it
already has been. But yeah. And I got hyped for a press briefing. I was like, we're having one of
those? The Lord! She pointed at the journalist and said
their name allowed them to say their their piece and then didn't clap back
weird weird but i'm curious to see like how because everyone's i think we're all in this
phase of trying to figure out what what this new thing is our new way of talking about politics our new way of interacting
with politics and yeah it'll like what does the media do like some you can tell some people are
still like they can't quit trump just quite yet and i get that there's he's still relevant in
in terms of impeachment but like making it all about that still i'm like we're gonna have to
dead that pretty soon uh you know because there's real shit that has to be covered in the country much in the same way i'm like will that same level of intense
focus be there for this administration as it was for trump and i think that's that will be telling
like how quickly they just go oh my god isn't it great that the the briefings aren't combative
yeah we we can't get caught up in manners obviously uh and have to stay focused but
there there's some policy.
There's some good policy shit happening.
Yeah.
Just,
you know,
just keep it coming.
Just build on it.
Just keep building and don't,
don't,
don't make it.
So people say you lied to us.
Right.
That's all.
It's all people money.
Give people money.
Don't,
uh,
that was one thing that no trick math.
Yeah.
The trick math,
the relaxing or like changing policies
around food banks it's like yeah but people could just use some money give them the money
the money like that that is always better than like yeah we're two in the bush right something
yes all right let's uh we're gonna get to know you a bit better in a moment, Joelle. First,
a couple of things we're talking about. The articles of impeachment are being delivered
today to the Senate. We will see how Mitch wants to play it. We'll talk about that a little bit.
We'll talk about how they're delivering help for medical workers via technology. We'll talk about a new instance
of the British coal gas study, the Walmart study, less refined sounding. We'll talk about the
Hall of Presidents at Disney. And then we're just going to do a general streaming content check,
and we haven't really talked about, we haven't been doing
our weekly watches
because everything was pretty
intense there for a little while.
But you know, we have watched Wonder
Woman 84. We have watched
a couple other things.
So we'll talk
about that. All of that
plenty more, but first joelle what
is something from your search history that is revealing about who you are
um i have researched every single dog adoption place in los angeles because the time has got
moved into my space and we you know the boxes are slowly leaving the space oh my moving is so hard guys
but once once we're we're ready for a dog we're ready we've been ready it's been about a year and
a half since we decided we're gonna get one we've researched breeds we've researched names genders
training puppies older dogs what are we gonna get uh now we've just come to the point we're like
we'll just take anything what's available please give us a dog so that we can love on it and have a reason to leave the house um please bring something that
just is completely not aware of the world into our space just buy we're just gonna steal its
energy we're gonna be in a room of hires and just really love our dog you got a pile of bummed out
dogs in the back you're just like i don't know man i can't really be in there with them too
we're gonna let him
replenish okay we're not trying to drain his energy but you know just survive off of it like
what we do in the shadows i just started watching that i just watched that too it was so good and
the energy vampire is so good so it's done really well of thinking of like it's hard to sort of
immediately think of what a good energy vampire representation is.
But goodness gracious.
They nailed it.
Wait, so what kind of dog?
Like what?
Is there a shortage of dogs?
Because I know there have been a lot of pet adoptions in the past.
So there is still plenty of animals available.
Yeah, I don't know why I'm like, no, we've solved it, right?
They're going quickly.
Like they go up and then like five seconds later like
that dog's been adopted i might have personal phone numbers from adoption people who work at
the adoption agency and i'm like what i just saw it you posted it four hours ago and they're like
adoption pending paperwork already the problem like damn it i can't sit on this site and wait
um but it's really hard we are hoping for um some kind of pit mix um we live in a new space my
brother's on the bottom floor and so we're like we want like a somewhat aggressive dog to be like
hey don't come in our space um but you know also fun and loving and so pit mixes have a good
combination of both uh they can tap into something yeah exactly but definitely sweet dogs yeah
exactly exactly my friends have pits
they're they're uh they used to be babysitting dogs which i love about them you can leave them
with the baby and no one will attack the baby that's is that true that's the history of look
at if i don't know if that's their whole history but certainly a history point for them is like uh
like 18th century no sorry uh 19th century so the end of the 1800s, early 1900s, you can find pictures of them
in baby bonnets
sitting. Yeah, it's so cute.
I gotta send this shit to the fucking
child. Oh my god.
Oh no, where's the copy link?
Oh my god. It almost looks
like you're like, it looks like the headline
of like, and this child was taken from his
parents.
Wow. Wow wow oh my god
exactly these pit bulls are so loving and almost like yo fuck a parent man like why do you have a
pit bull cradling me in the fucking bed also what man was in charge of choosing the name for them
because like this is a loving dog that like can babysit and they're like yeah but that
one time it fought in a pit like a bull we'll call him a pit bull uh bad pr for whoever named
them oh my god yeah it took us a long time to find a place that would let us have a pit bull
and so then we were like well if we're gonna be here we should definitely try to get one
um and oh my gosh they're just so sweet and their faces and when they're puppies oh my god i can't i'll cry they're so great so yeah
that's what we're on the hunt we're looking for one i'm hoping to have one very soon i just applied
for one this morning um no updates yet on their website so fingers crossed yeah getting a dog
now we're just now i'm just watching videos of dogs licking baby's faces oh my god i love that my dog went
by the time our kids was born was just too old and he was just tired just real tired about them
he was just like oh you've got to be fucking kidding me he's like now you want to bring
children into the house yeah exactly damn it come on man look at my knees well i have to do this oh this it's this uh pit
bull as nanny thing is like a very contentious thing in like the dog truth community oh really
yeah i mean it's like it's not that like it happened or didn't but they're talking about like
this article that introduced the concept it's it's what's interesting to me more than anything
is that there's a lot of energy going into like understanding it and then also the myth about like this pit bull that killed a two-year-old
that was like guarding a like a weed crop sort of kicked off this whole idea of like pit as baby
eater in the 80s right i remember that so what wow i mean all that to say we just want a dog to love on you know what I mean yeah and guard our weed
also listen bonuses we'll take it do you have a name uh we've been tossing some things around
Justin was telling me this morning and I was like I'm just gonna call it cute it was very long and
I was like listen I don't care what you name the dog because technically his dog whatever you want
to name it is fine with me I just want to hug the thing i just there you go yeah i want to flop its ears
and then take it outside for a walk like dogs they're the best did you say he wants to name it
q he wanted to name it oh my gosh something after cumberbatch but like a play on his words
like oh it's a rick and morty inside joke if I remember correctly and I was like that's a really long name
I'm just going to call it Q
simplify
easy
that's something I'm sure
we'll get to later but you are a QAnon
subscriber
Patreon
yeah totally
they were justified on that day
when you take him
for a walk you'll be cleaning up his q drops okay there he is he's back am i right ladies and
gentlemen uh am i right uh don't get me started don't even get me started on this one uh what is
something you think is underrated uh underrated is
the internet i have been without internet for almost a week and let me tell you absolutely
essential to our existence as human beings now uh i'm so lucky my father sent me a like
terabyte hard drive filled with movies that's what i've had to watch lately
there is no streaming right now in my house i'd upgrade my phone plan to a hot spot.
That thing is slow as hell. Internet required for existence. Yeah. So I'm guessing your move,
the monopoly of spectrum hasn't come to bless your wires yet? Listen, oh, so frustrating. I
called the landlord and I was like, yo, we're wired for internet, right? They were like,
no doubt. Great. I've set up internet since I was four. I know we're wired for internet, right? They were like, no doubt. Great.
We got this. I've set up internet since I was four. I know how to do this. This is great. I
just set it up. They set it up. I get the nonstop blinking lights, call spectrum, you know, fix your
stuff. They're like, oh, hey, we're seeing you. You're here. I'm like, we're not here. I promise
you. I know how to do this internet. Not there. So then they sent somebody over and that guy,
total jerk was essentially like, oh, we have to set up an entire new box for you connected to your phone line.
Because while you have an internet wire, you do not have our internet wire.
What does that mean?
Still not quite sure.
They've got to do construction and drill holes in walls and all kinds of crazy things.
We can come back in a week.
Right.
Right.
You're like, okay, sure. My corpse right right you're like okay sure my corpse will
let you in since i've died of no internet order groceries what are we doing i was like okay you
know what just uh go ahead put the date down i'm gonna call other companies and we'll see who can
get here faster but i go on they're calling at&t and they were like we can do 10 megabytes per
second 55 equipment i was, out the door.
Don't ever talk to me again, AT&T.
I can stream one thing a day.
Don't talk to me or my son ever again.
I was livid.
You guys have fiber wire cables, but I'm getting 10 megabytes.
Like, oh, God.
AT&T in LA is just, yeah, we'll randomly be like ah we can't get to your house sorry it's like oh
yeah i'm in the middle of a neighborhood my neighbor has like very you're a highest high
speed internet but they're like yeah sorry we we can't get there for some reason it's mind-blowing
i don't understand why we let internet companies i had an at&t person come and then tell me to get spectrum you showed up i'm like yo i need this shit now like i need it 15 minutes ago like my whole life
is on the internet and like i like whatever has to happen and they're like yeah i'm gonna be honest
with you man you're probably better off with spectrum at this point i'm like you're not even
looking at the thing he's like i can I can just tell. I'm gonna have
to go up there and if your neighbor's not home.
I'm like, eat shit.
Then the Spectrum guy came and was
really nice, which is very
not familiar.
On Spectrum of him.
Sometimes you get those tech people who actually
give a fuck about their job
and not to say...
Whatever it is, I just love when
someone has enthusiasm about it and is like
over explaining like yeah this is the reason
but I'm glad you're
almost on the other side of your internet
list like one more week
shit
it's uh yeah it's
an indictment any to any time you're
dealing with a telecom company it's
an indictment of capitalism I time you're dealing with a telecom company it's an indictment of
uh capitalism i feel like yeah because these should all be fucking public services you know
like public utilities that are actually done in a humane way and like affordable rather than like
well how much can you afford right well they're like oh well you can't afford to stream your
education you can afford to like, look at static documents,
like fuck off.
Joel,
what movies are on the hard drive?
What any,
any forgotten classics?
Dad really hooked us up.
He really hooked us up.
So first of every action movie between 2008 and now is on there for sure.
Nice.
We watched all of the fast and furious is every mission impossible.
All of the planet of the apes.
If it blew up,
it was on there.
But then he also included a lot of like black American classes.
Glory is on there.
And so is the color purple.
And I'm like,
what mood were you in when you were,
were you like also things that blow up,
but also education.
And then he put a lot of girly movies on there for me,
which I really appreciated. My atonement is on there for me uh which i really appreciated my
atonement is on there um but also pride and prejudice is on there which i favorite movie
watch it over and over again yeah a nice a nice combination i will say this a movie for every
mood because there has not been one time where we're like oh there's nothing to watch on this
thing and i've scrolled through all of netflix and found nothing to watch so i was pretty pleased with it that's some top-notch dadding right there that's like
some excellent father if you can if you can like put a movie selection together that will entertain
your kids for uh over a week like that's right you go in the dad hall of fame right doesn't matter
if you're three or thirty you know what i mean i was we did also watch all the kung fu pandas and
all the train your dragons so and all the Train Your Dragons.
We got to send my dad an award or something.
Yeah.
Most dads, it would
just be a series of
Liam Neeson movies and
probably some Seagal in there.
A couple of Civil War docs.
We'll put you in color.
No, you don't understand. It in color peter jackson took all that world war one footage and made it so real
uh what is something you think is overrated um my controversial overrated that i may take back
in a week when i have internet is Twitter.
I don't miss Twitter.
It's really bizarre.
I don't have it.
I'm on it, you know, maybe a little bit in the morning now.
But since there's no, like, open tab of Twitter on my computer now, it's just kind of like, oh, is this also part of the lightness that I feel?
Maybe it's not just new president energy.
Maybe it is also, you know, stupid controversy that I don't need to be involved in that I'll forget in two seconds. But for some reason, let overtake my life for a bit.
For example, my friend texted me and she was like, hey, are seeing all this Gaga stuff happening on Twitter?
I was like, I'm not on Twitter right now.
What's going on?
And she was like, she wore a jay to the inauguration and i was
like a bold choice no not seeing it get on everyone's in hysterics just upset about it or
it's the most hilarious thing it turns out it's a dove and then completely appropriate for valve
and i was like so this was a bit we spent a whole day on this bird that meant nothing ridiculous
yeah i didn't realize there was like criticism of her like because i was
saying she was extra but like that is i thought she was amazing and like very like her theatricality
is like great and what makes her her and like is her artistic contribution to the world but people
got defensive because i guess people were being critical of her
appearance I thought it was like iconic
I think some people thought she was perhaps
buying into the Mockingjay series
or trying to send some type of subtle
message
I'm sorry nothing is subtle
with her so like
everything's overt so you'd be like
what is she trying to do I'm like she's doing
what she does
full so take from it what you will and keep it moving right i mean yeah her fashion sense has
always seemed to be uh you know the capital from uh that series adjacent you know like it
oh the capital from hunger games hunger games. The capital from that series adjacent.
What the fuck is Jack?
Well, she was at the capital.
Jack's brain is melting.
Yeah, the capital from Hunger Games adjacent.
I could see it.
Yeah.
Twitter, I say this all the time as I try and ramp down my social media use.
I have it in sub-subfolders to really make myself be like,
do you want to go there?
Do you want to go inside there
because i it does seem based on like you know just all of the media i interact with on there i'm like
it's just it's a lot and most of the time like i'm getting all this information already but it's
like do i want it like in real time because when i look at that like little icon on my home screen
it it feels like it's like a door where on the other side you're hearing like screams and like fighting and like explosions.
And I'm like looking at it like slow zooming on.
I'm like, do I want to open this door?
And I'm like, nope, not right.
I feel like getting news lately has definitely been like the Pennywise doors.
I don't know if you saw the latest it, but at the end of part one, the kids have to choose like one of three closet doors to enter.
And they're all pretty terrible.
And they're like, do we choose the one with like the beheaded little girl or the one with the stabby guy?
The one that appears empty, but will definitely swallow its whole if we close that door.
And yeah, CNN has been pretty good, but they are also repetitive as hell.
So that gets tiresome after not too long.
Twitter is like a constant stream of misinformation.
And I won't bother to even suggest Facebook as a potential source because that's just chaos.
So, yeah, I feel like lately, to be honest, there's so much research to do for some of my other pods that I've just been buried in Star Wars.
And X much nicer over there.
Surprisingly, the crazy fan base. Wookiee. Yeah. pods that I've just been buried in Star Wars and much nicer over there surprisingly
with a crazy fan base
I'm into the Wookieepedia
I'm actually going back and like reading
a ton of the Star Wars novels because
I want to interview a lot of those authors
who sort of like held up Star Wars
in between the original series
and the launch of the prequels
so yeah I've just been deep in like
really heavy research territory
and screening new podcasts
and trying to see what's out there.
I'm so much more into the work right now
than I am into the rest of the world.
I think not being outside for so long,
coming outside today was very strange.
Trying to leave the house is a crazy experiment
in human conditioning.
What I used to do every day is now
like, jacket?
You definitely need a jacket. Do I pack everything
to go? I think it's like how parents feel when they have
a new baby and they're like, we have to take everything
because we don't know what's going to happen once we leave this
state.
Why do I have a spatula in my coat?
It's there. Just take it.
You never know.
You do never know. I can't flip an egg in the pan
uh all right let's take a quick break and we'll be right back
this summer the nation watched as the republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts, separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate
a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader
Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of
this 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.
I've been thinking about you. I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session.
24 hours.
BPM 110.
120.
She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, everyone. It's me, Katie Couric.
Have you heard about my newsletter called Body and Soul?
It has everything you need to know about your physical and mental health.
Personally, I'm overwhelmed by the wellness industry.
I mean, there's so much information out there about lifting weights, pelvic floors, cold
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slash body and soul. Taking better care of yourself is just a click away.
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?
The Boone County Rebels will stay the Boone County Rebels with the image of the Biscuits.
It's right here in black and white in France. A lion. An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the mascot switch.
As a leader, you choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team?
I'd just take all the other stuff out of it.
On segregation academies, when civil rights said that we need to integrate public schools,
these charter schools were exempt from that.
Bigger than a flag or mascot.
You have to be ready for serious backlash.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And impeachment is back in the senate we don't really know what's going to
happen uh the articles are being delivered today uh mitch wanted to delay but uh you know
it's not his decision anymore yeah i mean there's a little negotiating i think he wants to be like
mid february was like a thing i don't know what for i mean he's a little negotiating i think he wants to be like mid february was like a thing
i don't know what for i mean he's already trying to fuck around and block nominations so you know
that i think we know what to do uh can fully ignore this turtle fuck so uh yeah i it'll you
know if things still go according to plan as of right now it would be tuesday at one eastern would officially
kick off the trial phase so and we get to do it all over again it's just so funny how like we're
still like caught in the fucking grips where the news actually isn't changing but 100 this is
like he has to be held accountable but i'm curious to know how much this actually takes up the news cycle.
Because this will be a thing.
Can they do two things at once?
Can it be we're covering this and also what's happening with the Biden administration going into this omni crisis that he's waltzed into?
Yeah.
A lot of questions.
Yeah.
All right. waltzed into so yeah a lot of questions yeah uh all right let's talk about uh let's switch
gears to the uh global pandemic that's currently devastating these united states uh and solutions
are are a thing that is being talked about and covered and actually proposed right now uh we saw fauci at the end of last week
uh looking oh my god looking like a decade younger just like it's just like
it was like that private ryan giff in reverse where matt damon becomes the old man it's like
the old man turned it like i was yeah it was some i think i also got a bit of cathartic like it was
cathartic for me to see him be like,
take his mask off at his first press conference.
And I'm like, he's back.
He's ready.
Yeah.
But working in medicine right now is very difficult,
especially the Los Angeles area is just being crushed, crushed right now by COVID.
I know people in medicine who are just, you know, really struggling.
You know, Miles, you were saying you have nurse friends who are just underwater.
Yeah. And just like trying to hear, you know, I have one really close friend. She's like in oncology, so she's not part of that effort.
But and she's also like it feel it's really weird for me because she used to work in a trauma unit she's like when things like
this i'm i was very malleable but now she's like i'm kind of like i see how bad it is and i almost
feel blessed that i'm like in oncology because these people also need help but i'm not being
because a lot of people are being you know shuffled around to address the lack of like medical workers that we have. But yeah, hearing
just about how, just the disparities between how hospitals are treating nurses and doctors to how
funding's being moved to like how places need to, it's, it's just a really bad picture. And for
anyone who knows anyone who's had to work during this pandemic, especially in the medical field, you know how traumatic this has been for people because they're dealing with levels of death and loss that are like unheard of in terms of like what they're what the normal flow is of like incidences in a hospital.
So, you know, like there is this.
So obviously there needs to be a push to actually address this. And when you just read from what it's like to be a nurse who works in like the long haul recovery ward of a covid like at a hospital, not the people who are like in the midst of fighting the illness, like the people who have recovered, quote unquote, but are still dealing with like the terrible after effects.
This is what one of the accounts of a nurse is like.
And this is from Mount Sinai in New York. It's scary, she says. I see marathon runners who are unable to go up and down stairs and attorneys unable to string proper sentences together without word searching due to severe brain fog. We've seen thousands and have thousands more on the wait list.
uh and this wired article goes on to say she's bracing for a surge um of need in the coming months quote the worst is yet to come she says the hardest thing to say to these patients is
that we don't know what's going on but we are going to do our best to treat it i'm not sure
that was ever something we had to say to a patient that science has failed us and we can't figure out
the pathology so you know like on top of already having to take care of these people many of whom are like will
lose their lives they're also like in this place like the i they feel doubly helpless because the
the science is like it it needs time to catch up to everything and and it's just really affecting
a terrible environment and the the surveys that have gone out with healthcare workers just shows how much more of a depressive state this has put people in, in the actual pain.
And a lot of experts are looking at 9-11 and the research that was done with first responders there
to see actually what effect this is going to have on medical workers long-term. Because they said
after 9-11, they found 26.8 percent of police and 46 percent
of non-traditional responders uh like construction workers had ptsd symptoms 12 years after 9-11
and so that even shows like that we have to actually focus too on the ptsd of the people
who are taking care of all of the people that are dying so that's where like the technology part comes in
right yeah i mean they they've really found that ptsd like is like if you're not addressing it if
you're not talking about it like that is a huge compounding factor and so like the more that we
can just like culturally and societally just like make it a thing that there's absolutely no stigma around and it's being proactively
addressed.
You know,
that that's just something that like studies have found more and more that
people who are able to actually,
like,
I think that had like part,
that's part of the dynamic with MDdma being like a thing that gets
you to drop your you know social programming to and like resistance to actually just confronting
your feelings straight on and that's why it's an effective uh therapy for people who are suffering
from ptsd uh and just like societally if we could all take a some MDMA around this subject I feel like that
would be what you see it rapidly like we are having an evolution you know like yeah when the
like even the rock is like you'll have depression folks yeah the rock the rock for people who look
and be like yeah there goes a man who will suffer in silence and let that turn into some other health condition down the road.
Like it's yes, we have to talk about these things.
And that's what I think the benefit now is that because of that, we can look at these health care work and say, OK, what are we doing to help their situation?
Because their entire shift is just filled with chaos.
because their entire shift is just filled with chaos. So a lot of these recharge rooms have been set up across the country.
I mean, it's slowly catching on.
But these are essentially meant to be a place for 10 to 15 minutes.
These frontline workers can just take a second to be in an environment that isn't so sterile,
that isn't on the midst of the chaos of the hospital floor.
And they were they these experts teamed up with like there's this woman named Morel Phillips who they design like multisensory like experiences, but have now actually been like, how can we do this in a therapeutic way?
And they're using biophilic design principles.
So basically saying like as
much, how can we make this room feel like nature and natural as much as possible. And also working
with like musicians and sound designers to really create sounds like of nature or like, you know,
certain types of music that have are shown to like sort of bring people's stress levels down
to make these rooms.
And the results seem pretty clear there.
There was a study that was done and then they found that 15,
15 minutes in the restart recharge room at the end of the shift was reducing
people's stress of these essential workers by up to 60%.
Yeah.
And that's really something that they're like,
damn,
okay.
Even something as simple
as like just a place to sort of transition out of your really intense work uh work schedule
to then be like okay let me sort of get back in touch like in my body because you know your
limbic system is probably just hijacking your whole shit in the midst of all of what's going on so yeah yeah it's wild to see
this effort kind of come together i i think we're gonna see like there there's so many studies that
find a uh really profound link between mental and physical health and there's so much we still
don't know about that like that. I feel like this is a frontier
that we're going to see people exploring more and more
in the healthcare field.
This seems like it could be just the beginning
of a broader, bring those two ideas together
and get these people to redesign hospital rooms for the patients, too.
We've seen that somebody's mental health or how they're feeling can totally change how well they recover from surgery.
I don't know.
Hospital rooms are just famously so comforting
and right well because it's all about yeah it's all about utility and that makes sense that's
like the framework that we've been kind of designing them within but now like i i could
see this becoming like a much broader thing.
I think it's going to have to because if we think about, I mean, if you're 12 years later, you're still dealing with the effects of 9-11. I mean, at one point we're having like a 9-11 every day as far as just total death count for the country.
And then stack on top of that, just the duration of it.
It's just so long and still such like a long fight to go i mean we're gonna
have to think about it of course for medical personnel but also like somebody was talking
the other day about how they their friend has like a one-year-old and they took the kid outside
and it was clear the kid was having like just overload from just being outside um there's a
lot of damage done to all of us just from right yeah in the past year
but yeah four-year-old like covers his mouth when he's outside sometimes and i have to remind him
like it's not that the outside is you know infected it's that you know it's but it can be
it's very confusing you know for young kids who this is now like over a quarter of their lives uh spent in in the
pandemic but it's uh also kids are resilient so i'm sure it's like the what you're talking about
jack sort of too about like recovery and like what that environment is for someone's physical
because like we've uh since the beginning of like the lockdown we've read stories about how like being in nature has like helped people's stress levels or perceived happiness levels just by being out there.
And like, okay.
But it's like, it's like we're fast approaching like a field of study and I'm sure this already exists.
So science, I can't even shame you in my mentions, but like, it's like the, like vibe ology, you know what I mean?
the like vibe ology you know what i mean we're like you can say like that there's this thing that seems intangible but people can perceive or it's like oh this feels this oh wow this feels
good or like this room feels nice or whatever that we're like having to be like how can we
we need to harness the power of the vibes to heal uh so you know i mean that was one of the things
that fauci was saying is that it's all about vibes man yeah at the uh press conference more so than masks yeah he was pretty clearly high he was
yeah he was yeah he was i mean those his fucking pupils look like dinner plates i was like okay my
man but yeah music therapy it's obviously you's a, I think, stigma around things like vibes.
And, you know, that's why we're so, you know, far behind with regards to unifying mental and physical health.
But and also the brain is just a complete mystery.
So it's a it's an uphill battle.
But I do think it is a frontier of medicine that
uh people will be more and more open to hopefully uh and by necessity the new quack doctors or
virologists yeah i can see it all right let's talk about uh my favorite subject it's not really
my favorite subject but i get i get a lot of shit from bringing it up all the time the british coal gas study uh which found that basically giving people
access to uh or taking away their access to um you know methods of suicide actually affects
whether people kill themselves that's not a thing that like where there's a will there's a
way it's it's named after the fact that they changed the type of gas that was used in british
uh ovens in uh the 20th century and once the method of putting it sticking your head in an
oven was no longer lethal uh the british suicide rate dropped by like a third because that's how a
third of people were killing themselves. They just had a box they could stick their head in
that would end their life. And so once that went away, the suicides went away as opposed to
people finding a different way.
So there's more evidence on... I usually bring this up in relation to gun control, and there's now very specific evidence that proves that that is valid.
A lot of people bring it up. I don't just bring it up, but a lot of people bring it up in relation to gun control. And new research has showed that a temporary decision by Walmart to stop selling firearms reduced the suicide rate by 3.3% to 7.5% in counties with Walmart stores, which was an estimated 5,000 to 11,000 lives saved or 5,000 to close to 12,000 lives saved.
And so,
you know,
this is just one of those things that it seems like it seems to me like the most straightforward case for gun control is like there are lives that are being lost explicitly because people are allowed to
have guns in their house.
Yeah.
But how much do Walmart profits fall?
Right.
At a time.
Right.
But beyond even that,
I was like the,
so many people in the pandemic were like,
well,
people die.
What can you do?
They're going to die.
Like,
it's going to be a lot of that same energy.
Things I've actually heard about,
if you're stupid enough to take your own life and maybe you deserve to die there's this callous and completely uncaring
about like well you know some people are sick and need help and you could we could easily give that
to them as we could have gotten like it's pretty much the same amount of effort goes into like
helping somebody as it does to just be like well you're on your own buddy yeah comparing it to like meant like the
connection between mental and physical health it's like if getting a fever killed you if you
are going through a particularly difficult period of time and you have access to something that uh
you know you're mentally you're not well and you have access to something that locks that feeling in like that
it's the same it's like you know that that idea that suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary
problem is i think unimportant like it's kind of a quippy thing but it's also like these statistics
bear out that that ends up being what it is a lot of the time like
and you know there have been uh longitudinal studies of people who jump off the uh golden
gate bridge and survive and there's like i think 90 something percent of them go on to not kill themselves they go on to live normal lives uh and so it's like the
just because you make that decision in that moment doesn't mean that two minutes later you would have
still wanted to make that decision yeah the very just rigid view of it that doesn't that doesn't help anyone uh at all and having a button that ends your life
as which is what guns are is like the most permanent and just the most drastic way of
you know uh locking in that uh what is a sort of philosophical dilemma that people you know generally don't down the road don't want to have
like that's what it it makes uh the decision to take your own life so tragic to me that
so oftentimes the person would have wanted not to have done that if you had given them another
day to think on it if they just didn't have that means right there.
Walmart is just like being, you know, for most people know Walmart is just the destroyer of amart and mcdonald's like are the two companies
that employ so many americans that still need are relying on public benefits because of their
unwillingness to actually give people the the things they need um it's like like come on let's
do something now that we're having the 15 an hour argument right no how is that still a conversation
we started that conversation when i was in college the shit should be 25 yeah like let's be real let's be fucking real that's at
minimum it should be 25 an hour and you know the well how are you gonna pay for that it's just it's
called the people who you'll never be as rich as are gonna be slightly less rich right right or
the other argument we hear all the
time is like oh well then that will force them to like fire people it'll bring more machines like
that's already happening like we already have these machines taking over people jobs like
well here's the thing machines don't consume products either so what do you do about that
you know like it's like all so then you have to you have to have money for people whether it's through a ubi or something um because we're not going to some weird like the island type
vibe where everyone's wearing like their white uniform and like here's your gruel and you know
go on your peloton yeah it's holding back progress by you know like allowing companies right well because we're still like
it's still it's like it's just wage slavery you know and that's because your only option is okay
so you're not going to work then you'll die right well that's a fucked up why am i what's this what's
this game set up as exactly so if i don't do this if i don't work and toil then my op i i
there's nothing to rely on to help me so my only option is to be have my labor exploited huh right
yes that's the goal of capitalism you work or you die right everybody who is physically unable to
work or people who have any kind of barrier to working this woman who it's a brilliant writer
but she's deaf it was having such a hard time finding a job that would make any kind of like
accommodations for her she's like they all want to meet on zoom i can't hear what you're saying
and none of you sign so what am i doing here what is the point and she can't she just literally
cannot participate in the work she's proven herself time and time
again to be good at that kind of stuff is so frustrating um yeah we live in a society where
you you absolutely have to be productive in order to be valued and i think that that's
so disgusting yeah and we're just we're not like shedding that like toxic philosophy quick enough
you know because we still have to we gotta work hard even if your hands
bleed it's like that's fucking fucked up and cruel like yeah there there has to be some like level
that we can all come to and agree on but i think that'll take time it's like it's just really we're
just watching these companies like grind people out to the point where we're just like i don't
know what do we do but it's like well we fucking you know this is all we have to be in this together um so that we have to look at that
and say that's not a good situation that's not a direction philosophically societally i want to
move in but yeah come on we'll day by day just got to keep that in the front of the mind because
hopefully you know we'll reach a tipping point of people thinking in the same way and we can start.
I don't know.
Maybe that's a little too optimistic.
But, hey, the last four years have at least got people pretty focused on shit.
So there may be something to do with that.
Yeah.
And just before we go to break, just going back to the suicide conversation, that it is a public health crisis in the United States. It is twice
as common as homicide, which is the exact opposite of what people assume because homicide gets,
you know, at least twice as much coverage when it happens. And it is that way because of guns.
So it's a public health crisis that is being ignored every day in the country.
So, all right, let's on that note, take a break and we'll be back to talk about things that aren't suicide.
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
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That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
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Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller
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When you think of Mexican culture,
you think of avocado, mariachi, delicious cuisine, and of course, lucha libre.
It doesn't get more Mexican than this.
Lucha libre is known globally because it is much more than just a sport and much more than just entertainment.
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It's tradition. It's culture. This is Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12-episode podcast in both English and Spanish
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Join me as we learn more about the history behind this spectacular sport
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And don't worry, we promise to avoid any black holes.
Most of the time.
and we're back and uh we haven't checked in with uh what people are streaming what content people are consuming in a little while because uh there's been a lot going on um but there've been
you know we we've kind of mentioned in passing that wonder woman 84 was the most streamed piece of SVOD,
as people in the industry call it,
streaming video on demand.
I think ever it was definitely the most streamed piece of content of 2020.
Bridgerton has taken the Netflix world by storm.
Soul from Pixar also blew up um so yeah i just wanted to kind of
give us a chance to talk about uh these things that are in the zeitgeist that we really haven't
had a moment to yeah in a i mean normal world uh what uh what is there to say about all of it all right wonder woman 84 wonder woman joel wonder woman came at such an important time uh if like christmas was going to
be really hard for everybody this year i should i'm not going to spend it beyond christmas and
go to the holiday season was a challenge so many of us didn't get to go see people that we wanted
to see uh i know a lot of people who were single and have been quarantining
by themselves continue to do so through the holidays and here comes wonder woman like out
of nowhere it's like a christmas miracle like something new to watch that you would have
watched in theaters anyway probably um it was going to give you something to talk about whether
you liked it or didn't like it it was a really a moment of necessary normalness, like normalcy, and a tide of craziness just to be able to go on Twitter and be like, I did not like this movie.
Tell me about why you did or did not like it.
Was the flying, did it work for you?
Swinging from lightning.
Like, oh, God, not at all necessary conversation.
Vital to my existence.
I didn't like the movie, but I'm so glad to have that.
And sold a double
feature on christmas yeah it was awesome i really like i liked wonder woman 84 i watched it after
everybody had come out and been like what the fuck was that like people were mad uh so i had
extremely low expectations i thought it was i also knew that the uh central conceit of the movie
was a monkey paw wishing stone like that granted your wish and like so very silly uh it it like
sort of took place it took those superhero movies back to like the christopher reeves era Superman sort of level of sophistication in that respect.
But I just thought it was fun.
And I don't know.
I thought it was also like, you know, a that just by wanting thing like having a
want uh driven world is going to be okay and then it's like no that's i i thought it was a good
like take on the 80s um so i thought it was fun i don't yeah i think like i said when it came out
it's like an airplane movie i'm not invested
enough in the franchise to have like a really strong feeling i think it was more just like
plot hole stuff that i think the thing that bugged me the most was about that armor suit like above
all else and i said it last time we first i'm like how the fuck is that thing strong enough to take on, like, the collective power of mankind?
But in, like, a fight with Kristen Wiig, who's turned up to, like, 14, it's, like, it's just turning into, like, a paper sheet.
But, you know, other than that.
Yeah, that's fine.
Needed it.
It was, like, to your point, Joelle, it was, like, nice to be, like uh hey we we haven't seen this fucking nobody has
cool and not feel bad like like where other films i'm like do i need to see this in a theater or
whatever yeah fire it up let's go no let's just do it let's watch it right now please distract me
from the craziness that was that time yeah it you know gosh dc really knows how to do a first
and second act and to get a movie,
a superhero movie specifically that is that tied into like the bright kind of
fun comics we gear toward children.
Like it hit a different type of nostalgia button for me that I really
valued.
Yeah.
It reminded me of another superhero movie that I liked more than I think
90% of the
population Superman returns.
Uh,
I,
I thought that was fun,
but like it was,
yeah,
it was like sort of a bright world that was dumb and like,
uh,
ultimately like a very flawed movie,
but that I just,
for some reason it just was a,
my eyes liked watching it.
Yeah.
I understand entirely. Yeah. It's yeah vanilla ice cream you're like i
don't know yeah it's not the best flavor but it's cool it's fine yeah and then since we mentioned
soul came out on the same day you know i didn't quite hit for me i think in the same way like it
was uh wonder woman 84 i watched after people had given me very low expectations.
So I watched expecting it to be on level with like top Pixar movies.
And it was it was good, but it just wasn't like my favorite Pixar movie.
OK, but have you just listened to the John Baptiste soundtrack yet?
No, I've not.
God, that band can play a piano.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is so good.
It's really, really good.
I've been listening to it, like, as my nighttime music.
And it's been very helpful.
It's just soothing, but also sort of, like, has this uplifting.
There are so many moments in that movie,
particularly when he, like, gets into his groove
and it's sort of, like, describing, like,
what it is to transcend yourself in art.
Like,
wow,
what a beautiful statement to make for children.
I liked like the main character,
the drive of all that I had.
My issue was,
I really wish we could have seen a heaven that resembled like a black
American ideal of heaven because it would have been funky and fun as hell.
Yeah.
And I think that would have been like coco got an interesting afterlife i feel like we could have had an
interesting afterlife too that's right that was it felt a little bit let yeah miles you mentioned
that like when we first talked about this that you were hoping it to be a black like black coco
yeah i was but then like it but then it got so existential i'm like okay
so then i can't really even judge it like as anything aside from this narrative about our
existence or whatever because yeah i was like this feels like you could have where's black cocoa
i want that too and that'll do fucking numbers y'all are you fucking kidding me the memes would
be out of control.
Control out.
It would have been insane.
And the character design came pretty close to giving us like a lot of what was great about Coco, which was like, oh, here's a culture on display in a way that's easily accessible, similar to Moana.
And like the character design.
And this is pretty great for a Pixar movie.
Just a lot of details and stuff.
But you can tell this was definitely
the way this movie got made was a white guy pitched it wrote it and then they were like we
should probably bring in somebody black to like write and maybe co-direct it so they got the guy
that did um he wrote the play one night in miami which regina king just launched on amazon um
fabulous writer he put a beautiful he did the barbershop scene, of course,
and viewed a lot of his father's jazz heritage
into the film.
But at the end of the day,
you can see where he got to touch the things on Earth
and how they left it,
and then sort of how they left the original script
in contact with the beyond Earth stuff.
And I think they made it work it's fine they crossed the
finish line and it was interesting and good it like really moved my parents they really loved
it so i think it's gonna hit its audience okay um but yeah it's definitely not up there on the
top tier mantle of pixar movies it's no up or finding nemo yeah and pixar you still owe us
black cocoa okay you do yeah this doesn't tick the box just so you know it doesn't tick the box but up or finding Nemo. Yeah, and Pixar, you still owe us Black Cocoa. You do.
This doesn't tick the box, just so you know.
It doesn't tick the box. But still,
I will say, yeah, that scene about talking about
self-expression and creative expression,
I actually got kind of emotional when I saw it
because I was like, oh no, this movie is about to fuck me up.
Oh, God.
Anybody who has
any kind of creative
medium, whatever they work through, or has an outlet where you can truly go into that place where you're like, I'm flowing.
I'm zoning now.
And you can't you can't catch me.
Like that's really like the way they described it connected so immediately.
I was like, oh, that was fucking really well done.
But part of me was like, are kids going to actually understand that this shit is heavy?
And like, are they capable of taking all this shit on?
And if they got inside out, they'll be able to vibe with this.
I feel like that's sort of the dividing line.
If your kids were like, oh, inside out, I get it.
We're having conversations about emotions.
You'd probably pick up on what's going down here.
Yeah, there's a lot of good physical comedy, too, in the afterlife and people falling down and shit.
And when he is a talking cat that my kids really loved.
I should also say I was in and out on this
because I was having to run around and do different shit.
So I didn't sit down and just take it in
the way the filmmakers intended.
So any criticism I have should be uh taken with
a grain of salt i would also say bridgerton was also one that i was in and out on so i probably
can't remain in and out of that they're not much story no it's a soft core porn like i really feel
like i need netflix to acknowledge what it has created uh that should come with a warning like
hey this is a
softcore porn because this is definitely something I would have sat down and watch at like 13 it's
not for your 13 year olds uh right entertaining to a point I always expect listen Pride and
Prejudice is my bag I love a Victorian era tale uh because and what makes those so good is like
it's just a long string of longing. Like nobody is getting theirs.
It is just forever.
Like,
well,
they won't they.
And this show is like,
Oh no,
they will.
And they'll do it again.
And then a sexual assault in the middle of it.
That we're just going to breeze by.
Cause it happened to a dude.
And it,
which was weird to me.
I was like,
we have to go back to that at some point because it's a problem.
And the whole romantic story following this event is now making me uncomfortable
um it was a
wild ride I would like more
shows like this still but maybe you
know a tween more thought
in uh the actual structured
writing of them
yeah it all hinged on
again is he going to shoot
the club up
and that's when I was like and i found myself getting mad
because i'm like i'm only tuning in the next episode to see if he loves her via ejaculation
so i was like and then i was like man this is fucking me i don't like i don't like how it's
been distilled to this one thing to describe how he feels about the person and oh my god then i was
arguing with her majesty my partner i was like what the fuck you
think i mean he could still the dad's dead what the fuck does the dad know anymore i was so
frustrated by that i was so frustrated by that character but men are dumb so like i could totally
see that like men give a shit about silly stuff and people have talked about it being like coming
from a female gaze which like we definitely need
and i thought it was much more attractive than most soft core porn that has come in the past
um but yeah it like it reminded me you know it's a gossip like a gossip and fancy party driven
society and it reminded me of this tweet that I just have to,
somebody,
somebody said this tweet sums up liberal Twitter.
A best D socialist said this tweet sums up a liberal Twitter.
It's from Melanie Benjamin.
She says in my fantasies,
Pete and Jason will have Kamala and Dougie over for weekly potlucks that
Michelle.
Oh,
we'll crash with a bottle of wine and gossip after which Dr.
Jill and Joe bring the dogs over along with some homemade brownies to
enjoy while they all sing karaoke.
And that,
that reminded me of Bridgerton for some reason.
Can we talk just really quickly about a show that's actually good.
That's streaming right now that people can watch. Yeah's on netflix it's called lupin i don't know if you guys have
chance to see it it's uh originally a french but there's a really solid dub that won't tweak you
out or take you out of the storyline um yeah if you i didn't watch it because we were watching Narcos Mexico and I got frustrated.
I was just tired of not being able to look at my phone while I was watching a TV show, which is not good.
But yeah, I was like, all right, I need to take a break from subtitles for a little bit.
I totally understand. If you've seen the anime Lupin the Third, which is like very classic 80s like spy thriller, that's based off of an old French book about like a con artist slash Robin Hood type character who like steals from the rich and gives to the poor and gets like he gets a real high off of like duping mean people or bad people.
So this guy who's Omar Sy is his his name he's an immigrant from africa but
he's been living in france for a long time great actor you've definitely seen him in the background
of a ton of your favorite movies this is his first like stepping into his own like role in space and
he's crushing it my brother keeps referring to him as a french idris elba he's definitely got
that vibe of like cool black guy swagger trying to make it in a white
man's world and it's like super fun it opens with him stealing a super expensive necklace from the
louvre uh there are car chases and and he breaks out of prison by pretending to hang it like there's
so many cool like just old school spy things um that's not once again sherlock holmes it is so
brilliant and funny and the mystery is
really well woven i don't like a mystery where it's too hard you're like i'm so lost in this
mystery i don't even know what i'm supposed to be looking for and i don't like a mystery that's
spoon-fed to you where you're like well okay and now this happens that's boring it's a really
tightly woven mystery that keeps you guessing and on your feet um i'm not allowed to watch it
without my brother so we're only three episodes in but i'm really excited to finish it when i have internet in a week yeah brilliant yeah i was um
i used to uh watch like lupin sanse the anime like back in the because like it was like the
thing like my older because it was around like before i was born they're like you don't know
lupin i'm like all right that's how every black person gets into anime because he kind of because lupin kind of has like a fade
too you're like is he like because the hairstyle is like does he have a lineup and so light skin
what's happening yeah that was i remember looking i'm like he doesn't look like the japanese people
i know uh but it also kind of looks like the yakuza at the time that had perms and shit to
kind of have their hair curlier so like it's kind of in line with that.
But, yeah, because now Lupin is...
It's bigger than Bridgerton and Queen's Gambit.
Like, it's overtaken those on Netflix as the number one series.
And people are like, oh, shit, what the fuck?
Oh, really?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This shit is fully blown up.
So, I'm definitely going to watch that this weekend.
Along with the other thing I was just going to point out.
Batman, the animated Series on HBO Max.
That shit.
I fucking.
That motherfucker is so good.
Now I can.
People know.
If you know.
Look.
If you know you know.
And if you don't know let me tell you.
You probably remember when you were a kid.
Okay.
Because it was like the Batman cartoon in the 90s.
I remember the season ended on my birthday. Like in like 95 or 94 or something like that.
I was like, it's over.
But watching it again, more so than it being Batman or whatever,
it was more the experience of getting back into something that I had not watched in at least 18 years or something like that.
And it was weird this the second the themes theme music came back
up and the opening i'm like i like my brain started reconnecting like oh this is the part
where you're gonna see the the goons like their eyes widened because batman is about to swoop on
him and then it was it was like time traveling watching it and it was such a such a like
wonderful time because i was just thinking of all kinds of memories and shit that was like really pleasant it's also just fucking dope kevin conroy is like
the best batman voice and the animation's good it holds up it's you know that's that's just some
good shit to watch i can't i can't recommend it enough because it's also storytelling it's like
adult it's really like as an adult oh shit look at oh what's oh man
selena kyle wilding out right now you know it's like i really it was amazing how i could still
enjoy at the same level so just another fun thing to to look back but yeah hell yeah uh well joelle
as always so wonderful having you where can can people find you and follow you?
Yeah, I'm Joel Monique.
You can find me all over the internet at Joel Monique.
It's J-O-E-L-L-E-M-O-N-I-Q-U-E.
And is there a show that you have coming out pretty soon?
Oh, yeah, you know, check around May the 4th.
For some Star Wars content coming your way.
Some sick interviews, some deep dives into the movies, the books, the comics, the animated series, which I'm really excited to talk about.
If you have never seen a Star Wars, we're going to start at the beginning for you.
But if you're a Star Wars expert, we're going to be going into all of your favorite characters.
I'm talking Nightsisters.
I'm talking Thrawn.
I'm talking people who have never seen a movie before.
It's going to be a lot of fun.
Do you know Donald Paisa?
Yes.
And where can they get a sneak peek of what that show might be like?
Yeah, head over to the Fake Doctors Real Friends thread.
And it's an all caps Star Wars special.
It's a surprise Star Wars uh it's at the end of
season three if you're looking for it it's right before christmas or no right after christmas we
downloaded uploaded it so yeah check it out there it's a basically that's just a me and donald
talking very broadly about some of our favorite star wars stuff so give you a little taste before
the actual series comes out nice uh and is there there a tweet or some other work of social media
you've been enjoying?
Oh, crap.
Hold on.
You know, I haven't been on Twitter as much lately.
And that is a fine answer as well.
Oh, you know, but there was one from Darrenick Bird,
who tweeted,
Khalifa Browder allegedly stole a backpack at 16,
spent three years at Rikers Island without trial.
Riley Williams stole a laptop from
Speaker Pelosi's office and tried selling it to the Russians she was released to her mother
um if you don't know the story of Kalief Browder he killed himself not too long um I believe after
he was released from prison he spent three years without going to trial it was pretty tragic
and so sweet by saying there are two justice systems in America Black Lives Matter um and I read that to you just because you know uh i think as we talked about at the beginning
of the show there's a lot of people who are like a new day we're back to normal we can all relax
yeah our normal was better before trump it was far from perfect and so i don't want us to just
go back to quote unquote ignoring it yeah it's yeah yeah truly, it's... Yeah, truly. It's like, well, she looks like Daria.
So then maybe we'll go easy.
It's like, she tried to sell the speaker's laptop to Russia.
Whatever.
I mean, this is...
This is why, like, that whole insurrection shit was doubly exhausting,
especially for people of color in this country,
because you're like, okay, here we go.
And watch them flex their whiteness to the point of like
waltzing into the capital i'm like crazy uh miles where can people find you what's tweet you've been
enjoying ah twitter instagram at miles of gray and also uh 420 day fiance just talking 90 day fiance the complete antithesis of the news
uh a tweet that i like uh you know uh christy yamaguchi main nudged me say hey you might like
this tweet and i looked at it i said okay let me see what this is and this is from chipped front
teeth at chipped front teeth uh and it's like a like um screen cap of like a wikipedia
page for ambassador of the united states to jamaica and you go down it's chad hanks since
january 21st 2021 i was like this is so stupid chad hanks yeah go go off the hanks mandem big them up uh you can find me on twitter at jack underscore o'brien
uh a tweet i've been enjoying ellie kramendahl uh had a couple tweets i've been enjoying one
she just reminded us that when the celebs made the imagine video we'd been inside for a week
uh which was shocking to me I didn't realize that
and she also tweeted
the idea of a quote cheat day
is so dumb I'll cheat on my husband
whenever I want
Ken Klippenstein tweeted
going outside wearing oven mitts
in hopes of becoming a meme
oh no
and then this is just a good idea at low underscore lifer tweeted
it would be cool if you could just get a cup of hot broth the way you can coffee
um which i know you can in some places but like as omnipresent as that. And then...
Yeah, that's fine.
That'll do.
Oh, and then Steph McCann tweeted,
Oh, is my iCloud storage full?
Grow up.
Grow up.
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 the song we write out on Miles.
What are we writing out on today?
Let's go out on this remix of a Con and Moccasin track.
It's called I Want Troll With You, but it's the Gentle Dom remix.
And it's just so like Con and Moccasin's like psych pop funk that he does is so dope and very soothing um and this
remix is like soothing plus got the funk to it so i don't know whatever you got to do secure your
big toe because it will jump up in your boot when this track starts playing so if you're fine with
a wild big toe then go ahead and just do your thing but if not secure the toe secure the hips don't put too much honey in them because this track will get you moving you better have
honey in your hips before you turn the song on because yeah or yes and we're not responsible
for any hip injuries that occur from not free toe injuries you might want to just loosen
loosen your shoes and take them off yeah yeah put a. Put a sandal on. Yes. A sandal is a good idea.
You can find us.
We already did that.
All right.
We are going to ride into the week on that.
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's going to do it for this morning.
We're back this afternoon to tell you what's trending and we'll talk to you all then bye In California, during the summer of 1975, within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles,
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And I'm your host, Santos Escobar,
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Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes,
and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit,
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I was a lady rebel. Like, what does that even mean?
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