The Daily Zeitgeist - Kanye’s Lost (In Thought), Petty Arabia 8.10.18
Episode Date: August 10, 2018In episode 209, Jack and Miles are joined by Ethnically Ambiguous podcast host Shereen Younes to discuss Idris Elba possibly being the next James Bond, Kanye's appearance on Jimmy Kimmel, the dispute ...between Saudi Arabia and Canada, who Trump's coalition really is, Laura Ingraham's reckless comments on America, Kylie Jenner's birthday party, Macauley Culkin's weird comments about his girlfriend, bloidwatch, and more! FOOTNOTES:1. Idris Elba the next 007? Movie boss says ‘door open for first black James Bond’2. K. Michelle Reminisces on Best Parts of Dating Idris Elba: 'Amazing Head'3. WATCH: Kanye West on Donald Trump4. The Administration’s Infuriating Both Sides–ing of the Canada–Saudi Arabia Dispute5. Iran and Saudi Arabia: Friends and foes in the region6. How Broad, and How Happy, Is the Trump Coalition?7. Laura Ingraham: "The America we know and love doesn't exist anymore. Massive demographic changes have been foisted on the American people, and they are changes that none of us ever voted for, and most of us don't like ... this is related to both illegal and legal immigration"8. Inside Kylie Jenner’s Star-Studded 21st Birthday Bash With Kris and Caitlyn Jenner9. JRE #1153 - MACAULAY CULKIN10. WATCH: KAMAU - Hey Ya Cover / Interpretation - Live Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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There's so much beauty in Mexican culture, like mariachis, delicious cuisine, and even Lucha Libre.
Join us for the new podcast, Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12-episode podcast in both English
and Spanish about the history and cultural richness of Lucha Libre.
And I'm your host, Santos Escobar, emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you stream podcasts.
In 1982, Atari players had one game on their minds, Sword Quest.
Because the company had promised $150,000 in prizes to four finalists.
But the prizes disappeared,
leading to one of the biggest controversies in 80s pop culture.
I'm Jamie Loftus. Join me this spring for The Legend of Sword Quest.
We'll follow the quest for lost treasure across four decades.
Listen to The Legend of Sword Quest on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Carrie 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 Capital One, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you. Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare can k trust her sister or
is history repeating itself there's nothing dangerous about what you're doing they're just
dreams dream sequence is a new horror thriller from blumhouse television iheart radio and realm
listen to dream sequence on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
hello the internet and welcome to season 43 episode Episode 5 of The Daily Zeitgeist!
For Friday, August 10th, 2018.
My name's Jack O'Brien, a.k.a.
You know, most people think it's Ian, but Steve Sanders from 90210 is actually played
by O'Brien Ziering.
And I am thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray!
And yes, Miles will be present on the first day of school and graduation.
I'm sorry, Miss Jackson.
Brian, for real.
And I just flipped that on my own.
Actually, that's part Chapman Rice on that one and then part me just finishing it out.
So, you know, Chapman, hope you're doing well.
Miss the AKAs.
And shout out to Andre for that one.
And we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by a brilliant writer and filmmaker whose work you might know from such places as the MoMA.
She's also the co-host of the hilarious and super enlightening podcast, Ethnically Ambiguous.
We are thrilled to be joined by Shireen Younis.
What? Hi. Shoo, sh joined by Shireen Younes. Hi.
Shoo shoo.
Here comes the Shireen train.
Hi.
It's lovely to have you, Shireen.
We're going to get to know you a little
bit better, but first we're going to tell our
listeners what they're in store for.
We're going to talk about the
fact that Idris Elba might be the next James Bond, how people are reacting to that news.
We're going to check in with Kanye's check-in with Jimmy Kimmel on Kimmel Last Night.
We're going to talk a little bit about the Middle East and the conflict between Saudi Arabia and Canada and just kind of lay out all the different sides out there.
We're going to talk about who actually are Trump voters, guys.
Who the fuck are these people?
And how that ties into the upcoming midterms.
We are going to talk about Laura Ingraham, unfortunately.
We're going to talk about Kylie Jenner's 21st.
We're going to check in with Macaulay Culkin because he generated the most upsetting work of toxic masculinity. Unfortunately, we're gonna talk about Kylie Jenner's 21st.
We're gonna check in with Macaulay Culkin
because he generated the most upsetting work
of toxic masculinity of the day, I guess.
And we're gonna do a Bloid Watch.
But first, Shireen, we like to ask our guests,
what is something from your search history
that's revealing about who you are?
Okay, my last search is American movie real.
Is American movie real?
Now, that is the documentary American movie, which is amazing.
It's amazing.
And I thought it was a satire.
I did not realize it was a real documentary with that real man this whole time
until someone told me, and my mind was blown.
And if you guys haven't watched American movie,
go watch American movie.
And I'm sorry that I already ruined it for you and told you that it's real
because I think it's fun watching it thinking that this guy is in on it.
But now I have to rewatch it again.
Yeah.
It's absurd.
It's real, right?
It's real.
It is real.
Wait, remind me.
Is the one about the dude making a movie?
In like rural Wisconsin. And he just and he has a vision for this film.
It's a horror film, but he is just-
He's absurd.
Absurd.
One of the great characters in the history of film-
But that's the thing.
I thought he was a character.
Or non-fictional.
I thought he was a character, but really he's just a real character.
I know.
He is a real character, as old people say.
But yeah, that was my latest Google search history.
Did you just see that movie?
No, I've seen it ages ago, but I brought it up with a friend, and they mentioned that
it's a real documentary, and I was like, no, it's not.
You're like, that amazing mockumentary American movie?
I said mockumentary, and I was like, oh, I'm a dumbass. And I, yeah, it blew my mind.
It is one of the funniest movies.
I went into a hole all day.
Another amazing documentary like that is Muleskin or Blues.
That is about this Florida trailer park that has the same thing.
Like they kind of look at the different members in the trailer park.
One guy is like a filmmaker.
But then there's like a guy who's a musician who's really good.
And everyone's backstory is out there.
Out there. Yeah. And it's one of those things where when you watch it it puts you in that state you're like is
this the real life yeah is this just fantasy caught in a land thank you no escape from reality
okay we're checked in oh okay we'll stop we'll stop i liked where you were going though it
sounded like you had that next part locked and loaded.
I have it all.
I have it all locked and loaded.
Karaoke, that song for days.
What is something that's overrated?
Marriage.
Aw.
How are your parents doing?
Weddings.
I think weddings in particular are very overrated.
Oh, hell yeah.
Weddings are, I mean, I have a lot of friends that have had weddings that are married now.
I just think it's a giant waste of money, especially in America and in Western society.
Like everyone lives together anyway. Like why do we have to go get married?
Like there's no difference other than getting tax incentives or whatever.
So just go to a courthouse and get married if that's the case.
But why throw a big, stupid, expensive party and just blow all your money on something?
Let's go travel. Go do something more like that.
We'll have more
memories and just like yeah cake like fuck cake wow whoa hold on i was on board i know
but you know i feel you know like if look if you are wealthy enough that you have that kind
of disposable income to throw a wedding sure that's your prerogative to do so but i have
friends who've had more creative weddings that have been more about like, let's just have a good time.
And I've had people have more traditional ones.
And I think about my own future.
I don't know.
The price tag is always a thing that I'm like.
Yeah.
For one night, like one whole thing.
Like for what?
I think it's so I think what I think is overrated is just the build up to it as well.
Like making it your whole priority in life to get married and
have a family.
Who are you doing an impression of?
You were thinking of someone. It's clearly me.
No, no.
I got married.
That's not what I mean. It's weird too as Jack
is like, you want to see my wedding photos?
Just right before it started recording and now you say this.
Wow. Okay. No, I think it's
admirable that people have that priority.
I just think it's a little silly to build it up for a wedding or like those symbols of what marriage is portrayed as as far as commercialism goes.
Whether it's a ring, whether it's a wedding dress or a party or whatever.
Being with someone should be just less superficial than that.
But I think that's how they want to rock.
That's your prerogative to throw your money away.
Because I know people who really are...
Yeah, of course, of course, of course.
Not that you're trying to say,
you fucking disagree, fuck you.
But I think you see people who overemphasize the wedding.
It could literally be like it's an existential thing
where if this does not happen,
I will cease to be...
Like bridezillas or whatever.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But hey, I love a wedding though. Right. Yeah, like bridezillas or whatever. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But, you know, also, I also, but hey, I love a wedding, though.
Right.
It's like one of those weird things.
I'm like, I love a wedding if I'm not paying for it.
Right.
Of course.
It's like a free party, free food.
Yeah, yeah.
I think it's good for people also who, you know, don't get to cut loose and like, you know.
Cut loose, eh?
Cut loose, eh?
Is that what you say, Principal Jack?
What do you mean?
Well, like, just, I don't know.
I've definitely been to a lot of weddings
where there are like middle-aged men
who are just getting after it
and just having like the most fun
and you just know that that's not the sort of thing
they get to do.
Are you talking about chasing a woman
or just dancing?
Just dancing.
Cutting a rug, as we say.
Cutting a rug, getting drunk, you know.
Right.
There's some catharsis for some people. Yeah yeah and i feel like some people don't have you know parties on a regular basis or like
lots of fun things to do shireen sounds like we need to invite jack to a party
you know they're lonely and they just record this podcast. And it's rinse repeat.
And it's like Groundhog's Day where I'm just cutting a rug,
like a literal rug.
All right, this got dark.
No, but you know,
how would you do a wedding your way?
I just don't think I would get married.
Okay, in general,
just the idea of marriage doesn't appeal to you.
No, I think it's a little antiquated.
It's a transaction basically, like from rural times. times yeah i think it's a little antiquated a lot of it's
based in religion which i don't really i'm not a fan of so it's like why i mean i think it's very
great i'm all for gay marriage i'm glad there's like gay rights now where they're probably they're
finally equal but at the same time just the idea of marriage being this lofty goal always is so strange to me.
Well, right.
But we support gay marriage more because of the things it affords you or the status you get from certain protections by being married, right?
Because they incentivize it.
What's the best wedding you ever been to?
Oh, wow.
Okay, never mind.
Maybe you haven't been to any good weddings.
Have you been to a wedding?
I've been to weddings.
I had fun at my friend's wedding from college i well i was also taking photos at that wedding
though so i was like kind of working but um i mean i just i like dancing with my friends it's
like fun to just like let loose and cut the rug and whatever but cut a rug americans um but i don't know I think weddings are fun but also they kind of like make me like
nauseous
oh okay
so this sounds like a lot going on with these weddings
I feel like I'm
sounding so
pessimistic but there's just like
I'm all for love
and being with someone
but there's also like an underlying thing
like nothing lasts.
Wow.
Hell yeah.
Everything is temporary.
The transience of life.
What's something that's underrated besides the transience of life?
Puzzles.
Oh, shit.
Wow.
Jigsaw?
Like Sudoku puzzles?
Right.
Crossword puzzles?
Or finding a lifelong mate?
Solving that riddle, if you will.
I love puzzles.
I love Sudoku.
I love crosswords.
I love video games because they're basically just like real puzzles that you have to solve
with your strategic mind.
And then fucking escape rooms are just live action puzzles.
So you have to just navigate your way through.
It's so invigorating.
I need to do an escape room.
You've never done an escape room?
I have friends.
Let's go right now.
I have a group of friends who I used to get so high with in high school, like, where I'm like, yo, these people are, like, not going to do shit.
They're so hooked on escape rooms.
I'm not shading y'all if you're listening.
But, you know, I respect y'all.
But, like, it was so funny.
One day they're like, we've just been doing a lot of escape rooms.
And I was like, for real?
And they're like, yo, they're really dope.
And I'm like, we used to sit down all day
and just play video games.
And they're so enthusiastic.
They've been to every single one in LA.
They've exhausted every escape room possibility.
And I'm like, damn, I need to get more and more people
of that friend who's from high school.
Like, yo, escape rooms are the way.
Well, it's because it's like a boss temple
that you have to navigate through in a video game.
But you're there in person in this makeshift temple
or whatever it is.
And I love it.
It's so fun.
And I think just puzzles in general are underrated
and kind of nerdy when it comes to Sudoku or crossword
or even jigsaw puzzles.
Invigorate your mind, y'all.
Just be with yourself and learn something.
Every time I do a crossword,
I learn five new things I didn't know before.
Right, yeah.
It's great.
And yeah, with jigsaws,
I know a lot of people are shouting out
jigsaw puzzles on here.
It's when you get to the last 300 pieces,
you're like, they all look the fucking same.
You get real worried.
But there is an escape room down the street.
Let's just go right after this.
Yeah, we'll go.
I've been to two escape rooms, I think, and one was really good, and the clues actually
led one to the next.
And then I've been to one where it was just completely arbitrary.
Some guy just turned an office into an escape room.
It's kind of a hit or miss.
Yeah, it's a hit or miss.
It depends on the place.
The first escape room I ever did was in Dubai.
Oh, look at you. It's an international phenomenon. Damn. Everyone's doing it. It's kind of a hit or miss. Yeah, it's a hit or miss. It depends on the place. The first escape room I ever did was in Dubai. Oh, look at you.
It's an international phenomenon.
Damn.
You know, like everyone's doing it.
It's great.
That's a flex.
The first time I was in Dubai.
It was the most expensive.
I'm not sure if you've heard of it.
No, that's okay.
It was at an indoor ski lodge.
It sounded a little pretentious.
No, no, I'm fucking with you.
I was visiting a cousin.
I was visiting a cousin.
But yeah, I think escape rooms are fun fun and it's a great place for
friendship to either grow or
explode in your face because you probably get into
arguments with your friends about who's right but either way
it's a test. You get bummed out how dumb
your friend is. You're like oh my god this dude is
not getting it.
He's literally trying to put a
circle into a square.
Do you ever play that mobile game
The Room? No. That's a great, like, sort of,
it's not like it's an escape room, but it's one of those things
where everything sort of builds on the next thing. Really?
You have to kind of use your logic, yeah. I'll look it up.
The Room. Like the movie.
Yeah, but different. I think there's like
Same premise. Same premise.
It's about a mother and son? Is that what
that book's about? Yes. Yes. Alright.
No, I was thinking about
The Room, what's his name? Oh no, that's Room. No, I was thinking about The Room.
What's his name? Oh, no, that's Room.
What's that?
I think that's Room is the one we're talking about.
And then The Room, yes.
The Room is the best film of all time.
Tell me what's so.
That's right.
Finally, what is a myth?
Shereen, what is something people think is true that you know to be false?
Well, my first thought when I saw this was people think you need to shake Polaroid pictures
and that is a myth.
The OutKast song
has led people to believe
a lie for years and years
and I would even say decades and
it is so unfortunate because shaking the
Polaroid makes the colors run.
Does it really? It does. It ruins the
color. What you're supposed to do is
let it develop on its own.
Don't touch it.
Don't even move it.
Wow.
Yeah, set it down.
Set it and forget it.
I feel like such a fool.
But he's told all Beyonces and Lucy Lues and baby girls,
I mean, you know what to do.
Just shake it.
Shake, shake it.
It's actually a very sad song.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a sad but
catchy song, but also misleading
people for, and they're Polaroids
He did not invent that, by the way. I know
you're very young, but people have been shaking Polaroid
pictures for years.
Yeah, it's just like a weird habit.
I think because the logic, right, is that all the
developing chemicals are in the bottom
of the actual Polaroid, so
I guess they felt like shaking it would actually make it quicker.
Right.
I mean, I'm not saying they invented it.
I'm just saying they proliferated the idea,
and they sunk it to the masses.
Every time I take a Polaroid picture, I start shaking it.
I'm like, like the song?
Hey, ya.
Right, guys?
Anyone?
No?
Hey, ya.
Clap, clap, clap.
Just always looking for a wedding to break out.
You know, a dance floor.
Like, don't want to be your daddy.
Just want you in my caddy.
That is such perfect myth.
Right, because it's one of those things that it feels right.
You're like, yeah, just shake.
No, I mean, I lived in my darkroom in high school.
I was very much into photography.
And that was one of the first things we learned,
like, don't listen to the song.
And we were like, that was like a popular song
back in the day
like when I was
first day of photography class
we're not even gonna talk
about apertures
or anything like that
right now
we're gonna analyze
why the song is false
shutter speed ISOs
do not listen to
Hey Yacht by Outlast
you just changed my life
alright guys
you go to your house
all your Polaroids
are all fucked up
because you just
shook the shit out of them.
So many memories.
So many ruins.
Idris Elba, guys.
What a man.
What a man.
So the next Bond movie is coming out in November 2019.
It's still going to be Daniel Craig.
He agreed to sign on for one more but they already have
the director apparently
after he was like I'll never do one if I cut my wrist
or something yeah basically he like
got real emo and was just like
I would rather die
than do another Bond movie and then they were
like how about 25 million dollars
and he was like uh yeah
shaken not stirred
that's such a good Daniel Craig impression yes shaken not stirred right um that's such a good daniel
craig impression we're doing yes shaken not stirred thank you i will sign here um give me the money
so they've already tapped uh antoine foucault to direct and he and barbara brockley who is like
the keeper of the bond franchise uh have already said they're thinking non-white uh which most
people think will translate to Idris Elba.
Okay, now they're trying to be progressive,
but also like barf.
Yeah, but also like,
we want a colored James Bond.
Yeah.
Non-white.
Wait, I remember when they were first dabbling
with the idea of there being a not white James Bond,
that it was like Cuba Gooding Jr.
Really?
When the conversation, the first time was even, they even thought about it years ago. I remember that was like Cuba Gooden Jr. When the conversation, the first time
was even, they even thought about it years
ago. I remember that was the first time.
Must have been a pre-Snow Dogs
conversation. It was after.
I break most of my... I don't know, it was right after radio.
I break timelines into pre
and post Snow Dogs.
I use radio as that
delineation point.
But it would have just been far more constructive
just to cast someone of color
rather than announce that you wanted to do that.
Right, exactly.
They're like, okay, guys,
we're going to do something different.
Are you ready?
Who do you think it should be?
Ready to praise us for being so woke?
Hey, woke washed.
I've heard it speculated that the Oscars
put out that idea of best popular movie or best achievement in popular film as sort of like a weather balloon to just see how people reacted online.
And, you know, this could be another example of that, of just being like, hey, we're thinking about this and like seeing how people react.
And I think the reaction has generally just been like,
yeah, of course.
Maybe because for a white racist,
because James Bond is English,
they don't feel any ownership over it.
They're like, yeah, whatever.
If he was an American, it would be different.
Keep America white.
Right.
Yeah.
Keep Mission Impossible white.
You're replacing Tom Cruise with who?
But you know what's funny?
This week, though, they were talking about, do you know it's funny this week though they were
talking about a tick do you know you know kay michelle she's like the r&b singer who's on love
and hip-hop atlanta uh-huh she used to date idris elba and this story came out this week where they
dated like in 2014 and i just have to tell this anecdote so first she talked about how they met
she's like i'm walking off stage and i hear this accent say kay michelle you're beautiful i told
him to his face your jeans too tight and your accent funny.
She goes, I didn't have a filter.
I'm straight out of Memphis.
And then they're like, oh, what was the relationship like?
Like, was the sex good?
They said, she sits up and exclaims, amazing head.
It was good.
I remember that head.
Oh, my God.
K. Michelle, let him know.
He got the skills.
What an amazing couple. K. Michelle, let him know. Idris Elba, he got the skills to pay the bills. What an amazing couple.
Hey, Michelle, you're beautiful.
That's my Idris Elba.
So we're pro this, though, right?
For sure.
Yeah, I mean, I love Idris.
He's the top man.
Also, get me excited about the director, too.
Right.
I want to know who's...
Because Casino Royale was such a...
I thought that was really taking James Bond somewhere.
I'm like, oh, look, he's a broken man.
It's hard watching all those
women die constantly and acting
like you can just drown your sorrows in a martini.
You were starting to see the sort of
the humanity of it.
Yeah, exactly.
Once they wrote people back in, they sort of
lost that thread, but I would love to see that.
Casino Royale was definitely the peak of Daniel
Craig Bond. Yeah, well that was the first one wasn't it?
Was it? Yeah. I think that
was the reboot with him and then it was just sort of like
okay I'll be on board for the next ones and you're just
sort of like. Yeah.
But Casino Royale, you're right. It was
like this darker version of this
character that wasn't just like suave Pierce Brosnan
whatever. Right. It was the same thing
like when Chris Nolan started doing the Batman movies
where you're like oh shit Batman's kind of fucked up.
Yeah.
And he actually might, Fuqua might actually just be producing.
I know he was involved in this conversation.
I immediately assumed that he was the director,
because that's what he's mostly known as.
But he also is apparently a producer.
So they could go in a more interesting direction.
Although he directed Training Day.
And Training Day is a pretty good movie.
He also directed Shooter, The Magnificent Seven.
So it could go either way.
And we're going to take a quick break.
We'll be right back after that.
In 1982, Atari players had one thing on their minds.
Sword Quest.
This wasn't just a new game.
Atari promised $150,000 in prizes to four finalists.
But the prizes disappeared.
And what started as a video game promotion
became one of the most controversial moments in 80s pop culture.
I just don't believe they exist.
I mean, my reaction, shock and awe.
That sword was amazing.
It was so beautiful.
I'm Jamie Loftus.
Join me this spring for The Legend of Sword Quest,
a podcast about the fall of Atari
and the disappearing Sword Quest prizes.
We'll follow the quest for lost treasure
across four decades.
It's almost like a metaphor for the industry and Atari itself in a way.
Listen to The Legend of Sword Quest on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 iHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Some people won't give you the
real talk on drugs, but it's time we know the facts. Fentanyl is often laced into illicit drugs and used to make fake versions of prescription pills.
You can't see it, taste it, or smell it.
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Get the facts. Go to realdeal deal on fentanyl.com this
message is brought to you by the ad council 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, 24 hours. BPM 110, 120. She's terrified.
Should we wake her up? Absolutely not.
What was that? You didn't figure it out? I think I need to hear you say it. That was live audio
of a woman's nightmare. This machine is approved and everything? You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
And we're back.
And I think it was
last night on Kimmel.
Kanye.
Yep.
Kanye showed up.
Showed up.
He ghosted some other shows.
So they've had a feud
in the past.
Oh, yeah. Remember? It was like a low-key feud. Well, on Twitter they've had a feud in the past? Oh, yeah.
Remember?
It was like a low-key feud, though.
Well, on Twitter, remember?
They were going back and forth.
That's true.
That's when Virgil Abloh was helping him make memes to clap back at him, where it was like
SpongeBob SquarePants, and he's like, Jimmy Kimmel face-looking motherfucker.
It was just weird.
Right.
It was right around the Yeezus album, I remember, when they were fucking going at at it and then they squashed it or whatever so yeah when he showed up yesterday i was
like oh it was like a 22 minute interview in total and i really love jimmy kimball as an
interviewer actually like he's never run me the wrong way he's always really nice and like he
still is funny without being obnoxious right um and i really like the interview. I think I mean, Kanye is just a character, but his I don't know.
I like how Jimmy spun it all because he always was like underlying like Donald Trump sucks.
Yeah. And Kanye didn't really have anything. No. Like he didn't have a rebuttal to any of that.
Aside from like he would just say his point, like I had to build up a lot of confidence to put that MAGA hat on.
It wasn't because of that. It was just it was more of a symbolic moment for me to like take control.
Yeah.
Or just be like,
I'm going to do this thing I want.
I don't care what the repercussions are.
I want to wear the hat or whatever.
And sure.
But there was one moment that was so good where you could tell Kanye doesn't
really,
he's not in the ring with intellectual heavyweights too often trying to defend
his position.
Right.
Because Jimmy Kimmel questions him probably yeah jimmy kimmel just melted him with one question basically uh so i think we'll play a clip of kanye kind of talking about his love
for trump how fucking love can just can solve everything and then kimmy jimmy kimmy gets him
real good when i see people just even like go at the president, it's like, why not try love for one person to stand up against all odds and just hug somebody the way that Alice Johnson hugged her family when she got out of jail.
that one by one by one, we can defuse this nuclear bomb of hate that we're in as a society by thinking of everyone as our family and how we treat our kids, how we treat our aunties.
I think that's a beautiful thought, but just in literal terms,
there are families being torn apart at the border of this country.
There are literally families being torn apart as a result of what
this president is doing and i think that you know we cannot forget that whether we like his
personality or or not the his actions are really what what matter i mean you so famously and so
powerfully said george bush doesn't care about black, it makes me wonder what makes you think that Donald Trump does,
or any people at all.
Why don't we take a break?
We'll come back.
And Kanye West.
Every time Kanye gets nervous in this interview, he crosses his arms.
Yeah.
Oh, he's so transparent.
You know what I mean?
The few times where you can read someone's body language is Kanye
because he's signaling like, okay,
let me close off to what you're saying now.
And then, okay, what do you,
so what you can't see because this is an audio podcast is right after you
ask that question, Kanye is like, he takes it in.
He leans back like he's about to say something and then just kind of goes.
Right.
And then Kim will just mercifully just like okay let's take a break
because you don't need to take that much of an L on camera and then but the thing that
disappointed me a little bit is when they came back they just kind of went back to other topics
yeah and I think you need to you know hold this man's feet to the fire because he he doesn't even
really know where he lands uh Connie because he hasn't really thought about any of this shit
and also when he said
when he brings up Alice Johnson, that was the woman that
Kim Kardashian caped for and then got
the pardon, right? He was like, well, why can't
when she comes out and hugs her family, like
blah, blah, blah. That's love between a family
where there is love that exists.
People who supported her. Yeah, that is not an
adversarial relationship. So what the fuck are you
talking about? That's where you're like, oh man, you are
you just talk out loud.
You're so detached from reality.
It's absurd.
Well, you know.
But I do like Jimmy Kimmel and how he handled it, though.
He's a smart man.
Yeah, yeah.
He didn't, I mean, he didn't get real messy about it, but he just brought up a few things
like, okay, I'm gonna leave that there.
You really couldn't answer that.
So just let that marry you.
I mean, his points, his views are very obviously shown.
You know what I mean?
Like, he's not going to just, like, jack him off as he's, like, interviewing him. I like that about Jimmy Kimmel. He's not like Jimmy Fallon, just, like, are very obviously shown. You know what I mean? He's not going to just jack him off as he's interviewing him.
I like that about Jimmy Kimmel.
He's not like Jimmy Fallon, just laughing at every joke.
Who jacks everyone off.
Right.
Yeah, most people who don't live out here don't know that.
But he's constantly jacking his guests off.
Especially Trump.
It's a little known fact.
You don't see.
That's actually a green screen.
That's your name.
Right.
That is true.
Why can't we call it?
I was constantly called Jack off when I was a kid. Really?
Yeah. I had a sweat roll down his face.
Are you crying?
He's not crying, okay?
No, these are tears of laughter.
Called courage water.
Courage water coming out my face.
Courage sweating.
It means my courage is so much it's coming out my pores and my eyes.
I thought it was really smart that he pointed out.
He was like, yes, you're viewing that as a completely personality-based thing.
Right.
And that is true of narcissists.
That's true of Trump.
That's true of Kanye.
It seems that everything is just personality-based.
And I think it's also true of our media that we tend to just, you know, when we're viewing elections or these stories, we're just like, make it into world wrestling.
Even with like the Me Too stuff.
There are people who like, some people, if you're a fan, like there's that first layer of like, oh, but that person's cool.
Right.
Am I willing to like remove that from the like observing this situation?
So, yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's interesting that you started out talking about not knowing the difference
between a character and a non-fictional thing and a character and a fictional thing because
I think that that kind of breaks down for us a lot of the time, that a lot of these
celebrities are just kind of fictional characters.
Right, right.
You know Kanye is not a fictional character though, right?
You called him a character.
You know he's just a character.
Wait, he's a real person?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I'm so sorry.
Yes, that is sadly a real person.
I did like when Kimmel, when he brought him out,
he described him as a very talented musician, whatever, whatever,
and the last thing was shoe salesman when he brought him out.
Shoe salesman.
I'll sit up with him one more time.
Yeah, you sell shoes.
Alright guys, let's talk
about what we're calling
Petty Arabia.
Let's just
lay the groundwork here because I feel
like I get
the different sides of the conflict
when I listen to your podcast
Ethnically Ambiguous,
with super producer Ana Hosnier.
Yes.
But I feel like it leaves my mind
the second I start listening to it.
That's helpful.
No, no, just not leaves my mind,
but it's like I don't get it.
Right.
It gets too complex for me,
so I just want to relay it,
lay out what the sides are.
So on one side, it's Sunni countries
like Saudi Arabia Kuwait it's basically like most of the Middle Eastern countries I think people are
kind of calling it the Saudi Arabia coalition Saudi Arabia led coalition these days and America
is you know backing that coalition and the UK and Australia and Turkey and South Korea and Malaysia
and Indonesia and Brazil and Finland.
Right.
And Bosnia and Pakistan.
And Israel is kind of secretly on board too.
It all depends, yeah.
Right.
Well, wherever the U.S. is, Israel is too.
Right.
And then on the other side,
Iran is sort of the only Shiite majority country in the region.
And, you know, on their side, you have Syria's current regime, which is al-Assad and Russia.
And that's is that mainly it?
I mean, there's in terms of like the.
Who is fighting in Yemen or just in terms of who is aligned with Saudi Arabia?
Who is aligned with Saudi Arabia and against Saudi Arabia?
Yeah.
I mean, against is Russia, Iran, Syria.
Right.
And yeah, that's it.
So there's active fighting right now in Yemen and Syria and Libya.
And Yemen, in Yemen, a school bus was just bombed by this sort of Saudi-led coalition.
And there's just horrifying imagery.
And there's also been this sort of war of words going on between Saudi Arabia and Canada.
Yeah.
Well, right.
I think the crux of this is sort of like how the U.S. just is trying to play both sides in this specific instance too,
like where Canada rightfully is saying,
hey, you're arrested two female activists in Saudi Arabia
who are getting, what, like 10 years
and like a thousand lashings or something was their sentence.
And one of them is like the sister of an imprisoned blogger
whose wife is a Canadian citizen.
So they're just felt on behalf of their citizens are like hey this is fucked up yeah right and there's another prisoner
that was a ubc a university of british columbia alumni that like as a statement like she's an
activist she drove before driving was legal for women in saudi arabia she drove as an act of
resistance in the border in saudi arabia and she was arrested in 2014 um and she's
still in jail because she was arrested again for protesting um the professors of the university
are contacting the government and whatever they're they're they're speaking out over
the long-standing history of human rights abuse um in saudi arabia particularly against women and
like the prisoners that are still there and if you guys want to know more, honestly, I would recommend the most recent episode
of Ethnically Ambiguous.
Anna and I break down Saudi Arabia for the majority of the episode, and that comes out
on Monday.
So check it out.
Yeah.
With this whole situation, too, there was a very telling moment where one of the spokeswoman
for the State Department, Heather Nauert, I think is her name, they asked her, like, what's the U.S.'s position on this?
And it was so evasive of like, yeah, well, you know, we can't help them both out.
They're going to have to figure this out on their own or whatever.
When it's so clearly like, just say that you turn a blind eye to a lot of Saudi Arabia's bad behavior
because we were aligned with them for many geopolitical resource
reasons or whatever.
Yeah, for money.
Yeah.
And I think what our own people just can't admit that.
So it comes out in this weird half-assed thing of like, well, we don't want to pick something.
Right, right.
Just say, yo, look, we're in bed with them and we can't really make it hot for ourselves
because we're in bed with them.
So yeah, this whole thing of like now it's become this really big publicity war where like, I think on Saudi state TV, like they did a special on all
the human rights violations of Canada. Right. And then, uh, called back with like 15,000 students,
uh, to be like, yo, you got to leave the country and we're going to put you in some other schools
because we don't fuck with Canada anymore. And yeah, I think.
And then there was that weird tweet that was like the foreign ministry.
That was like a Canadian airplane.
It was infographic that showed an airplane like in route to smash into the Toronto Space Needle.
Right.
Oh, Jesus.
Yeah.
And like it was all black and white.
But the plane was in color.
And then it was like it was like the old Arab proverb is like those who put stick their nose in things they're like they're not a part of will see
things they do not like and everyone's like yo what yeah what are you trying to say deleted it
right because then because a lot of people were like uh hey you know like 15 of the 19 9 11
hijackers were saudis like what are y'all trying to say? Oh, no, no, no, no. That was meant to be the ambassador returning to Canada.
And that's what that was about, which maybe it was.
But like, again, it wasn't.
Yeah, right.
It was a very weird thing.
And like, and then, you know, it's just it's an odd moment, too, because Mohammed bin Salman
is sort of like, oh, they're making it hot, blah, blah, blah.
And it's like you are exacerbating this whole issue by then getting into this weird rhetorical feud with canada i mean trump has praised salman for being this
progressive like bringing a new age saudi arabia when really he's like he's even worse like like
yeah sure he lifted the ban on women driving but the women that drove and are in prison for driving
are still in prison like they're not getting released like they're gonna be in jail for a
long time because they were driving.
So he's not progressive.
He's just making it all worse.
And he's just a fake ass bitch.
Wow.
Let them know.
Give them that smoke.
And it's one of those things, too, where the U.S. is so quick to be like, you know, Iran
needs to change their foreign policy.
Yeah.
And, you know, they're doing all this.
This is that, that, that, that and that.
And at that same press conference where someone pressed him about like what's going on with saudi arabia and canada
they're like well what about saudi arabia like you're so quick to call iran i said what about
saudi arabia and the spokesperson she literally started like what what are you trying to say
like she was about to answer and realize she didn't have quite the good bullshit like i'm
sorry i think we have a bad connection yeah like. No, I'm talking to you right now.
How is this different than Saudi Arabia?
What's going on in Yemen?
They're like, and especially now, like a bunch of kids got killed.
And now what?
They're just going to be like, well, you know, send Nikki Haley out to hold up scraps of
metal that have like Iran stamped on it and be like, guys, this is really what we need
to be looking at.
So I don't know.
It's an ongoing feud where the representatives of our own government can't really be fully honest with themselves about why they can't, why they play both sides.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I just looked it up, and there's a Saudi-led military coalition that announced it's going to investigate the airstrike that took place in Yemen that killed 30 children.
I feel like they were just doing that for show because obviously they were behind it.
Yeah.
It was a Saudi-led coalition.
Yeah.
It's just-
Hey, we got to figure out what happened there.
Yemen is going through some shit and it's just really unfortunate.
And Saudi Arabia has been behind most of the deaths and it's really upsetting.
Yeah.
Well, guys, listen to Ethnically Ambiguous this Monday
and every week.
It's such a great show.
It helps make sense of this part of the world
for people like me who are dummies.
And make sense of Anna's dad, too.
Yeah, and make sense of...
Do you have a big part in this show, I heard?
Your dad?
He pulled up in this episode?
Oh, yeah.
We called Anna's mom.
We do.
Hi, it's Anna.
Hi.
I am always in the room.
Thank you for pointing that out.
So you're not an apparition, I'm saying.
No.
Yeah.
You're real.
You're not a character.
My parents are hosts of the podcast.
They're always there.
Okay.
They're always alive.
Fantastic.
And they will outlive us all.
Yeah.
But both of your parents have been featured on recent episodes. Yes. okay they're always alive fantastic and they will all love us all yeah but they have
both of your parents
have been featured
on recent episodes
yes
and have such amazing
super interesting stories
and it's
despite all the heavy shit
we're talking about
right now
it is one of the
funniest podcasts
you'll hear anywhere
you think so
oh it's so fun
Jack
yeah
I'm going to cry
yeah I'm a fan
what you think it's dull
no I just like when I hear, I just like.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Our podcast.
Tell me more.
It's a serious podcast.
It's not serious.
Have you guys just been laughing at everything?
Comedy bird?
Oh, you hear this, Jack?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This can't be real.
I mean, the parts where you go over the news stories.
Hilarious.
Yeah, yeah.
We really were a serious podcast.
We're like, what?
Have you seen our image?
We wear turtlenecks.
Why are you laughing?
Inspired by Steve Jobs.
Yeah.
But no, yeah, we called our parents in the recent episodes that happened.
Like, there was one episode we called her dad.
I called my dad in the next episode.
We called her mom.
We're probably going to call my mom next episode.
And I think those are my favorite because you get your info straight from the source.
You know what I mean?
I love talking to our parents because they're so –
they're not primed to be on a podcast.
They just say whatever is on their mind.
You're just talking to your parents.
Yeah.
It's just amazing.
They happen to be recording.
Yeah, exactly.
It's great.
It really is.
And my dad, when he answers the phone,
I was so glad he did this when we called him because I didn't tell him to.
But he holds answers and he says, shoo-shoo!
I know.
Which is why Whispers is my nickname
for my family.
And I just love that.
Now it's forever.
I want to make it a little audio byte
that I can just play whenever I want.
Ringtone.
Yeah.
Be a drop.
Just an adorable drop.
Shoo-shoo-shoo!
Yeah.
All right, guys.
The New York Times has a report out today that I think is based on a Pew.
It's not really a poll.
It's like a panel slash study that they did where they actually lined up responders to a poll with who they actually voted for.
actually voted for. So they've been able to get a really detailed picture of who Trump voters are,
how they felt during the election, and how they feel today. And one of the things that they focus on in this article is that, you know, it's not, I think when we picture a Trump voter, your mind
just goes to white male without a college degree tends to be who gets interviewed at his rallies and who, you know, is heavily featured.
And at least my mind when I think about your typical Trump voter.
But that group makes up about 33 percent of his voters.
So still like an outsized part of the voter population.
But for the past four Republican nominees,
it's all been between 30 and 35%.
So it's not like he had...
He suddenly activated a new vein of voters.
He did get more of them than past people,
but they are becoming a smaller part
of the voting block, basically.
Oh, as more people go to, like people go to college.
Yeah. And as the world becomes more diverse and more educated. And, you know, another thing that
kind of jumps out at you is just how strongly things are breaking in the direction of urban
versus rural. That people, this is something that got covered a lot in 2016. But, you know, prior to
2016, I think a lot of
people viewed it as like, there's red states, there's blue states, and then there are the
battleground states. And, you know, when you actually look at how people vote, it's really
just urban versus rural. Like the Republican Party is a rural party, and the Democratic Party is,
you know, urban. And now a lot of the focus is shifting to the suburbs, the sort of borderlands between the two. And, you know, even drawing a distinction between exurbs, which are like the suburbs that are closer to the cities, and then the more rural suburbs where Trump is still more popular. Well, that's why you see with a lot of these special elections
that were happening in these solidly,
or at one point were solidly red districts that Trump won,
I think that's where you're seeing the shift
because a lot of these suburban areas are kind of coming around
to what it actually meant to vote for Trump.
You know what I mean?
Where I think in the lead up to the election,
it was easy to try and convince yourself that he wasn't.
I mean, if you are someone who was in a little bit in denial about the racism, it was easy to be like, well, I don't know if he means it.
Intelligent people were clearly like completely turned off by his rhetoric.
But I think some people were like, that's just how he talks. It reminds me of someone I know who isn't a violent racist just says old-timey beliefs kind
of thing and now that we're seeing all the policies that they're just horrific i think a lot
of people are starting to wise up and that's why you're seeing like suddenly these places that
were not competitive suddenly are and the places that he's really being able to consistently turn
out votes are still in like more rural areas granted there are plenty of suburb like there
are urban areas that do fully buy into the Trump thing.
But like in, I think, Ohio,
this last one, the 12th district,
you see too a lot of the suburban areas
are like, hmm, okay, maybe not.
And more women too are also,
I think who really gave him,
delivered the election to him,
are starting to shift away.
47% of Trump's voters were women.
That is the most isn't that
unfortunate insane thing i've ever heard and i mean i knew that i just every time i hear it i'm
just like oh right that well i think that's why now they know that they're losing like based on
how all these elections have gone in primaries they're like oh shit like we're losing suburban
women and now deploy agent ivanka now like they're really relying on
her to start stumping in these areas you know because i think she's like a good safety blanket
for suburban people too like who had i mean if they if they voted for trump right they will use
her to convince themselves that like well it was just locker room talk boys talk like yeah like
and she won't let it get bad, even though she sat on her fucking hands
when all the family separation show was happening,
and she sat on her hands
when every other fucking thing was happening.
But somehow she can come in with her nice capped teeth,
and everyone's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I like this.
Her widened mouth somehow.
She used to have a really small mouth.
Her chin.
Her mouth is...
Well, you know, look, that's what she wants to do.
I mean, everyone gets plastic surgery as well.
Face aside, her fucking actions speak louder than her teeth.
A couple other interesting details.
He still won 44% of voters, making more than $150,000 a year.
I think, you know, people like to focus on the, you know, what they call the working class white voter.
But it's actually a lot of country club white voters.
And he won nearly 40% of college educated white voters.
And that is the part of his base
that seems to be sort of souring on him a little bit.
They were saying that the people who voted for him,
I think there were like 12%
that were college educated white women.
And they previously rated him like in the 70s,
you know, on a scale of zero to 100.
And like now are like in the 30s.
Fucking about time.
Yeah, right.
Jesus Christ.
So.
Wait, but I'm not going to believe that shit
until fucking 2021, January of 2021 happens and we see someone else up there.
I mean, it's still significant for 2020 because, you know, a lot of the battleground states are these heavily rural districts where there's, you know, his part of the votership is overrepresented, essentially, when compared to the breakdown
nationwide.
But they're also saying that for the midterms, this is why things are looking better and
better for Democrats, is because the people, it doesn't break down that way.
It's not like you have an advantage one place or another.
It's just whoever wins the most votes.
It's interesting because the big part of his campaign was immigration and like making America
great again.
And I think that's why he's buckling down so hard on this wall or just the illegal immigration
that's happening now because he wants to rile up those voters he had in the past being like,
remember me?
Like, I instilled all this fear in you about all these immigrants.
And look, it's happening now.
And so I think that's a big part of what he's trying to do, why he's not budging on this immigration thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it could be to his detriment because if the fucking government shuts down over this wall,
like that is not going to be a good thing for people who act like people.
There are people who vote for him that also rely on services from the government.
So then to shut it down, they'd be like, honestly rather have you know my medicaid or something than you having a fucking
tantrum over a wall or now that like immigrant families are like or like even illegal immigrant
families and now he's even attacking legal immigrants uh they're like being torn apart
his parents-in-law exactly yeah they just got they just got a citizenship. Woo-hoo. But, yeah, it's pretty gross.
And it's all just, like, a tactic that he's trying to do.
And I hope it blows up in his face.
Well, I think that's why the Democrats are trying to run more on a sort of, like, this is what I will try and do to improve your life.
That, like, has worked in these red areas where, like, hey, like, you guys need more broadband out here, like, in these areas.
Or, like, let's guarantee you guys need more broadband out here like in these areas or like,
well,
like let's,
let's guarantee you
some healthcare
or things like that.
Whereas these other,
the GOP candidates
are just like,
hey man,
fucking MS-13 dude,
you know,
immigrants,
ISIS,
what else,
what else can I scare you with?
Well,
I'm proud of the Democrats
right now because I mean,
so Cortez won in New York.
She's like a very like
progressive Bernie girl and then the mean so Cortez won in New York she's like a very like progressive Bernie girl
and then the first Muslim
woman ever won in Michigan
in Detroit and she's taking the seat of someone
who has been
in power as a Republican since 1965
and
he was accused of
pedophilia basically
no wait
I thought she won john connor's seat
who's not a he's not a republican but he's not yeah you're talking about rashida yeah she won
john connor john connor the pedophile is a democrat yeah why did i assume sorry that's my
own bias sorry that's yeah yeah that's me just like uh fantasizing about who the worst people
in the world are.
I thought he was sexually harassing people.
Where did the pedophilia thing come from? I heard it was sexually harassing children.
No, no, no.
He was sexually harassing his staff.
Like adults?
Yeah.
Wow.
Like young adults, I think.
Younger than him, which is everything.
They were legally adults.
I think it was it was
mostly around like uh like groping and other sex scandals i did i from what i understand i don't
think it had anything to do with underage people it was just very i'm not even gonna make my wires
are across but uh the point is i'm proud of democrats for at least like trying uh especially
like democrat women because i, ultimately the most,
I mean, the Hillary versus Trump thing,
like the most qualified woman
lost to the least qualified man.
And like they both have their negative points, sure.
But the people that said she was just as bad or something
are the people that I have a huge issue with
because it would not be this bad.
Yeah.
And I think, I mean, they have eyes.
They can tell that now, right?
By at this point
yeah but there's a lot of you know people don't want to admit mistake admit their mistakes too
which is why i'm still a little bit hesitant to really believe all of the polling because i feel
like a lot of people there are a lot of people who i feel would say like no man i'm okay with
the decision who probably don't want to admit that they're like yeah i fucked up the people
that i'm really mad at are the fucking third party voters where it mattered right those are the people that just never talked
to me again right yeah all right we're gonna take another quick break we'll be right back
in 1982 atari players had one thing on their minds. Sword Quest.
This wasn't just a new game.
Atari promised $150,000 in prizes to four finalists.
But the prizes disappeared.
And what started as a video game promotion became one of the most controversial moments in 80s pop culture.
I just don't believe they exist.
My reaction, shock and awe.
That sword was amazing. It was so beautiful. I'm don't believe they exist. My reaction, shock and awe. That sword was amazing.
It was so beautiful. I'm Jamie Loftus. Join me this spring for The Legend of Sword Quest,
a podcast about the fall of Atari and the disappearing Sword Quest prizes.
We'll follow the quest for lost treasure across four decades. It's almost like a metaphor for
the industry and Atari itself in a way. Listen to
The Legend of Sword Quest on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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.
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I've been thinking about you
i want you back in my life it's too late for that i have a proposal for you come up here and
document my project all you need to do is record everything like you always do one session 24 hours
bpm 110 120 She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller
from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And just real briefly, Laura Ingram is trending again for basically saying that America has changed and used to be great, but now because of, quote, forced demographic changes is no longer great,
or we've lost the America we once loved. It was one of those comments where you could tell what the message was by how people responded to it. David Duke immediately ran to social media
and was like, yes, finally, somebody is speaking the truth. You get it. Yeah, he said one of the most important truthful monologues in the history
of mainstream media. What?
I mean, let's just play the actual thing so you can hear for yourself what the fuck
they're doing on Fox News right now. Because in some parts of the country,
it does seem like the America that we know and love doesn't exist anymore.
It does seem like the America that we know and love doesn't exist anymore. Massive demographic changes have been foisted upon the American people.
And they're changes that none of us ever voted for and most of us don't like.
From Virginia to California, we see stark examples of how radically, in some ways, the
country has changed.
Now much of this is related to both illegal
and in some cases legal immigration
that, of course, progressives love.
Oh, we love it.
Keep California's name out your mouth.
Also, I like that she used the word foisted.
Yeah.
I mean, we certainly didn't vote for people
to seek a better life here.
Right.
What the fuck?
So between her and Tucker Carlson,
like they are just.
He's gone full blown white nationalist.
It's not even dog whistling anymore.
It's just fucking scream it from the mountain.
White people, we need to be scared.
Yeah.
We need to fucking fight back.
Well, remember when she did the whole like Nazi
Hail Hitler thing when she was making that speech?
If you scroll down on this Twitter thread, there's a
gif of her doing that. It's absurd that
that's the same person.
She's always been whitey.
Yeah, and I think even more
the call to boycott the advertisers
on her show are like,
people need to realize this is so
dangerous and careless
of Fox to be like, yeah, we're going to
broadcast this to a ton of people
where people are just I mean this is so it's so violently racist and just this whole thing of like
forced demographic change just say just come out and just say you're fucking Nazi nasty shit right
so you can be fucking canceled forever stop fucking around and then coming out the next day
and being like oh I disavow racists who
embrace my racist comments because I'm not
racist even though everything I say
is racist. What does she call it when
she's against both illegal
immigration and legal immigration?
That's just, okay, you
don't like foreign people.
Yeah, exactly. Well, she's been like, well, you know,
some of the Christians who are avoiding
persecution, they're running for their lives. I believe them. She said that. She's like, well, you know, some of the Christians who are avoiding persecution, they're running for their lives.
I believe them.
She said that.
She's like, and we should probably let some of them in.
And it's like, my man, this is not one oak nightclub.
We're like, yo, what's the ratios?
All right, we're going to list some of you in.
For the Christian, like, shut the fuck up, man.
This is all about this idea that the measure for American-ness is whiteness.
White Christians.
Yeah.
That is the measurement to determine how American something is.
When America is something much more, it's so much deeper than that.
And, you know, get all fucking, you know, it's a concept, really.
And that's why there are people from so many places, my family included, y'all families included, literally everybody's fucking family included.
At one point, they were like, you know what?
I don't rock with this place.
This place seems like a better option for me.
I think I'm going to go there because it seems like a like-minded group of people who were
like, yeah, be free here.
And immigrants are probably more patriotic than a lot of like oh my god yes nationalists or whatever the word is it's
it's they're so my my dad in particular he's so proud to be an american like sometimes i'll talk
shit about this country and he'll be like i came here and they've i've only been ever stopped for
a traffic ticket like in my country i would have been stopped i would have been thrown in jail and
i would have had to had to bribe with the cop or whatever but here i'm free right and i'm just like
there's a muslim
ban going on like after all the stuff he still looks at it as a great country and that's because
he came here for a better life and he found it right and a lot of immigrants work 10 times
harder than people that aren't immigrants for half as much for 10 times less yeah exactly and
then the next day she came Ingraham said that her topic
from last night had nothing to do with race or ethnicity.
She was about safety and borders and values.
Shut the fuck up.
Anyways, we've got a few minutes left to do a quick check in
with the Bloid Watch.
So a couple things happening in the tabloids online.
The equivalent of tabloids online.
Kylie Jenner turned 21, guys.
Kylie?
Kylie Jenner's 21st birthday.
That's the one with the makeup?
Yes.
Kendall's the model.
Kylie is the lip kit.
Kendall's the model.
Kylie's the lip care magnate.
Lip care provider.
Chapstick.
Right.
She was just on the cover of, I think, Forbes or Fortune as a, quote, self-made billionaire
because she's closing in on a cool bill.
Holy shit.
And so she had her 21st birthday.
It reminded me a lot of my 21st birthday.
Oh, really?
Very similar.
They had a mural of all of the sisters, the members of the Kardashian clan, and also their significant others, except for Tristan, Tristan Thompson.
Cheating ass.
Who cheated on Khloe and has not been-
I mean, we don't know, man.
Don't make it hot for Tris.
On closed circuit television.
Maybe they kissed a little bit.
Right.
And has not been forgiven.
But my man Ben Simmons showed up there because he is dating Kendall.
And I don't know, man.
That's not good.
That's not good for the 76ers.
It's worse than the Madden curse.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like, not everybody on the Madden cover got fucked up.
I mean, a lot did, but I feel like every person who gets in a long-term relationship with these people, it changes you.
Like James Harden, who just won the MVP of the NBA, dated Khloe for a summer and came back at the beginning of the season.
He was garbage.
for a summer and came back at the beginning of the season,
he was garbage.
Like they broke up and then he like slowly was able to like bring his career back.
But I'm just,
I'm worried,
man.
He needs to be out here,
you know,
putting his workouts up on Instagram and working on his mother.
It's gotta be very sort of like intoxicating,
you know,
like to be an athlete and not be around this like
like this the highest form of celebrity in a way right and suddenly do that and i think that's what
the the charm is of it all because it's something so different like if you're just some guy who's
a basketball player or whatever and you're not used to paparazzi being everywhere and like
everyone bending over backwards to make you happy or whatever, to do that must be
like, wow, like, yo, I like this shit.
And then you take your eye off the prize and suddenly you're like in a whole bunch of weird
tabloids because of like one thing and you're like, oh, what's happening?
Right.
Was there a Caitlyn drama too?
There was not really Caitlyn drama.
She showed up and they haven't really hung out together
in a long time, so it was just.
Really?
Yeah.
Is there like weird beef between them?
I think there's beef between her and Kris
and Robert Kardashian's children,
because she and her memoir talked shit
about like Robert Kardashian.
Whose memoir?
Caitlyn Jenner's memoir. Oh, okay. Like talked shit about like Robert Kardashian. Whose memoir?
Caitlyn Jenner's memoir. Oh okay.
Like talked shit about their
father who has passed away. Oh shit.
And so the Kardashian
girls are not super
fond of her whereas
Kylie and Kendall
I think there's been like some I don't know
they just haven't been really
fucking with each other in public lately.
But, you know, when Kendall, or when Kylie had her daughter storming.
Okay, I don't know.
This is melting my brain.
Right, I know.
Fuck them.
I don't like it.
I hate that this is news.
Anyways, this is not news.
This is not news.
This is gossip bullshit.
Oh, it's chat.
Wait, what did you guys call it?
Lloyd watch.
Lloyd watch.
Hemorrhoid watch. If you could say it with that voice for me to really understand. Yeah. This is not news. This is Lloyd Watch. What did you guys call it? Lloyd Watch. Lloyd Watch. Hemorrhoid Watch.
If you could say it with that voice,
for me to really understand.
This is not news.
Anyways.
Macaulay Culkin.
Yes.
Also, Macaulay Culkin generated the most upsetting thing
I heard today.
In an appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast,
great way to start a sentence,
Macaulay Culkin said about his girlfriend Brenda song,
this one's a good one, so I'm probably going to put some babies in her in a little bit.
I mean, we've definitely been practicing.
Said the man who's never had sex.
He added, I'm going to have some pretty babies.
She's Asian, so I'm going to have tiny little Asian babies.
It's going to be adorable.
Cool, bro.
A bunch of Sean Lennons running around the house.
That's what I'm looking for is literally what he says after.
Jesus Christ.
Get the fuck out of here.
God, that is gross.
Just the one like, this one's a good one.
You're not going through a six-pack of beer that's been in the sun,
and you open one and you're like, oh, this one went off.
This one?
Oh, a good one.
Still good.
Yeah, I'm going to put some babies in her.
Like, holy boy.
I don't know if maybe, is that how Macaulay Culkin talks, or is that what Joe Rogan does to you?
I don't know.
When you're in the room with him.
That's a good question.
Yeah, where he was like, before the pre-interview, he was like, I just respect each other's dreams and support each other.
It's really a very healthy relationship.
He's like, come on, dude.
You fucking, dude?
You gonna put some babies in there?
Yeah, maybe.
What are you, gay, dude?
No?
No?
All right, let's start rolling.
Anyway, so what's going on with Brenda?
Oh, you know, bro.
We're practicing fucking.
That's how you make babies, I heard.
Straight up.
I always find that so convincing that someone's having a lot of sex when they refer to sex
as practicing.
For making babies.
Yeah.
Kanye did it too.
He did?
In one of his old songs, he says, we were just practicing when your ass burst through
the packaging.
Wow.
I think his first child.
Sounds like Ari Melber now.
Yeah.
The way he said that.
Poets. Poets. Oh, but then another thing in actual Boy watch news so mila kunis remember we're talking tell us about the garbage that the paper tabloids are dumping into our eyeballs yeah it's kind of
connected to this what we're talking about yeah a few weeks ago so mila kunis was like yo i did
some fucking dark shit like i was i did people dirty and everyone's like oh my god what the
fuck happened?
So now I think we're finding out that what happened was when she was on that 70s show,
she was engaged to this dude, Morgan J. Freeman, who is the creator of Teen Mom or executive producer of Teen Mom.
He was 31.
And she was?
17.
They were engaged when she was 18. That was a very good year.
Yes.
It was a very good year. Yes. It was a very good year.
A very good beer.
And so then she was creeping on Morgan J. Freeman with Macaulay Culkin.
And then Macaulay Culkin.
And then there was Ashton who then she was kind of like she left Macaulay for him.
So in this whole article, they're like, this could lead to a divorce.
But all they're saying is because she was creeping on Morgan Freeman with Macaulay Culkin,
they're just being like, therefore, she will cheat on Ashton Kutcher and there will be a divorce.
But hey, you know, like they always say, you're going to lose them how you get them.
Right.
Yeah, like one's a cheater, all's a cheater, that whole thing.
That's what I said.
And so, yeah, there's that.
OK Magazine is saying,ad put a ring on
it it's official all they have is a photo of her wearing a wedding ring who's her uh jennifer
anniston i'm so sorry the brad pitt and jennifer anniston saga continues where uh if you look at
last week's i think uh in touch they said uh jen anniston and justin thoreau her her husband like
they're calling off the divorce but then in
this week's thing they're like she's got a ring on it could just be her fucking old wedding ring
i don't know right there's no date on it like they they're really careful about dating all
the other photos in this story but then this was like in july 8th 2005 right whatever it is but
anyway yeah they have not been photographed together yet.
But the cover has been, the cover is for the past,
ever since Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie broke up,
every cover has been about Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston being together.
They have not been photographed together once. It's just old pictures or they're being photoshopped together.
Yeah, and then the Globe even says, oh, they're back together again,
but they don't really say what the proof is.
They don't have photos.
They have nothing else except for quotes.
But on the Globe, the last thing I want to point out
is they say, world exclusive convict Cosby
joins prison cult desperate for protection behind bars.
Whoa.
Now, as somebody who's watched any kind of jail shows
or knows about jail culture in the African-American community, what kind of jail cult do you think this is?
Could it be the Nation of Islam?
Oh, my God.
Is that usually what it is?
Well, flip on back to that page, and lo and behold, yes, Coward Cosby sells his soul joining Nation of Islam after a promise he'll be protected in prison, Insider says.
Wait, there's puzzles in that one, too?
Give me that.
Yeah, there's puzzles in that one, too.
Who is the Honorable Elijah Muhammad?
So yeah, your typical trash roundup.
Prison cult.
Prison cult, wow.
Britney Spears was saved by young love.
She's 36.
Her boyfriend is 24.
Of Persian heritage, as they say.
Exotic.
So exotic.
It's like a plant.
heritage as they say so. Exotic.
So exotic.
It's like a plant.
Shereen, it's been wonderful having you on the Daily Zeitgeist.
I'm disappointed in my performance, honestly.
I could have done better.
Oh, stop.
Immigrant kid attitude.
You did good.
You sound like me.
It is true.
It is very immigrant kid.
Yeah, like, no, man.
I could have got 105% on that test.
Like, how?
That's a credit.
Where can people find you?
Well, if you want to follow our podcast that I have with Anna,
it's Ethnically Ambiguous on Facebook and on the HowStuffWorks network,
Ethnically Amb on Twitter, A-M-B,
and then on Instagram, it's EthnicallyAmbig, A-M-B-I-G.
And me, I'm Shireen Lenny Yunus, and I'm on
Instagram, shirehero,
S-H-E-E-R-O-H-E-R-O.
And on Twitter,
because shirehero is taken, and I'm still trying
to get that username, because I would love to have them
match one day, I'm on Twitter at
shireeny, shireen, S-H-E-R-E-N-W-H-Y.
There you go. And tell us about your short film. Yeah! Oh, yeah. Okay, S-H-E-R-E-N-W-H-Y. There you go.
And tell us about your short film.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so I did a short film almost two years ago now in 2016,
and I sat on it for a long time because I did not like it because I'm my worst critic.
We all are, though.
Creative's curse.
Yeah, and so I didn't do anything with it for a long time.
And then on a whim, I submitted it to this website called No Budge, which is curated by this indie filmmaker, Kentucker Audley, who I really respect.
And he wanted to premiere online on his website.
And so that happened.
And so I made that connection.
And then he was curating a exhibition at the MoMA in association with this organization
called The Future of Film is Female
and so I was part of a shorts block
that premiered at the MoMA in New York
part of the exhibition
and that was the first time I'd ever
screened the film, like ever, and it was
really cool. Well congrats!
Thanks! It was awesome! You showed your work at MoMA
At the MoMA! It was surreal
it was very surreal.
But I felt really lucky, and I was with really good company.
Yeah.
I mean, some people wait a lifetime for a MoMA like this.
Jeez.
And that's my time, guys.
Don't even need to tell you.
Thank you, Nick.
I'm out.
He's not the best in the business for nothing.
And I'm cringing in my own skin.
Miles.
Yeah.
Oh, wait.
You got a tweet you like?
Oh, yeah. Do you have you like? Oh, yeah.
Do you have a tweet?
Oh, yeah.
Actually, okay.
There were three
that I couldn't decide from.
I'm trying to decide right now.
But the first one,
just because we're on this puzzle theme,
Britt Bennett tweeted,
90s TV shows made me think
that obstacle course
would be a more important part
of my adult life.
And I agree with that.
I agree with that, yeah.
Do you have two others that you wanna share?
You can share as many as you want.
Am I allowed?
I'm allowed?
Okay, the next one, I think you might have liked this
or retweeted this, Miles, but Jess Dweck,
she tweeted this quote that just says,
according to his first wife, Ivana,
Donald Trump has never,
was never keen on
bequeathing his name to anybody.
It was Ivana who wanted to call
their newborn son,
Donald Jr.
You can't do that,
Trump said in Ivana's memoir,
Raising Trump.
What if he's a loser?
And there's a picture of
Donald Trump Jr.
Like,
just looking like,
What if he's a loser?
And then it's just him
looking down at his phone.
You haven't failed as a parent if your concern
is what if he's a loser?
Like, wow, look at
how you look at the world. And my final tweet that I like
is from Rhea Butcher, and it was
from last week, I don't know if it's August 2nd.
But she says, my god,
someone saying, quote, white people is
not racism, it's removing your perceived neutrality as a white person that feels bad to you.
And that's just like.
And that's the truth.
That's the truth.
Yeah.
Miles.
Yes.
Where can people find you?
You can find me at Miles Gray on Twitter and Instagram and tweet that I like.
I mean, I'm just a sucker for reductor headlines and tweets.
And a tweet that I like.
I mean, I'm just a sucker for Reductor's headlines and tweets.
This one is five pixie cuts that say, I'm fun and sexy and I still shoplift from Claire's.
Oh, that's great.
I usually shoplift from Claire's.
Magnetic earrings.
Because my mom would live to get my ear pierced.
Oh, really?
They have them over there?
Yeah. That's cute.
That's a nice part.
96, 97.
Did you quote a Jess Dweck tweet? Yeah. She's going to get a twofer. That's a nice part. 96, 97. Did you quote a Jess Dweck tweet?
Yeah.
She's going to get a twofer.
That might be a first.
Respect your Dweck.
She tweeted also, a reality TV villain and a slip and fall lawyer figured out how to record Trump without him knowing, but I'm sure he outfoxed all those former KGB guys.
Which is pretty true.
You can follow me on Twitter at Jack underscore O'Brien.
You can follow us at Daily Zeitgeist on Twitter.
We're at The Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website, dailyzeitgeist.com.
We post our footnotes there as well as in the description of this episode.
If you just click on the little I or the information wherever you listen on whatever application you use to listen to podcasts, you will find those.
That's where we link off to the information that we talked about in today's show, as well as the song that we ride out on.
Okay.
I was just thinking, because we're talking about Hey Ya.
I don't want to play Hey Ya, but I want to play a cover of it by kamau that's really good that's very different like a little rework and interpretation
of the song that uh was really interesting now they have a version on on like streaming services
that's like our studio version but i find the live version to be much better so that's gonna
be a youtube video uh but this is kamau hey y'all all right. We're going to ride out on that.
We'll be back on Monday.
Talk to you guys then.
Bye. My baby don't mess around
Because she loves me so
And this I know for sure
What does she really wanna
but can't stand to see me
walk out the door
oh
don't try to fight
the feeling cause the thought alone
is killing me right now
yeah
thank god
for mom and dad for sticking
two together cause we don't know how, how, yeah
You think you got it, oh You think you got it, oh, you think you got it
Forgot it, just don't get it when there's nothing at all
We get together, oh, we get together
But sex is always better when there's feelings involved
Yeah, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
And what they say is
Then what makes, what makes, what makes, what makes, what makes
Love itself
So why you, why you, why you, why you, why you
Oh, we so can't deny you if you know we're not happy
Y'all don't give a damn, y'all just wanna get that cable
Cable
Cable I love Taylor
I love Taylor
She lives in my lap
But who lives in my heart?
She lives in, who's in love?
Who survives, who's in love?
Who survives?
Who's in love?
Love!
Who's in love?
Who's in love?
Who's in love?
Love!
Love!
Hey boy!
We rose like a rose from the start
Under fluorescent light, love like glass in the water
And we thought it was ice, cold like earth when it froze
Unforgiven, forgiven, for it was that from the gold
We can stomp the devotions, confuse the four mistletoe
We jumped into the ocean without learning how to flow Who's in love? Love Who's in love?
Who's in love?
Love
Who's in love?
Love
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.
In 1982, Atari players had one game on their minds,
Sword Quest,
because the company had promised $150,000 in prizes
to four finalists,
but the prizes disappeared,
leading to one of the biggest controversies
in 80s pop culture.
I'm Jamie Loftus. Join me this spring for The Legend of Swordquest.
We'll follow the quest for lost treasure across four decades.
Listen to The Legend of Swordquest on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Carrie Champion, and this is season four 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 Capital One,
founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister
in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do
is record everything
like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio
of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.