The Daily Zeitgeist - Racist Receipts From ‘War On Terror,’ 9/11 Merchandising Bonanza! 9.10.21
Episode Date: September 10, 2021In episode 986, Jack and Miles are joined by Salted Logic's Hina Wilkerson to discuss Terry Albury's experience in the FBI after 9/11, Trump continuing to make stuff up, America's merchandising obsess...ion, and more!FOOTNOTES: ‘I Helped Destroy People’ Trump Appears to Be Making Stuff Up About 9/11. Again. DONALD TRUMP I'M GETTING 'OBSCENE' AMOUNT OF MONEY ... For Calling Holyfield/Belfort Fight The bid bombers of eBay 'Ghoulish Souvenirs' From 9-11 Attack Spitzer halts saleof 9/11 coins he calls fraud Return of the Fake WTC Coin 9/11 Commemorative Coin Formerly "New Low," Now $56.95 The 'disgusting' 9/11 memorial coloring book FEMA's 9/11 Coloring Book Aims to Teach Kids About Tragedy 9/11: 11 Tasteless Sales, Costumes and Events Inspired by the Terror Attacks The tacky practice of using 9/11 to market consumer goods backfires yet again Families infuriated by ‘crass commercialism’ of 9/11 Museum gift shop 9/11 Families Blast ‘Greedy,’ ‘Disrespectful’ Decision To Store Unidentified Remains Underground In Museum Families infuriated by ‘crass commercialism’ of 9/11 Museum gift shop New York's 9/11 Museum pulls controversial item from gift shop This 9/11 Cheese Plate May Be The 9/11 Museum's Most Tasteless Souvenir 20 YEARS LATER LISTEN: BADBADNOTGOOD - Beside April Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I am Lacey Lamar.
And I'm also Lacey Lamar.
Just kidding.
I'm Amber Reffin.
Okay, everybody, we have exciting news to share.
We're back with season two of the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's
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The more is punch each other.
Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money
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or wherever you get your podcasts. Just listen, okay? Or Lacey gets it. Do it.
MTV's official challenge podcast is back for another season.
That's right.
The challenge is about to embark on its monumental 40th season, y'all, and we are coming along for the ride.
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Hey, fam. I'm Simone Boyce. I'm Danielle Robay. on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. raising her younger siblings after the death of her mother, singer Jenny Rivera. I would do it over and over again. All of that has molded me to become the woman that I am today.
Like, I wouldn't change anything.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, the internet, and welcome to Season 201, Episode 4 of The Daily Zeitgeist, a
production of iHeartRadio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into American shared consciousness, and it's
Friday, September 10th, 2021, a day before the 20th anniversary of September 11th.
My name is Jack O'Brien, aka,k.a. from the back to the middle
and around again. I'm gonna
be there till the trend 100%
do
love. That is
courtesy of Radio Georgio
who pointed out that the
late Michael K. Williams choreographed
and dances in that video
with Crystal Waters. Oh, shit.
I knew he was a dancer. Yeah, I didn't know that. Wow, that's a that's Crystal Waters. Oh, shit. I knew he was a dancer.
Yeah, I didn't know that.
Wow, that's a catalog.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I'm thrilled to be joined, as always, by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray!
Oh, well, you know how I do on a Friday night.
I'm just probably driving and I'm smoking.
Means I'm faded.
Got these cravings.
But it's late and nothing's open.
Need that pork meal.
So I'm going.
Said who getting Taco Bell tonight?
Who getting Taco Bell tonight? Who'll get Taco Bell tonight?
Ain't as much as a whale tonight.
Woo!
Giving my toilet hell tonight.
Okay, it's Con Gray West, a.k.a. Miles Gray.
Thank you so much to Christy Yamaguchi-May for that part.
I had to kind of give that first verse just to kind of set up the scene but thank you at waffle house for that inspired aka yeah
we got to bring that in we got to bring in the uh background that was that was beautiful
well done who is getting taco bell can we that would have and and what one of the few times
where the aka is a drastic improvement on the the lyrical content of the actual song.
Yeah, I feel like I could sing that with a lot more passion than, I guess, One Little Children's Night.
Yeah.
One Little Children's Night.
Oh.
Ooh.
Yeah.
Because, like, his version is, I think it's, like, about how Marilyn Manson should be canceled.
Maybe. Like, his Marilyn Manson should be canceled. Maybe.
Like is Marilyn Manson like cameos on the.
Jack, come on.
Who's getting Taco Bell tonight?
Thank you.
You know.
Thank you.
That's the important.
Ask the questions that are on the zeitgeist's mind.
Yes, exactly.
Miles, we are thrilled, fortunate, blessed to be joined in our third seat by a brilliant storyteller who is the lead creative strategist for Salted Logic.
She's worked in everything from fine art to technology to academia to conservation, has worked with everyone from small business owners in Hawaii to a global PR firm in New York City.
in Hawaii to a global PR firm in New York City.
She is the co-host of the podcast, The Upvote, and created the three-part audio experience they called BeHoppa.
Please welcome the talented, the brilliant, Hina Wilkerson!
Hey, hey, hey.
Hello.
I didn't know that you were supposed to bring our favorite Drake bars from his latest album.
If I knew that, I would have been unprepared.
But I have no song, but it's wonderful to be here with you guys.
It's wonderful to have you.
Have you gotten through either of those long-winded albums?
No.
And I don't plan to.
Here's the thing.
I think like anybody that's maybe under the age of 30,
at one point in my life, I did like Drake.
He's the backdrop to my middle school angst. He gave me a channel to express all the pain I was
going through at a certain age, even though my life was so simple. But that guy in third grade,
he broke my heart and Drake just gave me the anthem for it. And so, you know, in a way he, he gives me something, but at this point it's like all
the pedophilia.
I just, you know, hot take.
Don't.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think there's a lot of, uh, not much of a hot take when there's a lot of receipts
or like you're talking to how are they like, yeah, but like, just to let them know, like
how this business is yeah well also any any woman that has been 17
has had an older guy in their life that's like you know what you're so mature like there's just
something about you and i don't know you're just not like the other girls and you're like oh my god
wait me i've always thought i was mature that's absolutely correct yes well you can date me in secret yeah and then you turn 25 and you're like oh my god
oh my god what a fucking creep yeah exactly is this still the millie bobby brown shit or are
there more receipts more shit coming out i actually i'm not um i think i think there's people that like he's dated that
are now like 19 and 20 but he's been in photos with since they were like 16 so there's questions
of like kind of a grooming and then he comes out when they're legal and he's like oh no it was chill
before now like we weren't doing anything weird it mentorship. And then all of a sudden we fell in love.
So pick your poison with those two albums.
Little Sims.
Check out Little Sims.
Little Sims album is great.
Yeah, there you go.
I heard Abba's dropping something new though.
Maybe listen to that.
Yeah, I can't wait for that.
I mean, I can, but.
Yeah, I don't think they've dated any kids so they're they're safe
right uh where are you coming to us from i am coming to you from nashville i just moved here
a couple of months ago from new york city okay and it's been good so far the south is the south
has been good to me so it's been nice okay wow a lot of people making that. You know, we've had other guests not resist the allure of Tennessee.
Yeah.
I mean, it's kind of like the less weird version of Portland.
Just as white, but a little less weird.
That's interesting.
I'm going to look at it through that lens.
What made you move?
Was there like a general like New Yorkork is over vibe i don't think
it's new york it's over it's just that like every apartment in new york is the size of a shoebox
unless you're a multi-millionaire so something about being in like a heightened version of
quarantine where we were all just kind of like test lab rats in this box and you order
your groceries so you truly never leave your house and then once it got winter you extra don't leave
your house yeah so it was just kind of like staring out of the window like dogs waiting for
their owners to come back but no one ever came for us and so the anxiety was just too much and the cost was way too much
and like who knows if something is going to happen again and we're going to be quarantined i'd rather
be in a house right yeah so it was it was just such a bummer and i moved there to get my master's
and so the whole time i was in school and i was working full time. So I never got to.
Like I never fell in love.
With the city.
I think if I got.
The chance.
To just like have one job.
And be able to like.
Go out on the weekends.
I would have a totally different picture.
But New York was just like.
A place that I lived.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well you worked your ass off.
Yeah.
I think that's for a lot of people too.
Like.
The hustle. It is. Which is a certain ass off. Yeah. I think that's for a lot of people, too. Mm-hmm.
The hustle.
It is all about the hustle. Which is a certain kind of fantasy.
Yeah.
You know?
Right.
You just never live up to it.
I lived there for, like, seven years, and then I just went back for, like, two days of vacation.
And I was with kids, so that also, like, changed the lens I was viewing it with through.
But it was totally different.
Yeah, it was kind of cool.
But that did make me realize how much I was just head down, working my ass off the whole time that I lived there.
Well, it's one of those cities that's almost not really a place that you...
It's like Vegas.
People live in Vegas, but it's like, should you?
It's like Vegas. Like people live in Vegas, but it's like, should you? It's like living at Disneyland.
It sounds like a good idea when you're 10, but it's like in practice.
You're too busy thinking about whether you could.
Yeah.
You have two options going out.
You're going to go strip club or are you going to get drunk?
Right.
And you can only do that for so many weekends in a row.
Or shoot a machine gun.
Ooh, that too.
Shoot a machine gun, race a race car you know take a very expensive shitty roller coaster ride and then that's about it drive a uh construction truck you can the you can like rent giant but you
know what the fucking parks out there because all that fucking gambling that revenue that it
generates out there i'm when
i see the public parks i'm like jesus christ what they're nice means yeah they were really
really nice that's such a specific compliment yeah i had to live there for a few months back
when i was in my political op days and i just remember like we had you know we very quickly
burned through all the same shit
like in the first week we're like well i can't go to fucking rain again uh like this is not gonna
fucking work for my body or my wallet and then so but because we're doing a lot of like organizing
and stuff in the area we would go to certain like parks and community centers and everything's like
what the fuck is this like and they said this is the bad part of town i'm like they got a fucking better park so we do in la oh yeah a lot
of people have better parks than we do i know yeah i mean we have the yeah we have terrible the worst
parks like that like to the point that i almost complimented new york city's parks when i was
talking earlier like that's that's well it's the giant wraps that really kind of add to the feeling.
It's almost like you're in an outdoor zoo.
You're like, look at that.
Is that a sheep?
Or is it like a petting kind of thing?
Yeah, but they're off-leash, so they get to just explore the space.
Yeah, it's like you're on the Sahara without having to travel.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, look, those raccoons are herding those dogs.
It's like, those are rats, not raccoons.
Ah, nature is beautiful nature is healing la just needs to turn every single golf course within
the city limits into a giant park oh yeah we'd be them that's anybody who knows how to do that
reach out to me we need to we need to seize that shit all right reach out to me please reach out
to me i got some ideas let's board these parks like fucking
pirates got some scratchers i haven't quite scratched off you might be able to fund this
thing yeah yeah uh all right you know we're gonna get to know you a little bit better in a moment
first uh we're gonna tell our listeners a few of the things we're talking about we're gonna talk
about the war on terror we're gonna take a look back at that bullshit through the eyes
of Terry Albury, who was an FBI agent who is currently in jail as the first person convicted
under the Espionage Act since 2001, because he was basically like, oh, the FBI is basically
sending people to prison and ruining people's lives for being Muslim. And this is fucked up. And he leaked it to The Intercept. And the details are wild and fucked up. So I just want to take a look at that as we're nearing the 20 year anniversary of September 11th. We're going to talk about Trump's campaign to stay front and center of our minds,
how that's going. We're going to talk about America's weird history of commercializing
9-11 memorabilia, all of that, plenty more. But first, Hina, we like to ask our guest,
what is something from your search history? Okay, there's a caveat here. So my last search is cheating dating sites. Now, I want to be clear that I was not searching these out for my own use, but I'm launching it. No, I would never. But I'm in the middle of launching a podcast and we're doing an episode about cheating and like films and TV shows that talk about cheating and I was thinking what is
that website that people can go to and it was like a big conversation maybe five years ago and there
was some leak and I couldn't figure it out it's Ashley Madison yeah I mean I was looking for
research yeah for the same thing well you're gonna be the guest on the show right things on this side terrible things i mean first of all
it's hard to it doesn't really stick in your brain because it sounds like a fucking furniture brand
yeah and then it was it didn't it turn out to be just all it was like men and bots like men
no i read a recent review of people doing like uh are you thinking about using a dating site here's your options and it reviewed ashley madison and it actually is almost all real women because it's
pretty much free to use the site if you're a woman and then the men have to pay for credits
like almost like a what's that where the guys are trying to like get a girl from
like another country and they pay credits to to male it's like that but domestic exactly it's exactly like that but domestic and all of the
people i mean based on this review who knows how how real it is but all of the people they said
were completely legitimate and people are using their real faces on this profile yeah that doesn't
make any sense like on grinder it's it's a lot sloppy. That doesn't make any sense. Like on grinder,
it's,
it's a lot of torso down.
Right.
You know what I mean? Like it makes a lot of sense.
That's really all you care about.
What's,
what's the,
what's happening?
Exactly.
Yeah.
I don't need to see your face and whether or not you like long walks in the
beach.
Right.
I just want to know,
does your willing enable?
Yes.
And local.
Are you carbon-based?
Do you want some dick?
Okay.
Is there consent?
You're a carbon-based life form and you have wheels.
Great.
Yeah.
Great.
I got a question there, Tradecraft there, on just putting their picture on it.
Because I'm sure there's also like location-based stuff, right?
They're like matching you with people.
Yeah.
I mean, it's pretty much location-based and people give their height, weight, and whatever profile name they want to use.
Right.
And then you just get it going because I guess divorce is too expensive.
But a lot of people on the site, I'm like, would your divorce be all that expensive?
Right. You know? What are you protecting right it's like the dog you know i can't i can't lose sparky yeah he's my only friend yeah yeah i was gonna say that that is like sloppy because then
like you could easily see your significant other's best friend on there.
But then that significant other has to explain why they're there.
Because you're doing a podcast episode about the website.
That's why I was there, fool.
Why are we asking these questions?
And I met up with this woman to ask her about her experience on there for the podcast.
Is it a crime to be a journalist?
Is it a crime to be inquisitive?
No.
Wow. I feel like Upton Sinclair here
just getting attacked for trying to bring things
out into the light.
I mean, if you're messy enough,
that would actually be a fun thing
for a couple to do, to just be like,
all right, look, we just want to see
who around us, what marriages
around us are in trouble.
So we are signing on that we're both doing
this for purely for research purposes right and then just like go in there and be like oh
oh you know what it is it's you make you've basically created your own diy version of
cheaters with joey greco yeah you know what i mean but yeah you just do the legwork and like
trying to find the local people
and then just setting them up
and then telling them
there's like,
hey,
just record on your iPhone.
Yeah.
I mean,
that'd be a big TikTok show.
That would.
That's the stuff
that gets viral on TikTok.
It's just like people
doing weird shit.
Exactly.
Also,
the kind of show
that gets you stabbed
probably by the fourth time
like Joey Greco.
Oh, yeah.
How about that? What is something you think is
overrated disney adults fathers giving their daughters away during the ceremony
and wine related home decor
i uh i told my boyfriend the list before we started recording he's like are you adding my
mom on this podcast?
I said,
absolutely not.
Nina,
if you're listening,
love you.
I don't mean your home decor.
Well,
she's a big wine decor fan.
Okay.
That side of it.
Right.
Yeah.
But the, the Disney adults,
there's nothing wrong with like,
I still watch Disney movies when I'm feeling nostalgic and drunk,
but it's the,
when you start feeling drunk the same time feeling right true
yeah the conditions must be met for me to regress when you're sad and depressed and you're just
feeling like the world is on your shoulders like little mermaid kind of brings you back to a
to like a happier time you know you can like go back to where you were at that at that moment in
your life but it's the problem is when you start to incorporate it like into your wedding and into your personality or like i have a lot
of friends from high school that i see going on these like yearly mecca type trips to disney
when i know that like you're trying to be you're like an aspiring youtube
like influencer and you have 10 followers and i don't know where you're getting any of this money.
Right.
I know you're going into debt to take this
little female selfie and say
hashtag magic.
You say for
wine-based decor, this can be anything
from
a wall made of corks?
Don't talk about it. Wine about it.
Like a decal that says like some people like
beer goggles i like wine glasses exactly or that like fermented grapes are a fruit that's like
getting your daily fiber intake from wine blah blah blah right right right it's usually on a
white background and it's in script that's almost illegible right and there's like little stars in the corner it's a it's a way of life i think
right right yeah it's yeah i i know that look i know it's the culture of karen's and i don't want
to shit on any culture right yeah but that is their culture and a lot of the wine puns shit
just don't stop like because we're still in peak rose pun world i feel like the other day no way
rose yeah no way rose when i was at target a while back i saw this and i'm like we're still doing
this shit we're still doing this shit really okay stop and smell the rosé it's like okay thank you thank you
i mean i don't know i guess that's their like i said that's like their weed you know like if
they're like for their religion that's their weed there's the one you know i mean yeah yeah i don't
think there's nothing bad about it you don't have a bunch of decor around your house that's like
bad about it you don't have a bunch of decor around your house that's like i'm looking at wine glasses that say hit me baby one more wine
you don't have the equivalent of that
that's pretty good yeah like i would. That's a real fucking thing. Oh, really?
I thought that was on the spot.
No, these people are criminal.
They've exhausted the fucking entire like pun vocabulary for wine.
Like I'm telling you, though, because it's the wine and pun world.
I feel like it truly goes hand in hand with people who feel like very red, like literate.
hand in hand with people who feel like very red like literate and you know well you've reached the venn diagram of disney adult and wine related decor with hakuna muscato right that's their
that's our battle cry yeah what is something you think is underrated costco kirkland signature
i think it's underrated which thing though which goes goes like Focus in is buying booze at Costco.
That's something that if you're not doing at home, do it now.
You're wasting your money. You're wasting your life away if you're not buying booze at Costco.
Having a party?
Booze at Costco.
Get the booze at Costco.
It's half the price and it's twice the size right and they
have all of their mixers like their their gallon drinks those are also cheaper and you just like
stock up go and go every quarter you don't even need to wait for a party don't be shame like go
on your own like on the first of every month stock and like, just make it a part of your, your ritual,
your routine.
Right.
Yeah.
Do they have wine?
While we're on the subject?
Do they have?
Oh,
absolutely.
They have the,
what's the giant wines?
There's the regular wine bottle,
but then there's the giant.
Magnum.
Magnum.
They have magnums for $6.
I think a Jeroboam is the biggest one.
Is it Jeroboam?
Then there's a Nebuchadnezzar.
It's like an even bigger bottle. Right. This is, I had a religionoboam is the biggest one. Is it Jeroboam? Then there's a Nebuchadnezzar. It's like an even bigger bottle.
Right.
I had a religion teacher tell us this when we were 16.
Is that true?
Yeah, it's like, the biggest wine bottle that I have.
And you're like, wait, what?
Like, you were just talking about the passion of Jesus Christ.
Well, it's hard to imagine how it can get bigger than those big ones.
Like, how do you even carry that it's like the size it's
just like a stupid i guess i don't know i i just tuned out because he would show like a man for all
seasons rather than like teaching like right that was like his whole curriculum and talking about
gigantic wine bottles so anyway shout out to you i also have kitchen shears on this list.
I think people bust out a cutting board and a knife for any old thing.
You can just cut it.
Just stand it above the pan.
Snip, snip, snip.
Sausages, carrots.
And then I also have the TV show Veronica Mars.
It's a cult classic.
I love it.
I think it's Kristen Bell's best work.
Yeah, I bought a yellow Nissan Xterra because of that show did you really no but i i thought that was a cool car then and i
and i every time i say i'm like yeah all right yeah stand by it you could you could be like hey
who's that who's that yellow xterra that completely missed me is that a it's like detective yeah it's like a it's like a
grimier nancy drew in what looks like van nuys california got it no like magical element to it
no magic element but it was only three seasons it got canceled and then the fan
base was so committed that 10 years later they completely crowdfunded a movie and then hulu
picked it up for the last season nice yeah all right well let's take a quick break and we will be right back. 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.
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. Hello, everyone. I am Lacey Lamar. And I'm Amber Ruffin, a better Lacey Lamar.
Boo. Okay, everybody, we have exciting news to share. We're back with season two of the Amber
and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network. You thought you had fun
last season? Well, you were right. And you should tune in today for new fun segments like Sister Court
and listening to Lacey's steamy DMs. We've got new and exciting guests like Michael Beach. That's
my husband. Daphne Spring, Daniel Thrasher, Peppermint, Morgan Jay, and more. You got to
watch us. No, you mean you have to listen to us.
I mean, you can still watch us, but you gotta listen.
Like, if you're watching us, you have to tell us.
Like, if you're out the window, you have to say,
hey, I'm watching you outside of the window.
Just, you know what?
Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show
on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packers star Kabir Bajabiamila
caught up in a bizarre situation.
KGB explaining what he believes led to the arrest of his friends
at a children's Christmas play.
A family man, former NFL player,
devout Christian, now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest. I am going to share
my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite. I got swept up in Kabir's
journey, but this was only the beginning in a story about faith and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron and the consequences for everyone involved. You mix homesteading with
guns and church and a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories that we liked. Voila!
You got straight away. I felt like I was living in North Korea, but worse, if that's possible.
Listen to Spiraled on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Dr. Laurie Santos, host of the Happiness Lab podcast. As the U.S. elections approach,
it can feel like we're angrier and more divided than ever.
But in a new, hopeful season of my podcast, I'll share what the science really shows,
that we're surprisingly more united than most people think.
We all know something is wrong in our culture, in our politics,
and that we need to do better and that we can do better.
With the help of Stanford psychologist Jamil Zaki.
It's really tragic. If cynicism were a pill, it'd be a poison.
We'll see that our fellow humans, even those we disagree with,
are more generous than we assume. My assumption, my feeling, my hunch is that a lot of us are
actually looking for a way to disagree and still be in relationships with each other.
All that on the Happiness Lab. Listen on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
And we're back. And so I wanted to talk about this New York Times profile of this former FBI agent, Terry Albury, who is, he's currently in jail because he dared be a whistleblower on what the FBI was doing during like the end of the Bush, actually
like throughout the Bush administration into the Obama administration. and then he was arrested during the Trump administration. But he basically revealed just wild shit about the profiling of Muslim people and entrapment,
destroying innocent people's lives simply because of the color of their skin.
And it's a wild profile because everything he, like, you're just, everything he's doing is, like, heroic, like, the way he's thinking about it.
Like, he basically spends almost a decade of his life, like, trying to, like, dismantle it from within. right before 9-11 because he wanted to like to pursue and like protect children from child
predators and like his family are like liberal people from berkeley and his uncle was a black
panther and he was like i don't know like just not your typical FBI agent because he's not white
and because he's
liberal but also
because he's not white
you look at the FBI I'm like
I'm that meme of that black woman on her knees squinting
like
I included some pictures of
his like graduating class
from the FBI and
like if the FBI had been profiling balding guys
with goatees they would have been in a better position to recognize and address that problem
because yeah he is the only person of color in his graduating class and there are at least
three balding guys with goatees there's no there's there's a there's an asian guy too
Three balding guys with goatees.
There's an Asian guy, too.
Okay. And then one woman with a tan who, you know, maybe we can put that in the column.
I don't know.
But, yeah, this story is wild.
Out of, like, 30.
The things that he says, right, are things that are not surprising or things that we have not heard of, too.
But you can tell because of just sort of the clarity
of which he's describing this,
like they're like, oh, this is like,
this is so offensive
because we've known about the pattern of like entrapment
that the FBI has been using and even used.
As they say, there's like even reporting around
how the people who were attempting to kidnap
Governor Whitmer in Michigan,
very similar playbook where it was the informants
in the meeting saying hey what if we kidnap them huh right about that and then they go along like
yeah i got them they're gonna do some wild shit so it's yeah this it's it's it's it's really i
think a really disheartening thing is like again we're seeing another example of somebody who is
trying to i guess you know not like not that he can right the ship but
at least try and course correct in the small way he felt he could and then now he's in jail right
yeah i have complicated feelings about just the concept of changing a structure from within like
i'm always a little i don't know like, like, sometimes I doubt, like, at some point, especially because he was in for so long, like, did it take that long to realize that this angle is not going to work? Like, let me transform the organization from within as the one guy trying to do it and i'm just always suspicious of like how real is that in practice like what
are you doing on a day-to-day basis to try to transform something that is so systemic
yeah like what does that even look like i think it probably looks like first trying to adhere
to the systems that are in place to raise grievances within the structurally fucked organization you're in and then when those
are rendered inert then you are like fuck how do i do so i guess i'll just laugh along like as he
says then he had to just sort of like play along with all the like islamophobic nonsense that the
other agents were talking about and like yeah and i don't and i guess maybe his rec you know his only
recourse is to just be like i guess the only thing you do is just come out very publicly and say what's happening because there's
not there's like three moves you set up and it's like gotcha fbi now we're gonna be you know
advocating for like workers rights yeah right no yeah there there is there isn't a playbook
and i think it always surprises me i mean obviously, obviously, I'm not white, but I'm always I'm working to be not desensitized to the shock.
But it's really fucking hard.
You know what I mean?
Like every day there is a new thing of like, well, did you know that we're racist?
You know, and it's like, no, I've been knowing.
So.
Right.
Well, hold on.
Hold on.
How?
This is a new story. This might be a new story, knowing. So. Right. Well, hold on, hold on. How? This is a new story.
This might be a new story, actually.
Ah.
How do I know that they're racist?
Right.
Just some basic data gathering.
But yeah, I guess the amount of things that he was experiencing and having to witness, it sort of makes like all the shit that you see, especially like the war on terror propaganda shit that you see where it's like these people who are like, man, we got to defend the country, man, from evildoers.
When really it was just a bunch of racists who said any person who came out of a mosque was a suspect.
Like, that's not.
Yeah, it's crime fighting.
Like the details of how it was conducted was straight up like they would just pick somebody first of all
they would pay somebody to inform so that person was incentivized to just come up with information
and i mean there's this quote from a former agent who's not the person in jail,
Albury. But the agent says, I'd say most of our investigations were based on very thin leads from
questionable sources. But what was the alternative? The government was convinced that there were
sleeper cells all over the country and we had to find them. So it's just create what the government
thinks is there. I mean mean it all started with that
with the search for like wmds and iraq like the like that but that turned out to be just like
kind of written into the you know cellular makeup of every aspect of the war on terror just like
make up a problem so that you had something to spend money on and like could get
your angst out and your racist anger out well and that's the fantasy of the fbi too like it's so
it's so self-indulgent you know i think that they have this image of themselves kind of like
like running through the streets and like very captain america saving the world and then they catch a baby that's
falling from the from a tower and i think like they have to work really hard to almost maintain
that image of themselves and then their solution is well then let's create problems so that we can
solve problems like let's just find shit to be doing so that we don't need to address all of
the other structural problems that
they that we've created yeah like make a other make a bad guy and then it becomes very simple
so then we don't need to be the bad guy yeah it's like almost like it's not even necessarily a policy
of it but this is just how american society is like manifested in this organization which is
like this sort of secret police force, which is,
you know, there to uphold these narratives that we need to keep saying, like, everyone's in immense
danger from the outside, from people from other countries. Also, these stereotypes that we have
in our society, those are all true, because we also look for cases where that's, you know,
we can reinforce those. And let's also, you know,
very clearly ignore all of like the discriminatory and racist behavior of the people within
the agency. Yeah. Well, have you listened to the podcast Cops?
So interesting. He also, so the guy that does it is Dan Taberski. He also has a new show that
just launched called 912
that's about the impact of 9-11 that's really interesting but cops is all about the reality tv
show cops and how that reality show spanning over decades like has had this huge hand in shaping
like a quote-unquote officer's self-perception like what he thinks it looks like to be a detective
and to be a cop and so it's these like grown man children almost replaying those like fight scenes
that they saw in cops and then like wanting to get the to get the bad guy and so they're like chasing the feeling of
i don't know like like catching people red-handed or like needing it to be movie-like
and so then they create the bad guys so they can have that moment for themselves it's really
interesting yeah we had dan on before i think the show's called running from cops oh yes and it's yeah it's really mind-blowing and i mean
but yeah it's just it's like so written into the dna that like the that tv show down to like every
aspect of what this officer saw behind the scenes of like they would abuse the no-fly list to coerce muslims into
spying on their communities basically saying like we're gonna put you on the no-fly list unless you
give us names and then like just every everybody was under constant suspicion if they were muslim
like everyone everywhere it was was basically FBI agents were
sent into these communities to instill fear, he says, and then generate this paranoia within
these people so that they know that they're under suspicion perpetually and there's no
justification for the suspicion other than the, he says, suspicion as a state of being but basically just you know that is a
pervasive and corrosive like force that's just like there always it's not something that like
you can like point to but you know you have the constant veil of suspicion and the possibility
that somebody's just gonna fucking break into your house and
make you give them names of your fucking best friends to like implicate them in a crime.
It's just like so poisonous. Oh, and the thought of even the concept of informants,
right, I think is framed as this like sneaky strategy to get the bad guy. But in reality,
like sneaky strategy to get the bad guy. But in reality, it only creates extreme mistrust,
extreme divisiveness, and a feeling of oppression within the community. And then that even furthers the decay of the community structure, which disproportionately targets Black and brown
communities. Yeah. All right. Well, we will link off to the article in the footnotes.
All right. Well, we will link off to the article in the footnotes. It is definitely a worthy read and puts into context some stories that have been underrepresented in the mainstream media over the past 20 years for certain. Let's talk about real quickly what Donald Trump and his campaign are doing to try and stay front and center without holding office and without having access to an active social media account all he can he you know he has very few tools at his disposal because
he's not like at the g7 with a mic and where he can just be like says some wild shit and then it
consumes that fucking headlines for you know weeks on end so he's got to be very efficient and like right now
his toolkit includes rallies saying vile racist shit just straight up lies or i guess doing
commentary at boxing matches on the 20th anniversary of 9-11 so we'll talk about the
last couple points you know for example his latest attempt at just creating a bunch of waves was him lamenting the removal of Robert E. Lee's statue in Virginia.
He had this whole, you know, because now all he does is put out like press releases in the form of like tweets.
But they're just so long.
People just check out after the first sentence.
One of the last ones of this sentence says, if only we had Robert E. Lee to command our troops in Afghanistan, what an embarrassment.
We are suffering because we don't have the genius of a Robert E. Lee, the guy who wanted to destroy
the union to keep slavery around. That's so, you know, that, that got, that chummed the waters a
little bit, but it didn't quite, I don't think did maybe did the numbers that he was used to,
you know,
getting for saying things like that.
Then he said something about nine 11 that I didn't realize he's been saying
like a few different lies about nine 11.
The most prominent ones were that he went down there with a crew and like
helped do shit.
That's where people are like,
I don't know.
We've,
we saw you down there.
Not many people have heard
of you bringing any kind of resources to help aside from like a camera to document you being
there and then he also said like he was giving money to charities and never did so he apparently
he's telling a new lie and i just want to play his new lie for everybody to hear because this
is just again part of his self-myth building that he does and he's normally used to.
Well, I was down there right after the event and I brought a big crew of people down and I helped.
A lot of other people helped. Those first responders are very brave. And I'm telling you,
we were hearing creaks. I've never forgotten it. There was, I think, the United States Steel
Building was called at the time, and it's 50 stories tall.
And we heard creaks.
I said, that building's going to come down.
And two big firemen grabbed me and grabbed other people, and they just moved out of that area.
Never came down, but I'd never heard a noise like that.
And it was a scary situation.
But the job they—
Okay, so he's lying like someone's elderly parent.
Or five-year-old.
Yeah, either one.
Yeah, there's an entire spectrum of liars.
But yeah, I like how he goes,
Oh, my God, and the firemen are like, get out!
And, you know, it never came down.
But I'll never forget.
That's his...
The art of the lie is to be like and you know it never did
come down to make it like sound a little bit truer that like it's not like they're exploded
in the background you can't prove it like right did y'all hear the creaks with donald trump after
9-11 they're like what are you talking about what the creeks no well and he also tries to tell lies that can
like he purposely tells lies that can be verified because as a normal human being you're like no one
would lie about something that would be so easily disproven yeah but he's not a normal human being
and this particular lie reminds me of if you've watched the documentary the woman who wasn't there it's just a documentary about a woman
who like inserted herself into 9-11 survivor support groups and people that lost families
and husbands and told this big story about how her fiance died and blah blah blah blah it's
fascinating but it's it's literally just him right you know and her whole thing fell apart when
someone just bothered to like,
look into it.
Right.
Well,
and the shame too,
it was another survivor that was like,
this is not making any sense.
Right.
Right.
Like,
but you're never like,
you would never do that.
You know,
like,
I wonder if this person is lying about losing their arm and their husband
died and then was saved by this firefighter.
You just never think to.
Yeah.
And then you look into it and then it's...
Yep.
It's just an insult to people who actually went through it,
like my friend Steve Ranazzisi, who...
Sorry.
Good guy.
Yeah, comedy fake 9-11 joke.
Wow.
For all the comedy fans out there,
Steve Rannis, he's the 9-11 scandal.
One of the guys from the, what is it, the league?
Yeah.
Claimed that he was there.
Also did the same thing.
Oh, my God.
Oh, and one last thing, though, about the boxing match.
Yesterday when we were talking about it, I said, look, they probably got a fucking payday for that.
And there's sources out there saying that they put an obscene amount of money in front of the two Trumps to get them to do color commentary at this boxing event with Evander Holyfield.
Even though a lot of people who are working on it are like, dude, I don't want anything to do with
some Trump production.
The promotion company was like, sorry, look,
maybe this will sell tickets
because, I don't know,
maybe it will.
If anyone can comment on physical prowess
and sport,
it's going to be
the boy Don.
That's how he was known young in his athletic career, the boy Don if anybody that's how he was known
young in his athletic career
the boy Don
he's like oh look at his biceps they're bigger than Christmas hams
oh you love to see it
wow I bet they're so juicy
how do you think they taste
you can take a big old bite out of that
what do you mean boxing
stop looking at everyone like food
I'm shocked that he hasn't started a podcast.
Like, that feels like the obvious, like an Alex Jones-y, just like errant stream of consciousness.
I'm just surprised that it hasn't happened.
I wonder if someone's just done the thing like, you know, like if you've ever been in a podcast session and you're monitoring your own mic, so you're hearing your own voice come through your headphones.
If they just put that on him, if that's like an Oculus headset for him.
When he's like, whoa, what's happening?
Just selfie ASMR.
Hello.
Yes.
Who's that man?
Fuck you, Hillary.
And he never presses record.
Yeah, yeah.
He's recorded 300 episodes, but none of them are available to the welcome back to episode 5022 of the sundowning with trump show i don't know where that goes but
yeah i i think it's just it because there's no audience i think that's probably why like you
can't retweet the podcast yeah exactly he needs that stimulation yeah right. Let's take another quick break and we'll be right back.
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. 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.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packers star Kabir Bajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation.
KGB explaining what he believes led to the arrest of his friends at a children's
Christmas play. A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian, now cut off from his family
and connected to a strange arrest. I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity
to now a Hebrew Israelite. I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning.
In a story about faith and football,
the search for meaning away from the gridiron
and the consequences for everyone involved.
You mix homesteading with guns and church
and a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories
that we liked.
Voila!
You got straight away.
I felt like I was living in North Korea,
but worse, if that's possible.
Listen to Spiraled on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, everyone. I am Lacey Lamar.
And I'm Amber Ruffin, a better Lacey Lamar.
Boo.
Okay, everybody, we have exciting news to share.
We're back with Season 2 of the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber Show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network. You thought you had fun last season? Well, you were
right. And you should tune in today for new fun segments like Sister Court and listening to Lacey's
steamy DMs. We've got new and exciting guests like Michael Beach. That's my husband. Daphne
Spring, Daniel Thrasher, Peppermint, Morgan Jay, and more.
You got to watch us.
No, you mean you have to listen to us.
I mean, you can still watch us, but you got to listen.
Like, if you're watching us, you have to tell us.
Like, if you're out the window, you have to say,
hey, I'm watching you outside of the window.
Just, you know what?
Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show
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I'm Dr. Laurie Santos, host of the Happiness Lab podcast.
As the U.S. elections approach,
it can feel like we're angrier and more divided than ever.
But in a new, hopeful season of my podcast, I'll share what the science really shows.
That we're surprisingly more united than most people think.
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With the help of Stanford psychologist Jamil Zaki.
It's really tragic. If cynicism were a pill, it'd be a poison.
We'll see that our fellow humans,
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My assumption, my feeling, my hunch
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All that on the Happiness Lab.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app,
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And we're back.
And we were just talking during the break about how the creek, I've never heard it sound like that.
His lies always contain big guys.
Like these generals, they're big and handsome
and they told me,
they said you're the greatest president
since Washington maybe.
And this one contained like big firefighters
coming to sweep him off his feet.
Huge.
Huge.
These firefighters were huge,
and they whisked me out of there,
took me to their place.
There's even a supercut of him
talking about big, strong guys.
Yeah.
Look at the size of that guy.
Powerful guy.
You know, I have a friend,
big guy, one of the biggest in the world.
That's some big people behind me.
Powerful guy.
Big, strong guy.
Big, strong guy. Big, strong people behind me. Big strong guy.
Big strong guy.
I mean, you know, so he's definitely like,
yeah, I'm sure.
He loves him.
Big guy.
One of the biggest in the world.
Big Gary, they call him.
The biggest.
Had biceps the size of Christmas hams.
Did he say the Christmas hams thing or no but it sounds so old folky you know
biceps they were like they were like the kinds of chains they used to put on the side of navy
battleships so strong so strong so strong anyways you think he i would look i wonder if like low
key he's paid an artist to do like a, like a romance novel cover with him being swept away by one of these, like these big guys he's always talking about, you know, like a Fabio-esque sort of just big chiseled guy.
You should have seen him.
He swept me away from the rubble.
Really, I felt so safe in his arms.
And that's how I want the country to feel with my new military plan.
Toward a Fabio maybe feel.
Just tender,. Just tender.
Yeah, tender. And you're in the arms
of a guy with biceps the size of Christmas
hams.
Just as sticky.
Just as smoky.
And you're like, how'd you get the clothes in there?
With the little pineapple circers. The hatch work
on the cut on the fat is really impressive.
Oh, boy.
Alright, well, I guess it shouldn't be surprising, given who was elected president in 2016, that America hasn't been super respectful, classy when it comes to never forgetting 9-11.
So our writer, J.M., kind of took a look back at 9-11, the national tragedy, and merchandising bonanza.
Uh-oh.
And, yeah, there's some wild shit in here.
So, there was a big run of coins that came out very early on.
There was a medallion allegedly made from recycled steel from the World Trade Center that costs a mere $30.
And this is, you know, noble.
They set aside 5,000 to 10,000 medallions for the victims' families at no charge.
So kind.
Yeah.
We turned this murder scene into a neck chain for other people
to buy but here's a free one
for you because it's such a terrible loss
so sorry in 2004
there were coins supposedly minted
from silver recovered at ground zero
which I don't know
from the pocket change of the victims
no wasn't there that like rumor
that there was this like vault or
something in the fucking basement?
Oh, there was some I just remember some weird folksy bullshit thing of like, you know, there was like a lot of precious metal in there, too.
But I don't know. I mean, it could be true, but maybe it was recovered.
But I remember that was like a big like a ground zero three kings where they're going in.
Depending on what part of the Internet you were on at the time.
Right.
So these, they actually claimed, were legally authorized silver dollars,
which they weren't.
They were actually made by a novelty company that also produced Harry Potter coins,
which also not acceptable as legal tender as far as i know and then in in 2011 the federal
government started selling their own 9-11 commemorative coin for uh 56.95 you gotta
mark it up so that you know you take advantage of the the fact that it's the real deal from the
people who brought you 9-11 is the 9-11 coin like what are you doing y'all like sorry about our foreign
policy y'all here's a coin directed by m night shamalan sponsored by m night shamalan right
for 56.99 who could say no what a specific number too why does it have to be 57 dollars like what
is you know is that the market number to make you feel like oh they were thinking
about how valuable that is probably yeah they could have just said 100 but i think it's really
probably worth close to 57 the government is honest with their pricing there was a non-coin
related merchandise the 9-11 coloring book for children, which, you know, there was for the ladies, I'm sure
that there was an image of Osama bin Laden being executed while cowering behind a woman in a Muslim
hijab, which is the text from the page. Yeah. Yeah. So this is so funny, man. Like they just
basically turn never forget and to be like, never never forget we're now painting all people from the Middle East as evildoers.
Never forget that's the script we're sticking to now.
Like, it was never about the United States because that's just this malleable concept that people bandy around so disingenuously to bolster whatever fucked up ideology they have.
It's never about the actual country.
It's just sort of saying, well, this is a thing you can't attack,
so I'll put the country in front of me,
and then that will protect whatever nonsense I'm advocating for.
Because it was like, the other thing with the merchandise is,
I remember every TV show, they were like doing stuff
and people were fucking wrapped up in the flag and shit and crying,
and they're like, I just feel so special to be part of of this country and it truly was put us in this era where you
could not criticize the united states right like people who are on the news saying like well the
reason people wanted to attack the united states is because of all the destabilizing activity that
we do in the region that creates jihadist movements and things like that and they're like
they're vanished because you know a fucking fighter jet is gonna like nut red white and blue over like a football game or
some shit well i think a huge part of that is like not that americans aren't or some americans
aren't racist already but i think to keep people obsessed with america they have to convince
everyone that the rest of the world isn't free and you're the only one that's free.
And that's why you should be so proud as opposed to like the reality, which is there's lots of places that, you know, free health care.
And like when you have a baby, you can stay home with your baby.
Oh, no.
What's that place?
Sounds scary.
Yeah.
Do they have challenge coins to commemorate their tragedy?
They don't have merch, though.
That's, I mean.
That's where they lose me.
You know, it was also like one of the most lucrative kind of storylines that America has ever.
Because like after the Cold War, the military industrial complex didn't really know
what to do with themselves and then this gave them a new purpose so they successfully cashed in
but it was generally like seen as not a great look when like walmart recreated the towers out
of cases of soda yeah which is there i think a lot of people have seen that picture,
but you got the red, white, and blue
with the Pepsi, Diet Coke, and Coke cans,
and then the towers are made of Coke Zero.
And the thing is, the people were mad
that they were mixing Pepsi and Coke products.
Well, they should have done all Pepsi
because Pepsi solves all of the world's injustices.
Right.
Yes.
We've long said that.
Yeah.
Can you imagine if they had that same ad agency around 9-11?
If they were like with the Kendall Jenner ad?
If they tried to do something?
It's like, Muhammad Atta here.
I think you just want this Pepsi, sir.
Yeah.
Yikes.
She's a flight attendant.
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, my God. Yeah. just want this pepsi sir yeah yeah she's a flight attendant yeah yeah oh my god yeah it would have
been united 93 or whatever the fuck and it would have been a pepsi at this that's what's just again
just so weird about everything is that there's not there's nothing there's no sanctity to anything
every because and i think that's really what all this reveals is there's nothing sacred in this country. Absolutely fucking nothing.
Not even human life.
Because it'll just be a fucking merch display or a commemorative blanket or a coin.
Because someone else doesn't give a fuck.
They just know that they can use these events to make more money or more fear.
Yeah.
So, wow.
Never forget, nothing is sacred here
the 9-11 museum is still open the gift shop is still like putting out products like a cheese
cutting board a 9-11 commemorative cheese tray where it's a in the shape of the united states
and their little hearts where the hijacked airplanes went down.
So, you know.
There's something like meta about taking a knife to a board that commemorates the.
Right.
Something about that.
This is, I'm not sure who made it, but it was an official selection.
made it but it was an official selection that like the person who runs the museum's gift shop which again the 9-11 museum maybe maybe shouldn't have a gift shop but the person who runs it was
like we're nothing sacred we're uh carefully selecting products to make sure they're tasteful
and yeah and apparently this fell under that category and it's also just kind of extra
fucked up because the 9-11 museum also has unidentified remains on the premises
of so like many relatives of victims have actively protested just the idea of having
fucking people selling mugs and t-shirts and scarves well have they tried the cutting boards yet
right because maybe that's some of they are pretty they do look pretty nice yeah yeah what do you
what kind of fucking again look there's so many things wrong with this cutting tray cheese board
fucking sharku terrorism board that they've got but like the only thing that this has it's a ceramic outline of the united
states with just three fucking stars painted on like parts of the northeast yep that's really
so they've i'm sure they reappropriated some ceramic mold and said all right put stars there
it's 9-11 my next thing is if you are putting this platter together are you like really treating that
section of the cheese board as sacred you're
not just gonna lay a shitload of crackers and shit on top of it right and like honeycomb and
further disrespect the i just don't everything about it like i don't even know how you present
it in a way that someone goes oh my god is this a 9-11 commemorative that's so thoughtful of you like this is you're such an ace with the decor
you know i love it thank you so much and like yeah and and these wine 11 glasses that you made
i love it i love it i mean those have to exist right is there wine 11 there has to be wine 11
at this point i mean haven't we reached wine
11 can't help but forget or something like that where it's like oh my god wine 11 never forget
your corkscrew there you go the gift shop is still going today selling everything from toy cars
for 65 that look like just 20 toy cars but they have Never Forget written on the hood.
And then there's also a bunch of t-shirts,
20 years later, limited edition collection of just garbage.
I just looked on Etsy and there's some 9-11,
like 20 years later, Never Forget face masks.
And I just don't think that the audience that wears
Never Forget memorabilia and
wears a mask ever overlap right yeah it's kind of a wasteful product really that's an interesting
person though i'd like where's that new york times profile right they're multifaceted for sure
yeah but yeah it's just i don't know yeah it's a bad i don't know it's been so it's been 20 years i mean jesus
like it's been so long and you think of how things have changed so drastically just in the last few
years but how we're still like really having a problem having a real again because america hates
a reckoning having a reckoning with this supposed war on terror and the amount of money that was just hissed away while everything just went by the wayside here in the country.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just I don't know.
I'm just thinking back of like how that fucking I remember the city in L.A.
People were so hopped up on that patriotism shit.
It was fucking wild.
Like every street turned into
some like fucking jingoist it's just like everything was a parade suddenly right except
for specific parts of the city but yeah like i just felt like everything else was just uh
just this like weird fever dream that people went through those first couple years and like
completely ignored what was actually at stake yeah hey but that's huh it's
like the government knows what they're doing when it comes to shit like that well hina it has been
such a pleasure having you on the daily zeitgeist where can people having me find you and follow you
and hear you and all that yes you can follow me personally at hina Rising on all socials, and you can check out some of the stuff that Salted Logic is doing at saltedlogic.com.
Yeah, yeah. And is there a tweet or some of the work of social media you've been enjoying?
Yeah, this is my favorite tweet of this week, and it is, serial killers in the 70s had no idea that they were going around creating content.
serial killers in the 70s had no idea that they were going around creating content that's good you you wrote your thesis about like true crime yeah my my thesis was about how
podcasting is like transforming true crime to like have an impact on the justice system because the people that basically like we write stories
about like really pretty white well-off women and then that stops the public from being able
to recognize someone that isn't that archetype as a victim and then it stops their cases from
being solved because we have no the diversity of what we see as a victim
is so small that like it impacts our empathy right and then podcasting has been yeah the
yeah the women in podcasting that like you know women experience most women have experienced some
kind of sexual harassment in their life and they just have more empathy with victims. So instead of talking about, like, Ted Bundy and how he's so hot,
which is kind of what true crime was for a while,
they're talking about the victims and their pain,
and it's transforming the way that we see crime
because it's being told in this, like, empathetic,
kind of female-driven way.
Yeah. Really cool.
Miles, where can people find you,
and what's a tweet you've been enjoying
oh boy twitter instagram at miles of gray also the other show if you like 90 day fiance check
out 420 day fiance with sophia alexandra and i where we do not just can look through the matrix
of that show and some tweets that i like okay so the first the first one is from Tani Newsome at Trondi Newman.
She tweeted, last night my friend was trying to list all the fixings on a Chicago dog.
And when she couldn't remember anymore, she lifted up her jean short leg.
And on her thigh was a huge Chicago dog tattoo.
And she looked at it and goes, oh, yeah, pickle spears.
This city takes my breath away.
Wow.
Another one from Trash Jones
at Jay Zucks tweeting
when God closes
a door, he opens a window.
Unfortunately, we are on a plane.
That's pretty good.
Tweet I've been enjoying
Roy Wood Jr. tweeted
iPhone cameras are too good for them to still
be charging us for school day pictures i respect the hustle though that is still still happening
and we're still paying for it i'm not proud of it but and the pictures are so bad the pictures are
because yeah anyways i think my dad tried to take he tried to show up and take a picture of me
Just trying to save money once
There you go
They were like what are you doing here
You can't show up unannounced with a camera
To a school full of small children
You can find me on twitter
At Jack underscore O'Brien
You can find us on twitter at Daily Zeitgeist
We're at The Daily Zeitgeist
On Instagram we have a Facebook fan page And a website, dailyzeitgeist.com,
where we post our episodes and our footnotes.
Footnotes.
Where we link off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as a song that we think you'll enjoy.
Miles, what song are we suggesting people check out?
This is, it's not going to be kanye west going to taco bell tonight remix
this is going to be from bad bad not good they have a new track out with kareem riggins one of
my favorite drummers and one of my favorite musicians like just a regular collaborator
with jay dilla and this track is called beside april and And, you know, Bad, Bad, Not Good, they're all musicians.
So this is just a band playing their thing.
But the track is just very smooth sounding.
And it feels like a psychedelic, like Italian spy movie, like score, something like that.
But it's funk too.
So, yeah, that's what I'm telling you.
I'm trying to give people a mood so they understand what the track will evoke.
Maybe, yeah, draw you into listening to it. give people a mood so they understand what the track will evoke. Yeah.
Draw you into listening to it.
So this is Beside April with Bad, Bad, Not Good featuring Kareem Riggins.
Damn.
All right.
I am intrigued.
I am going to go check that shit out. Well, The Daily Zeitgeist is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever
you listen to your favorite shows.
That is going to do it for us this morning, but we're back this afternoon to tell you what's trending, and we will talk to y'all then.
Bye.
Bye.
Hi, I am Lacey Lamar.
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