The Daily Zeitgeist - Weekly Zeitgeist 134 (Best of 7/13/20-7/17/20)
Episode Date: July 19, 2020The weekly round up of the best moments from DZ's Season 142 (7/13/20-7/17/20.) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informa...tion.
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Do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from?
Like what's the history behind bacon-wrapped hot dogs?
Hi, I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejon.
Our podcast, Hungry for History, is back.
And this season, we're taking an even bigger bite
out of the most delicious food and its history.
Seeing that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba,
and the piña colada from Puerto Rico.
Listen to Hungry for History on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
There's so much beauty in Mexican culture, like mariachis, delicious cuisine, and even lucha libre.
Join us for the new podcast, Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12-episode podcast in both English and Spanish about the history and cultural richness of Lucha Libre.
And I'm your host, Santos Escobar, Emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Santos!
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask on the iHeartRadio app,
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Captain's Log, Stardate 2024.
We're floating somewhere in the cosmos, but we've lost our map.
Yeah, because you refuse to ask for directions.
It's space gem.
There are no roads.
Good point.
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Join us on In Our Own World as we uncover hidden truths, navigate the depths of culture,
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Buckle up and listen to In Our Own World
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Trust us, it's out of this world.
What happens when a professional football player's career ends
and the applause fades and the screaming fans move on?
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
For some former NFL players, a new faith provides answers.
You mix homesteading with guns and church.
Voila! You got straight away.
They try to save everybody.
Listen to Spiraled on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, the internet, and welcome to this episode of the Weekly Zeitgeist.
These are some of our favorite segments from this week, all edited together into one nonstop
infotainment laughstravaganza.
So without further ado,
here is the weekly zeitgeist.
Speaking of the devil himself,
we are thrilled to have in our third seat the hilarious comedian,
Mr. Blake Wexler!
Take a deep breath.
This is Blake Wexler,
aka the Great British Blaking Show,
aka Paul West Hollywood,
aka the Mars Caponi homie,
aka Star Blaker,
aka Peachy Bonds,
aka the Cardamon Man,
aka the Bread Week Geek,
aka I'm Mary Berry Grateful to be here today, guys.
Thank you for having me.
Wow.
Anytime. Anytime. I got like a me. Wow. Oh, anytime.
Anytime.
I got like a couple of those.
We have missed you.
You're on the East Coast.
I am.
Where I belong.
What amounts to my hometown, Ocean City, New Jersey.
Shout out to Ocean City.
Shout out to Ocean City.
People are really wheeling and dealing in a free way out here.
But I'm locked down.
I'm wearing my mask.
So I'm trying to set an example.
You know what I mean?
You said mask adoption is not 100%?
Yeah, no, it is.
No one's wearing a mask here.
I would say 3% of people.
I saw someone lick a skee-ball.
3%?
The other day.
So you're not setting an example.
You saw someone lick a skee-ball.
If anything, you're like the example parents are going to point at to not be like that counterculture person they're like you see one of
them yeah one of those sciencers right it is it is weird where it almost seems like you're making
some sort of ridiculous statement but i know i'm you know what i mean like but i'm right
right in this case for once
this is the right statement to make so yeah yeah it's odd it's like people just like being like at
the hottest beach with direct sunlight and it was like no i don't wear sunscreen you're like i'm
just gonna do this and it's not a statement it's just quite literally the bare minimum
to keep myself safe and somehow if that's a statement right but or if you could catch uh their sunburn
like it was an aerosol in the air you know it would be the same thing right the um i think
new jersey is actually like looking good sitting pretty in terms of uh their overall numbers so
uh we'll look oh i won't wear that to change in the next couple weeks.
What the hell am I doing this thing on?
I feel like an idiot.
What is something from your search history
that is revealing about who you are?
So I had to go back a little bit
to figure this out
because I'm Googling just random things
all day for work.
And one that I came up with was Garth Brooks' Breakfast Bowl.
Because I saw a tweet that mentioned the idea of,
so basically it was a tweet about,
who would you be quarantining with?
And this person said, oh man,
I'll be eating Garth Brooks' Breakfast Bowl every day.
It's like, what is that?
What kind of sexual maneuver is that?
Unfortunately, it is not at all a sexual maneuver it is though a breakfast that garth has contrived
and is in tricia yearwood's uh cookbook whereby you take scrambled eggs and sausage and bacon
and tortellini and put it all in a bowl. What? That's just...
Yep, cheese tortellini.
That is a random word generator.
You put it in a bowl sometimes, apparently.
He will cook up fries or some sort of fried potato
to go with it, too.
And that is the Garth Brooks breakfast bowl.
And it's so American that it hurts.
Yeah.
In the soul and the arteries.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Tortellini.
What a violent mashup of food, too.
Just like,
I was like,
uh-huh, uh-huh,
and tortellini.
Apparently,
he puts tortellini
in like so many different things
and Tricia Yearwood
has apparently given up
on telling him,
no, you can't do that.
Right.
He'll just be like,
oh, you're making a breakfast quiche?
Throw some tortellini in there.
She's like, no,
you're wilding out Garth Brooks
and she does it
and it's delicious, apparently.
Do you take your coffee black? Yeah, black with some tortellini in there. She's like, no, you're wilding out Garth Brooks and she does it and it's delicious, apparently. Do you take your coffee
black? Yeah, black with some
tortellini in there, please. Just squeeze
the pasta, get the cheese in there, stir it in
and then let the pasta float on top.
You guys are going to say domo arigato
when you have some of Garth's famous
tortaschimi.
Okay, it's sashimi
with a round tortellini.
You just slice it so thin.
So thin you don't even know.
You don't even know.
You don't even know.
Oh, man.
Garth Brooks, one of my favorite.
There's some famous people who are just basically a walking,
talking, psychological experiment of like just you know they've grown up in such strange
circumstance there existed in such strange circumstances because of how famous they are
they're just any video any interview with him any video he posts of himself he's he's just like on
a different planet yeah in a very entertaining way hey yeah he's like oh he's just like on a different planet um yeah in a very entertaining way
hey man yeah he's like he's just like gaslit by his own success in a way it's like hey man i don't
even know where i am but hey put some trouble on there so as a black kid i didn't really grow up
with garth books i the first memory i have of his existence was him on the old 90s show
muppets tonight the very short-lived show where he was the guest.
The conceit was he was supposed to do a country song for them, and he just never really did.
And at one point, he finally agrees to,
and he goes out and he performs
If I Were a Rich Man from Fiddler on the Roof.
You said he was going to do a country song!
Yeah, he didn't say which country.
Ah, there you go, Garth.
I wonder if that was around the chris gaines time when he was just upsetting all audience uh expectations this would have been
around like 97 98 so i don't remember when the chris gaines thing was but i think it was a little
bit before a little bit after that yeah i think that was my first memory of like realizing he was a big deal because the
chris gaines thing was like i was like oh you can do that okay that's that's fun i mean i knew his
name but i mean not really yeah but at the same time i'm like hey okay yeah all right man cool
hey man you guys are like uh some fiddler on the roof i'm gonna be tevye uh pretty cool um tevye west but god just the
like that that is he was already on some next level uh thinking like galaxy brain fame uh when
he's like all right i'm at the peak of my it's like michael jordan level where he's just like
i'm at the peak of my powers as a country artist i will change my name change my appearance and uh do a appearance thing was a really wild part
because changing your name that's just part of being famous people do it beyonce was briefly
sasha fierce and that's an alter ego you have it's fine but right changing the look was the weird
part the type the genre The genre. And insisting
on introducing Chris Gaines
as the musical guest on the episode of
SNL that he hosted.
That's just me playing peek-a-boo
with reality, man.
I moved to
Kentucky in the 90s
and he was like...
I was fully unprepared
for the fact that Garth brooks was basically like
michael jackson at that point like it was like thriller thriller era michael jackson for uh
people who had trucks and cowboy hats and finally what is a myth what is something
you know it can be false that people think is true or vice versa i would say a myth is that
mouse traps work because mouse traps do not work i have like a gazillion of them around my apartment
and um yeah that mouse was not getting caught in any of them but you asked us to call you the human
mouse trap uh when we started this call right You just grab them with your bare hands and
snatch them up.
Just Ozzy Osbourne
but the mouse version.
I've been dealing with mice for
you know, I've had mice in my
apartment once like four
years ago, but ever since the pandemic started, there's
so many, there's the
infestation of pests is just through the roof. I heard, you know, ever since the pandemic started there's so many there's the infestation of pests
is just through the roof i heard you know because of the pandemic mice don't have food to eat so
they're just kind of right going to all these apartments that was the yeah like the big story
in new york those first two weeks were like the literal rat wars that were happening in manhattan
because like it once the food dries up they go in search of other food and then they turn
they turn up on some other rat turf and this rat war yeah yeah uh apparently koreatown is like new
york right which yeah it is kind of like new york it's probably the closest thing we have
oh just sort of like with like more high-rise like apartments and like sort of like architecture yeah yeah yeah i i'm having some
battles with uh with the flies the flies are coming in i got one of those uh electrified uh
fly swatters oh you just busted it out yeah
it's the tennis racket the executioner wow i didn't and it comes with a hood that you just put over your head
okay serena trilliums over here ready to fuck these flies up yeah i like the the salt shotgun
that one is more that one's fun yeah yeah because that just like basically like you
cock it once and it just i mean it's probably
the least humane because it's just like destroying their wings like with the buckshot of like the
grains of salt but this is the this is the world we're in right now so i have not seen this i'm
googling it right now yeah like look for it's like i don't know fly salt shotgun
that's uh that's one that i've never successfully uh gotta fly with the bug
assault as it's called yeah the bug it's probably made by some fucking former blackwater child
murderer so i should probably not even talk about it like i can't imagine the backstory to a thing
where a guy's like what if you applied the principles of buckshot in a shotgun that you could
just you know use at home and kill a fly with man because that shit is cool on a uh on an insect
do you have one of these do you have the holster no i i had it um like at an old office and at
another uh like at another apartment i had like someone had it and i would use it but i now at
the moment uh i am bug assaultless i just i use i try and use um either my bare hands or a towel
oh of course the bare hand one is like like jack said uh that old clyde frazier anecdote man was
so cool caught a fly with his bare hands and then let it go and i always try
and impress my uh yeah my partner her majesty with it and she just thinks it's so stupid i'm like i
caught it with my hand did you see did you see and she's like you do catch it with your hands oh yeah
i can catch a fly with my hands with one hand yes yes i can catch you are cool but but here's the
thing shit watch me spend fucking 45 minutes
listening to Bodega Boys in my headphones
running around my house like an idiot.
So it's not like I just come in and snatch this shit out.
She's like, yeah, fool, you wasted half a day.
And also, go outside and release your hand.
I bet you didn't get that shit.
Cut to me opening my hands.
I didn't get that shit.
My friend's wife made fun of him for doing the thing
where yeah he would like grab it and then like release his hand very slowly and like there
wouldn't be anything there oh i've done that so many times uh yeah walt frazier uh from the 1970s Knicks, one of the more underrated NBA players
and the most underrated announcer
because he's just absurd.
Right.
But he would just walk into a room
and slowly reach out and grab a fly,
shake it in his hand, release it.
And he was like, and kids thought that was cool i was like
i think that shit's cool as hell man like he that was in one of his books of like how to be cool
it's like man not everybody can do that you know and also nobody has a fucking like hand span of
like 14 inches probably like he did. Don't discount the size of an
any man over 6 foot
3 or 4's hand size.
It gets out of control.
Yeah. That was one thing that
I feel like was
I hadn't fully appreciated about Jordan
until the last dance was just
hand size.
His hand just reached all the way
around that ball.
Also, flies in the 70s, notoriously slow.
Yeah.
We wouldn't know, actually.
That's one of those things that we would have no idea
if flies were speeding up.
It turns out that the guy who created the bug assault
is from Southern California,
is a surfer and yoga enthusiast.
What?
Oh, hell yeah.
And he's just like an inventor, basically.
But I don't know.
I don't need to do much of a deep dive into this kind of thing.
I feel like all roads lead to darkness.
Tune in tomorrow when that guy's our guest.
I feel like you really need to invest in one of these racket smiles.
I know.
I feel like every time there's one of those
rounds people end up hitting each other with them
oh I've never done that
oh that's where
shit goes left with those electric rackets
you start smacking people with them
I've managed not to hit anybody
with mine
oh no I mean intentionally like it turns into a drunken game
of I'm gonna wave the electrified
tennis racket at
you right does it hurt yeah i i'd imagine it does it uh spark is so satisfying though
so when you hit the fly with the electric tennis racket it like you hear a loud pop which is like
what killing flies should always feel like there There should always be a loud pop, like you're popping a balloon.
And then you get, sometimes it'll stay on the racket.
Yeah.
And you just get it sparking.
So fulfilling.
Yeah.
So good.
Because, so I'm not doing it needlessly to torture the fly.
It's actually, sometimes you'll hit the fly with the shock.
It'll hit the ground.
And if you don't go and get the tissue
right away to come pick it up it'll get back up it just like stuns it for a second all right
but if it gets stuck in there it starts smoking and then you get your little
glass tube out you start freebasing that smoke
fly smoke
um sorry that's so gross but uh just hearing the two of y'all be like yeah and then that
shit gets smoking i'm like okay i thought i was bad when i was like i'm shooting the
shit out of their wings and they're fucked up everyone has a weird way of dealing with insects, you know.
What is something you think is overrated?
Well, funny you mentioned the rich people begging to pay more taxes at the beginning of the show.
I've been thinking a lot about, you know, rich people doing good things as being overrated.
I mean, there's been all these conspiracies about Bill
Gates, which obviously I don't buy. And I celebrate what the Gates Foundation does,
and I'm impressed by his work. But the real conspiracy is that you have someone who has
tens of billions of dollars in the first place, and can run some kind of shadow mixture of the
World Health Organization and the State Department. It's like, I'm glad he's doing it because in the abdication of everybody else doing this, it's good that it's
happening. But like, how can it not be? How can it be that, you know, the United States, this
incredibly rich and powerful country has basically let an oligarchy, as you mentioned, take control
of the functions of the state? I mean, it's no surprise that people are so angry.
state i mean it's no it's no surprise that that people are so angry yeah i mean he has lobbied his company has lobbied all like people who are billionaires have chosen to be billionaires um and
they are choosing that and the solutions of them you know being basically oligarchs who solve other people's problems over you know having a healthy social
safety net uh in in its place um one way or another you know um obviously bill gates can't
snap his fingers and suddenly we have a great social safety net but uh along the way he's made
lots of decisions that you know are are are counter to a strong social safety net.
I also think it's unreasonable to expect people to act strongly against their own interests.
I mean, that's why we have a state in the first place.
It's supposed to balance the wealth of society in a fair way.
the wealth of society in a fair way.
And so the idea that it's a solution to have people who are grossly enriched themselves
volunteer to de-enrich themselves,
I mean, it seems to be a little bit pie in the sky.
I wonder if those are like the wealthy people there.
They seem to be all the wealthy people
who didn't manage to get their hands into politics
or like get them there.
I mean, i could have
done it like the other wealthy people which is to just you know blow out the house and senate
with their money and and get their jollies off like that fuck the cocks all right guys we're
gonna take a quick break and we'll be right back this summer the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson. I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current.
Available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Substance use disorder and addiction is so isolating. And so as a Black
woman in recovery, hope must be loud. It grows louder when you ask for help and you're vulnerable.
It is the thread that lets you know that no matter what happens, you will be okay. When we learn the
power of hope, recovery is possible.
Find out how at StartWithHope.com
Brought to you by the National Council for
Mental Wellbeing, Shatterproof, and 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 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.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit,
where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their racist mascot, the Rebels,
into something everyone in the South loves, the Biscuits.
I was a lady rebel. Like, what does that even mean?
The Boone County Rebels will stay the Boone County Rebels with the image of the Biscuits.
It's right here in black and white in print. A lion.
An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the mascot switch
is a leader. You choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team?
I'd just take all the other stuff out of it.
Segregation academies, when civil rights said that we need to integrate public schools,
these charter schools were exempt from that.
Bigger than a flag or mascot.
You have to be ready for serious backlash.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And then finally, Ivanka is out here with,
I mean, at least somebody in this family is bringing out some new ideas.
Where's the fresh thinking?
So basically her response is, I think there's this thought among conservatives and white liberals also that part of the problem is that unemployment benefits are too good and so nobody wants to go out and get
a new job they so now that uh the coronavirus wrecked the economy nobody wants to go out and
get a new job because the unemployment benefits are too good so like now you know people are just going to sit at home. And so Ivanka stepped in, a hero, and said, guys, try something new.
If you lost your job, just try something new.
Try a different career.
On Bastille Day, on the day that-
She said, let them eat cake.
Yes.
Cake that looks like a chicken cutlet.
Yes.
Oh, boy. I mean- This eat cake. Yes. Cake that looks like a chicken cutlet. Yes.
Oh, boy.
I mean.
Cool.
Yeah.
Cool, cool, cool. Very.
That out of touch.
But this is the culture.
This is the culture of people in power in this country.
I've not heard a single word from most of these people.
a single word uh from most of these people i would say 99 of people on the right uh that actually have any kind of like consideration for like the humanity of it all she's got a job
because her dad is president like she literally has a job because her dad yeah well it's not like
she went to wharton she's like she went to wharton because her dad went there so right yeah try a new
angle yeah well i mean but yeah my dad did go here but
right that's not why i went yeah also independently believed it was a school that my i could get into
without doing anything so exactly um oh dude this is what are they gonna do like what the clock is
ticking like the only way i feel like they even know this from a strategic standpoint, is making shit darker isn't going to bring more people out.
Or maybe in the way that they think.
If they're going to try and get more people to soften up to the idea of voting, re-electing him, then you would need to see some bit of compassion.
bit of compassion, because it seems like despite what your party align or allegiances are,
there are a lot of people looking at this situation like this has we're not handling this properly at all. I think they think if they drive people back to work and into the streets
that they can get the capitalism machine going again, because then once everybody's busy,
once everybody is out and socializing, then maybe Trump's America won't seem so bad to the racists
who are questioning it, because everybody else knows the shit has been shit. But to racist white is out and socializing, then maybe Trump's America won't seem so bad to the racists who
are questioning it because everybody else knows the shit has been shit. But to racist white folks
who are like, we're voting for white supremacy, if they're now struggling and below, you know,
even further below the poverty line than they already were, and they have nothing to do but
look at the news and how their president is handling shit, then they can't be distracted
by the fact that he's terrible. If you're a white person in america to a certain extent when trump was first elected you could ignore everything that he was doing
because it largely wasn't affecting you right and now it's affecting everyone so i think they're
like we gotta get people back to work we gotta get them distracted they gotta they're watching
too much news it's like we were saying yesterday like if they if these people were actually good
with their money they would have looked at the the lowest cost version of getting through the pandemic to get their businesses going again
rather than just like this reactionary thing of like don't stop believing please and now it's
like just getting us in all kinds of shit where now we're gonna have to back our teachers um and
like our neighbors like we need there's so many other things like we're going to have to back our teachers and like our neighbors. Like we need,
there's so many other things like we're the opening of schools is just like so
cynical that it's just,
you,
you can't,
you almost like,
it's hard for you to believe that people are going to fuck around with the
lives of children.
Like really though.
I mean,
I mean they already did with the way they don't actually tackle a lot of the
mass shooting problems that happened in schools.
But even like with the math Betsy DeVosos was doing some people did like the calculations based on
like you know like it could just be this small number it was still dwarf like it was blowing
out any numbers that have happened with school shootings in like the history of this country
i just i'm waiting on people to realize that the government doesn't care about them
like is it gonna happen is it gonna to happen? Is it going to happen?
I'm not sure.
It's actually quite insane.
So, I mean, we'll see shit.
Ivanka, what should I try?
What did she say I should try?
Try something new.
Try something new.
She didn't even have no suggestions.
She didn't have any job suggestions.
Something.
Working.
Why don't you try it?
Making money.
Why don't you try that?
You're a terrible guidance counselor, Ivanka.
I know.
I just go.
I go to the guidance counselor.
I'm like, so what should I do? She's like, I don't know try that you're a terrible guidance counselor of mine i just go i go to the guidance counselor i'm like so what should i do she's like i don't know girl something new i mean
essentially like the the if she is the guidance counselor the student that comes in which is
working america going hey man i'm all kinds of fucked up i don't know what the fuck is going on
like i just see no way out of this there's barely any hope coming out of the white house uh and i'm
really failing to grasp onto something that could sustain me in an actual tangible way hmm well have you thought about finding something
new yeah i have a pamphlet for something new yeah i got a pamphlet for something new no it's it's
like one of those pieces of paper never mind miss. Never mind. Just go smoke weed by the fucking...
What are those?
What are those transportables?
Oh, can I hit that?
Portables, portables.
Portable classrooms?
Yeah, that's when you do it.
I remember after the earthquake,
half my school became portables
because half the buildings were so fucked up.
Like our parking lot became our new school.
Shout out to 1994.
It's coming.
Yeah.
Come again. Like our parking lot became our new school. Shout out to 1994. And that's coming. Yeah.
Coming again.
You guys ready for some truth bombs?
Oh my God.
Woo!
I'm just sorry, dude.
The fact that we're about to talk about how people think,
Wayfair, you got just what I need,
is involved with human trafficking um i can't stop i don't know like i laugh because i'm so shocked and sad because everything's the
only thing i can do otherwise i'm like oh man so many brains are rotten like and are thinking they
got superpowers to connect these you know see the
fucking matrix somehow out of nowhere yeah scrolling on fucking chrome all day yeah they uh
so so basically somebody noticed that um there were some cabinets uh and you, dressers and various pieces of furniture
that cost more than they should.
They cost five figures.
And they also noticed that some of those cabinets
had girls' names, like, you know, Karen, Janet.
And they searched the database and noticed that some of those are the names
of missing children and boom,
bang,
bing.
Uh,
they,
they drew the conclusion that this is how the deep state cabal,
uh,
is smuggling,
uh,
child slaves. Now is,uggling child slaves now is,
is inside of these cabinets,
I guess.
They've moved on from pizza parlors.
They realize they've been found out and moved on.
They're smarter.
They've gotten even smarter than to do it at a ping pong pizza restaurant
that,
you know,
doing it there in the,
in full public view.
No,
they're smarter.
Now it's on Wayfair and it's the kids' names and you can just order it like a cabinet.
That's how they've done.
It really is sort of to the point of like not being able to say you're wrong.
You arrive at that.
You get this kind of momentum where you end up at a Wayfair page and go, oh, shit.
Hold on.
The Anya's shorty cabinet is ten thousand nine hundred and eighty nine dollars
this is how they're doing it because there's on your way here you have not for once ever doubted
or even took the second to to question what you believe whether that's you know based on anything
uh tangible or real so that the furniture they were looking at is more expensive because it is a commercial industrial.
So they were looking at home prices, what a cabinet like that would cost in the home department.
But they were actually in the commercial department where the cabinets are bigger, essentially.
And they just ignored that fact.
They're for commercial use.
It's like for a fucking, not for your home.
It just happens to also be on Wayfair.
But they just ignored that detail.
And that one detail could have cleared it up, but instead...
Details are for cowards, I want to point out.
That's right.
For sheep, hey, it's for sheep.
Keep drinking the Kool-Aid, sheep.
Wear your mask, you're going to hell.
Because obviously human traffickers love including clues and easter eggs that could lead to them being caught like batman villains uh yeah right so right this started with like a
i think it's a interior design influencer and then another lifestyle influencer picked it up but it's
we gotta ban these influencers man but i i honestly this is one of those stories where
i look at it and i'm like well so what do like is the internet just bad do we just give up on
the internet like how do we how do we what do we do? It's such a mess. And that's such a big, broad question to consider because we have almost too much access to,
again, going back to the beginning, uncontextualized information.
And without that context, the human brain fucking loves to find pictures in random noise.
That's how we were able to look up at the stars in all of their millions and go,
that's a bear with a giant ass tail.
Like what?
What?
No,
it's up there.
You can see it.
And so we want to be able to find like things that will make,
help us make sense of things.
But because there is so much more noise than our brains are used to,
it's becoming easier for people to pick out those random patterns and just run with them.
And without the context you need to be like, oh, that's for industrial grade cabinets.
You're storing like giant, like, I don't know, collections of tools for a huge ass farm in one of these cabinets, not your doll collection for your little girl,
then you find the patterns that are wrong,
and you can't admit that those patterns are wrong.
And that's fun, and it's exciting to think
that you've just cracked the code that is secretly...
Oh, hell yeah.
Like, speaking of the Matrix,
that you've cracked the code
and gotten a unique insight into the secret
that is going on behind the scenes of the entire world.
That is powerful.
That's a powerful drug.
And they don't want to give up on it.
And so, okay, if this was 2% of the population
that was just off in a corner somewhere, that would be one thing.
But first of all, the actual president of these United States is trying to fan these flames because they're some of his most staunch supporters.
There's also a writer, J.M., pointed out this Newsweek article that the title was, here are some of the celebrities who sell products on Wayfair, which you would only
be interested in for one reason, as evidence that this conspiracy theory is true.
This came out after all this or during the fervor?
During the fervor during the fervor to exploit
like yeah yeah totally seo like they see uh this theory lighting lighting up in terms of traffic
and they were somebody on their staff is you know with it you know what i mean because i see it
everywhere i see all that i see the i see the the stencils and shit on the street in LA.
Like, all the where we go when we go all.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, I see that on the street.
It's around, which is very, it's funny because you don't notice it until you really look and go, what the, oh, okay, that's what that is.
Shout out to San Fernando Valley.
But this whole, it's interesting, like like the, it's like the same momentum.
Wow, what a poorly framed article.
I'm sorry, I just had to like,
Oh yeah, like what do these people are writing?
And I'm reading through it and like,
they, up top, they talk about how all of this is,
you know, bullshit and how in another article
from Newsweek, it's all debunked.
But they still put together this article about,
well, these are the celebrities,
here are the celebrities who sell through Wayfair.
And I'm like, yeah, no one is looking up this information unless they want to know who to shame.
So I'm very confused by this choice.
Don't bring Lionel Richie into this.
Come on, man.
Who to shame?
Lionel Richie didn't do anything to anybody.
Best case scenario shame.
Like, the worst case scenario, you know, cute.
Like, these are the people who showed up at the pizza parlor with automatic weapons.
Wow, Trisha Yearwood bring it all back yeah
what a circuitous episode yeah oh you think garth brooks only puts breakfast in that bowl come on
oh boy yeah so now wake up it's fingertips it's all fingertips it ain't totally it's toe
it's totalini okay that's you don't realize the it's like kind of the same energy though that was like in the
early internet when like the matrix sequels are coming out and like lost and like people trying
to fucking find easter eggs before the writers do it's like that same energy that i feel like
when i'm looking at it to your point of like the high you'd be like oh shit i know who the
merovingian is actually supposed to be in matrix reloaded okay the merovingians were these christian kings that were in front like dude that what i don't know i don't know where i took that
but that's not like the basis for a conspiracy theory slash religion moving forward yeah and
but that's the kind of energy you go around and people like dude i figured i don't know i read
up on it and that's what this is so therefore this is what it means yeah and this that's also part of
why i think that being right is overrated.
Like sometimes I watch shows with like a long narrative arc and some sort of central mystery.
And I'll try and guess along with it.
That's part of the fun. But when I'm wrong, it's like not like, oh, well, this was bullshit.
I don't believe in this existence of this movie anymore.
It's like, oh, OK, cool.
I see what they did there.
I get how they got to that point and why I was wrong.
That's actually unless it's lost, in which i was like no i reject this this is not right and i turn my back
on this now oh that's fair i mean with fiction sometimes your ideas are better than the ones
they end up going with for various reasons thank you fiction yes yes can be fun. When it comes to interpretations of reality,
like that's, yeah, it's just a bunch of...
Another thing this reminds me of is the fact
that the deadliest civil war in human history
was a cult in China that thought that their leader
was Jesus's brother and 20 million people died.
So, like, i don't know it seems like this is one of those frog in a pot like getting hotter and hotter until the water's
boiling things where like if you had told me two years ago that q was as popular as it is and that the president was openly embracing it.
And that Q ideology was like as murderous and like openly,
like we're ready to,
uh,
rise up if,
yeah,
act out real world violence.
If Trump is like taken out of office,
like that would be cause for immediate and profuse alarm.
And instead it feels like it's just
something that feels like a series of ingredients from the past 200 news cycles converging. And it's
just like, man, but it's really like those are dangerous elements. Yeah. Meanwhile, it's MS-13
and open borders and you're not going to have windows because of
Joe Biden's green revolution plan.
That is what is the emphasis of this administration.
When we're also looking, just comparing the language always of what the threats are.
It's always people of color, and it's always people who aren't cishet Christian American
people.
And we should say that, I mean,
there's totally good reason to be paying attention
for people to have their antenna up
about sex trafficking and human trafficking.
Like, that is a thing that we're finding out
is just all over the place,
especially among the powerful
with Jeffrey Epstein, Jelaine maxwell and it's in
the zeitgeist for sure and i think it's and it's been such a real world problem it's it's like any
like with these conspiracies that's why it's it's uh very easy for them to gain momentum because it
has to start with some kind of focal point that is a real world issue. So whether that's like your own financial disenfranchisement being the source of many,
all kinds of conspiracies about who runs what in the banks or whatever, or something like this with
sex trafficking, there's always this real world issue that give enough people to sort of rally
around and then sort of connect these dots. And yeah, it's really, again, we were talking earlier
in this week about the lengths that people can go when they're fully engrossed and caught up in
these conspiracy theories. And it shows that it's very real to people on some level, based on what
they're reading, they're arriving at a place where this is the reality that they're fighting against. So, you know,
on some level you can see why, yes, the material was there in the conversation and culture for like
this to pick up as like a trend. And then, but then you get to see like these bad faith things,
like this Newsweek article too, where it's like, hey, let's kind of just hop on this right
now because that'll get us some clicks. Yeah, yeah, totally. And I mean, this just,
if nothing else, it's worth talking about this because this just isn't how, you know, we talked
about the Jeffrey Epstein story a number of times and the way it actually works is they're out in
the open about it. They have a plane that everybody refers to as the Lolita Express.
They have Pedophile Island.
And then when people come for them, they just make that go away with sheer access to power.
They're not dropping hints in furniture catalogs.
E-commerce website.
Right, right.
All right. hints in furniture catalogs e-commerce website right right uh all right let's uh take a quick break and we'll be right back this summer the nation watched as the republican nominee for
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and we're back all right guys let's talk about this uh this lead poisoning thesis i i had kind
of heard about this uh in the background as as one of the explanations for why crime started going down in the United
States in the early nineties and has kind of been going down ever since,
uh,
the,
the thesis is basically,
uh,
as it relates to crime,
that that was the year that the first generation,
uh,
after the clean air act,
uh,
of 1970 hit, hit you know adulthood and started to
you know uh make adult decisions and be you know hit the age that people generally uh start
committing crimes um and the idea is that because uh the planet was so full of leaded gasoline fumes that up to the year 1970, humans were and especially children were exposed to unprecedented levels of lead.
And that's that's a fact that you can test by, you know, that they were testing at the time.
that you can test by, you know,
that they were testing at the time.
And it's just a fact that people during that time, like from the late 20s through 1970
were exposed as cars became so dominant
and up to the point, like up through the 60s
was probably when it was at its worst
because that was when the most cars were out there
belching out this lead gasoline fumes.
Before you go on, Jack, so lead is bad?
As it turns out.
Yeah, so lead poisoning.
So when you come into contact
with consistent lead poisoning as a child,
it affects, they found a lot of longitudinal studies
that say that it affects a person's ability to regulate their emotions.
They're more likely to display psychological traits that include impulsivity and egocentricity.
And when were these people born, probably?
Where were they born?
When were peak, when were these people really getting off on the fumes?
The baby boom generation is kind of,
so that's what I'm kind of connecting it to.
That's a lot of the writing on this
has just been focused on explaining
there's this big demographic puzzle
that a lot of different explanations
have been proposed for,
for why crime went down starting in the nineties because everybody,
Joe Biden's crime bill.
That's right.
Well,
no,
but that Joe Biden's crime bill and like the Clintons,
like all their like,
uh,
super predator shit was,
was a result of the fact that crime just started going up in like this
unprecedented and unpredicted, uh going up in like this unprecedented and
unpredicted,
uh,
way in the seventies and eighties.
Uh,
and then for no real reason that anybody has been able to identify starting in
the nineties that started going down.
Um,
and you know,
this is Malcolm Gladwell,
uh,
wrote about this being from broken windows,
policing and Rudy Giuliani, which turns
out is bullshit. And there's a lot of different explanations. The Freakonomics people wrote about
it being the result of Roe v. Wade, but that doesn't hold for other countries. So it doesn't
really make sense that that would be a cause. And so this writer, a bunch of writers have pointed to
lead poisoning being the thing, because once lead is taken out of the gasoline in a country
about 20 years later, almost like clockwork, their crime starts going down.
So it's really interesting that there's, we'll link off to some articles that kind of
explain it in more detail but basically uh there's this mother jones article that says
it's basically unassailable that lead poisoning explained who committed crime and ended up at the
cruel you know bottom part of our social strata. Taking that, if that is true, and we take as a constant
that America is not a meritocracy, but more of a lottery based on where and to whom you're born.
And I feel like it would be inevitable that the same would be true at the top of our society.
it would be inevitable that the same would be true at the top of our society. Like the,
the baby boomers who grew up and were exposed to all this lead and have
damaged impulse control,
uh,
who are still in positions of power,
still running our country,
uh,
that that would have an impact on them and just on our world in general,
since they've been, uh, so greedily holding on to power
uh for for so long um and so aggressive about it i don't know it it just seems like
it's a it's not not a thing that i found like you know somebody else really making the case for there is there was an article about how
baby boomers as a generation were more uh sociopathic than other generations and they
like mention as an aside the high lead content of their blood being one of the very unique things
about their generation um but it seems pretty i don't know like i mean it it tracks when you think about one of the things
that always surprises me when i really do look back is just how weirdly crime infested the country
was at that point like it wasn't just scare tactics and it wasn't just movies where like oh
you go to the city you're gonna get mugs like just a fact like oh that dude has like seven knives on
him oh that woman just got mugged while i was watching as it turns out there was just a weird
amount of currency serial killers so many of them during this time period so i should say that i got
uh i started looking into this because i was uh listening to an episode of last podcast on the
left and they were talking about the fact that
these three major serial killers uh whose names i'm i'm not remembering but they all came from
uh the same neighborhood at around the same time uh or the same town at around the same time and
it's like such an aberration like that that's not normal normal behavior uh and there was just an overall spike
in serial killers in the 70s uh and be there being geographical hot spots of serial killers
would suggest like literally something in the water so oh i don't know santa cruz is i was
saying santa cruz there was three serial killers active at the same time yeah exactly um yeah so i don't know and hey london
ontario too canada you got yours too there's a there's a whole thing of like few towns had
multiple serial killers active at the same time and when you look at with each other trying to
get to the top of their charts much like arsenal v liverpool Except we're at the top of no chart.
And when you look at three of our last four presidents,
they were born within three months of each other.
George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Donald Trump were all born, are all at the slightly older edge
of the baby boomer generation.
like slightly older edge of the uh baby boomer generation and you know they have very variously uh completely fucked up our our country in pretty aggressive ways um just feel
like we go too hard on george bush you know like ever since ellen you know i think we were all
supposed to realize uh you know that george bush he must also be involved in the Wayfair conspiracy because I don't know if you saw the image, the way they were talking to each other.
They were signaling to us what the real truth was, what's in the cabinet named W.
Yeah.
And presidents have what?
Cabinet.
QED.
Wow.
Gotta go.
For the CIA shuts us down.
For the deep states gets us yeah so
anyways just i mean this is also a very hopeful spin on things that like we are just being poisoned
by this about to uh pass from this earth generation so this isn't any sort of like
actionable uh ideas here
other than don't inhale lead.
I just think it's an interesting thing.
And let's not forget, though, going back to Flint,
the number of lead pipes that are still in use in this country
is extremely high, and it's something that can be solved.
It's going to take a lot of money and time,
but it can be solved.
It's not that much money.
Hold on, hold on. You lost me at it's going to take a lot of money and time but it can be solved it's a not that hold on hold on you
lost me at it's gonna take a lot of money miles is big on austerity uh
um regular hi over here um the uh one other detail of it is that people have been pointing to
the year 2020 as a year to look for a drop in violence in the
middle east because that's when like 2000 was basically there 1970 in terms of removing lead
from gasoline so uh that's one way i mean that's a convenient way to explain terrorism right right
it's like yeah nothing to do with the united states foreign policy it's it was the gas
i'm pretty sure so i mean in a sense it's always been about the oil and gas right damn we need an
improv team here between the oil and gas yeah all of this is can be like seen as a very convenient
like sort of well that that was the answer and now we don't have to
worry about anything and that's yeah definitely definitely not what we're saying i remember always
as a kid though too seeing unleaded gas like right i mean like well why would you like gas
or or just when i saw it i'm like well where do you get leaded gas yeah i'm like why why do you
get unleaded i remember always asking my mom, because she would say unleaded
because it was still the 80s,
and I'm sure people had habits of saying that or whatever,
or that was a way to describe gas,
but it always bugged my mind.
I was like, shouldn't we get the good shit?
You don't want un-anything.
Make the cars and the brains go fast.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, the guy who helped develop lead
gasoline thomas midgley jr did uh at a at a press conference poured lead gasoline into a bowl like
poured it over his hands put it under his nose huffed it uh and to prove his point new the state
of new jersey was still like we're you know fuck all that uh but oh my god i'm he had to take a leave of absence from
work after being diagnosed with lead poisoning he also apparently i'm just looking this up he
apparently also helped invent cfcs like freon which ate a whole ozone layer so this dude
shout out to you right and then in 1940 at the age of 51 and then there's more in 1940 at the age of 51 just like
talking about his two of his inventions like might have destroyed the world and killed a bunch of
people well in 1940 at the age of 51 midgley contracted polio which left him severely disabled
he devised an elaborate system of ropes and pulleys to lift himself out of bed in 1944 he became entangled in the device and died
of strangulation that's how he went entangled with august alcina wow an entanglement it was
truly an entanglement wow this dude could not stop he could not stop inventing things that would kill people like it
was just like he's like ah damn it not again yeah darwin his deal with the devil was i want to be a
famous inventor yeah exactly right your wish has been granted oh my god what's something from your
search history that's revealing about who you are or where you are?
Search history.
I searched recently Charleston Riverdogs jersey because they canceled minor league baseball, I believe, a couple or like a couple weeks ago, I think, officially.
And my parents live in Charleston where the Riverdogs play.
It's a class A affiliate of the Yankees.
And I was wondering, I'm like, God, they've probably,
because they've laid off players,
like their minor league baseball players
just won't make any money this year.
So I was wondering if there's a way I could support that team,
which is like a thing I love to go to.
Bill Murray.
First Barry Weiss and now the minor league baseball.
Sorry, that was like 20 seconds too late.
It gets worse and worse. I know. Our heroes. Barry Weiss and now the minor league baseball. Sorry, that was like 20 seconds too late.
It gets worse and worse.
I know.
Our heroes.
Anna, we need Jack's medication.
The Zoom delay is getting real bad.
Sorry, what was the Bill Murray aspect?
Oh, Bill Murray.
What if there wasn't one?
What if I need my pills as well?
He is a part owner of the team. So it's this little minor it looks like a little league stadium and then bill murray is just sitting in the stands
and he'll come out and do bits like uh because he lives in charleston south carolina and it's great
it's so much fun didn't you say you stop by there like as much as possible right like if you can
there's a game you try and go oh i go to that one of the last recordings that
like you it's a must it's a must for you to see the the river d's it is the river d's as all the
big fans call it yes that is correct um and i only have so much to talk about dogs yeah that
one syllable we had to go to half a syllable i just yeah I saved you the guh. Guhs are exhausting.
It's the only word
where a letter is longer to say
than the actual word.
I love going. It's just
going to a minor league baseball game is really, really fun.
What
is a river dog?
Is that just a dog that lives by
the river? Is that a name for
a type of fish?
An otter?
Yeah.
I think it's just a modifier that they just threw on there because they didn't want to just call them the dogs.
It would be like if Notre Dame just called them the Irish, which actually they should do.
You know what?
Never mind.
It's not like that.
They don't have to call them the fighting Irish.
And I'm not sucking up to you right now jack i think it's terrible uh what they do over there and to
paint that entire culture as fighters i think is wrong the oh you know what it was charlie weiss
was canceled they canceled charlie weiss dude this this river dogs origin story is so lame. First they come for Charlie Weiss.
Sorry, go ahead.
The reason they called the River Dogs is the owners had a lab named Taco
or possibly Chaz.
I don't even know why this is disputed
according to this article.
But the neighbors called the dog a River Dog.
So then, yeah.
Well, there's a Portuguese water dog.
Profuse urination?
Why river dog?
Did they live by a river?
No explanation?
Just the neighbors called it a river dog because it was dirty?
Looked like it was bathing in brown water.
Look at that old river dog, huh?
That dog's always in the river.
Wow.
That dog might as well be a fish.
Woo-hoo.
I tell you. Is that Taco or Chaz? Keep telling you, Mel. The dog's always in the river. Wow. That dog might as well be a fish. Woo-hoo. I tell you.
Is that Taco or Chaz?
Keep telling you, Mel, the dog's name is Lucky.
All right.
It's a river dog.
But it's in the river.
I've never heard an origin story that sounded more like it was being told by a drunk person
than that river dog.
Yeah, and you never asked.
Hey, you know why they call it a river dog. Well, you know why they called your river dog you know why
i call river dog don't you well we don't ask him follow-up questions we did it once and it was the
worst decision we ever made charleston river dogs mainly you know how to call them right because the
gold clangs the owners had a dog a taco yes sir we're in wilmington delaware and i don't know
what you're talking about i have to go do some tax-free shopping now, but thank you for that.
I'm going to incorporate now, if you'll excuse me.
Good.
Good day to you, sir.
I have to incorporate.
I have a nude incorporation, so if you could please.
Oh, shit.
All right.
That's going to do it for this week's weekly Zeitgeist.
Please like and review the show if you like the show.
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He needs your validation, folks.
I hope you're having a great weekend, and I will talk to you Monday.
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And I'm your host, Santos Escobar, emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Santos!
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