The Daily Zeitgeist - Weekly Zeitgeist 17 (Best of 3/26/18-3/30/18)
Episode Date: April 1, 2018The weekly round up of the best moments from DZ's Season 24 (3/26/18-3/30/18.) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informat...ion.
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Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
Crooks Everywhere unearthed the plot to murder a one-woman WikiLeaks.
She exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere starting September 25th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In California during the summer of 1975, within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles, two women did something no other woman had done before.
Tried to assassinate the President of the United States.
One was the
protege of Charles Manson. 26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky. The other, a middle-aged
housewife working undercover for the FBI. Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer, this season on the new podcast, Rip Current.
Hear episodes of Rip Current early and completely ad-free and receive exclusive bonus content by subscribing to iHeartTrue Crime Plus
only on Apple Podcasts.
I'm Carrie Champion, and this is Season 4 of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's basketball.
And on this new season, we'll cover all things sports and culture.
Listen to Naked Sports on the Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio apps, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Black Effect Podcast Network is sponsored by Diet Coke.
In 1982, Atari players had one game on their minds,
Sword Quest,
because the company had promised
150 grand in prizes to four finalists,
but the prizes disappeared,
leading to one of the biggest controversies
in 80s pop culture.
I'm Jamie Loftus.
Join me this spring for The Legend of Sword Quest.
We'll follow the quest for lost treasure
across four decades. Listen to The Legend of Sword Quest on We'll follow the quest for lost treasure across four decades.
Listen to The Legend of Swordquest
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 non non-stop infotainment
laugh stravaganza uh yeah so without further ado here is the weekly zeitgeist
what is something that you think is overrated if you i think overrated is being on the wave of the outrage where like you're like
okay like i i hate seeing the same message over like the same take over and over like i feel like
it is better if you amplify the voices that have already said what you're trying to say
rather than just be like oh i read that and i'm gonna yeah and I'm gonna say it right you know like I feel like I see this a lot where like one person is you know calling something out or talking
about something I think the one thing that has been um going on recently is just the kind of
obvious difference in how you know uh protest black people protesting versus like the parkland kids
protesting and i feel like you know a lot of people have been having that conversation in a
way where it's like yeah this is a problem uh we should address but also we should keep in mind
that you know this is the first time everyone's on board but then i feel like it turns to a game of
uh telephone where it's gotten to the
point where some people are like fuck these parkland kids and it's like no no no no like i
get what you're where you're coming from but you can you know we we are complex human beings we
don't have to just say one or the other we can be like this support this but also realize this yeah
right and sad that that's the those are the voices that are clearly getting the most ears.
Well, and it's because people take that and then they have an emotion about it.
And then they just say it instead of just sharing this voice of like where the fringe tries to make the hottest, spiciest take and not necessarily try and like, you know, really spread the take.
Right.
Because what these kids are advocating for is something that everyone will benefit to.
And I think, yeah, if people are really upset, clearly they have a reason to be because these kinds of problems have affected many other communities in a much greater way.
But again, yeah, it's like, sure, I get that this is somehow the way that people are starting
to listen, but this is America, and I think we knew that this is sort of how shit has
been working.
Sadly, I'm not resigned to that fact, but we have to be real of what the reality is
of how sort of these kinds of rhetorical discussions and how movements work in this country.
Yeah, and also it's just like if you're paying close attention the kids are aware of that the kids
are so much ahead of the woke curve than we are and it's because they probably spent most of their
time on tumblr before this all happened like they like they they've been checking their privilege
and like really trying to lift up black voices as they move forward.
And that's what's cool is you got all these people because –
and I feel like that's what happens when things start growing
is people try and nitpick and find holes in –
because no one can just rise.
You got to find something wrong with it.
Just the same way like they lift you up so they can tear you down.
Human nature, baby. And so I feel like it's getting to that point where they're trying to find something wrong with it. Just the same way. Like they lift you up so they can tear you down. Human nature, baby.
And so I feel like it's getting to that point where they're trying to find holes,
but the kids are ahead of the game.
Like the holes that you're trying to point out,
they've already been working on fixing that.
It's like Twitter wokeness judo.
It's like,
I'm going to use your wokeness against you to show that I am even more woke
than you.
And it's just like,
no,
we can just both have good points.
The New York Times podcast, The Daily, this morning actually interviewed some kids from
inner city Chicago who have been working on gun access and restricting gun access, making
it less easy for people to smuggle guns into Chicago.
And they are sort of jumping on this Parkland thing.
And while acknowledging, yeah, the reason that this is being, becoming a national issue
is because they're, like, the households in their community make three times as much as
the households in our community.
And that's fucked up.
But this is our opportunity.
Yeah. And, you know,, but this is our opportunity. Yeah.
And, you know, getting a national stage and using that.
Word.
What a...
Yeah, yeah.
Mic drop.
We wanted to talk about the March for Our Lives
that happened over the weekend.
I know a lot of people who were there.
I didn't get downtown today. You guys go? I was recording the Bechdel cast. Oh, right. But my mom lot of people who were there. I didn't get downtown today.
You guys go.
I was recording the Bechdel cast.
Oh, right.
But my mom went in my stead.
Nice.
To represent you.
I was at the Kids' Choice Awards.
Yeah, you're really out here for these kids.
Yeah, yeah.
See, people want to march for the kids.
I'm trying to be up.
Trying to get slimed.
I was going to say, like, I met with them.
But I was saying, you know.
That's tricky wording know that's tricky
wording that's tricky yeah yeah anyways we'll move that along a lot of people did go there
and uh fox news didn't really know how to react to all these you know young elementary school kids
like uh uh crooked media went down there and interviewed all the people on the street and it
was like you know these 11 year olds who like told their grandma they wanted to come down.
And like so they drove for like hours to get there to go to this protest and just this really intense outpouring of just organic sort of democratic energy.
Organic?
Well, we'll see.
Fox has a word or two to say about that.
So let's hear how they tried to cover the march for our lives.
There's something to be said for this. I mean, that's that's hundreds of thousands of people.
And I had conversations, a lot of them. And they really have no idea what they're talking about, especially with guns.
Kind of feel sorry for some of them without putting them on the spot.
But they seem to be very, very misguided.
But there's emotion, and emotion drives politics.
Well, I mean, I think we had talked about the fact that this march was going to take
place.
And one of the things that Peter Doocy had mentioned was that initially it felt like
it was more organic, that there was some students getting together after the Valentine's Day
event in Parkland, Florida.
And then now it's almost as if it's a celebrity movement.
It's Hollywood feel.
And that's what I wanted to ask you about.
So I definitely feel a lot of that.
It's a blend of all these different forces.
A lot of students were being bussed in, which is to be without said.
And you could tell by the T-shirts and the big coach buses that are in.
I was asking, who's paying for this, first of all?
I mean, it is highly organized.
There's 10 or 12 coach buses coming in with police escorts as I was driving in.
Here's the funny thing.
First of all, they're using armed guards for this whole thing, which I think is one of the greatest ironies of a gun control march.
Yeah.
Okay.
So a couple things there.
But was it USDA organic?
Right.
Do we know how organic this march was?
Right. So first of all, I like just the condescension that where he's like that these people don't know what they're talking about around guns.
They just want gun control, I guess.
But then she refers to the Valentine's Day event in Parkland, which sounds like it's like a silent auction fundraiser for like a private school or something.
Or like a sale at a fucking car dealership.
Right.
Come in for the Valentine's Day event of the year.
Right.
So it was just a fun Valentine's Day event that they're responding to.
And they all decided to have this get together.
But clearly they were being funded by high level.
George Soros.
Soros or hollywood royalty because how else could these
filthy paupers afford the notoriously luxurious mode of transport that is the fucking bus oh man
well also it's it's like wow you guys are crying over and being afraid of the kids and you think
the way you're going to win their support is just by shitting on them.
And it just goes to show you just this kind of change of tradition that's happening because their mindset is that you're wrong because you're a child.
Not because you're actually wrong, but you are wrong because I'm an adult.
And it's just like Danny DeVito's monologue in Matilda.
You know?
Whoa. Yeah, yeah.
I hit you with that deep cut.
But this is the main reason they're going to lose this generation is because they feel like they don't have to fight for them.
They're like, no, you need to listen.
You're misguided.
And you are only helping push them away more because you are shitting on these people and when you say the irony is that they have
armed guards in a gun control rally just proves yet again you don't know what gun control is
you're just right you are the misguided one right they object to the idea of guns and think that
guns shouldn't exist is like how they is right versus like their version let's do the bare minimum and at least
ban uh weapons that professional people in the military use in war but this is why they're so
good this is why they're a great propaganda outlet because they take the most cartoonish version of
the other side's argument and they're like okay so they you know this is an organization that has
three very clear things they want to get rid of certain weapons.
They want the minimum on background checks and like one other thing that I can't remember because I'm a –
You're an old.
You're an old.
I'm an old and I'm also an ill-informed liberal.
But instead of talking about those specific talking points and things that the marchers are asking for they're like they think guns should
never have been invented and they want them to disappear magically right uh which no nobody has
ever what's next these invisible guns are gonna be marrying each other that never existed like
whoa hold on you're you're messing up all your weird uh yeah psychopathic but it but it is weird
i said this in the last podcast uh the last episode I was on, and I'm going to say it again.
It is weird to see this outlet using Alex Jones talking points, like trying to use the crisis actor angle.
And what's even more pathetic is them pussyfooting it to be like, well, you do the math.
Right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like if you're going to do that, if you're going to make that kind of disgusting statement, then actually have the balls to say it. Don't right. Don't pussyfoot around it.
Like it's just it's really pathetic. Like it's it really is. That's exactly right. They also had
a segment where one of their men on the street went out to interview some of the kids and asked
them what they thought of the Second Amendment.
And, you know, most of them were just like, it's outdated or it's made for a different time.
And then they cut back to the Fox in-studio team and they're like, ha, yeah, just tear up the Constitution, I guess. And then one of the guys on Fox and Friends is like, they don't learn about the Constitution in class.
And first of all, like everything the kids say is right.
Obviously, they like leave in the ums and ahs to make them seem dumber.
It's very like Jay Leno, jaywalking type thing.
But so they make them seem as dumb as possible.
But everything like the content of what the students are saying is true.
It was literally
made for a different time, and labeling the Second Amendment outdated is such a reasonable position
that a Supreme Court decision in 2008 brought it up. It was a dissenting opinion, but Justice
John Paul Stevens was like, look, I don't think that the framers of the Constitution were thinking about handguns when they gave militiamen the right to keep muskets.
And like, that's a completely valid argument.
But basically, they show these kids having valid arguments and they're like, oh, yeah, sure.
What's so funny is that they're like, oh, yeah, no, it still holds up today.
Our childhood movies don't even hold up today.
But this document
does oh yeah i mean also to the guns they were even talking about then them just took like 40
seconds to shoot yeah so in their mind there wasn't like they're like well you know one of
these right cycles will get loose with a musket something could happen uh you know again very
different times and these people yeah they were they're not soothsayers.
They were impossible to aim also.
They were so hard to aim that, like, you know, once people invented rifles like we have today for the Civil War, that was the reason the Civil War was so bloody is because the generals weren't used to weapons that you could actually aim straight.
Right.
And so they, like, fought the war like you were just running up to people and like blasting at them in their general direction and but because the weapons actually fired straight
like lots and lots of people died because they just didn't they hadn't adapted their
tactics for a world in which straight like straight shooting effective weaponry existed
and they had in mind when they wrote the Constitution, same deal.
Like they were thinking of muskets and shitty, you know, things that fired round, things that knuckleballed out into the air.
And who the fuck knew where it was landing?
Casey, what is a myth?
What's something that people think is true that you know to be false?
Yeah, let's get into this. So I am HIV positive and I feel like not enough young, cool, hip,
beautiful people know that young, cool, hip, beautiful people can also be HIV positive in
this day and age. And it's nothing to be ashamed of. And so that's basically a myth because I run
up into that. I talk about it in my comedy and I can sense people getting tense sometimes when
I'm talking about it. And I just want to like relax and know that like if you're hv positive in this day and age you're fine
and it's like um kind of like fun to talk about you know it gives me my in is that because the
treatment has become just advanced so much over time because i remember like back in the day like
in the early night people used to look at it much differently. Oh, yeah, of course. It was a much different thing.
I mean, when we were...
Yes, treatment is amazing.
I take a pill a day, and I'm going to live forever.
I just have a joke in my head.
How do I get that pill?
Yeah, well, so there's a variety of things.
You go to your doctor and ask for it.
And also, you get HIV.
Oh, wow.
You need it.
But there's also...
So there's so much to talk about in this and we only have a short amount
of time.
But one, like the treatment is so good that there's something called undetectable where
I'm medicated to a point where like there's no trace of it in my body whatsoever.
Right.
Oh, okay.
And so I can't even, and studies have confirmed this, I can't even give it to another person
while I'm undetectable.
So as long as I'm medicated in this way, which I will be forever, I can't actually transfer
the meds.
So it's important to talk about so people know that.
You're actually more likely to get HIV from a sexual encounter with someone who doesn't
know their status and while using a condom,
then you are having unprotected sex
with someone who knows their status
and is undetectable because of medication.
Wow.
So that's like,
so it's important to kind of put that information
out into the world
because there's also a lot of people who are like,
ew, gross, you're HIV positive,
I would never have sex with someone who has that.
Right, right, right.
Because you're diseased and dirty
and gross and I want to catch it.
Right.
And that's a point of view that should be debunked.
Wildly flawed, yeah.
So there's that.
And yeah, so it's just something that I think
is not talked about because I think a lot of people
who are also HIV positive in this day and age
don't want or feel a need to talk about it so much,
especially publicly because it adds a stigma on top of you that you don't need. And let's be real, a lot of those people are
already stigmatized from a group of like, whether it's being gay, or whether it's having had drug
issues, or whether it's, you know, sex work, stuff like that. So I think that you're just
adding another level of stigma on top of it. And I just kind of want to get it out there that,
you know, it's, it's not something that you need to be ashamed of or feel stigmatized by
because it's normal.
Right.
Right.
You know,
it's just another thing.
And I'm,
I it's,
it's been,
it's been an interesting road and all of this.
Um,
but as I've like talked about it more and more,
I now know like every single standup comic who has herpes,
uh,
I know like everyone just tells me.
And I'm like, by opening up in this way,
a lot of people feel comfortable opening up to me about all sorts of stuff.
And you just realize how normalized or how prevalent
and how normal it should be to just talk about the fact that people fuck
and sometimes they get things.
And that's
just the way the world works and i'm not saying don't be safe and i'm not saying don't take
responsibility but also like you're human yeah and let's address this you're human culture yeah
exactly shame is really this big issue that shame i'm all i'm all in on brené brown's uh uh books
about releasing shame shame is a very debilitating human emotion.
I guess it's an emotion.
And as we get older, it's about trying to lose all of that
and just kind of fully actualizing your full true self.
Yeah, self-acceptance, baby.
Self-acceptance, baby.
Who's Brene Brown?
Brene Brown is an author and I think she's like a sociologist,
but she's focused a lot on shame and the debilitating aspects of shame
and how shame runs a lot of the world.
I mean, a lot of the way that people act.
Yeah, and our behavior, right?
Yeah, and so, and we all have shame.
We just get it at different levels
and we're all like imbued with shame.
And I think growing up as a queer person in this society,
you just are, you just know shame.
You know, you were raised in shame.
You were told to be ashamed of yourself.
And it takes a long time to relinquish a lot of that.
And then the HIV thing on top of that.
So I kind of got it in my mid twenties, kind of.
No, I did.
Okay, I was about to say that.
No, I did.
Yeah, I got a little bit mad
and I got a little bit more on later.
Drips and drips.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so I had just kind of come, I had like, I came out of the closet around like 18, 19.
But then I went to school in a very like middle of nowhere kind of place.
So like I didn't like.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it took me a little while to be like, to be super cool and open, you know?
And then I moved to San francisco and i was like
i'm gay as fuck and then within like eight months i was hiv positive and i went back into another
like shame closet as a result of that so i just and it took me a while to get out of that as well
so i just it's just it uh it was a bummer and i wish i had had more people in my life at that
time being like hey it's cool right you're gonna be fine through this you're gonna live through
this and you know because i initially at 24 i thought i was gonna die right and then it took me
um a while and a lot of people to be like and a lot of experience to be like no you're gonna be
fine right and literally i'm gonna live longer than most of the straight male comics you've ever
seen because like their disease is up in their brain you know so much but um yeah well shout out to
medical progress yeah baby
yeah because I used to think that like
Magic Johnson was the only person that had access to that
kind of health care you know what I mean like back in the day
that was like oh well magic's a different thing
I think that was true for like a year or two
at the time he had that access but even to this day
yeah right but even that I mean
like he could have there's a combination
of things too I mean like AJV has never been an absolute definite 100% death sentence to everyone who's gotten it.
There are different types of, bodies react to it different ways.
Right.
The immune systems are different.
There are things called elite suppressors where the disease never even advances without, like, you don't even need medication in a lot of ways.
So people have lived for decades with it.
And Magic was, I think he went full board on like,
I'm going to be the healthiest person in the world from this point on.
And he did.
But he's like the biggest example.
But there was tons of people who lived for decades.
And also it was in the mid-90s that the drugs got better.
Not amazing, but that's when the tide turned on the plague and the crisis.
Because up until that point, there weren't drugs.
There were drugs that could sustain life,
but there weren't drugs that could actually curb the disease.
Right.
And those drugs have progressed and progressed and progressed.
It's a little nuts that there isn't a cure yet.
I mean, like, it's...
And there is a lot of conspiracy out there.
So have you heard of PrEP?
Truvada?
Okay, I'm educating.
This is good.
So there's also a pill that you can take every day if you're negative,
if you're not HIV positive.
And a lot of gay men, because we're considered a high-risk group,
take it every day.
And if you take it every day, you can't get HIV.
Oh, okay.
So somehow, some way, the drug companies figured out a way
to get all gay men on AIDS meds without curing it.
So now they're making a lot more money.
I mean, that's the conspiracy theory point of view on the whole thing.
Right, right, right.
And I'm not going, I mean, drug companies are keeping me alive,
so I'm not going to completely come for them, you know?
Right.
But there is, it's just an interesting thought that rather than have
finding a cure after several, several decades,
just an interesting thought that rather than have finding a cure after several several decades um we have just another way to make more money on the disease itself so we'll file that under i'm
just gonna leave that right sponsored by gilead all right we're gonna take a quick break we'll be
right back 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.
Woo-hoo.
That would be me, Devin Simone.
And then there's me, Davon Rogers.
And we're here to take you behind the scenes of, drumroll please.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
The Challenge 40 Battle of the Eras.
Yes.
Each week, cast members will be joining us to spill all of the tea on the relentless challenges,
heartbreaking eliminations, and of course, all the juicy drama.
And let's not forget about the hookups.
Anyway, regardless of what era you're rooting for at home,
everyone is welcome here on MTV's Official Challenge Podcast.
So join us every week as we break down episodes of the Challenge 40 Battle of the Eras.
Listen to MTV's Official Challenge Podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts, separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current.
Available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, fam. I'm Simone Boyce.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And we're the hosts of The Bright Side, the daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that is guaranteed to light up your day.
Every weekday, we bring you conversations with the culture makers who inspire us.
Like our recent episode with dancer, actor, host of Dancing with the Stars, and now novelist, Julianne Hough.
stars, and now novelist, Julianne Hough.
I feel really whole.
I feel like the last few years,
I've really unraveled a lot,
which is part of what this book is about.
And I really feel so content,
which is a word that used to scare the crap out of me.
And I love that word now.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Carrie Champion, and this is season four of Naked Sports,
where we live at the intersection of sports and culture.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry,
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
I know I'll go down in history. People are talking about women's basketball just because
of one single game. Every great player needs a foil. I ain't really hear them voice. I just
come here to play basketball every single day and that's what I focus on. From college to the pros,
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports. Angel Reese is a joy to watch.
She is braggadocious.
She is unapologetically Black.
I love her.
What exactly ignited this fire?
Why has it been so good for the game?
And can the fanfare surrounding
these two supernovas be sustained?
This game is only going to get better
because the talent is getting better.
Listen to the making of a rivalry,
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
So we just booted a bunch of Russians out of the United States.
Did we shut down the Seattle consulate?
Yeah. Shutting it down.
Shuttered, which is spelled T-T, and I saw a headline that spelled it D-D. We just shuttered.
Oh, really?
Never mind.
I got you. They're running scared.
Right. So this is actually something back during the transition from Obama to Trump.
We closed the San Francisco consulate.
And like I thought the Cold War was over.
People are saying we're in like a hot peace period.
But apparently there's like all sorts of weird espionage shit going on.
So when they closed the San Francisco consulate uh there was just like
black smoke billowing out of the chimney for like days and document yeah and uh foreign policy
magazine did this big report where they like talked to intelligent people in america about
like just the bizarre activities that are happening around the San
Francisco consulate before it was shut down. And like, there was just weird stuff. Like they
followed this guy who worked there. Like they basically, it says, imagine like driving up
over Mount Tamalpais to doing a bunch of switchbacking
through Redwood Studded Ravine
until over the horizon
you spot a giant shimmering beachfront
and you pull up
and there's a guy in a suit
standing at the edge of the water
just looking out into the water
with a small device in his hand
and then he stands there
just staring out into the ocean
for a few minutes,
turns around,
walks to his car and leaves.
I'm like,
that's like what they saw Russian,
like quote diplomats from this,
uh,
take a long drive out of the city.
Yeah.
Like they followed him out.
They can see Russia from there.
Right.
And then like wave a page.
You're like,
all right,
we did it.
Yeah.
The documents,
documents,
they would follow these binoculars. They would follow these people and they would like go out to a gas station, pull their car up next to the gas pump, not pump any gas, walk off like into a field, do laps around this tree like three times and then go back to their car.
And then like another car of Russian diplomats would do the same thing.
This is how Russians exercise.
Everyone knows that.
It's just Russian cardio.
But it's just like so strange.
That's what we would call in the intelligence community tradecraft.
Right.
And they kind of marked all these different places where they were doing this weird shit
on a map.
And they said that they think they're either nodes of fiber optics that are passing underground
that they're basically like figuring out how to interfere with,
or their paths that spy planes are flying over and they're basically
transmitting stuff up to the spy planes.
But it's just interesting context for all this like Seattle stuff is that the
last consulate we closed,
it was for shit like this,
like just like really weird sort of uh almost stereotypical
tradecraft stuff going on what's weird too because like the reason is because it's proximity to like
a u.s nuclear submarine base right and like the boeing manufacturing like plants and stuff so it's
like damn like what's that weird shit about like they're like okay we got that we got the subs
figured out it's just hard to like handle, to know that all of these agents are clearly operating within our country and to think that we similarly have something going on over there.
But to know that we're being led by people whose intentions are unclear on our side, or at least it feels that way.
It's like, I just want to know what is happening like i because i feel like we are either super vulnerable which is clear we've
been vulnerable to some forms of espionage right um but like what are they trying to do beyond
influence our elections and or get a manchurian candidate in there who may already be in there
right well it's all like a technological arms race like it's basically an everything arms
race right there's weapons there's technology there's ai and we're all racing against each
other and so anytime one of our you know best and brightest comes up with something even if it's
in the private sphere they're going to try and steal those secrets stephanie rule she's an msnbc
contributor and she said something me, she was like,
Trump doesn't even know
what AI is.
He thinks it's a steak sauce.
And I thought that was super funny.
Yeah, she crushes it.
She's an awesome burner.
She's a sick burner.
But yeah, I mean,
and that's,
it's like there's so many
complicated issues
and all we are ever talking about
is just like PPs and where-wheres.
Right, right right exactly
well the thing is too with these like with these expulsions it keep in mind it's the least we could
do in response to all of this you know what i mean like we did this to be not left out of a really
like broad coalition of other countries who are taking action against russia although the number
i think was pretty high it's's the highest, but on paper,
we kicked out spies.
We should do that.
Cool.
I'm tough on
Russia. I'm going to kick out their spies.
I got their spies out. Meanwhile,
I don't see any sanctions on fucking Putin himself
or other oligarchs
around him that could really get
his ass in a fucking grind. Are they getting next world cup like or yeah the world cup is in
russia but it's just happening it's just happening and we're going down and everyone well the u.s is
not the u.s is boycotting the u.s yeah foresaw the fuckery in russia and said you know what we're
not even gonna qualify those goals yeah in tobago we're not even going to qualify. We're going to miss those goals. Yeah. Like in Trinidad and Tobago.
At a protest, we will fail to qualify.
And so did Italy, and so did the Netherlands, so they're on to something else. But England, is England going?
England did qualify, but there was talk of not going.
But then every English football fan was like, yeah, okay, we're not going to go to the World
Cup?
No.
It could be in hell.
But that's kind of the world that we live in now where it's like nothing really matters because if this was the 80s of course like we wouldn't be the uk
wouldn't be going because there was a real serious threat coming right from our nuclear foe the the
soviet union but now it's like i mean they meddle in elections and they're poisoning people but like
we love football yeah and their level of fucking around isn't quite reached the egregious levels
where people are like,
okay, we have to do this.
It's just like,
is it worth trying to do this?
They took,
they literally annexed part of Europe
and then we had the Olympics there.
Yeah.
Right.
And it's just like,
that's where we are right now
where it's hard to convince a population
that really terrible things are happening.
Right.
Or, and or, are these really terrible things?
Was Crimea really part of Russia that just wanted to be back?
You know, and that's like the world, like there is no real actual fact or answer or
anything because everything is disputed by a slew of other information.
Well, one fact that is probably undisputable is like, you know, every time there's been sort of expulsions
like this, there's expulsions in kind
from Russia. They're like tit for tat expulsions.
And so they're most likely
it's going to happen again. The only time it hasn't happened
was when Obama did it in 2016.
And that was probably because Michael Flynn was like,
hey, don't worry about this, bro. Don't worry about this, bro.
Which is a weird thing to look at
because that really is one of the few times, I think,
maybe one of the only times where there wasn't-kind expulsions or clapbacks from Russia.
Did they kill that?
Yeah, they killed that British.
No, he's still, him and his czar are still in critical condition.
Okay.
And we're like giving them plane tickets to go home.
Right.
You know, I mean, like that's how we're fighting in kind.
And like, you know, I'm not saying we should poison their spies but no it does feel
like we're not playing i feel like you know we're not playing with the same game maybe you know
sprinkle a little salmonella on their salad bar right oh yeah wow wow country but yeah they're um
yeah it's true we're definitely not doing enough to combat like the the election meddling and every
expert even in the department of defense has been saying that they're like, bro, we're not really doing anything to combat this.
Yeah.
Aside from like,
yeah,
we'll sanction people that were already being sanctioned.
Yeah.
We'll expel spies.
Of course.
Just let daddy Mueller take control.
Right.
We just want daddy Mueller.
So speaking of children's safety,
we wanted to open with a new segment that Miles is developing.
What's it called, Miles?
It's called Kid Decapitated at a Waterpark Watch.
What?
You know, so...
This happens.
This is actually a really terrible story.
So getting a UTI at Splash Mountain
is actually only the second worst thing
that can happen to you at a...
Yeah, so this...
Sorry to make jokes about this.
This is terrible.
This kid, I think two years ago,
was riding this water slide called Verrückt at the Schlitterbahn
water park in Kansas City.
Now, this thing, the Verrückt apparently translates to insane or mad in German because the thing
was so fucking intense.
And I remember it was like on like some TLC show or like whatever educational reality
shows like building impossibleLC show or whatever educational reality show.
It was like building impossible water slides or whatever.
And they show when they're first testing it, it's like this thing that does a huge drop, and then it hits a second hill, and then another drop.
Right, which water slides usually only go down.
They usually don't pop back up.
This is meant to give you a little bit of rush, and it's like one of those things where people get in or like three people get in a raft and go down right so in the initial test ones the angle of the hill when you come down off the initial descent right the angle was too sharp that it was launching rafts off the slide right so
so in the show they're like oh shit we got to change this angle right and they're like it's
a six-week job and then you see the guy being like you guys got two weeks right and they're
like because reality show logic right it's like clockman is threat and so you
gotta get them doing it right and then but sadly they didn't properly clearly there were a lot of
things being worked out because in august of 2016 this kid rode the ride and the the raft was
launched and he was decapitated and like two other women that were in the raft they went airborne
and collided with like the sort of like protective net
uh framing that keeps the rafts in and the kid was tragically killed now the people who designed
the ride have now been charged with like reckless second degree murder yeah aggravated battery and
aggravated endangering a child uh and the crazy thing is like there were people getting injured
before this kid got on the ride and they were keeping it all hush hush right and trying to be like oh man this happened to this
kid was the first time and after they did their investigation no it wasn't because this shit was
a fucking death trap that's final destination bones were being broken yeah i mean this is
this is one of those things first of all sch, Schlitterbahn is something that I had heard about from Howard Kramer on Who
Charted talking about how great this is in the Austin area.
But apparently, they pushed it too far in this case.
But I feel like this is one of those design flaws with the very fabric of capitalism where
you've got the sort of like carnival barker personality
who creates a water park and makes it like nationally famous that's like the best guy to
have in charge of your water park in terms of letting people know about it right but it's also
the exact wrong person to have in charge of like designing safe rides for people right and so that's
what where regulations come in handy. Like that's the
thing that it's the least sexy, least cool thing to like talk about and get excited about
regulations. But like we were seeing it over and over again, like regulations getting,
you know, killed by this administration and people who are pro deregulation getting put in charge of all
sorts of industries.
And like you really need regulations in place because capitalism is an awesome thing at
certain things, but it's not necessarily good at like looking out for consumer safety.
It's good at looking out for anyone's safety.
Yeah.
I think we've got to make we've got to make getting cars of strangers sexy again.
We've got to make regulation sexy again.
I'm on the marketing team for this.
I'm ready to make people horny for regulation.
Oh, I love it.
I mean, yeah, because when they talk about this ride,
they say it violated nearly all aspects
of longstanding industry safety standards
and that, in fact, the design and operation of the Verruckt
complied with few, if any, of the industry safety standards.
That's like some Titanic shit.
Right, exactly.
So, I mean, yes, again, I don't mean to be flippant about this child's death,
but it's just crazy because it's so fucking horrific.
And so preventable.
Yeah, right.
And it's crazy because it was like a thing on a reality show
that they were even like, hey, man, we need six weeks to do it.
The guy's like, do it in two.
And they're like, uh-oh.
Yeah.
They say that a lot of the really poor decisions he made
were in favor of getting this thing promoted on a reality show.
Right.
First up, we want to talk about the premiere of Roseanne.
Over 18 million people viewed the premiere of the new rebooted Roseanne.
And yeah, a lot of people are kind of taking this as a sort of vindication of Trumpism
because in the show, Roseanne is a Trump supporter.
And so you're seeing-
And real life.
Right.
And in real life.
And the first episode was sort of a conversation between her and Jackie about, you know, the Trumpism versus people who oppose Trump.
I think Jackie was portrayed as like a cartoon of liberalism, like she walked in with a pussy hat and an outfit made of kale. Right.
Like she walked in with a pussy hat and an outfit made of kale.
Right.
But yeah.
So, I mean, it is a perspective that you don't tend to get from mediated pop culture that's coming out of Los Angeles.
Sure.
I never watched the show growing up because I didn't really see myself in the reality of that show.
But I know many people that liked it.
But was the show problematic back then?
I thought based on what I was reading, they used sort of this working class reality to also talk about sort of other issues within it.
Like there was gay marriage at the time when the show was happening, but apparently it
was a controversial episode.
Is this new version?
Are they just going whole hog on trump where it's like no we're
going to normalize trump using roseanne or is it still going to be like we're going to we'll have
elements of people who support donald trump and also try and use that and juxtapose that with
other people and then explore the the relationship that we have between families or whatever between
people having sort of these political ideological differences i've heard a defense of it that tries
to compare it to all in the family because on All in the Family, obviously, the Archie Bunker was like an old, like crotchety bigot.
Right.
But I think the difference between that and this is that Carol O'Connor himself was not that way.
And like he was like, like he himself did not feel that way.
But the show like used him as a foil.
Now, to be fair, like Rob Reiner's character on that show was kind of a caricature of like a young liberal kid too right it was kind of there was that there um but
it doesn't help if the only like mouthpiece for that idea is jackie and she's kind of a punchline
and like a thing that may not be what they're trying to achieve but yeah there are a lot of
really like there are queer writers for the show people of color like i don't i don't know what
they're attempting with it but like right it might be possible like they're actually trying to find a way to like
bridge the gap in the fight between trump supporters and hillary supporters i don't know
what they're going for but that seems to be what they're claiming to be going for portray the
disagreement rather than taking necessarily a side in the disagreement right right but it seems like
from what how our writer jm was describing it it it seems like there are like plenty of things left hanging where a liberal character says something and then that's just the joke but there's no like –
And Roseanne gets the last word.
Yeah, gets the last word.
Trumpism gets the last word.
Yeah, I think it's probably more evenly distributed than you would typically see in a show about liberal city dwellers written by liberal city dwellers, you know, written by liberal city dwellers. But, you know, I think
that's probably partially both because Roseanne herself is not just the, you know, namesake and
star of the show. She's also, you know, one of the executive producers and one of the loudest voices
in the writer's room. And, you know, she herself is a trump supporter um but you know it's also a stated
goal of the show to try and accurately reflect what uh people who are living in the middle of
america who are in this you know income bracket uh would think like in the conversations that they're having. There's an interview with the co-EP of the show,
a guy, Bruce Rasmussen,
who was also heavily involved in the previous incarnation of it,
who was saying that the writer's room itself,
outside of Roseanne, is still fairly liberal.
It's a lot of LA comedy writers.
Right.
But they are having to dig.
And I think probably having Roseanne there keeps them honest about this.
They're having to dig to, you know, right from the perspective of somebody who is a Trump supporter, who does think that Trump is going to do something for them.
Right.
It's like the Black Panther for white working class people. Right. And I think. This is their Wakanda. Right. It's like the Black Panther for white working class people.
Right.
And I think-
This is their Wakanda.
Yeah.
And I think there are other shows that do the same thing.
Like I think Atlanta is another example.
That was something that kept jumping out to me in the first season is how much of that
show is about like struggling to, you know, like go out on a date when you don't have
the money to pay for the date.
Right, right, yeah.
And like, you know-
Very grounded in reality.
Right, very grounded in economic realities, which is something like from back when I was at Cracked,
we had people who grew up fairly poor on our writing staff.
And anytime they would write articles about growing up poor and what it's like to be poor,
growing up poor and what it's like to be poor, they would get way more traffic than their normal articles would because people, I think, are just so starved for content that reflects the reality
of life as the majority of people in America live it, which is as not somebody who can afford a
giant apartment in Manhattan.
Right.
You know?
And like even Lady Bird was kind of like that was one of the draws to that movie.
Yeah, very much.
It was like people, like that was pre-economic collapse, like that was just people living
in the 90s era.
Yeah.
What was I going to say?
Did you watch the show?
I did not watch the show.
I have issues with Roseanne herself and some stuff she's had with transphobia on Twitter and historically
and it's hard
because it's one of the things where she deleted
a lot of her old tweets when the show was announced
and I think that may have been the network asking her to do it
I'm not sure and all this stuff was happening
in the era where tweets weren't as readily
cataloged as they are now so you can find
a lot of like think pieces about the
tweets but there aren't screenshots of the tweets right um and like it was a little bit rough and and so i and i i've kind of steered
clear of it because at times he's gotten pretty aggressive with people um and so i'm a little
antsy about it now one thing i will say about the show um just from like reading about it um is that
there's been a lot of things like oh how dare you support Roseanne because she's a transphobe.
And then people point out
that there is a character on the show
that is one of Darlene's children.
And it's a boy who is like gender nonconforming
and dresses in girls' clothing on the show.
And I guess Roseanne as a character
is very supportive of him.
And people have been going,
see, this show's not transphobic
because there's this kid that wears dresses, whatever.
And I think that like that is a oversimplification
of what's happening in the situation.
Now, I am not saying this to attack it.
I actually think it's great they're doing this character.
And I think that it is really good to have a show that is hitting this market like you were saying that also addresses the idea of letting a kid in a middle class culture, especially in middle America, being able to be openly expressive of his gender nonconformity
and be able to address how he feels. And that's great. So I 100% support them doing that. So I
don't want to seem like I'm attacking that. But I do think that like, step back from using that
as an example of the show not being transphobic, because that does not mean the show is not
transphobic. In fact, Roseanne openly refers to trans women at least she did on Twitter in the time when
she was really engaging in this as men in dresses.
So you could even make the argument that
they're making this a boy who wears
dresses who is explicitly not transgender
as a way of being like, oh, this is all this really is.
And even though it's really two different things. And they're
not saying that one should not be showcased
and should not be celebrated, but it's just
not. It'd be like if I'm on a show and I'm of
Jewish descent and someone's like, that show's not racist,
you got a Jew on there.
Like, let's go ahead.
Or the same people are like,
I have black friends.
Yeah, exactly.
But it's not even that.
Like, it's literally saying
this different group is represented
so this group is not being attacked.
So like,
I don't think that that character
in and of itself
absolves Roseanne Barr herself
of her history with transphobia.
And so,
now I've,
like the article
that you guys linked to,
or someone mentioned Andrea James,
who is a trans writer and like performer,
like was praising the show.
And she was in the shows at the end of the day,
it shows really funny.
And that's what matters more than anything.
And that's what's like an heel things.
So there are trans voices who are watching the show and saying that it's
fine.
So for me,
it's less about what the show is doing and more my reservations about the
about the Roseanne herself.
And so, yeah, I just, I, yeah i yeah as a kid never appealed to me but like it just seemed like one of those
things that everyone knew like it was like a show that i never watched but i knew the characters
names right just because like everyone would talk about it but i don't know jack you watched it
yeah i watched it a lot growing up and i i didn't even realize but uh you know norm mcdonald ended
up being one of my favorite comedians and he was a
writer on the show when i when uh i watched it back then and he's still a consulting producer
uh whitney cummings is co-showrunner wanda sykes is writing on it it's like the the writer's room
is really impressive and so i'm definitely gonna check it out i just haven't had a chance to yet
yeah and i'm not like i will probably check out at some point and like it is like again like
going back to my own overrated earlier like i think that there are people who are going to get
something out of this and it's going to be really useful for them and so i you're not hating i'm not
hating i hope i honestly i think the fact that they have a gender non-conforming kid on the show
is amazing and so i support i'm excited about that um and you know i'm hoping that the people
on the show like sarah gilbert and johnman, who have a perspective that is very different than what Roseanne Barr's perspective is, still are able to have enough creative input in the show that it's not just like a propaganda thing.
And I'm optimistic for it.
Yeah, me too.
I just haven't been able to bring myself to watch it for reasons.
All right.
We're going to take a quick break.
We will be right back.
All right. We're going to take a quick break. We will be right back.
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.
Woohoo! That would be me, Devin Simone.
And then there's me, Davon Rogers. And we're here to take you behind the scenes of...
Drumroll, please.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
The Challenge 40 Battle of the Eras.
Yes.
Each week, cast members will be joining us to spill all of the tea on the relentless challenges,
heartbreaking eliminations, and of course, all the juicy drama.
And let's not forget about the hookups.
Anyway, regardless of what era you're rooting for at home,
everyone is welcome here on MTV's official challenge podcast.
So join us every week as we break down episodes of the Challenge 40 Battle of the Eras.
Listen to MTV's official challenge podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two
assassination attempts separated by two months. These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago
when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of
that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife
working undercover for the FBI
in a violent revolutionary underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, fam. I'm Simone Boyce. I'm Danielle Robay. And we're the hosts of The Bright Side. or wherever you get your podcasts. our recent episode with dancer, actor, host of Dancing with the Stars, and now novelist,
Julianne Hough. I feel really whole. I feel like the last few years I've really unraveled a lot,
which is part of what this book is about. And I really feel so content, which is a word that
used to scare the crap out of me. And I love that word now. Listen to The Bright Side from
Hello Sunshine on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
I'm
Keri Champion, and this is season
four of Naked Sports, where we live at the
intersection of sports and culture.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Every great player needs a foil.
I ain't really hear them.
Why is that?
Just come here and play basketball every single day, and that's what I focus on.
From college to the pros, Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
Angel Reese is a joy to watch.
She is braggadocious.
She is unapologetically black.
I love her.
What exactly ignited this fire?
Why has it been so good for the game?
And can the fanfare surrounding these two supernovas be sustained?
This game is only going to get better because the talent is getting better.
Listen to the making of a rivalry,
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
But we wanted to get to some hard news.
Yeah.
Because there is a video game out that is super hot.
Cool.
Super cool.
Super cool.
It is.
An instruction manual on how to be a modern man.
Right.
That's how I like to put this game.
It's called Super Seducer.
It's called Super Predator.
Move over, Tucker Max.
Right.
We've got Richard La Ruina, who is apparently a real person and not a satirical character.
He, even though his name actually has the word ruin in it, and he is just awful.
He's the self-assessed Europe's top pickup artist.
Ah.
And he has released a video game
where he teaches you
how to nag women
and just like, you know,
treat women like shit enough
that they end up in your hotel room.
It's good, you know,
and you thought that just like
society and people around you
could just glean that.
Right. But it's good to just have it all in one place from someone who i think looks like a bodega unabomber just like a
terrifying uh man what a hottie the whole thing the whole game is basically scenarios where there
is a woman or group of women and then it's like a choose your own creep venture where you're then like one of them is
like a woman walking down the street
a classic
harassment set up
classic harassment scenario
in which it says oh what do you do
A approach directly in front
B approach slightly in front
and to the side C pretend
to be blind D walk next to her.
E, wolf whistle, which I guess is...
And F is...
The option is, yo, what up, girl, walking with her.
Right.
And it's insane.
So you can click on the thing and inevitably, until you do the right thing...
I mean, all of those seem like great options.
Honestly, I feel like the answer is pretty clear which is pretend to be blind yes and and
then bring back the michael scott character blind guy mcsqueezy uh and just walk up to her like
so this this shit is crazy so there's other ones where it's like there there are these like women
drinking at a bar and again it's sort of of like- Another classic setup. Women sitting in a booth, sipping wine, sharing their feelings.
For so many years, men have not known how to approach those women or to approach women
on the street.
How will you break the ice?
Leaving them alone.
One of them is ask them if they are talking about you.
If they say no, then ask why not?
My favorite answer is ask them if they know what you like in a girl.
The answer being your dick.
That's the whole sentence?
Yeah, that's like an option.
Is the next option pretend to be fly?
No, one of them is like creep up from behind stealthily.
And like when you click that one, the dude's fucking head comes up
like a villain over a fence post.
And he's sniffing them.
And then he starts smelling them.
And they turn around and go,
Ew!
We're going to have a game night.
We're going to have a game night.
We're going to have to find a way
to stream this on Twitch,
the Jamie Loftus review.
Oh my God.
I would snap Richard LaRuina
over my leg like a twig i would i would
end him oh god well i will have you know jamie that uh he admits that the game was made before
the hashtag me too stuff uh actual quote from him right but he wants the me too stuff the me too
stuff but he wants to highlight the strong female characters in the game.
You know, the living mannequins who appear and vanish on his bed.
The scary dolls with holes in various places.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Strong female, independent female characters.
Strong female protagonists.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, there's even like moments where it's like talking to a woman who like has a boyfriend.
And it's like, first ask if she's going to marry him.
That way you can take away her independence.
It's like the most fucking manipulative.
It's just psychopathic.
It's crazy.
Yeah, it's all just like finding ways to attack the unconscious of people.
And this is a guy who clearly knows what other people are thinking
of him because he says he hopes people can appreciate super seducers strong female characters
and that it's an easy angle to take saying the game is whatever sexist or whatever else so it's
just like so he knows how he looked to the world he would get a haircut first of all and i god i don't
know there's and it seems so like goofy and dumb but then sometimes you'll like meet a guy in the
wild who it's like oh you would probably like you've read these books right right right there
was a guy who approached me a couple weeks ago this was and it partially on me uh because i was
they but there seemed to be like a birthday party at the bar I was at.
I'm like, I'm just going to take a piece of cake and see if anyone notices I wasn't invited.
And so he came over.
He's like, hey, it's my friend's birthday, and that's her cake.
And I was like, I know.
I was invited.
Oh, you doubled down?
I doubled down and took a second slice of cake.
Oh, you doubled down?
I doubled down and took a second slice of cake.
But then it turned out he was just trying to start a conversation with me by yelling at me about someone else's cake
and then made a bunch of strange comments about cake.
And then I was like, I actually have to get out of here, comma, Arthur, period,
with my mountain of stolen cake.
Oh, wow.
I mean, this guy, he was in some hot water when he was saying that he felt British women
are overweight and entitled.
Right.
That's why he only fucks with Eastern European women.
And they're like, bro, what?
Yeah.
Classic Neg movie.
Neg your entire country.
Yeah, Neg the women right off top.
Right.
What's up, girl?
You're fat and entitled.
Boom.
Anyway.
That's a great way for him to explain why he's like a weird loser virgin.
He's like, well, I just don't think anyone in my country is hot.
Right.
And that's what this woman said.
She's like, you're blaming women for your lack of success by calling them entitled,
you fucking idiot.
And I've never, yeah, it's like I've never left this country and I think every girl here
is super mean.
Right.
That's why I love Russia.
He specifically calls out Russia.
He's like, you walk down the street in London, and they're like, whatever.
Maybe you see a beautiful woman here and there.
Then you go to Moscow, and it's like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
But the game is still on Steam, I believe, but it's no longer on the PlayStation Store
because they're like, yeah, this game is kind of fucking gross.
I don't understand.
I don't know.
What's their problem?
Yeah.
It seems a little bit like they're censoring his truth.
Right.
Again, just pretend you're blind.
I mean, anytime that comes up as an option, you know that's the option I'm fully going with.
Just pretend.
Or you could pretend
to be blind. Or again, the greatest
pick-up line we've learned is ask them
if they know what you like in a girl.
The answer being your dick.
Yeah, that's gonna work. Because this guy's
so busy, you know, getting
with various women from
Russia, he
also left a comment on a
video on YouTube that was criticizing the game
that only had 150 views and like started berating the person on youtube uh and then made a dmca
complaint to youtube so that the video review of this i'm sorry it's triggering for sorry sorry
my bad my bad uh no it's activating our coping skills. I love the positive
Miles Gray has been.
Trigger, triggering.
Yeah.
But he was angry
because the game reviewer said,
I don't know,
maybe just be yourself
and don't pay attention
to this guy's rules
for how to insult women
into sleeping with you.
And he was like,
come on, man,
that's cuck shit.
That doesn't work.
I mean, I'm sure ever since this came came out this guy cannot stop coming and making money so he comes money
yeah he comes little bills now so jokes on us i think this guy like got rich though really young
and then was like pissed that money wasn't equating to sex for him so then was like i gotta figure out a way to gas
like women right fucking me right in a way i think it's partially like the john ham uh character on
30 rock where it's like he's like a okay looking dude who got rich when he was young and is like
wow now women sleep with me i must have like some amazing
mind trick that i'm using on them and it's like right no man people aren't being honest with you
or like nobody liked you before because you were kind of a loser and one woman was having a really
bad day right exactly just happened to meet her on the worst day of her life but i like that that
guy who he put the takedown request to YouTube,
he felt bad and came back
and then PayPal to do 50 bucks.
It was like, I'm sorry.
Really?
Yeah, and he's like,
you don't want your fucking money.
Speaking from personal experience,
cucks love to PayPal random people $50.
Uh-oh.
But yeah.
Oh yeah, we never heard the end of that story.
Oh, the small sauce.
Small sauce.
Yeah, so I guess that's maybe a good place to end, right?
So there was a
saga where you
were doing a live stream on Facebook
and then what were people like giving you a rating?
They're like, what would you rate her out of 10 or something?
Someone named Swole Sauce, yeah,
started a hot or not thread about
me and there were
I mean, the conversation,
it's like, where's my WikiFeet page?
But the conversation, there was a lot of thoughts.
There was a lot of good points, a lot of things that really made me want to run into traffic.
So I messaged the guy who started the thread and asked him for $50.
Accidentally Venmo'd him $40.
Negotiations took place.
That's how you start the negotiations.
Always Venmo someone $40.
Here's $40. Now this is what the negotiations. Always Venmo someone $40. Here's $40.
Now this is what I want.
I want fat and $50.
So all said and done, he ended up Venmoing me $20
and said he'd come to my show in New York in a few weeks.
That's right.
Didn't show.
He didn't show?
Didn't show.
Wow.
Wow, Swole Sauce.
Too busy getting swollen cleans, but like Swole Sauce.
Or if he was there, he was too afraid to talk to me.
Oh, no, that ain't Swell.
But, and there was also, there was no one Swell at that show.
So if he was.
I would have known.
I'm being highly critical of my own audience saying,
they're a bunch of weak losers.
If there was someone Swell there,
they would have stood out like a sore thumb.
All right, linguine legs.
He didn't show.
Linguine legs. Linguine legs. All right, linguine legs. He didn't show. Linguine legs.
Linguine legs.
All right, Jamie.
Log flume.
As always.
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.
Means the world to Miles.
He needs your validation, folks. I hope you're
having a great weekend, and I will talk to you Monday. Bye. Thank you. Defne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16, 2017, was assassinated. Thank you. to a mafia state. Listen to Crooks everywhere, starting September 25th
on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
In California,
during the summer of 1975,
within the span of 17 days
and less than 90 miles,
two women did something
no other woman had done before,
try to assassinate
the President of the United States.
One was the protege of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
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Hear episodes of Rip Current early and completely ad-free and receive exclusive bonus content
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I'm Renee Stubbs, and I'm obsessed with sports, especially tennis.
Tune into my podcast each week to hear me and my friends in the community break down
the latest matches, including the US Open. Plus hear from some of the biggest names in the community break down the latest matches, including the U.S. Open,
plus hear from some of the biggest names in the sport
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It's about belief, and once you break through that,
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Listen to the Renee Stubbs Tennis Podcast every Monday
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Presented by Elf Beauty,
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In 1982, Atari players had one game on their minds, Sword Quest.
Because the company had promised $150,000 in prizes to four finalists.
But the prizes disappeared, leading to one of the biggest controversies in 80s pop culture.
I'm Jamie Loftus. Join me this spring for The Legend of Sword Quest.
We'll follow the quest for lost
treasure across four decades. Listen to The Legend of Swordquest on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.