The Daily Zeitgeist - Weekly Zeitgeist 171 (Best of 4/12/21-4/16/21)
Episode Date: April 18, 2021The weekly round up of the best moments from DZ's Season 180 (4/12/21-4/16/21.) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informa...tion.
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Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts hi i am lacy lamar and i'm also lacy lamar just kidding i'm amber revan okay everybody we have
exciting news to share we're back with season two of the amber and lacy lacy and amber show
on will ferrell's big money players Network. This season, we make new
friends, deep dive into my steamy DMs, answer your listener questions and more. The more is punch
each other. Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players
Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Just listen,
wherever you get your podcasts.
Just listen, okay?
Or Lacey gets it.
Do it.
In California during the summer of 1975,
within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles,
two women did something no other woman had done before,
try to assassinate the president of the United States.
One was the protege of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nickname Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI.
Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer, this season on the new podcast, Rip Current.
Hear episodes of Rip Current early and completely ad-free and receive exclusive bonus content by subscribing to iHeartTrue Crime Plus only on Apple Podcasts.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit,
where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school
to change their racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves,
the biscuits.
I was a lady rebel.
Like, what does that even mean?
It's right here in black and white in print.
It's bigger than a flag or mascot.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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.
Well, Miles, we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by the brilliant, the talented, the hilarious Chelsea Weber-Smith!
Well, thank you.
Thank you, you know I always love being here with you guys.
Look at you.
Thank you for having me back.
Always such a great conversation to be had.
Yeah.
I agree.
I love talking to you guys.
It's so good talking to you.
I love talking to you guys.
It's so good talking to you.
As we've talked about before,
like your work on, you know,
social moral panics and just your kind of pop cultural history.
Mind for pop culture history is just,
just inject it right into my fucking veins.
I love it.
I will.
Yes.
What are you trying to get a jumbo?
A red top?
How are you packing? How are you packing it up? Pandemic, Chelsea. You want two? You want two? Or you want the. Yes, please. Great, Dan. What are you trying to get? A jumbo? A red top? How are you backing it up?
Pandemic, Chelsea.
You want two?
You want two?
Two for five?
What's the deal?
The other thing I was going to see,
I was thinking of you when Lil Nas X twerked his way to hell.
Oh, baby.
I know.
That was full blown.
I will say it hasn't been great PR for Satanists the last little while here, you know.
But I think he has a brilliant PR team, which I'm sure he's a huge part of because I think they knew what they were doing with that and what was going to happen.
Oh, hell yeah.
I appreciate a good PR stunt as much as I hate capitalism, I have to say.
And that was a beautiful, beautiful rollout from start to finish there.
And, you know, it was a satanic panic.
But, man, things just the last satanic panic lasted like 15 years.
We're turning over quick these days, aren't we?
Oh, yeah.
We turn over fast.
But, yeah, thank you for thinking of me.
You know, when Charles Mans manson died a bunch of people
called me i was like are you okay and i was like no i don't like serial killers i just know a lot
of how does that feel for you what wait what did you think i was into man i was like oh my god
oh his wisdom was so beyond yeah and his music let's not forget pour one out for another musical
king that's pretty ridiculous yeah did you ever hear those weird tapes those oh yeah oh yeah
those are i remember dating somebody who put me on not put me on but like
played them for me for the first time and i immediately was like oh no like why
do you have all these mp3s these are not good songs at all and i was like come on out to this
ranch where me and my friends hang out and uh we can just you know yeah he's got a song about
dumpster diving it's like we love i can't remember it but it's a real happy like let's go dumpster
diving you guys and it's so he was heavily influenced by and uh even friends with the
beach boys yeah sure was and they both branched off in their opposite directions and took things
i i think kokomo is is the most authentically and deeply satanic song in American culture, because it's just like at that point where the hippies and like the 60s culture has completely sold its soul to capitalism
and just like visions of, you know, steel drums dancing in our head.
Yeah. Well, it's so interesting because Charles Manson and the Manson family were like a huge kickoff for the satanic panic because originally they were like this is a satanic
ritual and so it's just like and then it was like rosemary's baby and the exorcist and all of these
like satanic movies with all this like happenings around them that were supposed to be like like a
cross was struck by lightning the night of the premiere and you know so it's just like the beginning of this right satanic panic that
we're still i mean we've always had a satanic panic so it just it just gets big sometimes and
puffs up and i should say satanic uh in the more evil than anything yeah yeah not nice satanists
who are just like yeah not fun satanists challenging
yeah shall be the whole of the law yeah is is satanism i mean i feel like little nas x is
making satan cool again like yeah yeah i guess the real if since the satanic panic only lasted
all but 15 seconds has satan lost its appeal in terms of being a lightning rod for outrage for
conservative people like are we in a post-satan world now like satan is no longer the worst thing
well i mean it i guess it depends on which christians we're talking about like the
evangelical because there's been such an evangelical resurgence right so it's like those folks are definitely on board with like satanic forces you know controlling yeah right like all
that stuff is still around but i think it's i mean it's lost its power probably a little bit you know
but it's just like the metal heads right it's like the metal heads of the 80s it's in the
backwards records it's all the same shit right it's just
a little bit more surface level now and it's sexier now yeah you didn't have to play that
video backwards to uh get no what it was trying to do um but he did kill satan yeah i know what's
their problem did you ever witness a wave of comedy, like sketch, sketch comedy around Manson and the Beach Boys working together? I can think of like three things like sketch comedy pieces that were about Manson and the guys are trying to record a legit song where it's like the beach boys working on some
harmonies and then like sort of the the game of the sketch was like manson breaking he's like
yeah and then satan would come in and drip blood down on the thing and they're like we're talking
about a young woman's new car that she's driving to the beach like all right all right yeah yeah
go on i'll work on some stuff and kept kept coming back with all kinds of weird shit.
Oh, man.
That sketch is also so good that you referenced.
I think you should leave.
Yeah.
When you look at the battle within the Beach Boys,
even accepting Charles Manson,
over the lyrics, it's such a bummer.
Because as Brian Wilson was trying
to make Pet Sounds and Smile you had Mike Love like who was just a like branding dude like a
marketer from the start who was like nah man it's all about the chicks and the cars and surfboards
yeah and then like when Pet Sounds didn't like sell a bunch of albums out of the
gate he like used that to just be like see what did i tell you man you don't you don't know shit
leave it to me mike love and that that started the whole yeah it's a it's a bummer it's a saga
it is a saga yeah what is something you think is overrated? So overrated, I'm trying to figure out the best way to phrase this, but I would say talent or like the word talent.
So this is kind of speaking as an artist.
So I got my training like a long time ago, back in high school, primarily.
I've been kind of drawing on and off, but doing
other stuff. I was an English major in university and all these things. So kind of like art became
kind of more of a hobby, but like, I still continue to do it, you know, in my free time.
And I just get very tired at this age, like I'm 30 now. And I'm always hearing people say,
oh, you are so talented. Your art is so good. You're so talented. And art is a skill, just like any other skill, any other trade that you can do.
And so it's something I studied to do.
I didn't just magically become good at art.
I had to work to get good at art, I guess.
So I know that people mean well when they say that but i prefer the word
skilled over talented i would say yeah i think because i think it obscures a essential part of
what it means to do like any kind of creative art that you engage in i think to put that word talent
because i used to have this idea too of what art was or what an artist was or did
and it was a person who was just i don't know you got these freaks walking around called artists
right they just can't help themselves but to pick up a brush or a instrument or whatever and they
just fucking do their thing it's wild it's like they're like kind of the superheroes of our of
our culture in a weird way without really like thinking like no
these are all just fucked up people who this is a thing they really like to do and the process of
even being creative is like it's never this magical thing where someone's just thinking so
originally and they came up with something i think that's why there's like a book i read it's a very
easy read it's called like how to steal like an artist that really helps like deconstruct this idea that like people aren't just iterating on things that happen
that they've they've looked at or were influenced by rather than this idea that like in a vacuum
you're uh hit with inspiration and coming up with something so next level and i think that maybe
help will help people embrace like their own interest in a certain artistic endeavor like
it's like anything it's
a muscle you gotta the first shit you're gonna do isn't gonna be fucking good it's gonna be whack
but you like it and it doesn't matter and that's the beauty of it is that it doesn't matter you
just keep doing it and keep doing it and you get better and better yeah yeah exactly i mean i think
most artists like to um at some point you know we all like like to redraw stuff that or well not
just necessarily draw like any art you know they like to redo the stuff that, or well, not just necessarily draw, like any art.
They like to redo the thing that they did before to see how they've grown. It's like the easiest
way also to show other people how they've grown. Of course, I draw so differently from what I did
like 10 years ago or 20 years ago when I was a kid. But while I guess right now I'm more primarily
doing like digital painting and stuff like that, I do also lots of fiber art.
So I'm also working in starting knitwear design.
So I knit and I spin.
I sew a little bit.
And those are all skills also.
And I didn't always know how to do those things either.
Right.
Right.
right i mean just looking at the art like when you go to your twitter feed there's like four different pieces of art in your pinned tweet and oh yeah because it was portfolio day yeah yeah
it's very like it's encouraging to me to hear you say that like talent like that it's not just
god-given talent because like this is like you it's like
you have photorealistic stuff you have like really cool looking like more cartoon influenced stuff
and like i i just feel like people i i would look at that and be like okay here's somebody who just
woke up and was able to like reproduce whatever was inside their head so that's pretty dope to
hear yeah yeah i still think that my art could use improvement but i do i do appreciate hearing
that people enjoy my artwork it's a process you know we're never done we're never done
you know what i mean i think that's the biggest i think that's the biggest gift you can give
yourself as a creative person because yes while we can always be like, I can do better and shit.
Trust me, as a Japanese person, I know.
I know the shit that can get in our heads, specifically around like folk, like nailing down a craft and perfecting things because that's part of the culture.
But I think in terms of like telling ourselves constantly, like we're always iterating,
we're always evolving.
So what my style is now will not be the style.
It will continue.
It's just like,
you got to go easy on yourself.
Cause it's so easy to be like,
fuck,
this should be better.
Fuck it.
I'm done.
I'm frustrated.
Cause that shit happens a lot.
And it's very easy to burn out if you're not,
you know,
giving yourself.
And they say that like,
um,
like just in parenting,
when the worst thing to do is to compliment a kid on
like their natural ability in something and the better thing is to like treat it as a process
where you're like kind of learning and you know yeah make a verb of it as opposed to like a
commodity that the kid is like wow you're you really like get math you're really
good at math as opposed to like you're doing great and math uh is all right yeah wow look at you
you're you're on your way to being a mathematician right yeah but yeah it's true you gotta you have
to sort of take out the pass fail good bad binary that exists when talking about things like this.
Cause they're not that simple.
And because of that,
like the cow,
we,
we wander into all these sort of toxic ways of thinking.
Yeah.
Yeah,
definitely.
That especially goes for things where it's,
I think people get caught up in this,
especially when it's like writing or doing,
doing things that aren't as like evident
outwardly as like being a really being able to draw really cool shit yeah like making music
where like feedback is a little more instant right yeah stuff especially when you got a wham bar uh feedback i don't even think that was you mean whammy bar wham whammy
i call it wham because we're we're tight we're having a moment yeah what is something from
your search history that's revealing about who you are what you're up to oh boy um misha barton 2021 looked up recently uh in the in the pandemic i've been re-watching
the oc okay it's part of my nightly ritual to stay sane i eat a little bowl of potato chips
and pretzels and watch an episode of the oc oh yeah okay what's your uh i'm not to i want to continue
this but i want to stop you there on the little bowl of chips and pretzels how do you prepare
that how big is the bowl and what is your idea in terms of how you're you know moderating what
the mix is in the amount great question uh so you got it it's a small bowl it's uh you know
regular it's maybe a cereal bowl all right so it's not like huge and uh you got it it's a small bowl it's uh you know regular it's maybe a cereal bowl all right
so it's not like huge and uh you got you put like a handful of potato chips and this is how you have
to work it out for every two regular size potato chips you eat one pretzel and they're rolled gold
pretzels look we're in california i can't get the good stuff i'm from pennsylvania if i was back in
pennsylvania i'd be getting tom sturge's pretzels okay tom sturge's pretzels the best and uh
probably i don't know goods potato chips whatever potato chips don't have lard um at this point uh
but um that's the ratio okay all right and so you're watching your oc getting your salty snack on
right and you thought what's misha up to now well yeah really all of them also i learned something
very interesting rachel bilson comes from hollywood royalty she's like her dad is nominated
for the screenplay for the five bloods uh this year it maybe he's not nominated, but he should be. But yeah, that was a screenplay
that was like about five
Vietnam vets that
has been kicking around since the 90s.
And then Spike Lee came in and
gave it a reason to exist.
She went to my high school.
Which one? Rachel Bilson?
Wow. Do you know her?
No, she was like a senior when I was a freshman.
Was she an actual student or was she like already acting? She's like, you know her no she was like a senior when i was a freshman was she a actual student or was she like already acting and she's like you know like it was the same thing like kirsten dunst is
also like when you're acting you don't go to you're not at school like you're just at you just
you say you go to a school for like the social part to say like oh i go to this high school
right twice a year for a test and then I'm on set the rest of the time.
Yeah.
A lot of people don't know this, but Laura Bundy.
Yes.
Andy, in a recent episode, I revealed that Laura Bundy,
yes, that Laura Bundy who played one of the kids in Jumanji
went to my high school in Kentucky,
and that was a defining fact for kids who went to my high school
Miles was like oh yeah
Kristen Dunst went to my school no big deal
and didn't even mention that Rachel Bilson did
I mean look you know
did her and Rami Malek go
doubt together when they were in high school I don't know
he went to my high school too
she posted
a picture when Rami Malek was
nominated for an Oscar she posted a picture of them from Malek was nominated for an Oscar.
She posted a picture of them from high school, and apparently he wrote her on Instagram and was like, please take that down.
I'm a very private person.
When it comes to awkward pictures of me.
Yeah, of me as more of like a kind of round-faced teen kid.
Okay, sure, Rami. Here's an actual little-known fact to me up until a couple weeks ago.
Did you know that Penn Badgley and Adam Brody are not the same person?
I had just fused them as the same person in my head because Dan and Adam, was his character's name Adam?
So Penn Badgley played Dan in Gossip Girl.
Adam Brody played Seth in The O.C.
They were both the literary
kind of nerdy character, and I had
absolutely completely fused
them in my brain.
Then Adam Brody was on
Comedy Bang Bang the other
week, and I was picturing
Penn Badgley the whole time. Oh, Penn Badgley's
Hot Man Zookas, right?
Is that what he is? That's how I remember Penn Badgley. Well, Penn Badgley's hot man zookas right is that what he is that's what i that's
how i remember pen badgley well pen badgley i've never seen with a beard does he rock a beard
every once in a while allow me to litter the chat with this image of hot man zookas pen badgley
yeah he's the dude for the chat miles has just posted a uh 30 line long link oh yeah hot hot zookas i'm hot for zookas
maybe vulture should do one of those things where they have two friends talk
except with pen badgley and manzookas right um zooks and pen how is uh how's the oc holding up
i was not like i watched a couple episodes
when it first came out i never really got fully into it is it is it good well i loved it when it
first came out because seth cohen i was close to that age and he was into indie rock and comic
books right and representation matters as we all know and i had never seen someone into death cab and
the x-men on tv before so an awkward jewish kid into indie rock and comic books so i found that
to be important in my development but not bad it's not bad honestly like it's still pretty enjoyable
like they're all very good actors and they're having fun mostly.
And there's some fun dialogue there. But it's like it has the problems that any show that has to do 24 or 25 episodes a season like they mostly used to do have, which is like, how do you fucking keep a show?
How do you keep things going for 25 episodes?
So there's all these ups and downs so like
everyone's breaking up every two episodes right and yeah i i don't know there's some murders too
right don't they run into like the gotta keep heightening it to the point that like or not
murders but people die and like it goes isn't that when the what you say episode happens what
you say yes that's the only thing i know i've never seen the oc before and
i've only you lived it bro yeah yeah dude i did uh not kind of no but i would say region of the
country would you andy could i a blazian man in the year of our lord 2021 who's never seen the oc
cast eyes upon this masterwork and have an effect that is positive
uh sure i mean i don't know they're not they're like i don't know honestly i don't know
like i'm trying my journey it's tough to think about it through the eyes of like
present day kind of woke hollywood and i say kind of in the sense that like hollywood today is
like they love hiring uh yeah it's it's like companies but it's still like yeah but it's
still like everyone behind the scenes is white so you're still getting a white perspective it's just
now said through the mouth of a black person right uh mostly there's you know obviously a handful of
exceptions i don't it's fun i don't
know i don't know like what you're looking for it's it's certainly not i didn't find it too
offensive it wasn't like no i don't know if it would be offensive necessarily more just like if
as like you know like since you have a connection to it from back in the day you're watching it with
a different sense versus sort of objectively being like yo check out the OC check it out
it's streaming baby I look
by the way I didn't say check it out I said this
so you're
saying I'm not saying check it out
yeah I was not
I was not recommending this I was saying this is how
I've survived right
this is
my own unique medical intervention
for my boredom.
Right, right.
This is Prozac for me.
And I would never give someone else that prescription.
Right, right, right.
What is something you think is underrated?
I have two things.
The first one, I think, I'll just quickly say, I think DMX prior to his passing.
I think a lot of artists do get they're more celebrated
posthumously.
I just
you know it's
I mean he's an OG.
He's a pioneer in the
game. He's so
talented. How many
hits did he have?
Unique.
So unique. Put other rappers on as well.
Like, he has a legacy.
And I just, you know, I know because he had his health issues,
and I do say health issues because that's how addiction should be treated.
You know, I think this society is very cruel.
you know i think this society is very cruel and oftentimes when people are in vulnerable situations like that they become the butt of jokes so you know now i think people are
you know after the guy is so sick and then passed it's like
he's being celebrated but i think he should have been
celebrated you know is yeah yeah he's a he's a he has a very unique place too because i think
alongside just his like very clear charisma and things like that there was something about how he
projected his like personality through
rap that transcended a lot of the weird.
I mean,
granted,
yes.
Like he,
he's an OG of also the most,
some of the most toxic shit I've ever heard a rapper say,
like without a doubt,
like things I'm like laughing now.
I'm like,
Oh,
you wrote that down and said that.
Right.
But after a while,
like,
as you really kind of look at his life
in its totality you realize like from childhood he had been in and out of like correctional
facilities and juvenile detention and things like that because he was he was trying to survive on
his own if you listen to the talib quali interview he did last year there are moments where he is so open about things
he has been through that when you really look at it you're like oh right everyone just thought oh
he's the dog like oh wow but truly like it was a very broken human being who had to adopt a much
more aggressive persona i think to sort of hide his own pain but within that like he was able to also express
which is oddly enough he needed sort of the language of this like hyper masculinity to be
emotional and he was able to do that in a way that didn't get him you know people would be oh he's
soft because he's crying on stage and shit but he cried on stage and people felt that shit like in
the early 2000s um and i think
there's a lot to be said about you know sort of like those elements of his work and like yeah of
course you can there's nobody has a legacy that's completely pristine but i think with with this one
for sure i think we just took him as like an energy vibey rapper but as i kind of reflect more
i'm thinking of like the things that actually pulled me in and i think
it was how because he was so emotionally transparent on top of like just being a great
performer but i think it was he was able to be uh vulnerable in a way that like a lot of like
rappers really weren't at the time so yeah he communicated more like in the intros, like before he started rapping, just like the build up was like so much just energy and pathos.
And yeah, like just that dude's spirit, that dude's energy is like, because I mean, there was like the flex culture of like, yeah, look at me what I got or whatever.
And like, you know, I'm with this, this, that and the other woman who whatever.
But it was a lot more about like just
dark shit that he was going through it wasn't as much of like the it wasn't as material i mean
later on i think he started making more like party albums and things like that or you know
tracks slightly different but at the end of the day i think that's really what i think was for
me interesting because he's coming up in the time where like hard knock life or bad like
bad boy is sort of dominating the sound which is all materialism and then to have this guy like
screaming in a tank top wearing a like chain like a literal like chain link as like a fucking jewelry
and you're like oh oh okay i just remember an ex gonna give it to you when he was when he said
fight these tears i was like huh that's yeah You when he said, fight these tears.
I was like, huh.
Yeah, you want to fight me?
Fight these tears.
You're like, oh.
Huh?
Wow.
Yeah.
That's dark.
That's emotional.
Yeah.
He's an artist.
He really is an artist. And in terms of having a pristine legacy, I mean, we're human.
Humans are no humans perfect.
But he's an artist yeah he's artists thrown through and you can just tell from the amount of people
that showed up when he was on his deathbed like it's it's weird you know we've lost a lot of
artists before but it's interesting when you can actually like you can begin to measure truly like from the
output of like people sharing memories or like moving into physical space to be near it is a
huge thing so yeah sad to see him yeah he's only only 50 young 50 years young rest in peace yeah
it's a it's a tough time for you know i just anecdotally, I know people who are passing because of suicide and drug addiction, like, more than I feel like I've ever, taken a toll and just in general the the fact
that like fizzy you said these are illnesses that people aren't uh willing to treat as illnesses
um that like those things are taking a toll especially in america you'll see i mean and
you hope that these are the kinds of moments that can hopefully shift, move, uh, prod the culture to move forward a little bit to be like,
if,
if you're going to,
if you're willing to say the addiction was a tragedy when they're dead,
you have to be able to,
to have that same empathy and energy for someone from the onset.
It can't just be like,
Oh,
he a crackhead.
Right.
And then it's over there.
Because I think that,
I think that was a lot of
the discourse especially in the last sort of 10 years or so when he really had kind of fallen off
where people just were like oh he's an afterthought like you know he did that to himself
when when it's so funny because most of us know we have examples of addiction and that struggle
in our lives that we are very much invested in the wellness of that person but with celebrities it's
like this thing it's like well fuck you till you die and then when you die oh what a shame
right yeah yeah all right let's take a quick break and we'll be right back
do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from like what's the history behind bacon
wrapped hot dogs hi i'm I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejon.
Our podcast, Hungry for History, is back.
Season two. Season two.
Are we recording? Are we good?
Oh, we push record, right?
Okay.
And this season, we're taking in a bigger bite
out of the most delicious food and its history.
Saying that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba,
and the piña colada from Puerto Rico.
So all of these...
We thank Latin culture.
There's a mention of blood sausage in Homer's Odyssey
that dates back to the 9th century B.C.
B.C.?
I didn't realize how old the hot dog was.
Listen to Hungry for History
as part of the My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
When you think of Mexican culture, you think of avocado, mariachi, delicious cuisine,
and of course, lucha libre.
It doesn't get more Mexican than this.
Lucha Libre is known globally
because it is much more than just a sport
and much more than just entertainment.
Lucha Libre is a type of storytelling.
It's a dance.
It's tradition.
It's culture.
This is 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, the emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Santos! Santos!
Join me as we learn more about the history behind this spectacular sport
from its inception in the United States to how it became a global symbol of Mexican culture.
We'll learn more about some of the most iconic heroes in the ring.
This is Lucha Libre Behind the Mask.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask as part of my Cultura Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you stream podcasts.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit, where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves, the Biscuits.
I was a lady rebel. Like, what does that even mean?
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 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.
Hello,
everyone. I am Lacey Lamar.
And I'm Amber Ruffin,
a better Lacey Lamar.
Boo. Okay, everybody, we have exciting
news to share. We're back with season two of the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network.
You thought you had fun last season?
Well, you were right.
And you should tune in today for new fun segments like Sister Court and listening to Lacey's steamy DMs.
We've got new and exciting guests like Michael Beach.
That's my husband.
Daphne Spring.
Daniel Thrasher,
Peppermint, Morgan J., and more. You gotta
watch us. No, you mean you have to listen
to us. I mean, you can still watch
us, but you gotta listen. Like, if you're watching
us, you have to tell us. Like, if you're out the
window, you have to say, hey, I'm watching you outside
of the window. Just, you know what?
Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on
Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network on the iHeart on the iheart radio app apple podcast or wherever you get your
podcasts and we're back and all right let's talk briefly about infrastructure yeah it'd be nice to have some
yeah here all right moving on yeah that's it that's really my take just my idea i just read
this thing about france and i was like oh must be nice but you know it's like a lot of nations are
especially america takes its sweet fucking time trying to figure out how to combat co2 emissions
there's like little examples of like just small things you can do to have positive outcomes. Like in France, you know, when they're
not busy enacting just horrifically Islamophobic hijab laws and, you know, robbing people of agency
because that's just not how we get down here. They are really trying to figure out like a
practical way to combat emissions. And not that I'm just saying like,
Oh yes,
shout out to them.
But it's just an example,
right?
That they've been trying to re configure in a internal domestic flights with,
by saying,
if there is a flight,
an internal domestic flight that can be covered by train in under two and a
half hours,
we ain't doing that flight anymore.
We're just not doing it.
It doesn't make sense because then you can take a fucking
train because on average
the plane has, emits
77 times more CO2 per
passenger than the train.
So that's like a little thing you can do. Okay.
So that's the government.
I love riding the train. It's so
wonderful. But we already got like
things where like Republicans are like, oh, giving money to Amtrak it's like right yeah that's what my first thought
was like wait so the government's telling them to do that and they're listening without like
a enormous political backlash on like a bunch of militia people like yeah they also do shit
like be like oh air france you need some money okay well guess
who owns part of that now the government right because you needed some bailout money we're here
it's like it's my friend though it's like well if you were really thinking imagine you were thinking
like a businessman if another business person came up to you say hey let me get a loan you'd
be like okay give me a stake in your fucking company that's your fucking head right now come
up with that ownership scheme it's not like the u.s government hasn't bailed out the airlines like constantly it's just right they know it's
bad pr right is it bad pr to nationalize them i mean exactly that's all it is it's bad pr it's
actually good policy and it makes for better outcomes by not allowing these greedy fucks to
do whatever the fuck they want so anyway along those lines it's just saying it's stuff like
this that the u.s should be thinking about more aggressively because the other thing is like as much as they're
like oh we're gonna go electric all electric everything it's gonna be electric avenue it's
the main street electrical parade the one you see our fucking fleets coming down the street
okay fine but that's not electric cars alone will not solve this crisis like especially when you
consider the carbon footprint for the production and transport of electric vehicles it's not it's not like oh electric cycling is actually
going to have to factor in on some level for us to really cut down on emissions and i was just
reading this other piece especially looking at things happening in europe as a result of pandemic
like i think overall like interest in cycling has gone up in
this country, myself included.
I use a bike way more than I used to.
But just looking at simple things like this, in this study, they found urban residents
who switched from driving to cycling for just one trip per day reduced their carbon footprint
by about a half ton of CO2 over the course of a year.
And that's essentially the same as the equivalent emissions
from a one-way flight from London to New York. So, and if just one in five urban residents
permanently change their travel behavior in this way over the next few years, it could cut
emissions of car travel to close to 8% in Europe specifically in this analysis.
So like just build the bike, like you see places that have bike lanes and you're like, oh, wow.
Why wouldn't I bike there?
Why?
Because it's safe.
L.A. is like fucking Mad Max.
Like you've got to be like, oh, I hope you're built to ride a bike in the in these streets because nobody's saving you.
It's just different levels of encouragement.
I think we need them.
encouragement i think we need them there used to be a thing at like when i worked for a tech company where they would ask you if you drove to work and they would actually be able to enforce it because
you wouldn't get a parking spot if you said that you like rode a bike to work and then you would
get like a tax break i think or something this was in la but that's like rather than going through your employer, why not just make it so that people like can report for riding a bike everywhere and like get get some sort of credit that doesn't require all sorts of, you know, the U.S. just makes things super complicated and favoring of employers over employees so that they don't lose the power to the you know so
capital doesn't lose the power to the people yeah i'm just thinking like the like even with new york
right all the stuff that is being proposed like how can we reuse the streets smarter right you
know because clearly covid led to a movement of like reclaiming these streets for like public spaces or no car spaces and like using bikes and things like certain paths that you can take, but it's not enough where it feels like a city that's thinking about people who ride bicycles. love to ride in a protected bike path rather than worrying if i'm gonna get sideswiped by a costco delivery truck uh because nobody's looking that like just passively like just it can't cost that
much money it can't cost that much money and you're damn sure not spending it to help unhoused
people so where the what the fuck are y'all doing right and like the and covid's lockdowns like
nature just sort of started to blossom in this weird way because a lot of the
pollution was cut down and so it's like like you said it's this missed opportunity to be like
okay so this is like the effect of us doing x y and z so then we obviously can't keep going at
that rate but how can we apply some of the you know the improvements as negative as everything's
been the environmental improvements of us just like not fucking with everything constantly right so it's like i hope that we i am dubious but i do hope we will take stuff from that
that's what it makes it disheartening there's been some coverage of the of that being like
somewhat exaggerated the the like uh eco like benefits and like the you know dolphins have
returned to the canals of venice i think that was uh just fake that was fake i get duped but but i think they're you know overall there's definitely
been a decrease in flights decrease in you know miles driven and i was i was just thinking as as
uh you guys were talking about like weight things that we could take from the pandemic
if we're allowed to just wear sweats from now on like everywhere it doesn't matter then i can ride my bike to work and not worry about the fact that
like i sweat through three shirts we have to become a post-drip society yes thank you i feel
like we have to move into a post-drip culture because the drip is you know directly related
to capitalism consumer capitalism and i think if we can if we can move to a post-drip economy a post-drip society a lot of ills will be remedied because i
think to outwardly be able to you know evoke your status with your clothes is like there is the is
the first game that shit plays on you to begin sort of rat racing towards nonsense and post-drip
in the sense that i will be completely dripping in sweat
and people just have to get over that yeah uh all right let's talk about matt gates just check in
real quick with him i think the the women who work for him have put this whole story to bed by using the always effective sexual predator evidence of,
well, there are women who he hasn't assaulted
and been a creep to.
So therefore, it must mean that he's not a creep.
I mean, yeah, I will just read this
because that's always what, like, if you're racist,
then you need someone to be like,
as a friend to other non-whites.
And I have a few of them who will perform for me for my defense.
But in this case, this is the press that was the statement that came out of his office.
Today, the women of U.S. Congressman Matt Gaetz's official office released the following statement.
Matt Gaetz's official office released the following statement after the shocking allegations last week in the press.
We, the women of Congressman Matt Gaetz's office, feel morally obligated to speak out.
Also, just so you know, no names are specifically signed to the statement, just because it's
written by Matt Gaetz.
Allow me to continue.
Oh, for sure.
Actually, I just read it like this toxic fuck.
During Congressman Gaetz's time in office office we have been behind the scenes every step of the way
we've staffed his meetings we've planned his events we travel with him we have even tracked
his schedule congressman gates has always been a principled and morally grounded leader at no time
has any one of us experienced or witnessed anything less than the utmost
professionalism and respect. No hint of impropriety, no ounce of truthfulness. Okay.
Maybe 27 grams of it, but that's a gram short of an ounce. Now, in our office and under Congressman Gates' leadership, women are not only respected, but have been encouraged time and time again to grow, achieve more, and ultimately know our value.
Woo-hoo-hoo-hoo!
Okay, people of the house, let me continue.
On every occasion, he has treated each and every one of us with
respect thus we uniformly reject these allegations as false that is such a fucking stretch you can't
get a single one of them to sign their name to this that's yeah wild again and the final one
just so you know it's really written by a conservative male. Congressman Gates will continue to lead by example and stand for the people of America who have been maligned by the liberal elite.
And we will stand with him while we recognize the scrutiny we will face for making this decision.
We take comfort in the hope that more Americans and elected officials will stand up and refuse to remain silent.
About what? Sex trafficking? sex trafficking yeah yeah about the pictures
he was showing people sorry i had to sit back down after standing to salute after that uh statement
i mean there and that and unfortunately if the details are just getting worse and more clear
that he absolutely has everything to do with this joel greenberg guy who's under investigation
uh the last thing that came out was like over the before the weekend were these venmo receipts that he absolutely has everything to do with this Joel Greenberg guy who's under investigation.
The last thing that came out was like over the before the weekend were these Venmo receipts that popped up to Joel Greenberg, the guy who's trafficking these young women and girls
in certain instances where Gates sent Greenberg $900.
And then the next day, Greenberg is sending out $900 in different denominations to three
different women.
So it says the memo field for the first of Gates's transactions to Greenberg was titled, quote, test.
In the second, the Florida GOP congressman wrote hit up blank.
But instead of a blank, Gates wrote a nickname for one of the recipients.
When Greenberg and the Daily Beast said they're not sharing that nickname because the teenager had only turned 18 years old less than six months before this transaction.
teenager had only turned 18,
uh, 18 years old,
less than six months before this transaction.
When Greenberg then made his Venmo payments to these three young women,
he described the money as being for one payment,
quote tuition,
uh,
one quote school.
And the other one quote school Q and on.
Are you there?
Can you help?
Huh?
Are you,
where's your energy Q?
Where's that energy for the,
for the,
the child sex trafficking?
Or is it, is it is it
just cover for your your ignorance and white supremacy i don't know but if it help um so now
two of his staffers have already resigned probably more at this point and he's truly now going for
the defense that we saw a certain alabama secretary of State deploy last week where he says, this is from his office,
Matt Gaetz has never paid for sex.
Matt Gaetz refutes all the disgusting allegations completely.
Matt Gaetz has never, ever been on, he said never, ever.
Come on now.
Has never, ever been on any such websites whatsoever.
Matt Gaetz cherishes the relationships in his past
and looks forward to marrying the love of his life.
Anytime someone says never or always, I i'm like you're already lying right yeah never ever ever ever ever ever ever pinky swear he just got engaged right is that is that what honestly dude
i swear on my mom dude i swear on my mom i swear on my mom i'd never paid for sex bro i just fucking
dude make i'll swear on fucking anything name something right now my fucking grandma dude you know how much i love her bro
i'll fucking swear on that shit okay um grandma in the crosshairs of of the universe yeah of
letting karma crush your poor grandma because you are a fucking sex criminal allegedly um and also
it got even worse because news then broke that greenberg, Joel Greenberg, he's going to make, he's going to, I think he's going to take a plea deal.
He's going to name names.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he's going to be cooperating, meaning Gates may now become the prized show horse he always wanted to be.
And I just want to play this clip because Joel Greenberg's lawyer, dude, credit to this guy.
I'm just going to play this exchange where right after they talk about like the plea deal happening,
immediately the press is like to Joel Greenberg's lawyer, like, hey, hey, hey, like, so what do you think this means for Gates?
And he's trying his best, y'all. But this is a beautiful bit of back and forth between Joel Greenberg's lawyer on the heels of announcing that they're probably going to take a plea deal.
Does Matt Gates have anything to worry about?
Does Matt Gaetz? That is such a
When it comes to what happened today,
does he have anything to worry about?
And you're asking me to get into the mind
of Matt Gaetz.
Right?
Well, from your mind.
From my mind.
Based on what your client knows.
Based on what my client knows.
Discontent.
See, I thought if I kept on talking and talking,
I would avoid these questions
and not to say,
I'm sure Matt Gaetz is not feeling very comfortable today.
Damn.
He, this is, and it's wild.
He also did the dumb man thing where you, you know, you fucked up.
So you're just going to laboriously repeat the question back.
What did I do last night at the club?
So you're asking, should you be worried about what i did okay so you want me to enter the mind of you right my
partner okay and laying this out here because i do need let me let me just write this down real
quick let me okay let me just write down um so you're the subject but i do love i have to respect that he came clean
it was like i thought if i kept repeating yeah you're saying that i would run out the clock
and it doesn't seem to have worked and so yeah he's fucked yeah uh yeah that was beautiful please
you know just resign and fucking whatever i mean it's so weird too like when these
staffers leave now it's like oh it wasn't the racist insurrectionist shit or the other stuff
before just weird when people draw these lines but it also shows you the nature of working in
politics is like you're truly like hitching your wagon to a star and when you realize it's about
to explode like you got to try and take that momentum and like hopefully it jettisons you
into like another orbit but I don't
know how the fuck you're going to leave have this
on your resume you might be like oh I
actually didn't work from 2017 to
2021
I was just smoking mad weed
that's the best you
can do
it's just like
Matt Gaetz is such an idiot yeah it's really uh that i feel like
i would almost say i feel bad for white men because like damn like the world reflected
some dumb shit back to y'all like you could like you could get away with this kind of shit and it's
made you the worst criminals on earth it's wild because it's like for so long they get away with it that
yeah why wouldn't you the fact that what they do because they can get away with it it's like oh
you're fucked up like you take pleasure in in ruining people yeah like they're it's crazy i
mean i'm thinking about like scott rudin also just because like yeah yeah like unnecessarily cruel and
exactly or it's it's purely for your own personal gratification you know what i mean it's not even
about the other person it's like you you're completely out of control and you're like oh
that's how i just respond to shit and i do that because i'm not willing to for a second create
some self-awareness or figure out like if this is the right thing it's just me indulging my fucking worst impulses constantly yeah it's so important for them to make those
worst impulses a part of what like drove them to success right yeah rather than it just being
you got lucky and you happen to be of a certain level of intelligence that
you were able to do this thing and you could
have been nice the whole fucking
time or Matt Gates like bro you had everything
right you're from from a so
much wealth familial wealth
like he grew up in the Truman
show house yeah you know that yeah
okay oh literally the Truman show
house literally the house that they
made the Truman show in that they made the Truman Show in,
that they shot the Truman Show in.
Oh, no.
So he has main character syndrome.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
For sure.
They've been just feeding him privilege
like they're trying to make foie gras,
like just nonstop advantages.
And he doesn't.
That's just it. he's curdled yeah yeah
uh all right let's take a quick break and we'll be right back
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 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 the prints. A lion. An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the mascot switch.
As a leader, you choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team?
I'd just take all the other stuff out of it.
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.
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.
Season two. Season two.
Are we recording? Are we good?
Oh, we push record, right?
And this season, we're taking an even bigger bite
out of the most delicious food and its history.
Saying that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito
from Cuba, and the piña colada
from Puerto Rico.
So, all of these things. We thank Latin
culture. There's a mention of blood
sausage in Homer's Odyssey that dates back
to the 9th century B.C.
B.C.? I didn't realize how old
the hot dog was. Listen to Hungry
for History as part of the
My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, everyone. I am Lacey Lamar. And I'm Amber Ruffin, a better Lacey Lamar. Boo. Okay,
everybody, we have exciting news to share. We're back with season two of the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network.
You thought you had fun last season?
Well, you were right.
And you should tune in today for new fun segments like Sister Court and listening to Lacey's steamy DMs.
We've got new and exciting guests like Michael Beach.
That's my husband.
Daphne Spring.
Daniel Thrasher.
Peppermint, Morgan
J, and more. You gotta
watch us. No, you mean you have to listen
to us. I mean, you can still watch
us, but you gotta listen. Like, if you're watching
us, you have to tell us. Like, if you're out the
window, you have to say, hey, I'm watching you
outside of the window. Just, you know what?
Listen to the Amber and Lacey, Lacey and Amber show
on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
When you think of Mexican culture, you think of avocado, mariachi, delicious cuisine,
and of course, Lucha Libre.
It doesn't get more Mexican than this.
Lucha Libre is known globally because it is much more than just a sport and much more than just entertainment.
Lucha Libre is a type of storytelling.
It's a dance.
It's tradition.
It's culture.
This is 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, the emperor of Lucha Libre. And I'm your host, Santos Escobar,
the emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Santos! Santos!
Join me as we learn more about the history
behind this spectacular sport
from its inception in the United States
to how it became a global symbol of Mexican culture.
We'll learn more about some of the most iconic heroes in the ring.
This is Lucha Libre Behind the the mask listen to lucha libre behind
the mask as part of my cultura podcast network on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever
you stream podcasts and we're back uh and so uh the prosecution in the d Derek Chauvin case has rested.
And now it's time for the defense to pull out all the stops.
Explain why what we all saw was not what we all saw.
And it's wild.
I mean, like some of these expert witnesses, it's just like, I don't know. Is this a thing where you will be able to continue to consider yourself like a functional human being after doing this? are the defense lawyers and experts for people like derrick chauvin you're you're operating in
a different on a different wavelength yeah because you're like fuck all right let me put the cape on
for white supremacy and try and obscure the facts as best as i can and trying well i can go to sleep
at night because i'm a goblin so and i live on the side of a church and i turn to stone at night. So the whole thing is like their expert witness is so,
this guy Fowler is just an absolute fucking clown
with the theory.
Like essentially this guy is almost suggesting like,
you know, maybe George Floyd was actually dead
before the police arrived.
Have you ever considered that?
Like these are the kinds of swings he's taking
and the whole thing isn't even like a clear theory that he has.
It's just to be like, well, it could have been.
I don't know.
Could have been that.
Could have been that.
Could have been white supremacy doesn't exist.
I don't know.
Guys, what am I doing up here?
So he says, first, a few of the theories.
Floyd's oxygen intake was impeded by the exhaust pipe of the nearby police car where he was being knelt on.
nearby police car uh-huh where he was being knelt on then he also did concede during the cross-examination that he didn't know anything about the car what kind of exhaust came out
or even if it was running at the time right so they're like tesla he had no idea he's like all
right how's this let me all right new angle new angle how about this one perhaps a tumor found
in floyd's lower abdomen could have contributed to a sudden surge of adrenaline that led to quote sudden cardiac arrhythmia what yeah yeah this is like arguing
with the person who's just trying to argue like you don't know it's a lot like arguing with a
conspiracy theorist or like a flat earther who's like how do you know you've been right you've been
to you've been to space have you flown up there and seen the curvature of birth because yeah well that's that's their ploy like they're just leaning into how do you know
yeah their only thing is like you have to prove beyond the shadow of a doubt
well yeah and doing that the thing where they they give themselves intellectual cover for their
racism which is to be like well it couldn't
just been that this guy just killed this black guy because he's a racist it could have been this
it could have been that because for me to agree with you that this office then i have to actually
acknowledge this form of racism on some level which i'm not willing to do so i would rather
retreat to the safety of these intellectually disingenuous arguments of, for example, the position of Chauvin's knee during the arrest, saying it wasn't necessarily restricting Floyd's breathing.
And if it was, there would be evidence of bruising on his body.
There was bruising on his body.
The prosecutors, they showed that evidence.
Right.
So it's just like, again, this is it's just an exhausting exercise in trying to deal with this
you know expert and this is seems to be his specialty uh obscuring black death because
this is another this from the daily beast quote uh though not part of the chauvin case fowler is
currently being sued for his expert testimony in another case in maryland where police killed a
black teen and arrest the parent the teen's parents described as quote chillingly similar to george floyd's but a death that fowler similarly testified was quote accidental wow so
he's like the special forces white supremacy op you know like operative let me help what is it
looks like a clear-cut case of this murder yeah they bring all here's a bunch of mush but we have we have such a long-standing relationship
in systemic racism with with um logic and science and the neutrality of using that as a
rationalizing and kind of eradicating any kind of like humane perspective on it it just reduces it down to
like okay if we're just talking about if the law is about like what are the specific facts
and we're and this the science behind it's the specific facts that's all they're going to lean
into and that's all that and that's going to be their safety point because i think the next step
that we do in this fucking country is like, but that is what justice is.
It's based on truth.
It's based on fact and truth.
And so these impassioned, you know, from our perspective, completely logical arguments of like, you have documentation of someone being murdered.
You have someone being crushed and slowly choked.
Like, yeah, that's what we see on the inside.
Yeah, while screaming about it.
They're like, no, but we need to get in to really get under the hood here.
Because otherwise, if this poor man is wrongly accused, our entire system, you know, would be upended.
And it's always.
It's not like other people have been wrongly accused.
It's constantly this thing of like the system needs to be protected the system needs to be sort of like
the fragility of the system is being tested and we have to kind of uphold it that that that's
my imagining of what this well yeah it's the last line because well because yeah the system itself
is inherently racist so to acknowledge it would it would i would have to crumble more in
the sense that justice would have to be applied in this context where normally wouldn't be able
to retreat under the cover of law or legalese right of explain away what actually happened
i mean if you remember my great poem i just did like these alabaster temples that are stained with
blood um yeah we just don't want they're like oh my god can you imagine the paperwork involved if Like these alabaster temples that are stained with blood.
Yeah.
We just don't want, they're like, oh my God, can you imagine the paperwork involved if we admit we're a racist country?
No, we can't deal with that.
Too much, man.
If it's really bad, then yeah.
If they don't know how to stick to the script and keep it low, then yeah, sure. We'll do that to create some semblance of justice but that's not what this
whole thing is and the other thing that was going on during this whole portion again even journalists
and people who are observing the trout they weren't even clear if any of this testimony from
these experts was actually helping chauvin at all they were more like i think this is harming him
because this stuff is so nonsensical one of the last things fowler said was he saw no evidence that floyd
was oxygen deprived because he didn't complain during the arrest of experiencing problems with
his vision which would be indicative that you are you're being deprived of oxygen you would be
seeing these spots little spots of light and things like that. And because George Floyd only said, I can't breathe.
How do we know?
He literally made this argument.
Well, when someone's trying to murder you,
you also have to treat them as your doctor.
Yeah. Oh, you've slit my throat.
My carotid artery has been
severed and therefore the blood loss.
Like what? The fuck are you talking about?
Give me like a Virginia Woolf style
stream of consciousness of literally everything you're experiencing.
Uh,
otherwise I see,
but how am I supposed to know?
How am I?
These are the hoops all to avoid actually,
you know,
giving justice to somebody who's been murdered is just to do all these
fucking ridiculous hoops.
When before it's easy enough for a black person to get killed because he
looked at somebody really.
And again, the defense is laughable because white supremacy is laughable. You know what I mean? easy enough for a black person to get killed because he looked at somebody really and again
the defense is laughable because white supremacy is laughable you know i mean it doesn't hold up to
any scrutiny the idea that because you are white you are owed things so when someone has to go up
and try and essentially give some kind of quote medical counterpoint to what is just a clear hate
crime that results in a death yeah you look it looks
like absolute nonsense so i hope the jury is equally as disturbed as most people hearing
this would be but well there there is one jury member who um apparently is a blue lives matter
supporter and i think it's a female and i think she had another she had voiced at some point
some issues she had with
black lives matter so i don't know how the fuck she got on there but she's yeah when she's in the
mix interestingly enough because when they were looking for you know trying to select a jury pool
they had to fill out surveys being like did you hold a sign during the summer what did say
oh wow i wonder if she's like yeah i did said blue lives matter oh great i think i'd like to
have a person introduced.
Let's throw that in for a little spice.
That's all it takes, unfortunately.
And that's why this shit is so frustrating because black people are having to look time and again into the eye of this demonic system in this country to say, what the fuck?
We don't give a fuck yeah so can you tell us why
you're protesting though today can you like put it and that's just more insidious because they
should just be saying we don't give a fuck right i'm here because i have to i we need to appear a
certain way but really we don't give a fuck and if you want if you want the proof look at the
outcomes there's no justice for you yeah because we don't give a fuck.
Well, that's that, that, that recurrent thing where they're like, I just don't understand why people damage property and, and, and lose control.
It's just like for us to not have, I don't know.
It's for people to not have the, like, yeah, if you were pushed to this point, what the fuck would you do?
Like, how would you react?
We see how you, like a lot of you people react to having a black kid walk through your neighborhood in South Carolina, you know, you lose all control and, and, you know, jettison them, uh, short of, you know, murdering them.
But it's like, but there's no, there's no identification with your, with the other.
And that, you know, it is just like, it's so insane.
And it's, and it's so insane because it is insane.
It is a, it is a dysfunctional way that we collectively are dealing with trauma, ongoing trauma that we, that we bring to one another over and over again.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
It's cool.
But all in all, pretty cool.
Pretty cool stuff.
Pretty cool.
Let's talk about this House bill, which, you know, progress that it's getting raised as a possibility.
At least we're making the Republicans
Go on the record and squash it
Yeah
I mean yeah
Just the thing you know again as we're talking
All the ills in this country
Especially in regards to racism
We can draw a straight line to slavery
And the fact that we have had no reckoning
With it
Absolutely none Just you know here's a
month yes how about that okay and then other than that it's just crickets so you know for decades
black lawmakers have been trying to advance legislation that would at the very least begin
to formally analyze what needs to be done how we can right these wrongs and some legislation did
just move out of committee to do just that,
allowing for the formation of a commission to look at the impacts of slavery,
discrimination from fucking 1619 to now.
And there figure out ways what we need to alter in our educational system.
What are the solutions to,
to write all of the racist wrongs in the country and what kind of
compensation should be offered on top of that considering the just the by design poverty that
black people experience um so yeah a really great moment when we see those things but you always
realize yeah i got out of committee where then it has to be voted on by these other fucking people
in this country and we already have jim jordan saying spend 20 million for a commission there's already
that's already decided to take money from people who were never involved in the evil of slavery
and give it to people who were never subject to the evil of slavery that's what democrats on the
judiciary community committee are doing oh god so that's that's about it you know i mean it'll get out of
the house but then the senate like right look what so again another moment steward i think even
for people who are you know looking at politics enough you go yeah well that's a wrap or even
black people looking at like okay fucking preparations no yeah that's that's the
cynicism that we live with because i'm yeah
and it just i think a lot of people are underrating just how exhausting this is really becoming now
uh like on top of everything else that it's truly it's like i don't know how long we can
just keep asking nicely right you know and then be have just your face spit in right and and still try and maintain your dignity or humanity throughout
that and so uh shit i don't know what to do i mean like this is until we can we can solve
issues like this of having these jim jordans and this minority rule in the country it's like how
come there's fucking no one's gonna get anything they're old i wonder if there i mean i wonder how much effect you know
there's not immediate effect definitely like with this kind of thing it is like we're going to have
a commission to vote on the possibility of mentioning that it could be yes right maybe
right but if anything you know sort of like a glacial pace this in combination with the choven trial and minneapolis and just this
past year with blm and even you know recently with sort of like standing up for asian you know
rights and abuses and stuff this is like the naive kind of like maybe white liberal hope part of me or something.
But it's a little bit like, okay, yeah.
I mean, I guess if anything, we're just kind of like keep doing it.
Because if it does get to a point where you're like, oh, well, we try.
We'll just like put it on the back burner for another 20 years.
The next time it's going to be real bad but it's it's exhausting it is and like you said how much how much how much
compromising of your dignity of of anyone's dignity and of just being traumatized over and
over and over again how much can can really you stand yeah it's uh yeah i don't i don't know and
i think you know unfortunately glacial pace is like the theme yeah it's uh yeah i don't i don't know and i think you know unfortunately
glacial pace is like the theme yeah this thing and yeah totally and because of that generations
of people come and go without seeing anything change right so i don't that's the thing you know
the people of color are technically a minority in this country so until the the tipping point
really has to come from other people in this country.
Cause every,
we all know what the fucking stakes are.
People in proximity to us who are allies know what the fucking stakes are,
but it's this whole other section of the country that has no interest in
looking at this in any other way,
except their own denial to,
to maintain comfort.
Yeah.
And to just avoid thinking
that anything could be wrong in this country as well and to just excuse their own ignorance
and it's not just the republicans either i mean by the i'm still can't get past biden
in the aftermath of you know the first night of uh demonstrations in minneapolis saying that like we're waiting to see
on like the initial murder of an unarmed very young man but there's no excuse the the one thing
that i can like say is automatically wrong is looting is just so frustrating well because that's how he has to still wait wag a finger
at black people yeah right that's what it is that he can't or else he's a race traitor right
and subconsciously he's not willing to be a race traitor and say that is absolutely wrong this
person needs to go to jail immediately that what we saw was an absolute hate crime if you if you
saw they'd be like oh he sounds like a black person right because i don't hear white people talking like that if they do
they're like very radical activist people but not people in real positions of power because you you
stand to be you know your perceived race traitor or whatever the fuck it is but he you have to
still have that position of like yeah that was bad but also remember who's in charge again i'm gonna let
you know by saying that remember capitalism is about protecting capital and property not about
people so yeah don't don't break any windows well the crazy thing is like he's sort of future trading
any any positioning he might have for other you know i mean it is it's
a little bit of a bargaining chip like well i can i could say this but then i would lose this
move i could make later for this other thing just the political aspect of sort of like
yeah i think the the political triangulation shit is just old now because like the people that lose out are the ones that are actually at most risk while you wait to find out what the most efficient position is rather than going full stop on the side of humanity.
I just also don't, I don't, I wish the Democrats would kind of learn like, okay, clearly the Republicans have established that there's a precedent maybe based on our sort of social media internet world we live in. And I was like, the half gonna get swallowed up and would be and would be elevated if it started the conversation like it just if it
jumpstarted a little bit you need one very white celebrity to do something like that and spark the
outrage and be like what's the problem what did i say that's wrong and i'm gonna be the one to say
what's the fucking problem with you
the democrats triangulation like kind of reminds me it seems like it's of a piece with the what
we're talking about on the journalism side of this like both sides in it and like triangulation
okay so the republican side is this but the other side the people who are being murdered
on video uh while screaming i can't breathe are saying this
so we have to like tip the elections in our favor every fucking time right so we have to talk about
both sides and it's like you know that the documentary 13th like the villain of that is
like the clinton administration like the fucking and it's all well i am a democrat by name and so
therefore i have to do these republican things to like confuse people into like both sides into
supporting me and it's just like that shit is so far past i mean it should have never existed but
what is it has harris had anything like i haven't because she was so sort
of front and center on so many i feel like anytime it was a statement from the president it was also
a statement from her but i haven't heard anything you know reaction or otherwise from her yeah i
mean at that point i've been emailing her and stuff it's not right i mean i think the thing
was just sort of very milquetoast kind of of like, you know, this is going to happen.
I think what this is, quote, folks will keep dying if the country does not address racial injustice.
Okay, Vice President Harris.
You got any fucking ideas?
Right.
Like, what the fuck?
Talk to old man Joe.
ideas right like what the fuck talk to old man joe but again this is why like it's that's why it's so disheartening too because no matter who's in the office there's just these everyone is still
cut from the same cloth of only rocking the boat to certain degrees yeah no one's no one's gonna
flip the table and the table flippers get fucking marginalized real quick yeah that's just how
the system you know that's how it protects itself it's like oh this person has big table flipping
energy to the sides you go either that or they're now i feel like they kind of position is like oh
that's that's just their brand that's the bullshit that they're like putting out there that they're
actually this person like there's there's a real point i mean it's always existed politics but i feel now like there is a very poisonous sort of acknowledgement of like everybody's got
their kind of brand everybody's got their sort of like persona you know the fact that they come at
aoc is just like she's just coming she's just like leaning hard into this like 20 something
kind of liberal you know trying to grab her base in that way
and so it doesn't that huh you think that i do i mean i see is being performative with a
progressivism i don't but i've heard people say you know that that there's an aware there's that
thing of like there you have to have an awareness of who you're speaking to but you also have i i
think there's the cynical version is that,
that they're like, oh, it's a performative thing. Like who knows how genuine they are?
And once we start to call that out in each other, then you just, then you cannot,
it's hard to sort of invest any kind of hope and faith in collective efforts. You know what I mean?
If we're mainly with our leaders and stuff.
Well, I think that's why we have to ditch the notion that these people are going to
do anything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um,
or,
or not put,
yeah,
not put,
put the full onus on like,
Oh,
they're here to save us.
Yeah.
And I just even look at like the natural disasters that have occurred.
I hear more stories anecdotally about people in the community just helping
each other than the fucking,
then FEMA coming through with some shit.
You know what I mean? Like, especially texas when things were completely fucked up like people were like fuck it we're gonna have to we're gonna help each other
out yes there is government assistance but there's on some level yeah i think we we realize police
aren't gonna fucking protect us and these politicians all they do is just fucking just
do with their fucking stand-up sets and on the hill and we're like great cool let's go home i think you are describing
libertarianism at work miles uh they're big they're bigger in the stand-up stuff
every every man for himself neighbors will take care of neighbors uh it's all good yeah yeah well certain neighbors will
take care of certain yeah exactly and by take care of uh i think you know what i mean yeah
i mean shut the blinds and act like we're not home right right all right that's gonna do it
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