The Daily Zeitgeist - Wicked Sexy Boston, Taco Bell: The Hotel 5.17.19
Episode Date: May 17, 2019In episode 394, Jack and Miles are joined by Go Fact Yourself co-host J. Keith van Straaten to discuss the sexiest accents in the US, more on what is going on with the abortion bills in south, Game of... Thrones fan theories, the new Taco Bell hotel, McDonalds teaming up with US Embassies, Chris Rock rebooting the Saw franchise, and more! Plus super producer Anna Hossnieh pops in to talk about what is going on with the US and Iran. Go see Jack on Go Fact Yourself LIVE on May 19th in LA!FOOTNOTES:1. Boston Accent Ranked Second Sexiest in America, Survey Says2. Are tensions between US, Gulf allies and Iran coming to a head?3. War With Iran Wouldn’t Be Like Iraq4. Trump administration's Iran threat claim disputed by foreign officials5. It’s Time for the Leaders of Saudi Arabia and Iran to Talk6. Trump Tells Pentagon Chief He Does Not Want War With Iran7. Abortion is legal everywhere, but misinformation is panicking patients in Alabama and Georgia8. Not All Conservatives Are Cheering On Alabama’s New Abortion Law9. Taco Bell is opening a hotel and resort10. Taco Bell Hotel11. If you lose your passport in Austria, head for McDonald's Golden Arches12. Chris Rock To Reboot ‘Saw’ Franchise With Lionsgate & Twisted Pictures13. Tickets for Go Fact Yourself with Jack O'Brien and Jena Friedman on May 19th! 14. WATCH: Swami Million - Cioccolato (feat. Fawda Trio) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist who on October 16th 2017 was assassinated.
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Hello, the internet, and welcome to Season 82, Episode 5 of
The Daily Zeitgeist!
A production of iHeartRadio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into America's shared consciousness
and say, officially off the top, hey, fuck Coke Industries.
Oh, fuck you.
And fuck Fox News.
Oh, fuck you.
Friday, May 17th, 2019.
My name's Jack O'Brien, a.k.a.
Well, I guess it would be nice if I could Jack O'Brien.
I know not everybody has got O'Brien like you.
But I got to zeitgeist before I give a heart to take.
And I know all of gray is flame because he's Zeit's gang, too.
All right. We're not going to go into the 40 version.
We're all holding out.
Were you doing the limp biscuit version?
Yes.
Okay, very limp.
Very limp.
The very limp biscuit version.
Limp biscuit.
And I'm thrilled to be joined by my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray.
Yes, hello.
It is I, Miles Gray, a.k.a. MSTDZ host Rachel Bladow, a.k.a. DZS anchor Zan Rather, a.k.a. NDZ anchor Tom Smokehouse.
We're going to take a massive blow to the face.
A.k.a. GrayBC anchor Peter Jennings, A.K.A. TDZ Correspondent, Stoned Phillips.
And thank you to Christiane Magucci-Maine at Crispy Bean Donut for that anchor-inspired A.K.A.
So good.
A.K.A. Chain of A.K.s.
Mine was courtesy of Crikey, and he did a whole entire first verse that was about the news and Mike Pence
and the situation in America right now in the courts.
And he forgot that I am a bad singer.
I would not subject our listeners to an entire verse.
They demand it.
That's why they write it.
Acapella.
Well, we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by returning guest and hilarious
man, J. Keith Van Straten.
Hilarious man. When it comes to my manliness, very. Keith Van Straten. And hilarious man.
When it comes to my manliness, very hilarious.
Hey, everybody.
Thanks for having me back.
Glad to be here.
A.K.A.
Ja'Keef Neal.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That was A.K.A.
Just for Culture King fans.
Well, J. Keith, we're thrilled to have you.
I'm going to be seeing you fairly soon this Sunday.
That's right, yes. You're going to be a guest on my
live Celebrity Game Show
podcast, Go Fact Yourself, which we're taping here
in Los Angeles on Sunday at 5pm.
If anyone's in LA or you have
time to get to LA, tickets are free. It's at 5 o'clock.
You can go to gofactyourpod.com for
free tickets and it's going to be awesome.
And as part of the show, you ask
the celebrity guest for areas of expertise.
I'm not, by the way, no shade on your booking ability.
I'm just saying it was clearly a slow week.
I feel the same about any time I appear on anything.
But you ask for areas of expertise, and I won't spoil what mine are,
but I will just let people know that it's worth coming
because I think we are going to set a record for the stupidest areas of expertise.
You're being too self-conscious.
Well, it's fun, though, to be smart about stupid things.
Because some of the shit you're saying, you have an expertise,
and I'm like, I fuck with that, too.
You say that shit's stupid.
Yeah, that's why I was wondering why you were being so defensive about me calling myself stupid.
I'm like, calm down now.
That's me, too.
All right.
Well, we are going to get to know you a little bit better in a moment.
First, we're going to tell our listeners a few of the things we're talking about, such as a list of America's 38, or at least the United States of America's 38 sexiest accents.
We're going to talk about the Taco Bell Hotel, which is a thing, not a joke as far as we can tell.
McDonald's is going to have some embassy qualities going forward in foreign countries.
Then we're going to check in with the march towards war in Iran, which is not fun.
I tried to make it sound fun there.
Did not succeed.
We're going to talk about these abortion bans and where it will end.
We're going to ask Reddit to put its money where its mouth is and ask, what if Reddit actually wrote Game of Thrones Season 8?
What would have happened?
What would it look like?
And a couple bizarre, seemingly random word-generated pop culture headlines.
Chris Rock is going to reboot the Saw franchise.
Is that right?
Yep.
And the breakout star of Khan is Mel Gibson.
Yeah.
And in some movies that are very, very poorly chosen, given his background.
Or very intentionally chosen.
Right.
Yeah.
I don't know. Still poorly, in my opinion. But very intentionally chosen. Right. Yeah. I don't know.
Still poorly, in my opinion.
But we'll get to that.
But first, Jay Keith, we'd like to ask our guest, what is something from your search
history that is revealing about who you are?
I recently searched for waterfalls near Sydney, because I'm going to Sydney, Australia next
week.
Damn.
And I like waterfalls.
We afflex there, mate.
Okay.
Not afflex.
Not afflex.
Just...
Well, I wanted to mention the travel here
because last time I was here,
I mentioned that a recent Google search was-
South CAC or something?
No, it was a theater in Charlotte.
And I ended up meeting up with a bunch of Delhi Zeitgeist fans.
Yeah.
And it was awesome.
It was, I believe they call themselves a hashtag Zeitgang.
Yes.
And let me tell you, the initiation,
I was not expecting the curb stomping
as part of it.
But no, it was a great time.
I actually kept in touch
with some of them.
And so if there's anyone
who's going to be in Sydney
next week
or in a place
that I think is called
Wollomboli
or Wollombimby.
There you go.
How did you know that?
Nice.
You got to know
how to say
the bloody cities of Europe.
I don't know.
I have no idea.
All I know is it gets in my fucking head.
Apparently, it's the second highest waterfall in Australia.
Whoa.
And I would go seek out the first one, but there's no way the first one has a better name than Wallamimby.
What is it?
Wallamimby?
There you go.
There you go.
I want to go to Wallamimby.
You might need to bring Miles just to say that for you.
Yes.
Yes.
There's no other way I could record that.
I could be making that up, too. No, I think that's right. All right. There's no other way I could record that. I could be making that up too.
No, I think that's right.
If not, I'll start calling it that.
Australian Zeitgang, step up.
Step up.
I know y'all are out there because I interact with some of you in the DMs and the mentions.
And, man, I wish we were going out there sometime.
Yeah.
Because apparently y'all are listening out there.
Australian tour, let us know that you're here for it, and maybe it'll happen.
But hit Jake Keith up and show him a good time.
First, yeah, he'll come as an emissary of the Zeit squad.
Yes.
Which means I get any swag or moonseas or anything to bring.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We'll arm you with some TDZ fidget spinners.
Nice.
By the way, they sound like this.
There it is.
Very good.
All right.
What, you doing anything down there that's worth talking about?
I'm going to go see a waterfall.
Yeah, there you go.
All right.
No, I was there around Thanksgiving, and I made a pal there.
I was going to go see her and see a bunch of stuff.
And I travel a lot, a lot of times for the mileage and for the, obviously, the experience as well.
And so this was all motivated because there was a good fair
and I had a friend there and Australia is awesome
and I want to see more of it.
Are you talking about Guatemala?
I think it was, I'll look it up on the phone if you want,
but I'm pretty sure it was the Wallamambi.
Hey, well, look, you know what?
Just tear up my mentions.
Ozzy's IK.
Do people on Twitter like to correct people?
No.
Is that a thing?
No, no, no, no, no.
Nah.
It says here Wallamambi Falls. Oh,. It says here, Wallamambie Falls.
Oh, Wallamambie.
Wallamambie Falls.
Yeah, right then.
Yeah, so I like waterfalls
and I like Australia
and I like traveling
and I like meeting up
with people, so.
Oh, yeah.
That sounds wonderful.
Let's do it.
What is something
you think is overrated?
Overrated?
No-show socks.
No-show socks.
I don't know if anyone's
wearing them now
in the room.
I got white crew socks on.
Jack does. I don't understand the appeal. Why wouldn't in the room. I've got white crew socks on. Jack does.
I don't understand the appeal.
Why wouldn't you want to show the socks there?
Why do you have socks on?
Great ankles, Jay Keith.
Great ankles.
Let's see your ankles, Jay Keith.
Maybe you're hiding something.
I'm hiding a tattoo with a sock on my ankle.
Okay.
But no, it actually is more of a specific situation.
Okay.
As you can probably imagine, I'm in therapy.
And my therapist wears no-show socks sometimes with shoes.
And it drives me crazy.
I can't not mention it every time because I just feel like this is not appropriate for a professional therapy setting to see a man's ankles.
Is it because it's the side of the ankle or it gives you the jerk reaction of like, maybe they're not wearing socks.
Right.
That would be nasty.
Right. That would be nasty. Right. So I have started to make him show them to me because the idea that he would not wear
socks to a professional therapy setting.
Right.
You know, it's like, okay, sure.
He's helped me get over a lot of my depression and deal with a lot of my family issues and
get me at one point into a stable relationship and a stable job.
But all of that is negated.
Right.
By having to see his ankles.
Well, that could be part of his exposure therapy.
His espadrilles.
Are these no-show socks with dress shoes?
Sometimes.
Or dress-ish shoes.
Dress-ish.
Yeah.
And I understand that, you know, okay, yes, you don't want to wear a black dress sock,
you know, up to your calf when you're wearing shorts.
With the garter.
I understand.
Yeah, yeah.
Although a garter is quite appealing.
With the man garter or whatever.
Yeah, the man garter.
But I just don't, I don't see what the payoff is.
Like, why the sock shame?
It's an aesthetic thing.
Yeah.
I don't enjoy the aesthetic. Okay, so the sock shame? It's not even a shame.
Okay, so the reason I do it is I remember as a kid,
that was just like the sneaker look that we rocked.
Is that we would always, you just didn't want,
because I think we saw growing up at white crew socks
as being like what teachers wore,
what our grandpappy's socks, they would wear those.
And then I think with sneaker culture,
it was cool to just kind of have your ankle out or whatever.
It looks seamless.
It looked like a cool look.
I remember, shout out to my boy Chris,
who used to take,
his parents wouldn't buy them for him at first.
He would pull his sock all the way down
and have all the excess at the toe
and fold that over.
Fold that under.
You know what I mean?
All right.
Well, compared to that, I'm not a monster.
Obviously, it's better than that.
But I understand though too because whenever I wear no-show socks, people always go, are you not wearing socks?
Yeah.
It's not even that it's about the style of it.
It's more what I've encountered is people are concerned about the inside of my shoe smelling like shit.
Right.
Or just you're not doing well.
Like, oh, you can't afford socks or something. Yeah, I think part of it is the aesthetic that, look, I'm so just relaxed and not sweaty that I don't even need socks.
But I don't want that in a therapist.
I want my therapist not to be so relaxed.
Right, exactly.
And again, I think it's a little more okay if you're wearing maybe a boat shoe or a sneaker, but with a dress, anything dressy at all or an espadrille, I find it very uncomfortable.
Well, that's what I've also noticed.
A few spring weddings I've been to, I've noticed the cropped pants look where people like the no sock look with that like that's
just kind of you know that's where uh the fashion editors of the world are look fashion doesn't have
to make sense i understand that people express yourself how you want i just think it's overrated
and especially if you're paying the same price like it should be it should be a quarter as much
of the price for no shock for like sock. I get mine for fucking nothing.
They're disposable at this point.
I don't recommend buying your socks like that, but they have cheap-
Do you know how much of our landfills are filled with disposable no-show socks?
With my discarded socks?
The ones you use to try on a shoe at the shoe store?
I know.
I'm about to banish myself onto the Pacific Gyre for my contribution to the blue.
My secret is I go to women's shoe stores.
And you know those little footy things that they put on?
The foot condom for when you try on the shoe?
That's what I use.
You will never be my therapist.
What is something you think is underrated?
Yamiche Alcindor.
There you go.
I love Yamiche Alcindor.
She's a journalist, White House correspondent for the PBS NewsHour.
In general, I think the PBS NewsHour is underrated.
I listen to it. They do a free podcast of the full NewsHour. In general, I think the PBS NewsHour is underrated. I listen
to it. They do a free podcast of the full show every day. And I just love that she's young,
she's a woman of color. She talks like a regular person, and yet she's still a straight down the
middle professional journalist. And even when they ask her questions or when she's on Meet the Press
or something every once in a while, you can tell she's as fed up with as bullshit as everybody else,
but she still answers as a professional reporter.
She's a journalist, and I totally respect her.
And she's a pretty good Twitter follow as well.
Yeah.
All right.
And her name's Yamiche Alcindor.
It's fun to say.
That is a dope name.
No relation to Kareem, right?
Lew Alcindor?
Yeah.
I actually don't know.
Let's find out.
Damn.
That would be some real interesting connection.
No way to know.
No way to know.
Wish we did.
Yeah.
Because we live in the end times.
But, I mean, if you don't remember, she was the woman who made waves when she asked Trump
to his face, you think your rhetoric is emboldening white nationalists?
And he goes, oh, that's such a racist question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fuck you.
I wish that had just kept going.
Relax the whole show.
I was going for more of a Spike Jonze record.
Yeah, maybe.
Directed by Michelle Gondry.
All right.
I am now following Yamiche Alcindor.
Oh, yeah.
And that sounds like a great resource, the PBS NewsHour.
Yeah, I think it's really underused especially.
But, you know, I think you think of it as like, oh, that's something for parents and grandparents and all that.
But it's sober.
It's straight ahead.
It's not centrist.
It doesn't suffer from the bull-side-ism.
But it's real good journalism.
And there's a lot of women on it.
It's very quietly become a very progressive.
Never mind.
Oh, sorry.
Count me out.
Out.
Is it a daily show?
Yeah, it's every day.
Oh, OK.
PBS NewsHour.
All right.
Never mind.
It used to be in the McNeil-Lair report. Then it was this something. Zyking, don't listen. Don't listen to that. Why? Because, it's every day. Oh, okay. PBS NewsHour. All right. Never mind. It used to be the McNeil-Lehrer Report, then it was this something.
Zyking, don't listen.
Don't listen to that.
Why?
You're only allowed-
Because they get their news here.
Okay.
The McNeil-Lehrer NewsHour.
Are you guys on weekends?
No.
Okay.
You can listen to Hari Sreenivasan then report from Lincoln Center on weekends.
We got the weekly, man.
You know that too.
What is a myth?
What's something people-
I think a myth that I recently debunked for myself anyway was that it is bad and or dangerous and or depressing to travel to Russia.
Whoa.
I just got back a few weeks ago.
I was in Russia for a week.
I went to St. Petersburg and I went to Moscow and I travel a lot.
It was one of my favorite trips I've ever done.
Really?
It was great.
The people were friendly.
A lot of things are in English.
A lot of people speak English.
Easy to get around.
Granted, I'm a straight white male who is not a journalist or a dissident.
That being said, it was – when you talk to the people who live there, they're very aware of all the stuff that's not great of it.
But it's so – I was just so impressed with Moscow and I can't wait to go back.
It's just – it's vibrant and fun and weird.
Is it still one of the most expensive cities in Europe?
Well, that's the other – that's maybe the sub-myth of it is that you definitely can go there and live like a sultan.
Of course.
And spend $1,000 a night in a hotel and all that.
But I found everything that was in my wheelhouse of things that I wanted to do and buy were much, much less expensive.
The daily lives of regular day-to-day Russian people.
Yeah.
I mean, granted, there's the wages and everything's relative with medical care and taxes and all
that kind of stuff.
But no, as far as being a visitor, I was really prepared for, well, first of all, getting
scammed and being dangerous and all that.
None of that kind of stuff happened.
But everything was much, much less expensive than I thought it was going to be.
I can't wait to go back.
My first
hearing about somebody going to Russia
was a group of people I know who were
entertainers. And it was a mixed group
of people of color, gay people.
And they had not the best time there.
And I'm aware that it was dangerous.
Not to say that that invalidates
your experience, but I think any place can be many different things to me.
No, absolutely.
No, and I understand that there's some privilege involved and whatnot.
But, you know, I definitely felt like, you know, the people that are also aware of that stuff and the people that I met, you know, were glad to talk about and acknowledge all the, you know, all the bad stuff.
You know, for me, I was debating about, well, do I want to support this with my money
and with my travel and all that?
But I feel that being able to connect with people
and have that kind of one-on-one diplomacy is valuable.
And to be able to talk about – I was talking to people.
They couldn't imagine that a comedian would go on television
and say the president's a liar or make fun of the president's voice and all that.
And so it does also make you appreciate for, you know, as much as our
democracy is falling apart, you know, that we still have that right here for at least another
hour. Right. That's amazing. You really like travel the world. I'm running for myself.
Is there anything that jumped out to you other than the people being friendly as something you weren't expecting?
I kind of wasn't expecting as much Soviet kitsch that they know that that's what people want to see.
In Moscow, there's a museum of Soviet arcade games that's really popular where you can go and play these incredibly boxy – there's a, you know, there's a lot of like shooting and a lot of, there were actually a lot fewer
ripoffs than I thought.
I thought they were just like done, you know, they would have done like Comrade Pac-Man
or something like that.
But some of these machines, you know, had like 200 buttons and you were supposed to
like push one to match something that showed up.
And so some of the controls were crazy.
And then there was this pinball game that I was playing, which I thought were like, oh, that's a nice like old
old timey pinball game with wood, wooden flippers and lights and a sort of a, you know, a counter
that kind of scrolled up. And then I looked at the display above it and it was from 1994.
So stuff like that. And just, you know, there are tours that cater to that and there's other
stuff that kind of caters to that old Soviet kitsch. But I also – it was also just interesting to see how much Soviet stuff they either still embrace or that they just kind of don't mind.
Like you go into a subway station and there's a big mosaic of Lenin.
Right.
And also the subway stations were also I think super unexpected just how freaking gorgeous, especially in Moscow.
I took some videos where I was panning down and you would think, oh, you're obviously in a palace or a fancy hotel ballroom. And then you pan down and the train,
the train pulls in and people are coming out. Wow. Absolutely stunning palaces underground.
Huh? Yeah. So vodka, the vodka was nice. Yeah. Yeah. Vodka like in fast food places.
I'm serious. No, really? Yeah. Not like I didn't go to a McDonald's. We can talk about McDonald's
and stuff later. I know. But I went into, I couple places that were like fast order, sort of fast casual places.
And yeah, you could get a super ice cold glass of vodka with a lemon like with your burger.
Wow.
So that was cool too.
Vodka with lemon.
That's interesting that the Soviet stuff is almost like part of a brand that's been like incorporated?
Does it have all the late capitalism trappings that we have over here?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting, especially St. Petersburg, you wouldn't know.
St. Petersburg just reminded me of, oh, it's a very pleasant sort of Western European town. Like it doesn't look, you know, when you talk to people and you understand, you know,
what's going on behind the scenes and all that.
But yeah, you wouldn't think, oh, I'm in a formerly communist country or I'm in a place that – other than maybe, again, some of the subway decor and the fact that the subways are so deep under the ground because they wanted to withstand a nuclear blast.
Right.
Yeah, there was hardly anything you would notice that would – that felt like, oh my god, this is where the Soviet Union stuff happened.
I mean even being in Red Square.
Right.
There's this huge building that's been turned into a mall and –
There's like ads up and stuff.
Not as much of that in Red Square.
It's still pretty –
It doesn't look like Times Square.
Yeah, no.
It's not like – there's a big Coke bottle.
No, nothing – not like that. But yeah, I took a lot of pictures of the fast food chains, the Western fast food chains, not because I was so surprised to see them but just because they were in the Russian writing.
Cyrillic.
Yeah, in the Cyrillic.
But they were still in the font and color of what you expect from the logo.
So that was weird to see like, oh, right, they also have fonts. Right. You know, so that kind of stuff.
That's so interesting.
Yeah.
I think you've sold me on traveling there because, yeah, just the Soviet arcade games, the idea that, you know, their technology was evolving in a completely different like silo from ours.
Absolutely.
And like what video games could have turned out to look like.
Well, it's also fun because on the signage they have for all the games there, which you can play all of the games that they have on display, they'll also say who made it and what they were usually doing.
And so it was, you know, this is a game where you get to hunt ducks.
And it was made by people who make, you know, radar for shooting down missiles or, you know.
So like almost all of them had like military applications and they were just doing this while they were waiting for the next, you know, military order.
Those are the video games you could have been playing today if Rocky hadn't won that fight.
Which might come up on Sunday show.
It just might.
That might be one of your topics.
All right.
Let's talk about this new poll from a social media outlet that I will say the name of shortly.
name of shortly, it broke America down into 38 different accents and ranked them by sexiness,
according to a poll of, I think it was like, they have 1.5 million social media followers,
and they surveyed, I think, all of them. The group is called Big Seven,
and the answers they found were somewhat surprising.
Who do they... Okay, so they're asking people, what's your
sexiest accent?
What do you think it is? What gets you hot?
I think they gave them a list and asked them to
order it.
And Boston was
ranked number two
as the number two sexiest, which made
me wonder if
I don't know, if was a more more women than men
answering because i just you think more women like a boss a man's boss a man's boss well if
you think about like i i always use movies as like my proxy for understanding like the american
unconscious and like movies you've had like mark walberg and like it's like a rite of passage for like a male lead to come up with a Boston accent,
like play a Bostonian.
Whereas the only women who have Boston accents
are portrayed as like townies and you know.
I'm trying to think of the last time I was like,
oh, the town?
When like Blake Lively was like a Southie.
Yeah, yeah.
And even then it's like portrayed as like a heart.. Yeah, yeah. And even then, it's portrayed as a hardship.
But hey, maybe this might be more telling what people are into.
It's not about the standard as like, yo, you know, I like that.
So number one was Texas, which makes sense because you can kind of...
People like the Southern drawl.
Yeah, if you're using movies as a proxy,
like there's been sexy men with Texas accentsas accents and sexy women uh but boston
was surprising me philly being number eight was really surprising to me well also seventh is
hawaiian right that's what i'm saying like you must have such a ear for nuanced accents to even
be able to rank these right because if you told me oh uh can you like between uh a northwestern accent and uh like a youper i'm like what's a
youper right yeah i have no idea does this not seem to be the most scientific of polling i mean
it's possible the people they were polling happen to live in those places right but also i think
they probably were asking do you think hawaiian people are sexy not necessarily the accent right
yeah people are just picturing they're like yeah, yeah, I remember I was in Maui,
and these really cool guys came up to me,
and they're like, hey, get the fuck out of here, holy.
I was like, it was so hot.
Who are you?
And also, like, sexy is so subjective.
Sure.
Like, there's no way to really rank this shit.
I think this is important scientific work
that we're talking about here, guys.
Yeah, look, I think I'm just mad because Valley, California Valley is 46th.
Yeah.
I mean, first of all, it's-
Long Islander.
That's fucked up.
Yeah.
I like that.
Long Islander.
That's fucked.
Yeah.
Pennsylvania Dutch.
I mean, yeah, like-
Pennsylvania Dutch.
Yeah.
Oh, those sexy Amish?
No, that didn't make it hard?
Yeah.
I mean, right.
What you think about an accent is completely subjective
I find a southern accent attractive
but I lived in Kentucky when I
was going through puberty I'm sure those two
things are like related in some way
but like and
it's also yes not
the methodology isn't strong
here but I just I do find
accents very interesting.
Which is odd, but they have Chicano on here, but there's no like, is there like African-American vernacular?
Yeah, that's another question is like they don't have cultural.
They just break it down regionally.
Well, just Chicano is the region of Chicano.
Yeah, I'm like, that's very specific.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
But okay, whoever did this poll, hit me up,
because I'll rearrange this.
If I could describe my accent,
I assume it would be very high on the list.
Yes.
Just sort of generic Midwestern.
That is on the list.
Is it?
Yeah, they said, I think it's like American.
General American.
General American.
General American.
Where am I?
Where was my favorite general?
Yes.
I like General Mills. General Mills I was a. Where was my favorite general? Yes. I like General Mills.
General Mills I was a great fan of.
Made a good cereal.
General American was ranked 32nd on the list.
Right in the middle.
That's what it should be.
Between Atlanta and Hudson Valley.
Like, what's a Hudson Valley accent?
Oh, you don't know the Hudson Valley?
I know it exists.
I just don't know what that sounds like.
Sound like beaver trapping?
Sounds like they'd rather be in New York City.
Right.
Stephen Colbert was the example they used for the general American, but I think it's anybody who speaks on TV.
I guess also, Zeitgang, help me understand, right?
What's the difference between a Cincinnati accent and-
And a Southern Ohio accent.
Right.
Or like, what's the New Mexican accent?
Yeah.
It's interesting.
Like if you talk like Walter White?
Mm-hmm.
I don't know.
Jesse Pinkman, is that New Mexican?
All right, we're going to take a moment to ponder all of these questions, and we'll be right back.
back. My name is Manuel Delia. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere,
a podcast that unhurts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions like,
how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed? Or can I negotiate a higher salary if this is
my first real job? Girl, yes. Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the
answer, we bring in experts who do, like resume specialist Morgan Santer. The only difference
between the person who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies.
Yeah, I think a lot about that quote. What is it like you miss 100% of the shots you never take?
Yeah, rejection is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself.
Together, we'll share what it really takes to thrive in the early years of your career.
Without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 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 near them. Why is that?
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 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.
This new season will cover all things sports and culture.
Listen to Naked Sports on the Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Black Effect Podcast Network is sponsored by Diet Coke.
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 near them boys.
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, Caitlin Clark vs. Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And Miles, this headline you wrote as let's make a war iran edition oh yeah yeah i
mean you know while people are really getting upset about game of thrones there's some just
a lot of shit going on especially with iran and the all kinds of takes coming out of the administration that are so confusing and inconsistent.
You're hearing some things that are dovish and other things that sound like straight up war drum solos that people are fucking banging.
Now, the House Intelligence Committee, they were asking, like, can we get a briefing?
And a lot of senators also like, can we hear from an intel agency what exactly this like
increased threat is that people have been talking about especially john bolton um yet no one came
to brief them because the white house said the situation is quote fluid which i believe is a the
exact reason why you would want to be briefed on things so you can understand the fluidity and what
the forces at work are but apparently that's not And isn't it a lot of the things that they are suddenly being provoked by
are things that have been happening for years?
Yeah, well, I mean, a lot of the stuff recently,
they're pointing stuff like there's a backdrop of, like,
sabotaged oil tankers and oil pipelines being attacked.
And some people look at that as, like,
those are warning shots to the United Arab Emirates and Saudis
that getting in bed with america in this you might want to stay out of this because we can fuck up
your precious crude and the production of that as well but my question is aren't those things like
right things that have happened in the past yeah so like we're kind of choosing to be like what
the fuck did you just say yeah right well like especially when you look at stuff, like when you're pointing to the actions of the Houthis in Yemen
and things like that, that has been going really...
Saudis have had problems.
That is not new.
A lot of this is not new.
This is just being recontextualized to try and be like,
oh, you see what's going on?
Not that it's excusable, but to act like this is some...
Like we've crossed the Rubicon or something is absurd.
And you're hearing that around the world too too, because there was a British general recently
who just came out and said, we have no evidence to justify any assessment that there is some
kind of increased threat from Iran.
Full stop.
And this is just some shit coming out of the White House because who knows what's going
on.
I mean, if you look at Donald Trump's past tweets, he once famously tweeted,
in order to get reelected, Barack Obama will start a war with Iran. So I don't know if that's in his mind. He thought that was like an effective way to get the country to rally around a president
because it's not. And we're also looking at a conflict that no one in the White House is
equipped with in terms of Iranian diplomacy by any means, especially when John Bolton is leading the charge.
And the factors at play are so different.
Like you can't compare this conflict to one like in Iraq in any conceivable way.
You can't even compare it to North Korea because like that was a very tense situation that deescalated.
But Kim Jong Un is different, right?
Like he has absolute control over
north korea he can say whatever the fuck he wants and if people want to pipe like no one's gonna
pipe up and be like whoa whoa i thought we i thought they were the enemy what's going on
because you'll just get killed you will get shot by an anti-aircraft weapon right exactly like his
uncle i think even but in iran you know like you can't expect ruhani the president honey to somehow
pick up the phone and send lovely letters because there's a lot of shit going on in terms of the power structure there.
Like the supreme leader, he can't suddenly make nice with the U.S. because the framing of the relationship or the tension between the United States and Iran has always been like, these are the people who overthrew Mossadegh in 1953 and put in the Shah and led to all this other shit.
And we have not forgotten that.
So forever the enemy or forever not people we're really fucking with.
Yeah.
And even environmentally, because there's also like a ruling council who are that very hard line people in it.
They can't just suddenly soften their positioning with the U.S. because it's not the same.
Right.
There's too many factors at force that are not – Donald Trump is not going to get the same outcome he thinks he'll get with North Korea.
And that's why it's almost like – it doesn't even seem that the administration is interested in those sort of things they put out when they pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal, which lit this whole fuse.
And now it's just sort of like, oh, I think something's going on with them.
It wasn't even like, you need to do this, this, this, and and this and then we can start negotiating. Now it's just like we gave our
number to the Swiss intermediaries. You can
call them if you're ready to talk. I'm like I don't
think that's going to happen. Yeah. I was looking
at a photograph of the USS
Abraham Lincoln and the
caption was an aircraft carrier which
has been deployed to the Persian Gulf in
response to unspecified
threats from Iran.
You can't even specify threats from Iran. Well, there was also when...
You can't even specify a reason why.
Well, last week or the week before when John Bolton was like, yeah, and we're deploying
this carrier group out to the Persian Gulf, that was a pre-planned deployment months ago.
So that was not in response to anything, yet John Bolton tried to reframe it as if it were.
So there's a lot of...
There's just so much bullshit going on to try and get people to,
I don't know, create some kind of faux outrage that does not exist.
And I think just again, even when you're looking at the geography, like even if you play this
out to like, you know, I think Tom Cotton was like, hey man, it's going to be two strikes.
The US is first and it's the last one.
And this is not even, they're not even comfortable. When has this ever gone well? Cotton was like, hey, man, it's going to be two strikes. The U.S. is first and it's the last one. Yeah.
And this is not even, they're not even comparable. When has this ever gone well for us to get involved in a war in the Middle East?
Never.
Yeah.
And we're not done with the ones that were started already.
And super producer Ana Hosniyeh, who has a lot of family in Iran.
All my family.
Yeah.
Feeling good.
Awesome. But no, one of the things was when Iran attacked a Saudi boat that had oil on it because it was in the Hormuz Strait, which Iran, that's Iran's like trade route and they don't obviously get along with Saudi Arabia.
So that kind of caused some issues.
And then Iran placed missiles on small boats in the Persian Gulf, which kind of made people think that Tehran was going to try and strike U.S. troops or any of its allies.
And then they were afraid, you know, of Iran, like trying to get into Iraq, which is not.
Yeah, it's a lot of like they're taking very small things and using those to escalate.
And of course, you have like hawks like Pompeo and Bolton bolton you know they're kind of pushing these this this pressure on trump and i think like the administration to try and
take on this government and and country which is i personally think it's a lot of posturing it's
like a lot of male posturing i don't think we're going to go to war because i think in the back
of everyone's mind going to war with Iran it'll end poorly
like so poorly
it will completely destroy
the Middle East. Iran has way
more cards to play just
from like strategically where
you know they're located geographically
to you know the size
the geography of the country
like the military capabilities
Iran would be the worst country to
fuck with that the united states has you know in our lifetime the united states has been in wars
with yeah yeah because it's not like saddam who is completely isolated had really he could only
just oppress his own people to exercise his power right Right. There are proxies all over the Middle East that Iran could get to attack other places in the Middle East.
They have cyber warfare capabilities that Iraq did not have.
Right.
Like, they can fucking bang.
Yes.
Like, it's not a—I don't know what the fuck people like Tom Cotton are thinking, where you just think you're just going to pull up.
It's like one and done.
Not to mention the people of Iran are are not gonna look at the u.s
as fucking liberators by any stretch of the fucking imagination yeah they only see a lot
they know their history unlike americans and they only think of man what happened when the
shah was put in and look at what happened all because british petroleum was like we're not
gonna really split these profits of this oil with you fairly. You know, the unfortunate thing is I don't think tensions will escalate while Trump is in office.
I don't think, you know, Mohammad Javad Zarif, the foreign minister, came out, said there's no
future where they sit down and talk to Trump. They don't take him seriously as a leader. They
don't want anything to do with him. They believe him to be the cause of all the tension and trouble.
So at this point, I feel like it's just going to maintain this kind of like back and forth
of like tension until Trump is either out of office or Trump like backs down.
Or does something tremendously stupid.
Right.
Yeah.
And provokes us something because he has no idea what the fuck is going on and what this
if you got people gassing you up like, oh, we got this.
We got this.
We do not have this.
Yeah.
That podcast, the national security like expert
podcast that i listened to rational security was talking about their concerns are not that trump
will lead the united states into war but that trump is himself inherently like his politics
are isolationism that like he doesn't want to fight in war. They're not worried that like he's going to bring the impetus for war. They're worried that he is going to be led into war by, you know, the much smarter and, you know, more shrewd people that he surrounds himself with.
somebody accidentally steps on somebody else's toe and it leads to a big, a war. That sort of shit happens all the time. And this is a much more precarious position than the United States
has put its military in a long time. And then, you know, the other thing that they're pointing
to, to your point, Ana, is that there was an op-ed in the New York Times by two of the leading security and
intelligence officials from Iran and Saudi Arabia, where they were like, we hate each other,
but we really don't want to go to war. So like they're thinking is that they couldn't have
written that without getting killed if it wasn't approved at some higher level. So their governments are basically like, this guy's an idiot.
He's unstable.
We don't want a war to happen under him.
Yeah.
So people in the United States and people in Iran don't want a war.
And the people next door especially don't want a war because it's going to fuck up their
country too and they're not even directly
being brought to the table yeah you look at the loss of life and the and the destabilization that
happened from the iraq war you want to do that shit all over again right on a much on a much
larger and bloodier level this is not dude the idea of a land war there in a land that landscape
that is three and a half times larger than Iraq, not just open desert like Iraq.
It's all mountain.
You will not be able to get to these people.
It is going to be sloppy in there.
And Tehran, there will be a battle of Tehran.
There will not be like, yo, roll the tanks in and we're going to be throwing parties.
It's not going to be like that.
And again, we have no allies either.
If you want to go into this, I don't see everyone being like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The UK, Europe.
Yeah.
We're all right with you.
We're right on this fucking side.
With all the diplomacy we've done, we don't have allies?
The one thing you don't realize, Bashar al-Assad is on Iran's side.
If you drag Bashar al-Assad into this war to come and back Iran, you have destroyed
the Middle East.
That will create such a horrible mess.
I can't even, the second you bring Bashar al-Assad into anything, you fucked it all
up.
So, you know, really not the people we want to fuck with right now.
And wouldn't Russia also be on that side?
I don't even know.
That's the thing.
Like, I don't even want to think about how Russia will get involved. Like, that's the thing I don't even understand. And I don't even know. That's the thing. Like, I don't even want to think about how Russia will get involved.
Like, that's the thing I don't even understand.
And I don't know.
Imagine if there was like proxy attacks on Israel, which provokes a response from Israel.
And we can no longer hold that back.
I mean, it's...
On the plus side.
Look at how much closer we'd be to the biblical prophecy of end times.
Oh, of course.
On all the conservative Christians are lovingly.
Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba.
Right.
And that's, I mean, Cotton is one of those, I believe.
So, you know, who knows where his priorities are.
Let's talk about-
Well, before we end, if you want to know more about this,
listen to my podcast, Ethnically Ambiguous,
where I've been doing...
Will you accept this Iran?
Where I, you know... We accept this truth.
We've been talking a lot about Iran and what's going on.
And if you don't want to know anything about this, listen
to my podcast, Reflect Yourself,
where I don't think we've ever mentioned the word Iran.
That's my expertise.
And you guys are talking specifically about Iran
in this week's episode, right?
Yes, this week's, this past week's, and next week's will also be about Iran, just furthering what's been coming out.
It's a great podcast where you can get smart on Middle East stuff and get to hang out with two of the smartest, funniest people podcasting.
It's a podcast that poses the question, what if The Bachelor was talking about Iran?
Yeah, exactly.
That's right.
All right.
And then in other just terrible news that keeps coming in this administration and in this version of government that we have currently, more states are enacting just incredibly strict laws on abortion bans.
Just abortion bans.
Yeah, full on.
Just full stop.
Yeah, I mean, last episode when we recorded at the time, Governor Kay Ivey had not signed
that law that had reached her desk, and she did.
So there's that.
But there's been a lot of widespread concern over these because there's an insane amount
of misinformation going around,
especially in states that are affected by these bills. But as it stands, abortion is still legal,
more or less, in the United States until hopefully SCOTUS does not overturn Roe versus Wade and
hopefully it will let it stand. The ACLU has, announced its plans to sue to block the laws.
And most federal courts are very likely to overturn the laws before they even take effect.
And then triggering all the counter suits and trying to argue all the way to the Supreme Court.
But when I think an interesting thing about this is sort of seeing the fallout on the GOP side of things, because a lot of conservatives have began to voice their concern over these bills
because they're like, this could fucking backfire
in terms of actually really motivating and energizing people to vote against Republicans
because they see, oh, this is what the Republican brand is?
I want nothing to do with it.
But we don't know what's going to energize people.
Pat Robertson is against this.
Yeah, which is –
That shocked me.
I could not believe I heard Pat Robertson say this.
I mean, a broken clock is right twice a day, but still.
But, like, minority leader Kevin McCarthy said, quote,
I believe in exceptions for rape, incest, and for life of the mother,
and that's what I voted on.
Like, very much was like, this is too extreme.
Eric Erickson, who's a conservative writer and typically always on the very,
very right politically, not right or wrong, side of things, also said,
I also think we risk turning people against the cause by a dogmatic insistence on getting rid of an exception for rape.
We can pat ourselves on the back for a purity to the cause, but it will ultimately doom our cause by treating complicated issue
as an easy choice of choosing the victim we cannot see for the victim we can see.
And so they're like, we get what y'all are trying to do, but this is the potential blowback. And I think this is
exactly why this is one of the hundred thousand stains on their quote unquote party. And I think
at this point, every Republican needs to be held accountable for this kind of shit,
because this is what is being done in the name of this party.
Right. This is only 17% of the American population thinks that Roe v. Wade should be overturned.
17%.
Outright, right?
Yeah, outright.
It's an incredibly unpopular position.
Right.
There's also the risk, too, that the evangelical base who was so important to Trump could bail
or get disillusioned if these bills fail to ultimately
overturn Roe v. Wade because he was out here being like, I'm your guy.
And if you're coming out here taking pulling up from 50, not even 40, trying to just hit
the rim, it's not going to happen.
Again, he said this is the same Eric Erickson decisions that would preserve Roe, particularly
with the Trump pick joining the majority would depress some segments of the conservative movement that totally invested in the line that holding their noses to vote for Trump would see Roe overturned.
And that will matter in 2020.
And again, Pat Robertson.
Okay, wasn't, didn't he?
Oh, no, that's Jerry Falwell.
But still on the same level of wacky.
He actually, he said, I think Alabama has gone too far.
They've passed a law that would give a 99-year prison sentence to those who commit abortions.
There's no exception for rape or incest.
It's an extreme law, and they want to challenge Roe v. Wade.
But my humble view is that this is not the case we want to bring to the Supreme Court because I think this one will lose.
Yeah.
was talking about how this could backfire on the right because it is the laws that they're enacting are way past what the popular support is for or even
like close to popular support is for and you know they've seen in Kansas for
instance which is a state where abortion doctors have been murdered and it has a
extremely pro-life anti-choice we're trying to change and it has an extremely pro-life.
Anti-choice.
We're changing it up. Has an extremely anti-choice voter record.
They still, when somebody tried to go this far, they voted them out of office because they were like, okay, we're not extremists.
And they're enacting the anti-choice side of this is enacting laws that are unpopular.
And, you know, there could be a backlash.
But, I mean, that's just I feel like, you know, women whose bodies are being, you know, threatened with with these laws probably don't have the patience to sit around and wait to see that backlash come about.
I mean, this is really
terrifying shit. Yeah, I can't believe we're going through this again.
I'm remembering being 16 and protesting
to keep abortion safe and
legal, and the fact that it's going backwards like
this, it's bewildering, but you've still got
to stay engaged, and you've got to stay involved,
and if you can give money to people who are defending them,
you've got to do that. I mean, the Dark Ages happened
after the, you know.
Enlightenment.
The Enlightenment and the.
I don't know if that's true.
No, no, no.
No, okay.
After the Light Ages.
It happened after the.
After the Bright Ages.
I didn't know there could be history on the quiz.
The Dark Ages happened after, you know,
ancient Rome and ancient Greek philosophy
and all sorts of really brilliant shit
happening around the world.
And brilliant shit.
Brilliant shit, bro.
To quote Socrates.
Yes.
So, yeah, you guys can donate to the Yellowhammer Fund if this is something that you care about, which, you know.
And if you can't, please.
If you don't care about it, talk to a woman in your life.
And I will match any donation up to a total of $30.
There you go. Oh, each person? so no just total oh okay well yeah i'm gonna give thirty dollars
either way so well yeah and i think also too it's very important if you have like even you know
family members who are confused about this this is about just straight up government control over
someone's body right yeah just full stop don't even look i
mean look they can think about all the propaganda they've been fed or whatever but at the end of the
day this thing is about treating the like women's bodies as state property there's they have no
agency and if you if and all the people who are nuts about all kinds of other rights and shit
like that you should look at this and be scared shitless.
It's a big deal.
Because who the fuck do you think it's going to come for next?
Who knows?
Yeah.
All right, guys, we're going to take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
Daphne Caruana Galizia was a Maltese investigative journalist
who on October 16, 2017, was murdered.
There are crooks everywhere you look now. The situation is desperate.
My name is Manuel Delia. I am one of the hosts of Crooks Everywhere, a podcast that unhearts the plot to murder a one-woman Wikileaks.
Daphne exposed the culture of crime and corruption
that were turning her beloved country into a mafia state.
And she paid the ultimate price.
Listen to Crooks everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradente.
And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline,
a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career,
you have a lot of questions. Like, how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or, can I negotiate a higher salary if this is my first real job? Girl, yes. Each week,
we answer your unfiltered work questions. Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for
advice. And if we don't know the answer, we bring in experts who do, like resume specialist Morgan
Sanner. The only difference between the person who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies. Yeah, I think a
lot about that quote. What is it like you miss 100% of the shots you never take? Yeah, rejection
is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself. Together, we'll share what it really
takes to thrive in the early years of your career without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline 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 near them.
Why is that?
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 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.
This new season will cover all things sports and culture.
Listen to Naked Sports on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Black Effect Podcast Network is sponsored by Diet Coke.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 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 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, Caitlin Clark versus
Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back.
And we're heading into the weekend of the final episode of Game of Thrones.
Miles, you guys talked yesterday
about some of the fan backlash.
Yeah.
And we talked earlier in the week
about how I think some of the fan backlash
was being driven by people reading and thinking about
and debating all these different fan theories
that are really exciting to talk about.
And it's like, oh, that would be an amazing plot twist
if this happened or if Aria was secretly not Aria
and then Littlefinger was actually alive
and Bran warped into a...
So there's all these Reddit fan theories
that are extremely popular
because they're really fun to think about.
So a writer at The Week went through and actually listed them as things that they wish had happened in season eight.
And going through, I didn't see, like, they're all fun things that I think I had heard of in one form or another.
And I'm not convinced they have a single theory on there that would actually work.
Like, I think they're all things that are great for thinking about as fan theories.
But like one of them is a theory in which middle finger is still alive.
Middle finger?
Middle finger.
Is that Thomas Middleditch playing Peter Baelish?
In which little middle fingers. Is that Thomas Middleditch playing Peter Baelish? Which Littlefinger. I like Middlefinger.
This would have been a Middlefinger to fans of the show, I think.
But yeah, where Littlefinger's still alive and working with the waif who killed Arya
in that suspiciously pitch-dark fight Arya had with the waif and then stole her face.
And they're like, why didn't the dire wolf
recognize aria so they're saying aria could be the waif this whole time this whole time
aria got killed so it's but it's fun to think about because they're like wait why didn't the
dire wolf recognize aria why did that fight happen in the dark like why wouldn't they show her kill
her if they didn't have this plot twist in mind they ran out of production days right well no it was also like that scene was fucking dope and also
the dire wolf couldn't recognize her because she had changed that was the point of that scene but
it's these are fun to think about but i don't think any theory where it's like, oh, they should have done this other plot twisty thing is a valid reason to get mad at the show because a lot of those things are just like a sugar high that like would actually fuck the show up.
Right.
I mean, that's just a bizarre idea.
Like, and it would just negate everything before.
Like, I don't, there's nothing that would propel the story further
if you're like, and Arya was the waif the whole time.
It's just a plot twist for plot twist's sake.
I don't know if you watch Dexter,
but in season six when Edward James Olmos
was basically a fucking hallucination.
They sensed an entire season of Dexter?
Yeah, and you thought he was a real fucking person,
and then you're like, oh, Colin Hanks is kind of seeing shit.
And you're like,
what the fuck?
We just went this whole
motherfucking season
acting like this guy.
Okay, fuck you.
Right.
So, I don't know.
They,
Zach and the Rippers
an entire season of,
I forget what the name
of Zach's band was
from Saved by the Bell,
but there's a whole episode
where he becomes
a huge rock star
and turns out to be a dream
and that bummed me out.
Yeah.
What was the Zack attack?
The Zack attack.
Yes.
Anyways,
go read through the theories,
get them out of your system.
Like one of them that I liked was the idea that Bran would eventually warg into one of the dragons and like use somehow like be better at being a dragon than a real dragon.
Which I like, I was like, oh, that would be sick if he warged into a dragon,
but why would he be better at dragoning than a dragon?
That was very dumb.
PhD in dragoning.
I would just like to point out I have never seen an episode of Game of Thrones
nor read it, so unless all of a sudden they played on a game show
or went to see a baseball game, I don't think I have anything to suggest.
No, there's – I mean at this point, we're basically burning up on reentry here.
I think it's a lot – wouldn't you think though it's separation anxiety?
People are sad that they want to feel like some control because this thing that they love is going away.
I think that's right.
Especially for people who have been like, I've given a decade of my life to this.
You got to leave high school at some point.
Yeah.
And it's like, yo, please don't put all your eggs in a TV show basket.
Please.
Please.
Please don't put all your eggs in a TV show basket.
Yeah, invest in podcasts.
Please don't put your life eggs in a TV show basket.
By the way, it's very evident that you are not a Game of Thrones fan
by the timing of this recording that we're doing on Sunday.
Oh, because you'll be missing an episode?
Yeah, I will be missing the final episode and the Game of Thrones finale party that we are throwing.
You are a dedicated guest.
I appreciate that.
At the HQ.
At the HQ.
Maybe we'll go live.
You can see how we party.
Yeah, you should.
Let a carnation out. And then I'll go live. You can see how we party. Yeah, you should. A lot of carnation.
And then I'll go live and be like, what happened?
Let's talk about Taco Bell Hotel.
Taco Bell Hotel.
The Taco Bell Inn.
I'm a corporate whore.
What can I say?
Jake Heath, what are your thoughts on Taco Bell?
I don't mind it when I've had a lot to drink.
It actually has a pleasant memory for me because my grandmother, we lived in Louisville,
Kentucky.
When I would go and visit her, you know, she obviously would take care of me for many years.
And I wanted one time to take her out to dinner and asked her where she wanted to go.
And she wanted me to take her to Taco Bell.
Oh, hell yeah.
Because she loved their tostada salad and we would get it.
And then she would sit at the booth and she would lay out a napkin like a placemat and eat it with a little fork and knife and all that so yes yes so the young brand
runs that town they really do oh is that like where the hq is uh i don't know if it's at the
h if that's the hq but uh i know like i think they're in long beach or something there and so
they're not far from here yeah but young brandss has, I think, a bunch of things there.
Per capita.
Yeah.
It's very congested.
I think Louisville used to play in the Yum Stadium.
I think they do now, yeah.
The Yum Center, yeah.
I think I saw Bruce Springsteen there a couple years ago.
Oh, right.
Well, no, I mean, this...
I've heard the story, but I don't know that much about it.
Is it the rooms made of tostada shell?
Well, they don't... I mean, it's very it like the room's made of tostada shell? Well, they don't.
I mean, the aesthetic will be very T-Bell.
Now, we don't know if your pillow is a burrito or looks like a burrito with memory foam inside.
Right.
Idea.
But look, hey.
Now, is this a pop-up thing or is this a real thing that they're going to do and sustain?
They describe it as it's a full-service resort and hotel.
So they have a pool.
They describe it as a full-service resort and hotel.
So they have a pool.
They have a fucking salon where you can get Taco Bell nailed shit or a fade or braids.
I don't know.
Shit like that.
It's basically what we were talking about earlier this week with- Monsanto Mountain?
Yeah, Monsanto Mountain.
Because we were saying Hershey's Park is a random brand to have a theme park.
But I was suggesting a Mountain Dew-themed,
extreme sports-themed park.
That sounds real already.
Right.
And then Taco Bell took us up on it.
They're making the-
And what was Monsanto Mountain?
Oh, we were just saying other world brands
that probably inexplicably got in the theme park.
Did it have a Marigold Roundup?
Yeah.
Ooh.
Yeesh.
It's funny because I did say the theme park. Did it have a merry-go-roundup? Yeah. Ooh. Yeesh. Yeah. It's funny because I did say
the theme beverages
would just be you drinking
out of a roundup container.
Ah, there you go.
Because the lawyers won't drink it.
But anyway.
I would check out a Taco Bell hotel.
Why not?
Yeah.
I'm just so obsessed
with like a few menu items
that my brand is just
loving Taco Bell
and a bunch of people are like,
you see Taco Bell hotel?
It's coming out.
One thing they do say
is that there would be
a wedding that you could get a Taco Bell themed coming out? One thing they do say is that there would be a wedding
that you could get a Taco Bell themed wedding.
Well, they have that already in Vegas.
There's a cantina, Taco Bell cantina on the Vegas Strip
where you can get alcohol
and then you can also get married.
This man knows it all.
Yeah, which seem related.
Wait, let me see that ankle tattoo.
Yum brands.
I'm a shill.
But I think
I bet it would be very creative because if you
think about it, all of Taco Bell,
they have a huge menu and it's all made of
either beef. Four ingredients.
Beef, tomatoes, cheese,
and salsa, and sour cream, and
some sort of tortilla. I think it'd be
very creative. I'm curious to see. Where is it, by the way?
Do we know? It's going to be in Palm Springs. But we don't
know exactly where. I signed up to know. Where is it, by the way? Do we know? It's going to be in Palm Springs. But we don't know exactly where.
I signed up to know when the
reservations are opening. But also,
Yum Brands, look, if you're really smart, you're going to have
me there to fucking fawn over
your hotel. Influencer.
I'm an under the influencer
is how I like to describe myself.
Did you know
that Taco Bell, for their
kitchen, they hired origami artists instead of chefs just to come up with different themes?
No.
It's just made up.
I know my bell.
No regular person could figure out how to fold a tortilla once.
Let's talk about McDonald's, who are kind of taking a different step towards legitimacy.
Weird story.
So look,
if you're an idiot abroad and you need,
and you're in Austria,
very specific scenario.
If you're an American in Austria and you don't know what the fuck you're doing
and you need the U S embassy,
um,
well,
you can go to one of the nearly 200 McDonald's locations in the country,
uh,
where they are training people to help tourists
get in contact with the U.S. embassy.
So it's like a Big Mac and an asylum.
Yeah, I'd like a Big Mac and I lost my passport, please.
And it's just very, I don't know.
I mean, I get it because I can see Americans being so unaware
of how to get shit done that they would think that, like, wait, McDonald's.
They'll know.
The true sign of American imperialism.
Well, I do travel a lot and I do go to a lot of McDonald's when I'm abroad because it's a place that, you know, you can get a bathroom and you can get free Wi-Fi.
Right.
So, you know, maybe they could go full service.
I don't eat there.
maybe they could go full service.
I don't eat there.
It's just, yeah.
It's funny to watch like literally we're seeing corporate locations turn into like go-betweens for citizens and the government.
But what was the need for this?
Were like too many people not finding the U.S. Embassy in Austria?
Were not finding – I don't know.
I wonder if they did some consumer research and found that people –
one of the ways that people think about them is like a safe place abroad or like an island in like a foreign country or, you know. No, there's definitely a lot of
truth to that. Yeah. So maybe they're just like, let's step into that and see if we can do something
to reverse this tailspin in our image of, you know, being selling Americans poison. Yeah.
Just kidding. Was that in the press release? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So we're going to try and use this to reverse the tailspin we've been in for the past decade.
Actually, there.
He did that with bacon.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
So completely random word match.
Chris Rock to reboot the Saw franchise.
What the fuck?
I thought it was a joke.
reboot the Saw franchise?
What the fuck?
I thought it was a joke.
Apparently he is a fucking really big fan of the Saw films, and he pitched them on his vision for what the new Saw era could be.
This is a quote from the head of the chairman of Lionsgate.
When Chris Rock came to us and described in chilling detail his fantastic vision
that reimagines and spins off the world of the notorious Jigsaw killer, we were all in.
Saw is one of the highest grossing horror franchises of all time and it's one of Lionsgate's most successful film series.
This upcoming film will still be as mind-bending and intense as all the previous Saw films.
Chris conceived this idea and it will be completely reverential to the legacy of the material while reinvigorating the brand with his wit.
And then Chris Rock said, I've been a fan since 2004.
Oh, that's my terrible Chris Rock version.
But he said, I'm excited by the opportunity.
We know the unsexiest accent.
Yeah, it's Chris Rock.
Which is sad because Jimmy Fallon can do a better Chris Rock than me.
I'm excited by the opportunity to take this to a really intense and twisted new place.
Is this just
Chris Rock trying,
he's like,
Jordan Peele
was a really talented comedian.
He's like,
I can think of some
fucked up shit too, Jordan.
Right.
Yeah.
I'm just wondering
if that's me.
Also,
I didn't know,
is it soon enough
to call it a reboot?
Like,
when was the last
Saw film?
Like,
very recently.
It's still a boot.
Yeah.
And horror movies
tend to be the ones
that was pretty good.
Got the laugh from the booth.
Got the laugh from the booth.
Yeah, I think the
last movie franchise
that tried to reboot
a still active franchise
was like Friday the 13th
or you know
Nightmare on Elm Street
did it also.
It's like
whenever slasher movies or horror movies do this,
it never really works out.
I guess Halloween does it constantly.
Give us 10 years between films before you call it a reboot, not three.
Yeah.
Jigsaw came out in 2017.
Halloween did it, and it broke records for best horror opening of all time.
But they totally acknowledged,
wasn't it called Halloween H2O?
No, not Halloween H2O, I'm sorry.
Wasn't the latest Halloween acknowledging
that it had been around a while?
Oh yeah, it had Jamie Lee Curtis in the lead,
and it was her character as a grown-up.
Right, fighting him with Activia yogurt, I think.
I saw this one.
And then in chris rock
it'll be little penny who's actually on the jigsaw mask oh my god it's gonna guard me
uh yeah i don't uh it's kind of interesting though i'm i'm intrigued to know i mean we only
know chris rock as a comedian and doing things really explicitly in comedy so to know but i feel
like you know sometimes there's a bit of darkness in many comedians so i'm curious to know what that
what if it i wonder if it's so you might have an artistic vision yeah i mean enough that he
came to lion's gate and he's like hold on right i'm ready to reap they're like reboot um the last
film was two years ago right he's like okay but i i think I have the new Jigsaw. Right. Yeah.
I mean, is he going to be in it?
Is he going to be the Jigsaw fellow?
No, I think he's just executive producer and he has like a story by credit.
I mean, I don't know.
Oh God.
Please don't be in the Chris Rock.
He just does a tight 10 in the middle.
Yeah, right.
Could you imagine one of the torture sequences of him just doing his new comedy?
They're running away, and they just run through a Chris Rock show.
Right.
And you just see in the background like 10 really solid minutes.
Hold on.
Like in the background of that torture scene was like a screen playing Bigger and Blacker,
his stand-up special.
So good.
Such a great stand-up special.
They did it, but I understand.
It's like, okay.
All right, Jigsaw. But yeah but yeah I mean that's definitely true he's a very smart I don't know yeah the Jordan Peele thing made a sort a
sort of sense because he's a brilliant comedy mind and there is like a setup punchline kind of
shape to a lot of horror so maybe it it will translate. It would be so amazing if Jordan Peele was like,
he like sets off this whole trend of comedians
actually thinking of like,
hey, but what about all that dark shit
you're also thinking about too?
And like, rather than turning that into comedy,
like, can you just embrace the darkness
and give us some fucked up like horror?
Wait, have you guys heard the Jerry Seinfeld's
take on the Child's Play franchise?
It is mind blowing. What's the deal
with Chucky?
Why am I wearing overalls?
Jay Keith,
it has been a pleasure having you
on our show. My pleasure to be here.
I look forward to having you on my show.
To remind the people, it's this Sunday,
the 19th of May at 5pm at the Angel City
Brewery downtown. You can go to gofactorpod.com for tickets.
You'll be competing against Jenna Friedman from The Daily Show and her own show on Adult Swim.
And it's going to be a lot of fun.
Yeah.
She's going down.
Yeah, you guys can get tickets in the footnotes.
Footnotes.
And, yeah, come watch me destroy Jenna.
And is there a tweet you've been enjoying, Jake Heath?
There was a tweet from this week, a fella,
I think it's, yeah, a fella named Nick Youson,
who tweeted out this two minutes of DVD commentary
of Ben Affleck talking about Armageddon
and talking about how the movie made no sense
and he tried to get it explained to him on the set
and they told him don't worry about it.
So he goes on this whole thing just very derisively about, like,
why would they train oil drillers to be astronauts
when they have astronauts they could train to be oil drillers?
And it's great just him acknowledging just what a terrible take it is.
So it's at Nick, U-S-E-N, Nick Usen,
and the tweet actually says,
let us all join hands to once again remember the time
Ben Affleck got absolutely lit and went off the rails during the Armageddon
commentary and it's pretty fun
and did you
say where people can find you and follow you?
I did not I'm at J underscore Keith
on Twitter Australia hit me up
and then my show Go Fact Yourself
is at Go Factor Pod and
GoFactorPod.com
Miles where can people find you?
You can find me and follow me on twitter and
instagram at miles of gray uh and some tweets that i like uh let's do oh first of all yesterday uh
when we were on the last episode we were talking about what varus was writing in that note
i was joking around that someone should have done one about the Jersey Shore note.
And shout out to Andrea Guzman at Drea underscore 225
for bringing my attention to that meme of Varys
actually writing it on the Jersey Shore note
before he burned it up.
Also, another one from Aparna Nancherla at Aparnapkin.
Just saw a squirrel with abs, which is very,
it's weird because I can picture yeah me too
but also it's i think there's something about it that's so absurd i don't know why i'm able to
picture it so clearly why when they get up on their hind legs yeah they like look like they
have a tight little body in there i don't know squirrels are hot is what i'm saying that's my
take all right squirrely i want to fuck a squirrel uh all right so uh twitter
someone who left the church of scientology and is talking shit now yes exactly a tweet i enjoyed
is from at sweaty harry uh two tweets he's he tweeted uh i wonder if my old dare officer
ever thinks about me too and then tweeted i just remember the poster on the wall of a dude saying he smoked a joint
and he could hear his hair growing and how fire that sounded now i just smoke and think about
the fact that there was one night where my parents tucked me in for the last time and i'll never know
when it was oh which resonates so hard with me as a paranoid, really morose pot smoker back in the day.
Wow.
Isn't that fucked up?
That was like some shit.
I thought about that as I was talking to my son last night.
I was like, damn, this is going to be the last time.
Yo, if you're fortunate enough to have your parents still with you, go regress for a moment.
Have them tuck you in so at least you can have that memory.
Yeah. Snug as a bug in a rug. That's tuck you in so at least you can have that memory. Yeah.
Snug as a bug in a rug.
That's what I do.
Oh, is that what you're saying?
Snug as a bug in a rug.
Tuck the sheets around them.
It's good times.
Oh, you know what?
Actually, when I think about it, I was never tucked in like that.
Oh, you weren't?
Nah.
I don't think I was either.
I'd be like, yo, I'm turning the lights off.
Right.
Okay.
This definitely is a service they should offer at the Taco Bell Hotel.
Yes.
Ooh.
Make yourself a little bed burrito.
A taco?
Talk-in?
A taco?
Taco Bell?
Taco Bell?
I think that's a drag queen.
Taco Bell.
You can find me on Twitter at Jack underscore O'Brien.
You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist.
We're at The Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website, DailyZeitgeist.com,
where we post our episodes and our footnotes,
where we link off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on.
Miles, what's that going to be today?
This is a little bit of an instrumental track from Swami Million and Fada Trio.
Just search Swami Million, S-W-A-M-I-M-I-L-L-I-O-N.
And this track is called
Chocolato.
It's dope.
It's kind of like a, you know,
beady, but there's like live instruments.
Sounds like some North African stuff going on there.
Beady like little eyes
that make you distrust somebody?
I'm sorry? Beady like little eyes.
No, no. Beady. Like beat based.
Like borscht. Okay, got it.
Yes, thank you.
Exactly, like borscht.
And this track is called Chocolato,
but it's spelled like how you would see it
if you were in a gelato shop.
So C-I-O-C-C-O-L-A-T-O.
All right.
The Daily Zeitgeist is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
We're going to ride out on
Chocolato.
Chocolato.
And we are
going to be back after
the weekend. You guys enjoy
your final weekend of the throne.
We'll talk to you guys on Monday.
Bye. Defne 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 on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in. Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice. And if we don't
know the answer, we bring in people who do, like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour. If you start
thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think it sort of eases us a little bit.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game. Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
Listen to the making of a rivalryivalry, Caitlin Clark vs. Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore The Making of a Rivalry, Caitlin Clark vs. 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.