This Past Weekend - 10-2-17 | This Past Weekend #44
Episode Date: October 2, 2017Goblins. Knee Jerk Reactions. Callers Callers Callers. Next week back to the old format. See how things are going. Happy October. **This was recorded Sunday evening before the Vegas tragedy. Thoughts ...and prayers with that city and the lives affected and lost. ** www.patreon.com/theovon October 10th Hollywood Improv- http://bit.ly/2hGAbaW New 2016 Tour Shirts w/ dates avail Mon evening at theovon.com/store Thank you for the support and please subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Okay. Okay.
I know, some of you guys are tired of the intro music.
Well, if you are, just listen to it again.
Celebrate living.
Celebrate misery. Sorry, that's a little bit muerto.
That's a little bit muerto in that Spanish for death.
Because you die in other
countries too. In Spain, Portugal, Africa. Everywhere you go, you die, brother. And that's
the crazy part. And I'm sorry to start us off like that. But that's not what's happening right now.
Right now we are in the live category. We're checking that live box if somebody passed you a note right now
and it said do you live yes or no you would check yes because you're alive sorry i know some of you
guys it's it's a um it's a sentence almost you have to deal with while some people seem to just
be able to embrace it and just just be just just have joy just jumping out of their dang skin.
You know, just like joy is just repelling out of their armpits and just spelunking out of their nose, you know, constantly.
And some people have that natural joy.
That's what I call that.
That natural joy.
TNJ. Not to be confused with TMJ, which is lockjaw. And lockjaw is something you could get. It was rabies little brother. Because I grew up, you know, a lot of people know in the rabies belt, a lot of rabies, a lot of lice, body bugs, you know, we had one fellow was always scratching his neck and they would have to uh you know put these almost make him like a mummy because he was scratching his neck so much
because he got the body bugs and people get different types of stuff you know and that's
one thing that he got but tmj was also it was think, something like lockjaw where you couldn't eat for a while. It was like a diet, but one that basically your central nervous system enforced a diet on you.
And you couldn't open your mouth.
And that was something I remember my mother told me, be careful out there because you could get lockjaw.
And especially around this time of year, you know, I find that October, do you realize it's October?
Do you realize you can eat candy all month long and nobody will judge you? You could be at a
funeral and break out a snicker, you know, a baby snicker, and nobody's going to judge you heavily because that's natural.
Because it's that time, you know.
I mean, you could just, you know, you could crack open a pixie stick and bust a couple of rails right up your snout, you know.
Like freaking, like coca-luffagus, you know.
Like snort-a-luffagus, bruh.
You could do a couple grams of grape pixie powder
and nobody's heavily going to judge you.
And that's because it's Halloween time.
And Halloween, I always feel is, I mean, it's the best.
I mean, you could dress up like a fucking ghost
and go to Burger King tomorrow
and people will just think that, you know, you're just trying to get a head start on the year.
I mean, we had a girl in our neighborhood that would go trick-or-treating year-round.
And some people thought she was mentally challenged, you know.
Maybe had a little speck of the tism on her.
Because I grew up in the tism belt as well.
And that's basically a lot of the South and Midwest.
Tism is belt as well. And that's basically a lot of the South and Midwest. TISM is heavy out there.
TISM drips heavy.
It drips heavy in the genetic caverns out there.
It just drips off the ceiling.
And every now and then a drop catches somebody.
And they get caught up. Their feelings and emotions and the way that they live and they get caught up.
Their feelings and emotions and the way that they live their life gets caught up,
and that's autism.
And everybody's got a little bit of it.
I'm sure I had a splash hit me on the back
when I was going through the genetic caverns into the universe,
and I got a touch.
Because I'll see a lot of times autistic kids,
and they flare up
kind of when I come by a little. You know, it's almost like if a dog hears something in the
distance and I'm not referring to autistic children as animals or autistic humans.
I'm not doing that at all, but I'm saying that they'll have that same, you ever see like a dog,
like if you, if a dog is far away and you make a sound and the dog looks, that's a lot of time what happened with me when I get around people that have mental disabilities.
Because they know that the thread in me is recently removed from the quilt that they're made of.
That I'm partisan.
That I'm partisan to whatever they got. And I've
always thought that I've always felt a little bit on the people say on the spectrum, but I say on
the, I don't want to say on the rainbow, but I say on the water slide of autism, because it's a wild
ride, but happy October guys. Happy October 1st. I, um, Oh wait, it's October 2nd.
It's October 2nd.
I'm recording this on October 1st.
I hope you had a good weekend.
I hope people got into the football.
We got some people that called in about that, about some of the different kneeling.
A lot of unique perspectives on it.
And so we're going to rifle through some of those in a little bit.
We got Ari Maness coming back in. I know people hate him. Some people love him. So we're just going to figure out. We're going to try it again. A little bit of a flow. We can see how that goes.
I'll give you a sensual update.
I'm in seven days of no masturbation.
And for me, that's good.
And so I'm feeling pretty hopeful about that. One of my problems is a lot of times once I tell people I'm doing something, I screw it up.
You know, like the second, like, you know, I'll say that to you guys and I'll get excited.
I'll get caught up in my own hope.
And then it just, you know, it's like that creates a bad recipe inside of me that then somehow I end up, you know, looking at masturbation or touching myself.
And I don't want to be doing that anymore.
I don't want to be touching myself.
Why? Because I'm an adult.
You know, and I've been touched.
Trust me, I've been touched enough by myself. I've given
myself enough easy access to my wiener and to my body. And so I think it's time sometimes to start
to cage myself up from myself and have a little bit more respect for my seed.
What else? Oh, I watch this show, Last last chance you i don't know if you've seen this
but i used to work over in um in mississippi i worked on a farm over there for a couple of
summers in a row two three summers um they're right on the actually right on the louisiana
mississippi border and this this show on netflix last chance you is about mostly African-American black boys that play football at a school called Eastern Mississippi Community College.
And it really kind of captures a little bit of that slow vibe that goes on in a lot of small towns.
If you get a chance, man, I heavily recommend that.
It's a pretty good show.
This past weekend.
Yeah, that October, I remember when I was young, doing Halloween was always a special time, you know.
I remember in high school eating mushrooms, you know, psychedelic mushrooms, little trip snacks, brain, Mentos, basically Mentos for your your soul i mean you you pop a couple i mean
the first time we went to get some mushrooms i went with some kids who'd already gotten them
before and so they were fired up and we went there and i'd never seen as many mushrooms in my entire life, not even at a grocery. And we got, literally, we got probably half of a black, big black garbage bag full of mushrooms.
And we took them to a party.
And at the party, people ate them.
We went inside the party, people ate them.
And about an hour later, there was probably maybe 40 people at the party.
An hour later, nobody was in the house,
but everybody was still at the party.
People were lost in the woods.
People were trapped.
Some people were trapped behind the swimming pool,
even though there was no way to get trapped behind it
because it was just a round pool.
People were playing hide and go seek with themselves.
Two kids were in the bathroom and didn't know each other was in the bathroom. I mean, people
were, I mean, you could just hear people's souls just jerking off in the distance. You
know, it was like, I mean, it was just like bison were just roaming through people's souls
for the first time. And then Indians were showing up and hunting them.
And that's what was going on.
You could feel people shifting.
You could feel people shifting gears mentally and emotionally at the same time when people were bent out on them mushrooms on that Halloween.
And then, now we had a lot of mushrooms.
So those went on for a few days and children were eating them.
And they, I remember dressing up like Where's Waldo.
And I got in a powdered sugar fight with a couple of people who I didn't know.
Which is fun at first, but anytime you're fighting with condiments, fun at first, violent at the end.
You know what I'm saying?
Crack open a packet of mustard
on somebody it's cute for about 40 seconds and then shit escalates you know and next thing you
know you're trying to fucking hide chunks of relish in people's tear ducts and shit and that's
when shit escalates but uh but i remember a buddy of mine this kid todd drank some gasoline high on mushrooms he was jacked up on
something you know and he um he fucked up at the service station time saver the service station by
us used to be called time saver because i guess they assumed that if you stopped there you were
going to save you a couple extra seconds but old todd uh he really earned himself a couple of extra seconds in the hospital, days even from drinking the gasoline.
But yeah, I had good times on Halloween.
I was Where's Waldo one time.
I was Peppermint Pat.
Another time I got jacked up on some type of uppers.
And I was Peppermint Pat for Halloween.
And it's really basically you take some long
Johns that are the pants and you take the long John shirts, which is just kind of the same
material as the pants, but it's a shirt and you, uh, so peppermints to it, just tie the peppermints,
you know, all over it, get you a little hat, a little, excuse me, like a little beanie hat,
hat a little excuse me like a little beanie hat hook a few peppermints onto that and suddenly you get a cane like a cane for um a grandparent and you paint it red and white stripes and
suddenly you fucking peppermint pet you know and and it's not even a character but it is a character
and people are like who are you and it's like i'm peppermint pat you know what i'm saying let me hide a little bit of this mint up in that ass you feel me
let me breath fresh in that crotch you feel me so that was another costume that i had um
i remember this story man this is the first time that i knew when I was young, my father lived with us and my father was really old, you know,
and so we would go trick-or-treating and my mother would take us. My mother had worked all day,
you know, and so she got home and she was a lot of time frustrated and my dad would stay home.
Excuse me, I'm gonna have to clear my throat. a lot of times you hear me clear my throat
you hear me i make that sound because i got a big lip you know i got that i got that uh
that uh what is it i got that uh that sashimi that tuna sashimi for the bottom lip and so a
lot of water and a lot of coagulates bunch up down there in the bottom of my lip.
You know, I'm kind of Bubba Gumpin' down there.
And so, you know, a lot of time water build up right there.
And I'd probably make a pearl if you gave me enough time.
I'd probably make a pearl in my mouth.
I bet when I die, if the last person who comes by my body
just pulls my lip down,
If the last person who comes by my body just pulls my lip down, they might find them a beautiful, you know, geological treat right there.
And that's going to be a pearl because I got them coagulates. You know, my mouth kind of flows into this place where there's no way for the water to escape.
So anyway, that's what I'm going on.
If you hear me making sounds, that's the sounds I'm making because people sometimes will call in or email. Some guy emailed
one time, I can't, I can't listen to the podcast anymore. You know, he's always drinking your own
spit. That's what he accused me of doing. Drinking my own spit. What are you talking about, dude?
Like I'm like an, like I'm an orphan in the Sahara? What do you mean drinking my own spit,
dude? I'm not going to drown, bro. I'm not going to drown so you can have an easily listening
atmosphere, you know? So every time you hear me making that sound, know I'm surviving,
okay? That I want to be at other stages of my life.
You know, I'm not going to have my brother be at my funeral and say, oh, my brother drowned out because he didn't want to swallow his spit.
Because he had shame about it.
I'm sorry.
You know, different people make different sounds.
Go put your ear up to your stepmother.
I bet she sounds like a piece of
shit. Maybe. Some people's stepmoms are decent. Anyhow, onward. So I remember we had Halloween
and my father would stay home and my father was old. That time he was 76 years old, maybe 75.
And my mother would take us trick-or-treating. And I didn't realize at that time yet that my father was old.
I didn't.
I mean, I knew that he was like physically slower.
But I guess I didn't realize.
I didn't really realize how he saw me.
You know, I didn't realize how he envisioned me or looked at me or if he did any differently because of his age.
And I remember we went trick-or-treating with my mom.
And my brother and I got in a fight.
So we were Raggedy Ann and Andy.
And both of us, we both started out as Andy.
And then my brother beat my ass enough where I kind of looked more like a raggedy Ann.
My eye paint had gone out, my hair was sprayed out, and my raggedy Ann outfit was all busted up, looked more like a dress.
At that time, I was showing up back at my door like a real bitch.
We get back to our house. We'd gone trick-or-treating. We had a pretty decent time.
And it was my mother with the four children, my sister in the stroller.
And we get back there.
And my brother and I run up to the door.
And my father came to the door and he looked at us.
And he got the candy bowl.
and he went, he got the candy bowl and just said, you know, take what you want, you know,
and that's when, he didn't realize it was us. He didn't realize it was his own children,
and that was, like, the first moment that, like, I guess I realized that maybe my dad just couldn't
relate to me that well, even just because of his age.
Like he just didn't, you know, maybe dads forget.
I mean, my dad had just seen me, you know, an hour earlier when I left.
You know, my brother and I wearing our costumes and stuff.
But I remember getting back to the door and he didn't know it was us.
And I just remember feeling this this this disconnect immediately this like this it wasn't like a feeling of of pain but it was this feeling immediately where I understood where
where we were in relation to each other like I knew immediately there was this divide
where he just didn't,
there may be like,
he could confuse me with other kids that,
you know, he didn't remember things that well,
that there was just this,
immediately there was this element that,
and probably at that age too,
that, you know, he didn't recognize me.
You know, there was probably a lot of fear
that set in like internally then, you know, this feeling that, you know, he didn't recognize me. You know, there was probably a lot of fear that set in like internally then, you know, this feeling that, you know, maybe he couldn't protect me or
something if he didn't know I was his own. There might've been some, you know, nocturnal animalistic
vibes going on. But, but that was one moment that it really shook me. And I was like, wow,
shook me and I was like, wow, you know, um, you know, my dad is, is he's old, you know,
he doesn't know that my brother and I standing here, you know, who don't have masks on, who have,
you know, like headbands that have like yarn and stuff and are looking a certain way, um,
that he doesn't realize that we're his, his sons. And that was kind of a wild moment for me not to bring down the, the town, you know, I'm not trying to drown the town here in, uh, in inner salt water. You know, I'm not trying to, you know, put the saline in the, in your eye holes. But, uh, but yeah, just reminding me that that was another thing that happened at Halloween. Let me think of some other Halloweens that I went to.
They had this, my mother had a station wagon.
And a station wagon was something that, it was like a van, but for straight up real ass
moms.
It was like an SUV.
It was like the original SUV.
Like now they got these SUVs with all this room and this and that.
The station wagon, that thing was like 50 feet long.
Like your mom could be driving and you could be so far in the back
that you were a couple minutes behind her in time.
Like if you'd asked your mother what time it was,
she would have said 1144.
And if somebody would have asked you what time it was,
you'd have said 1141.
Because you were living in the past.
That backseat was so far.
And man, it was fun in that station wagon, you know.
You could talk all the smack
because your mother could never reach you.
These SUVs, they got reachable children in them.
You could catch an ass whooping if your mother got long arms, if your mother's Nigerian, you know.
If your mother's from Kenya, you might get your ass beat, even if you're just sitting into the back.
But with that dude, with that, with that station wagon, man, your mother could put you in there.
You could be back there so long, you could start a family.
She opened the door.
Next time she opens the door, you pop out with a husband and just freshly back out tan
because you just got back from your honeymoon.
It was that kind of thing.
You could feel like you were back there forever in your own universe.
And I loved my mother's station wagon.
But on Halloween, she would put the tailgate down.
And we'd get a couple of local kids.
And we would stand on the back of the tailgate.
And hold on to this bar.
The tailgate was down.
We'd stand on that and hold on to this bar that was at the top of the station wagon.
And my mother would drive.
She'd take us to the nice neighborhoods so you could get that candy, you know.
Because rich people had the candy.
I mean, you showed up at some poor people's house.
People, you know, I remember this one dude.
What was that guy's name?
Cutman, Mr. Cutman.
He would blow weed smoke in your face and blow drug smoke at you.
And that was his big Halloween thing.
So when we were young, we didn't get into that much.
But as we got a little bit older, it was fun to hit his door.
Because he'd crack that door and just blow you a hit of that dope smoke at you.
You know, trick or treat, boy.
That shit was trick or trauma dude one year
that shit hit me right in the nostrils dude and i was bent out and i was bent out boy i was ghosting
dude i had goonies in my head bro hey thoughts i had goonies in my head, man. But that was a good time, I remember.
And so anyway, we'd be on the station wagon.
And that tailgate would be down.
My mother would be cruising.
And the fun thing to do when you saw that open yard coming up was to run and jump off.
Like we were in the Air Force, you know, 101st Airborne Division.
And no offense if I'm getting that wrong.
I don't want to offend anybody in that sense.
But you get what I'm saying. We'd run
and jump right off that tailgate.
Alright, alright, alright,
alright. You know?
Somebody throw my sister off.
You know?
And everybody just hitting the grass and then everybody
would get up and make sure they had all their candy.
Half the candy rolled out into the
yard. But it was dark. You didn't know. You'd get your bag and run to the door. Then you'd hit a string of houses
and then get back on the tailgate and off around to the next street. You know, mother would go
around and we jump off, you know? So this one boy, man, one time we're going, man. And my buddy,
um, my buddy Danny, and I've talked about him before and he you know
very slender neck i mean his neck if it was made out of anything it was turkey bacon and
so he was long you know and long people they're out there there's you're more likely to catch a
cold um my dad always told me you're more likely to catch a cold when you're long because there's more of you. You know, if I'm only 20 inches tall, there's only 20 inches of me where a cold can land. But if I'm 27 inches tall, I'm a little longer than those molecules or those, you know, those viral antibodies or bodies that are floating around they can land there's more
room for them to land you know like i'm telling you it's easier to land on saturn than it is on
pluto because there's more space that's what i'm saying so my boy danny was long and he went running
off and we were one two we're jumping off that tailgate hitting the yard you know rolling over running up and danny
goes running dude jumped and hit literally landed right onto a fire hydrant that was in somebody's
yard man and i heard a sound come out of that boy it didn't come out of his voice box It didn't come out of, it was almost like his bone marrow just let out a fucking shriek.
Like his bone marrow let out a shriek. And that's when I knew that nighttime was dangerous, man.
And that the devil lurked sometimes on Halloween. He was never the same. He was never the same before that, but he was definitely,
he was double never the same. Um, after he just jumped sheer darkness and just caught that fire
hydrant just to the whole neck and body, you know, and the crazy thing is you could pop that hydrant
open and run water across him forever and he would never get back to normal oh but it is fall it is autumn and uh happy halloween you guys uh we're gonna be right back
uh just a second i got i got re mandison studio i got a just a new way we're gonna use them i got
a plan bear with me we got a few calls that came in about the NFL. We got a guy who's got some pubic hair reconfiguration something.
And we got a couple more things.
We'll be right back.
Just give me one second because somebody just rang the doorbell.
I got to see who it is.
All right.
But, yeah, it's that time of year.
It's the time of year where things are fresh.
October, I think, is a great month to rattle off the things you want to get done that have been plaguing you all year.
Set a few goals.
Knock them out before turkey time and before Christmas.
Because if you put your ear, stick your neck out a little.
Now stick it out a little bit further.
What do you hear?
I'll tell you what you fucking hear, boy and girl.
You hear a turkey with a jingle bell around his neck.
And that's holidays coming fast, dude.
And if you don't think the holidays are coming fast, go outside.
Bend over.
And I'll tell you this, for you know what's going on you will have a damn
pilgrim with a fucking sack full of new toys hiding in your ass because that's what i'm telling
you the holidays are coming quick and we got a great episode for you guys, man.
I'm excited.
I didn't have that crazy of a weekend,
so I'm just going to kind of leave that right there.
You know, I spent some time.
I go to therapy on Mondays,
so I'm ready to spend some time with my therapist.
I'm trying to get, you know, through tonight's episode so that I can get some rest and be prepared.
Sometimes I go to this therapy session,
I'm not prepared, you know, but I go to this therapy session, I'm not prepared.
But I go to adult therapy for males because I ain't no wuss.
And if you're having problems,
if you're having problems, you're feeling some emasculation issues,
I want you to hit the hotline, 985-664-9503.
I want you to hit the hotline with some of the ways that you're feeling as a man.
If you're having a tough time being a man, it could be in any facet.
Hit the hotline.
You don't even need to leave your name if you don't want to.
But just make sure your story's real.
We got some great calls that came in.
We got a couple people calling about taking a knee.
The NFL, we got a couple of amazing perspectives on that.
We're talking about why we don't have camels in America. We're talking about a follow-up call from a gentleman who, you know, we talked about it last week about what would the price be that you would let your loved one get out there and do sex with a stranger, an expensive stranger, a stranger that's got some money, you know,
the rich.
How much would you just let the rich just plow into your loved one?
And we got a call that came in about that.
We got some great calls.
A man got hair transplants from a place you probably wouldn't even expect.
And you heard the doorbell a little bit ago.
That's going to be Ari Maness is going to be back here
and he's going to be in studio.
But the time when he's not in here,
he's not in here.
This is our time.
And this isn't the time that I share with him.
This is our time.
And the time when I tell you he's not in here,
he's not in here.
So I just want that to be known.
A couple of other things before we move on in the program.
I want to let you know that I am headlining the Hollywood Improv October 10th at 8 p.m. I got about we can do about 45 minutes.
Hot new material. Cool stuff. You're going to love it. You can find those tickets on my website
theovon.com as well. I got the Hampton Ain't Easy the tour shirts are available now at
theovon.com
slash store. And those
have all the tour dates on it from this past year.
It's kind of a neat shirt. It's a few
dollars price here because I had to get a couple extra
colors put on it.
But it's a cool shirt, man. And I think
it's nice to have. If you want to get that, you can
go get it. It has every
city that I performed in this past year.
And what else?
Oh, I got a new series that we're working on a pilot for for Comedy Central.
So I'm excited about that.
There's no money in it yet, but it's going to be a neat opportunity.
And it's all a little bit based on this podcast, so that's kind of exciting.
But I just want to thank you guys for being here with me today.
Happy Monday or whatever day it is this week you're listening.
And we're going to be right back.
We're going to have Ari Madison's studio.
We're going to check on him briefly, hit a couple of news topics,
and then you and I are going to get back to some of your calls.
I'll be right back.
This past weekend.
All right, and that is everything that you need to know. Also, if you want to support the Patreon, you can go to patreon.com slash Theo Von, T-H-E-O-V-O-N,
options on there to donate. Thank you so much to our Patreon supporters. I really appreciate it
allowing me to get a new camera.
And eventually the goal is.
To come out with a Thursday episode.
That better reflects responses. From Monday's episode.
But with that said.
Here's a couple of thoughts.
Ari.
I'd say keep him on.
He seems like a good dude.
The one thing I would say though.
Is just maybe have him be a little bit funnier.
Hey, Theo, this is Ivan.
Love your show.
As far as Ari is concerned, for someone that you want to have with you all the time,
just pick someone that you enjoy being around and someone who's professional.
And someone who's professional.
Be a little bit funnier.
And someone who's professional.
Be a little bit funnier. And someone who's professional.
Be a little bit funnier.
I don't know why I did that.
You did that.
You edited that.
I would never do that.
You did do that.
You're lying.
You're lying to me, and you're lying to all your fans.
There's a glitch, I think.
There was not a glitch.
Okay, fine.
There wasn't a glitch, man.
Those are two comments that just kind of, those are a couple calls that I got in, you know, and I didn't.
You said we weren't going to bring up comments again.
You said we were just going to skip past that and just go into the podcast.
You said we're not going to talk about it anymore.
We weren't.
But then you just played it.
Yeah, it's on the play sheet.
Yeah, but you said to me before,
I said, hey, are we going to keep going over
the negative comments or are we just going to move on?
And you said, oh yeah, no, we're past that.
We are past it.
And then you just brought it up again.
But I wanted to make sure you're past it.
I was until you just brought it up again.
Now I'm back in it.
Now I'm back in, I mean, the funnier thing, fine.
Comedy is subjective.
That guy didn't think I was funny.
Some guys didn't.
No, well, that guy, yeah.
Some people did.
Some people didn't.
The professional thing, first off, i feel like i'm a professional and then secondly you making that little
mixtape i was that's a mixed that you made an ari hate mixtape okay that's my you're you my friend
pio von made an ari hate mixtape it's not a hit it's a remix of a couple of albums. Okay, a remix. You made an Ari Hate remix.
Okay.
Which makes me think that you think I'm unprofessional.
No.
You think I'm unprofessional?
Not at all.
That's why I was going to actually,
if you'd let me gather my thoughts a little bit,
I was going to contradict what some of these guys were saying.
I don't think you were.
Really?
No.
What do you think?
I was going to let you just drown out there in the dirty water?
I think you're just letting me out here to drown.
That's okay.
I guess that's what people want these days for entertainment.
No, I mean, look, it's very Rome.
It's very Rome these days in the podcast world.
They wanna see you get killed by a lion
or fight a thousand squirrels.
You know, there were some men though,
if they didn't have a lion,
they would get thousands of squirrels to fight men.
Did you know that?
I did not know that.
Yeah. Is that true?
Yeah, it's crazy too. You're not
pulling that out of something you think
might be true? No, not at all. It's a real thing.
Alright. Cool.
Well, here he is, guys.
Ari Maness
right here. And what I want to say
is, what's going on in Ari's world?
I just want to do a check-in with Ari.
You know, life's good.
Me and my girlfriend, we made up.
Yeah, last we checked, you guys had just made love after the Grand Canyon.
Yeah, we had gotten back together after the Grand Canyon.
Things were a little shaky.
I think we're on good terms.
We went to San Diego together.
Oh, that's cool.
What was the occasion?
This past weekend, it was my younger brother Jonah's birthday,
and I lined up some shows as well.
So I was doing some comedy and was going to visit my 17-year-old.
I'm 18 now.
Oh, wow.
He just turned 18.
And so we celebrated by going to the whorehouse in Tijuana, Mexico.
Really?
Yeah, the Hong Kong.
You ever been there?
I've never been there.
Did you take Jonah?
No.
Jonah stayed behind, even though he is allowed to go.
Now he's 18.
In Mexico, 18, you're allowed to fuck whores. Oh, you're allowed to get murdered at 7 or 8 though he is allowed to go. I was 18 in Mexico, 18.
You're allowed to fuck whores.
Oh, you're allowed to get murdered at seven or eight.
You're allowed to do anything.
Yeah.
But no, this was just me, my girlfriend and one of my buddies, another comedian who was
on the show.
Okay.
And yeah, so we went and I've, I've been there four or five times now.
I love the place.
You just go there, $80.
You could just, you know, have your way with a woman of your choice
and now do you feel any like
emotional repercussions from that do you walk
out of there feeling like
you know this isn't good for me or this isn't good
for my psyche or something like that or you just feel
you know honestly the first time
I walked out of there yeah
I felt it was cool it was like
I can't believe this place exists
yeah because I mean prostitution here exists,
but it's this really shady internet, secret, grimy, dangerous maybe.
Yeah, it's like you've got to, like, hide in a recycling bin
and just wait until some kind of, you know.
Yeah, you tiptoe around it.
They're not called prostitutes.
They're called escorts.
There's all these rules.
And they do a background check here.
It's this legal establishment.
Nice establishment, in fact.
Now, when you walk in, what is it like?
Is it like a CVS?
Is it like a ready med?
Is it like a 24-hour medical center?
What vibe is it?
It's kind of just like the nicest strip club I've ever been to.
I've only been to a couple strip clubs in the U.S.
And is it well lit?
How's the lighting in there?
It's lit kind of like a bar, so it's not super bright, but it's not dark.
You could definitely see around.
There's $4 beers.
There's three stories.
There's jacuzzis.
There's stripper poles.
There's women.
There's people drinking.
There's parties,
bachelor parties, friends hanging out at tables, drinking beers. And so you walk in there and
there's just all these women lined up up and down the place, probably, I'd say over 100.
Can you smell crotch in the air when you walk in there? Honestly, be honest.
You don't smell crotch. What you when you walk in there? Honestly. Be honest. You don't smell crotch. What you smell
is cleaner.
Cleaning products.
I forget the name of it.
Is it scented in any way like
orange cleaner products or is it just basic
cleaning, government type of
cleaning products? I think it's basic
Mexican government cleaning products.
It smells a little different
than the cleaning products here. It smells like 99 cent store cleaning products. Okay. Because it smells a little different than the cleaning products here.
It smells like 99 cent store cleaning products.
Right.
So it smells like you're just-
Lower end cleaning products.
Right.
Maybe the cleaning products aren't as good,
but the people who are doing the cleaning work harder.
Yeah.
They work good.
It felt clean.
Right.
And yeah,
there was no part of me while I was there
that was thinking this place is gross.
Because in America,
yeah,
you get a $3 Windex or Shinex or whatever.
It's three bucks.
But the person doing the work
is putting in a dollar's worth of effort.
That's right.
But down in Mexico,
you get a dollar's worth of product,
but you get $3 worth of effort.
I think that's,
I never thought about that.
And you're spot on with that.
So you go in there and you do it.
And I've been there three or four times.
Now, were you nervous when you walk in?
Because I would be extremely nervous in there. I was only nervous this time because i'm with my girlfriend
okay and she says she's cool with it she's like i don't care they're they're just prostitutes
you're not cheating on me if we go here she even she was thinking she would get into it she goes
i'd be down to watch you have sex with a prostitute wow and i think that could be you know kind of hot and
fun yeah so we go very um it's very lake of the ozarks missouri and that's swinger country if
you never spent time on yeah i didn't know what you're saying oh yeah there's a good uh i wandered
into a swingers weekend up there one time on accident yeah did you uh partake no i couldn't
do anything i could watch the bingo that they played,
and then I wasn't supposed to get in the elevator from like 11 to 1 a.m.
because it was basically just like a fuck trolley just going up and down the building.
But I did press the button one time, and the doors opened,
and there was just a brother in there just putting down the hammer on some older white women.
But anyway, go on.
So we go in there.
She's drinking a little bit more than me. get sussed out which made me think she's uncomfortable yeah and that made me a little
uncomfortable and i kind of just got this vibe that she was just pretending to be into this
whole experience your girlfriend to be cool yeah to be be the cool girlfriend that is letting me have sex with a prostitute.
So I didn't end up doing it.
I ended up not partaking.
Did it feel like a gang?
Because at that point when you say that, the cool girlfriend that's letting me have sex with a prostitute,
that makes me think like gang.
Like somebody that's in a gang.
No, like she's in a gang?
No, like this is all some type of gang.
That seems like something that happens in gangs.
You know, like I'm going to bang type of gang type of, that seems like something that happens in gangs, you know, like,
I'm gonna bang your friend,
you know,
you stay here,
you have this snack
or something
and I'm gonna bang your friend,
you know, like.
Sounds like you know
more about gangs
than I do,
I don't know.
But there's like
initiation type stuff
and the girls probably
play along with stuff
to seem cool
and comfortable,
you know?
Yeah, it just felt like
maybe because we were on
weird turns
from our last fight and she wanted to be like, Yeah, who takes their girlfriend maybe because we were on weird turns from our last fight,
and she wanted to be like, make it up.
Yeah, who takes their girlfriend, gets in a fight at the Grand Canyon,
and to make up for it, takes them down to a hooker house in Tijuana?
Yeah, it was just one of those things.
I talk about hookers on stage.
Sometimes she knows I had been there.
I'm open about my life.
Did anybody there know you when you got there?
No, but I did actually see one of the prostitutes i had prior experiences with but she did not uh remember me
at all or seem to notice me and did your girlfriend did you tell your girlfriend you've been with that
woman i did wow i got that one last time and she was like oh cool and so and i don't think that
bothered her i we're fine from this whole experience.
Nothing affected our relationship from this.
I think mainly, though, because I was keen enough and I picked up on the fact that she didn't really want me to do it.
And she didn't really want to see that.
And I felt that.
So because I'm a gentleman and because I care about her, I decided, hey, I don't want to.
I said, I don't really want to do this.
I said, you're prettier than all these girls.
You're much more beautiful, which is true.
She is prettier than all those girls.
Yeah, she's a pretty lady.
And I said, we don't need to do this.
We got some delicious street tacos right outside, a Mexican taco truck there.
Right outside?
Yeah, right outside the whorehouse.
There's this taco truck.
We got a whole plate of tacos for four bucks together together we pigged out it was delicious wow
and we got back to my parents house 4 a.m crashed out on the air mattress woke up drove back here
unbelievable dude yeah it's almost like a modern day romeo and juliet you know yeah except better
interesting ari manis uh well i appreciate that check-in man i appreciate you letting us know Juliet. Yeah, except better. Interesting. Ari Maness.
Well, I appreciate that check-in, man. I appreciate you letting us know
what's going on.
Why don't you lead us into a couple of news categories?
First category, speaking of
sex.
Semen-contaminated
flutes might have been given
to children.
So the California school officials warn
that several school districts in Southern
California, they were a flute donation,
musical donation from this
man, I guess, started an organization
called Flutes Across the World.
And now they think that
the flutes he donated in, he also
jerked off onto
and then gave them to kids.
Wow.
Hmm. I mean, that's, how are they going to know?
It's said in the story, they don't know how this came,
how they found out, but someone found out.
But there's semen everywhere.
It's like when you walk into a motel or a hotel or an abandoned building,
when you find a stray dog, you know, like you could
go look on the YouTube and there's people out there spending way inaccurate time with animals,
you know, it's like there's semen on everything. We're made out of semen. When you think about it,
we're from it. Everybody wants to walk around and act like, you know, it's this taboo product,
you know, like it's something that people are secretly bussing in
from China or something or from Korea.
We're semen.
You are semen, dude.
I agree with what you're saying, 100%.
So a little on a flute from some kid
who's even more recently of seed than us.
I just, who are they going to say did it?
I'm sure they'll probably say Trump did it.
No, they're saying the guy who donated the flutes did it.
But what I'm saying-
Was also doing seed.
Well, you know what?
That doesn't surprise me.
A guy that has a bunch of flutes?
Yeah.
Seems like a guy that probably is jerking off on the stuff.
First of all, if you know anybody that has more than one flute,
I'd phone them in right now, bro.
And the number to call for that is 911.
I say you get what you pay for.
They took these free flutes.
Yeah.
They're free flutes.
You can't be complaining about,
if you don't want semen on your flutes,
then buy brand new flutes on Amazon.
But if you're going to take these donated flutes,
yeah, you get what you pay for.
Yeah, that's the thing.
You want a handful of free marbles, dude?
They smell like the inside of my ass?
You know what?
That's life, dude, and that's God's plan for us right now.
That's the news, man.
Speaking of that, that's the news.
Let's get into one call right here while we got R.A. Madison's studio.
Here we go.
And the number is 985-664-9503.
You can always hit the hotline with any thoughts, comments, concerns, or questions.
Let's tap into this right here.
What up, dude?
The name's Chep Toy.
Chep Toy.
Asian?
Chep Toy?
You're thinking of Joe Coy.
From Kentucky.
Louisville, Kentucky.
I just wanted to
let you know that I
too had a hair
removal procedure.
This is in response to the
hair transplant that I got
almost 14
days ago. I kid you not
man,
but it wasn't on my dome.
It was on my face.
So, you know,
I have a hard time growing a beard.
I got that engine in me.
And that means Native American.
I don't think he's talking about Hemi.
But he,
and I know what he's talking about, actually.
There's a,
there's part on my throat,
it's almost like a choke mark
where I swear my mother choked me
when I was young that will not grow hair. Yeah, I can't's a, there's part on my throat, it's almost like a choke mark where I swear my mother choked me when I was young
that will not grow hair.
Yeah,
I can't grow a full beard.
Yeah,
so it,
yeah,
that thing is way shoddy,
dude.
Okay,
well,
no,
you keep bringing me down.
My bad,
dude.
You know,
it doesn't look that bad.
It looks like scruff,
some chicks like that.
Yeah,
it looks like,
like you've been kind of
living in New York,
but outdoors.
Yeah.
And my family.
And so I can't grow a lot of facial hair.
Okay, guy.
Well, let's get to it.
So, you know, if you grow like a chin beard or a neck beard, you know, the hairs are a little greasy.
Chin beard and neck beard look a lot like pubes.
They do.
And so I'm actually going through the procedure right now of getting some pubes.
I got plenty of those transported to my face.
Now, I'm a little worried, though.
Now, I asked for your prayer request.
I just want to let you know, let you know that you're not alone in this. I'm a little worried, though. I asked for your prayer request.
Just want to let you know, let you know that you're not alone in this.
And God bless you.
Wow.
He took it to the Lord at the end.
And I've been at Halloween before where we, you know, we needed beards and stuff. And we would cut off pubes and each other's pubes because some people had better stock.
And use that to make our beards and mustaches for Halloween. and we would cut off pubes and each other's pubes because some people had better stock,
and use that to make our beards and mustaches for Halloween outfits.
What do you think about this, Guy?
What do you think about this, Ari,
about getting that transplant?
If this is real, to me that sounds like a prank phone call.
Really?
I thought about it.
I don't think it does.
So you think it's real.
So if he's really getting his pubes uh to his neck he's transplanting his pubes and moving them to his neck i think
there's a bigger issue why is he so insecure about not being able to grow a beard
right shave your face just don't be a beard guy just be a shaven man you know i mean it's just an
old prison trick like in prison a
lot of times if you read a lot of these old like prison diaries and stuff and you can get a lot of
these on the deep web which is just like they've um they've digitized prison diaries and you can
read about the things they did at halloween and a lot of the things they did was used different
types of body stuff that they had even dandruff that they would collect all year to make different types of costumes and stuff like that.
You know, so it's pretty interesting to hear, you know, like a guy would be like, you know, Tony Montana.
But it would be like, you know, four or five, six people's dandruff that he would use to make the cocaine stream coming out of his face you know and it's almost it's almost spookier that way you know
when you leave the house with four people's dandruff glued to your cheek yeah you know
and your cousin and a pubic mustache made out of your that your cousin grew for you
you know that's rochester new york right there be a little bit funnier oh this is broken again
this is no it's not broken be a little bit funnier um god uh yeah all right i guess i forgive you
thanks for having me on buddy you bet ari manis ladies and gentlemen and uh i'll be right back
in just a second with uh we're gonna get into the rest of these calls we got some great ones. This past weekend.
Okay, and we are back with Ari Maness is out of here.
You know, I think we're just going to continue to try this for another week at least.
See how it fits with Ari.
I liked him, you know, I like checking in with his life to see what's going on.
And I like having a couple of news segments that I don't have to think about and prepare. So it can be kind of fresh to me, but let's,
let's get into some of your calls. We had a lot of great calls about the NFL and a lot of great calls about the sitting, taking a knee, the, the national anthem issues.
And, and I thought a little bit more about it over this past week.
And I think everybody did because it's something that's, you know, that's in the air, you know.
And certainly in the past few years, I find myself thinking a lot more like, what are
my like thoughts innately and feelings innately towards people that are different than me?
Where do I stand?
What do I think?
What do I feel?
I find myself doing that more.
And I think that that's great.
Awareness is eventually key in every aspect of your life. But what I'm also noticing is and hearing about that the take a knee thing was very vague.
It was like, OK, well, we're upset at at racial injustice.
Then we're upset at Trump. And then we're like it's a police brutality.
It was like, well, what's it for? You know, I understand it's for different things,
but it was just, this is the first year
that I really felt like it was, you know,
it just seemed, because if you,
it almost started to make it so that the awareness stuff
is starting to lose some of its effect.
That's what I felt like.
Because every week and every day,
if you keep saying,
oh, this is about awareness,
this batch of cupcakes is about Black Lives Matter,
this casserole is for DACA repeal,
this, if every,
it just, it gets to be overwhelming so that nothing is for anything.
Because if you're saying that everything is something, then nothing is for anything.
You know, it's like, it just wears it out. And I think people are starting to get worn out.
And I've noticed from different friends of mine that, that they're're just there seems to be this vibe that people are just
tired of hearing constantly about blame you know if you want to blame white people forever about
the issues of the world then you can start in britain you know the civilization humanity
civilization apparently began in af and Egypt, I think.
So if you want to go all the way back to there, keep on going.
We can keep cruising through the history books.
And you want to blame it on two organisms in a desert that got hit by lightning?
Or you want to blame it on two monkeys that met in the woods?
Or you want to blame it on Adam and Eve?
I mean, at a certain point, you're just going to keep,
like, at a certain point, we just have to look at where we are.
And we have to look at what role we are also currently playing in our own problems.
Because that's some of the issue that I start to have personally is,
well, yeah, I know that there's issues in America where there are racial injustices. I know that some people don't have as good of opportunities as other people. I know those things. I think that most people want to fix them and are happy to find ways to do that.
But if someone just constantly just yells, everything is wrong, everything is wrong.
At a certain point, they're not helping.
I don't feel like they're not helping to be part of the solution.
So I guess I'm just trying to be a little bit more solution oriented, you know, and also what role do you play in your own problems?
You know, like, yes, there's tons of problems in the black community.
But there's also some of those problems are problems that the black community needs to help solve.
Needs to at least work together with other people to solve for themselves.
You know, like not everything is white people's fault.
You know, if you are, you know, and I hate to use black and white just as the only example,
but that's just like the biggest example that's going on right now.
You know, but I just hate to see activism get diluted by being overused.
And maybe that's naive of me to think that that's not even possible.
And I'm open if that's,
if that's the case, then I'm open to be corrected there. But I just hate to see, it's not like the boy who cried wolf. It's just like the wolf keeps crying boy. It's like the wolf just says, boy,
boy, boy, boy, boy, boy, boy, you know, and there's no, there's never any real communication between the boy and the wolf.
It's just the wolf keeps yelling boy. And at a certain point, it's like, you can't hear the
wolf yelling boy anymore because they just won't stop yelling it. And you think that the wolf may
have autism. And that's how we came back full circle on autism. And people say, well, Theo, you can't talk about autism.
Guess what?
If I show up on the spectrum, then I can.
And if you want to put me to a test, I'll take it any day of the week, dude.
You can blindfold me and put both my hands under a baby's ass and put a number two pencil in my mouth and I'll fucking take that test on my tongue.
And you'll be like, well, I don't know if you have autism. Well, only an autistic person could do that. So check
yourself. Let's get to some of your thoughts and feelings right here. Here we go. On the
NFL, take a knee.
You were talking about taking a knee for the anthem during football games. Now, I don't
really see what taking a knee during a football game has anything to do
with police brutality. So I don't really see the connection of the protest. However,
as far as what my opinion is on them actually taking a knee, I think as a country,
shouldn't demand patriotism from people.
Oh, it's interesting. Interesting thought. Like, yeah, patriotism, you can't demand that out of
somebody that they care about America. That's true. To me, that feels unfortunate that they
don't, but it feels true that we shouldn't be able to demand it. Onward.
Demanding patriotism from people is the sort of thing that the Nazis and the Soviets used to do.
Now, if somebody feels a general dissatisfaction with their nation and doesn't think that their nation deserves patriotism from them,
then I kind of support their right to do that.
patriotism from them, then I kind of support their right to do that.
However, at the same time, I kind of think the whole kneeling for the anthem thing doesn't really send the message of a protest
against police brutality. And I love the podcast.
Yeah, it just seemed a little vague. It seemed a little vague as to
what was going on and what was happening. But yeah, you can't demand
patriotism.
I mean, he's right.
That's how a lot of, you know, evility gets started in the world.
You would hope that people have it.
But I guess we're just in such a diverse and different time now.
Where people, some people have it and some people don't. Maybe America is such a melting
pot now where a lot of places, you don't see that much patriotism. You know, I mean, I'll be honest
here in Los Angeles, I don't see it very much. I can go seek it out. You know, on Veterans Day,
I can go to the cemetery or on the 4th of July, I can go to an event. But otherwise you don't, you don't
see a lot of American flags here in Los Angeles. You know, I think maybe some places are just
so diverse where some people, it's not, they don't care about America first even. I mean,
I think some people do, but there's also a vibe in some places where they don't, you know, and that's okay. You know, some people look at America almost as like an airport, it seems like for the rest of the world, where you can come here and you can live here and you can shop here and you can get a hotel here and stay here. And then you can go back on to wherever, you know, you care about more.
You know, that's, I think that's a vibe in some places, but I think you just have to find a place
then that reflects a little bit more of your, of what you desire, because then you can live in a
reality that is a little more comfortable for you. I think it's, you still should recognize that there
are these other realities out there though. But I don't think there's anything wrong with living
in one where you think you're best suited for.
Alright, let's go on to another call here.
Hey, it's Logan. Doing some weird stuff down here.
Okay, Logan. Thank you for calling. Doing some weird
stuff down here. I don't know what that is, but I appreciate you checking calling. Doing some weird stuff down here.
I don't know what that is, but I appreciate you checking in with us.
Onward.
So you were asking about comments about the kneeling,
and I thought I might try it at a different angle.
See what you had to say.
So a lot of times people want to uh seems america is mostly about convenience
about convenience he's saying go ahead so like you don't see people standing up at the bar when the
when the national anthem comes on you don't see people standing up at home when the national
anthem comes on um i'm not necessarily going to comment on the exact
kneeling aside from i don't really disagree with it uh i'm kind of in the neutral zone
can't really do much harm it's up to the owners i mean it's up to the owners and the advertisers
it's not my it's not my fight i it's it's uh they're using their field. Okay, so he's saying that these players, you know, if their owners are allowing them,
the team owners are allowing them to do that, then, you know,
and that's where they want to use their stance to show uniformity and take a knee,
then that's where they can do it, you know.
That it's up to the owners.
And in the end, that's really true.
I think if a lot of those owners started saying, you're not going to get a paycheck,
you know, I wonder how those people would adjust, you know, because there's a lot of people in Los
Angeles who, you know, were probably afraid to say that they were Trump supporters or were voting
for Trump because afraid they would lose their jobs, you know, or in most of America and are in different places and vice versa.
I'm sure there were a lot of people, you know, in in other places that were afraid to say that they were Hillary supporters or they would lose their jobs, you know.
And that's unfortunate. I think that we're at a point where people, you know, don't want to or can't that we can't even be open to other people's perspectives and
ideas. You know, I think if it's a dangerous perspective, our idea, we can totally not accept
it. But I think you still have to find ways to be able to hear it and to be open to it,
you know, because you might learn, you might change your mind, you know, and change,
I think is always good. Even if you just change your mind a little bit and take a little piece
of what they know or their perspective, you know, I mean, I'm grateful right here. Cause I'm thinking
about some different perspectives cause you guys are calling in with them, but that's true. He's
also saying like how big of an, like people at bars aren't standing up and doing the Pledge of Allegiance.
You know, could you imagine that if everybody in a bar?
Now in some countries they may.
You know, I feel like if you get to some of these other countries, you're at an Irish bar or something and it's a soccer game that they might really get down and put that hand on the chest.
But I don't, I don't think that they're doing that here in America.
You know, it's so it's, but then it. But then that's part of being at the game.
It's like when you're at the event, that's where people do it.
But I'm also thinking, I'm feeling that even after a week or so of this going on,
that people are starting to lose.
They almost just don't care what these players do.
And not because they're black or not because they're white or because they're Latino. And it's only a few Asian players, I believe, but just because
they're just, it's getting hack. It's getting old. It's getting old without us having more of a
direction for solution. And I think that it's getting old just pointing fingers and not pointing the finger also
at oneself to figure out how can we better um better you know how can we better achieve the
successes that we want uh in America all right let's grab another call on Take a Knee.
Here we go.
Hey, Theo, this is Brant from Tacoma, Washington.
Hey, Brant, I appreciate you calling, brother.
Tacoma.
Now, that is outside of Seattle, probably about maybe 15 miles, and that is a little
bit of cowboy country.
15 miles. And that is a little bit of cowboy country. And if you like pine trees and evergreens and cowboys at the same time, you can get that in Tacoma. Now, sometimes people think of Seattle,
that's fish country. You know, and that's up there. People, you know, they got men even
breastfeeding children and people shaving their chest hair and making wallets out of them and
all that kind of stuff.
You know, a bunch of dream catcher addicts and people, you know, eating homemade cinnamon made out of their own, you know, skin flakes and flavors out of nature. But if you get outside
of Seattle, not even far, Tacoma is a little more cowboy country. So they might have fish out there, but they call it water cattle.
That's what they call fish over there in Tacoma.
They call it water cattle because that's the livestock of that salty H2O.
All right, Onward.
I have a comment about the NFL players kneeling before the game for the anthem. I think it's definitely another issue where the media is having another tool to exploit
the vision in America.
I think there's a lot of that going on right now.
You can see it in the local news.
You'll get some polls of people that are going to boycott teams and half of them are
saying they're going to boycott the season and the team
and half of them say that they aren't.
And that's a good point.
Like the media doesn't even, if you
notice with these polls now,
it's half and half.
A lot of the polls,
oh, it's always half and half. Really?
That's striking.
Because if they can keep it half
and half, then they can keep it, then they can keep it half and half then they can keep it then they can make
it seem divided and that's just interesting man it used to be a poll was a real poll
you know and not since the election have i trusted any polls i don't care who the poll is from
because the problem is the people taking the polls and the people running the polling companies, the friends or whoever they're even polling, they don't even, those people are just like people.
You know, a buddy of mine runs a network here in Los Angeles and he's telling me that, you know, well, the first thing we do when we want to see if a show is good, we take it downstairs and we ask everybody who works in our company.
Yeah, but 98% of the people working your company have gone through the same schools or friends of who are already in the company got them the job.
It's like just asking the same person.
That's why I feel like taking polls where you don't have an accurate group to take them from just doesn't end well.
But yeah, it's kind of fascinating that the polls are always 50-50 now and that that behooves the media the most because it keeps people arguing.
And that's not every case. I understand that. Onward.
It's a 50-50 divide, similar to what you're seeing with bipartisan affiliation and what people are doing there.
You have the Charlottesville issue and just a lot of division in America right now and the U.S.
And the media is highlighting it.
You know, the media is supposed to be a tool that helps inform us,
but it's certainly changing to something different to where it's entertainment and it's ruining people and it's giving us all false impressions of what's actually going on.
That's true.
It's a good point.
You know, and I feel most bad.
I appreciate you calling.
And these are some good points.
And I feel most bad, and that's not the right term, but I can't think of it right now. I feel most bad for seniors who are older, who are in hospice, who are, you know, maybe their spouse has passed away, left for heaven or wherever.
They've always thought that the world was a good enough place.
And they thought that maybe they're leaving the world better for their children.
Or that they raised their kids right their whole life or did the best they could.
We'll say that.
And then now here you have – and they don't realize that the news has turned into this. That the media has turned into this element that's not reliable.
That's not just sharing information. And that's not reliable, that's not just sharing information.
And that's sad.
That's sad because they think that then, I bet that causes a lot of depression in them,
a lot of new senior depression because suddenly the world that they thought was a better place
that they were leaving behind, it probably isn't as bad, but it looks that bad,
and they don't know the difference.
Maybe because of senility, because they're not as in touch with the vibe these days.
They don't realize that some of what the media is doing is not healthy.
But I agree.
The polls are 50-50. Let's keep them 50-50.
That way things are dividing.
50-50. Let's keep them 50-50. That way things are dividing. You know, and I do, I think that we are better than the media makes us out to be, than the news makes us out to be. I really do. And
I think that these are good times. You know, I mentioned this a couple weeks ago. I had lunch
with Howie Mandel a month or so ago. And, you know, he's been a friend of me for a few years now.
And he said, this was right when the Charlottesville stuff happened. And he said, you know, he's been a friend of me for a few years now. And he said, this is right when the Charlottesville stuff happened.
And he said, you know, I'm happy that this kind of thing is happening.
And how he's Jewish, I think at least half Jewish, if you can even just be half.
But he said, I'm glad this kind of stuff is happening because now at least you know who people are.
You know, before you don't, you don't, maybe you didn't know where the guy across the street stood.
You know, what his thoughts were were what his real feelings were you know but at least now there's a there's at least a vibe where you do know you know some people are coming feelings that have
been hidden under people's brains are coming to the surface and making people uh think and making
people act you know but I appreciate that call.
Let's keep it cruising here. Here we go.
Hey Theo, talking about the NFL players kneeling.
Now I'm coming from a place of a white privilege. I'm a white dude.
So obviously I had white privilege growing up.
My dad was, he was the 10th of 10 children.
Ooh, 10 out of 10.
Dang, boy.
That's that Postmaker's dozen, boy.
10 children.
Onward.
Postmakers, Post, Postman's dozen.
Onward.
Lived in a two-bedroom house on a clay road in Alabama.
Oh, y'all got to get asphalt, man.
If you don't have any asphalt, hit up some gypsies.
If you got any gypsy friends that live out there in the Midwest or whatever,
they'll sell you some bad to probably decent asphalt. Onward.
When I was born, he was making minimum wage.
He was supporting my mom and two other kids.
He suffered from depression and anxiety.
He died in his early 60s from drinking and drugging.
But you know what my white privilege was is when my dad told me,
son, I don't care if you grow up to be a ditch digger.
If you do grow up to be a ditch digger, you'd be the best damn ditch digger there is.
And that's my privilege.
My dad told me to work hard.
What I'm afraid is happening with these NFL players,
I got these young impressionable kids looking up to these guys.
They're kneeling on the field, and the message they're taking home,
the message these kids are taking home is, someone's out to get me.
I can't do it.
Why even try?
There's a whole system against me. Why should I even try?
I appreciate your call. That's an interesting take.
You know, if you're a child at home, if you're a black child, maybe even if you're a mixed child, I don't know.
I mean, I'm not these children. You know, I don't have these children. But could that affect the way if you see, you know, even your heroes saying that
they don't have that, maybe your race doesn't have a chance? Or if you catch that vibe from
some of this, could that be negative for them? Could that make them not want to work as hard? It could be. You know, it could be. I appreciate your call and I appreciate
that thought. Let's move on to another one. And look, I'm just, I'm happy to have you guys' calls
and thoughts here, man. And you know, this is a big topic that a lot of people had thoughts on.
Here we go. Hey Theo, my name's Shea from Indiana. Thank you for calling, Shea. Indiana.
And actually, I just got a call recently said that Indiana was not the home of the Ku Klux Klan,
that it was actually somewhere in Tennessee.
So I have to look that up.
Wherever it was, bummer.
Onward.
I served 12 years in the Army infantry.
Thank you for your service.
Onward.
and the Army infantry.
And thank you for your service.
Onward.
I understand protesting,
and I'm not unaware of the strife that African Americans go through
with police officers in certain areas.
And I agree there needs to be something done.
Police officers need to be vetted better,
trained better.
Sometimes they're just putting crazy people
on the streets with a gun.
Yeah, that's true, man. Sometimes they are, sometimes they're just putting crazy people on the, uh, on the streets with the gun. Yeah, that's true, man. You know, sometimes they are, sometimes they aren't. Um, you know,
you wish that these guys got paid more, you know, you wish that teachers and, uh, and police officers and public service, those people got paid more. You know, you also have, uh, you know,
decades of police going into neighborhoods that are extremely scary, going into extreme high crime areas.
So probably a lot of, you know, PTSD from past experiences.
I can't even imagine.
In addition to racist cops, you know, in addition to the fact that racism exists.
And yeah, I mean, there's a lot of thoughts on it.
Omward? that racism exists and uh yeah i mean there's a lot of thoughts on it onward but uh for me when i
see uh people kneeling at the anthem like that you got to think about why we do the national anthem
to begin with is it just an unknown ceremony no we're doing it to raise you know to understand
where you come from and the liberties and the freedoms that you have
because people did die.
They lost limbs.
They lost lives.
They sacrificed their minds
so you could live in a place like this.
That's a powerful line.
They sacrificed their minds.
It's a good line.
Onward.
I completely agree.
We need to fix things.
Things do need to be fixed. If you're going to use your platform use it for good use it for positivity and then figure
something out and let's make people aware doing a senseless act by just kneeling it just causes
division and hate but uh that's that's that's my high horse or my stand uh thanks to you
thank you appreciate it yeah it makes you, yeah, I mean, are we helping?
Is this helping?
Are we finding solution?
Because here's, I don't think the media doesn't care if we find solution.
You know, if we solve the problems in the world, let me tell you who doesn't benefit.
Probably the news networks.
Can you imagine if the world were good and comfortable?
Would we even turn the news on?
If we knew that everyone was doing okay?
You know, it makes you start to ask yourself, well, why do I even watch news?
Am I addicted to the hatred?
Am I addicted to the hatred? Am I addicted to the, you know, to the negativity?
Am I supporting it by the things I watch and the things that I, you know, click on?
I don't know.
I do not know.
All right, let's hear a little bit more.
Let's take another call right here.
Hey, man.
Why we don't have camels here in North America
seems like they can live in the rest of the regular world
in sand and hot sun
and just the sun burning the sand on their feet.
And they can get all that water in them.
I think they would do a lot better here.
Dang, bro.
I appreciate the call.
Yeah.
Why we don't have camels.
Why we don't have camels here in America.
That's a great question.
You know, it is.
Because you go to some of these other countries and they have camels.
You go to India.
Oh, you'll see a camel.
Look out in the woods.
You'll see a distant camel.
You go to...
Where else?
You go to Africa. Oh, they got camels out there.
If you got a hat made out of reeds, made out of reed pieces of greenery, a camel will eat your hat.
First thing you stand in there and you got a little bit of shade on your head.
Next thing you know the sun is hitting you and you hear something chewing nearby. And that's a camel just ate your hat. First thing you stand in there and you got a little bit of shade on your head. Next thing you know, the sun is hitting you and you hear something chewing nearby. And that's a camel just ate your
hat. So they have camels out there. But in America, you know, you get around here and it's not like
that. You know, and I think part of it is because we're not as natural. I mean, dude, you go to Africa, you get a rental car, they might have a fucking sloth in the trunk.
You know?
You go to Nairobi and you get a pair of pants and you put them on.
And they might have a couple of, they might have a Laz lizard or something in the crotch of them.
An exotic lizard.
So you get a lot of these different countries, you're going to see some animals.
In America, you might just get a couple of pesky raccoons out there.
You know, throwing dice and fucking talking shit.
You know?
And just fucking around in the garbage, making love by the garbage.
You know, we don't get, like, we don't get as many wild animals.
Now, you get up into different parts out there to Montana.
You know, you might get some tigers.
You know, you might get some mountain cats.
Even some aggressive lesbians if you're hanging out by the gas station at night.
Because I got accosted by a lesbian out there one time.
I think it was pretty much a lesbian.
Aggressive lesbians.
Now, I'm not saying anything about all lesbians.
This was an aggressive, an aggressive lesbian.
Had a Dokken t-shirt on, this old band, Dokken.
But they have, you know, we don't have that natural,
we don't have those camels running around, and I don't know why.
I do not know why at all, but that's a great question, man.
Why we don't have camels in the United States of America.
Let's get them.
Talk to Trump, dude.
Trump will get you some fucking camels, bro.
All right, let's hit another question here.
Oh, and this question had to do with last week.
It was if your girlfriend wanted to sleep with somebody else.
If you got that offer.
Because someone on Snapchat last week called in
with the offer they got.
Let's hear this.
Yo, what's up, baby?
Calling from, I'm going to keep my name out.
I'm calling from Toronto, Canada.
Toronto.
Almost made love to an Indian woman up there one time
or pretty much a woman of age,
but just outside of that.
And I went to Halloween. I celebrated Halloween
up there one time with the ShamWow guy, my buddy Vince Offer. We went to a party and he ended up
meeting a white girl that I think he ended up making love to. Onward. Canada. Just wanted to
talk about last week. If you've let somebody else sleep with your girl or vice versa
maybe your girl's letting you sleep with other chicks whatever yep you can find that on our 925
episode onward um i don't know what if i've practiced the dark arts as you put it you put
the dark arts i'm i'm a proponent of the dark arts. I might be an elder. I don't know. Okay, see you out there, man.
You Edgar Allen Go, boy.
Onward.
Yeah, me and my girlfriend, you know, it started off totally healthy, as most relationships do.
Everything's fun.
Everything's new and exciting, whatever.
And as time went, you know, you learn something about your girl.
She's a freak.
My girl is a freak.
She's crazy.
She was into crazy shit, and so was I.
And you kind of awaken the dark arts in each other.
So, okay, now you want to do threesomes.
And then it turns to, well, why don't we just have an open relationship?
Okay, so now you open relationship.
And that's when anybody can come through and shoot your doe.
You know, that's open season.
That's hunting season. And that's when you're come through and shoot your doe. You know, that's open season. That's hunting season.
And that's when you're sharing your crops with the neighbors.
And that's when it can get a little ornery when you look across that fence and see somebody else eating your vegetables.
Onward.
Okay.
So now we're shaking our heads like, oh, is this normal?
Like, can we do this?
How do we do this?
And it practically ruined our relationship
in the end of it. I was letting her, Oh man, I was almost hopeful for a second that you figured
this out, that you had this, let's keep going. Sleep with other dudes. She got jealous and didn't
want me to sleep with other girls. And then eventually because of something, some deep
seated, weird, dark art that i
had in a part of me i started to like that she was sleeping with other guys and she would film
it and she we would watch it and it was like a part of our relationship but wow wow boy that's
crazy man i mean you're in there then you know if you have you watching videos of other men with your
lady you know that's very i want to say roman but that's even past that you passed roman
wow let's hear more man that's not healthy and i knew that but i just couldn't help it you know
things progress you just get bored with the regular shit so i don't know it know. It kind of ruined our relationship, I think, in the end.
She won't admit to it, but I think that's what it was.
But yeah, let me know what you think about that.
Oh man, I think, I mean, look, I'd be lying if I didn't say some of it sounded fun.
You know, if it doesn't sound fun to be just, you know, crawling down that dirty staircase on your hands and knees.
Maybe just crawling down that dirty staircase on your hands and knees.
And you know that each step below you, and you're going face first down that staircase.
Because when you get naughty like that, you face first.
As a man, you're going face first.
You're taking all your feelings and all your senses.
Your senses are all in your head and in your fingertips.
So you're taking all those face first down the stairs into the darkness.
And you know that the devil built that next step.
You know each step built by, you know, Carpenter Satan or Carpenter Lucifer.
You know, you know that each one of them steps getting warmer and naughtier, slipperier. But you keep going hand first on your knees down that staircase.
And your nostrils and your brain filling up with scents.
Filling up with the scent of musky women.
You know, in Best Westerns and, you know, in private account credit cards.
You know, in cheap things of cocaine
and people wearing fucking little outfits on their dick
and all kinds of stuff like that.
And you're getting into some wildness, man.
But you keep going because that's the temptation.
That's temptation, man.
That's what that is.
And look, I feel you. That can be fun, but that doesn't end well. That's temptation, man. That's what that is. And look, I feel you. That can be fun,
but that doesn't end well. That's the thing. That doesn't end well, or we would all probably be
there. So now here you are, you know, you're a little bit burnt out. You've sound like you got
some issues from it, but I just say, keep climbing, man. Turn around, keep walking up. I'm not saying
you don't have to always be good. I'm not saying any of that. I'm not saying God's going to save you. I'm not
saying any of that. All I'm saying is that it doesn't sound like the safest environment.
And that's why the struggle is where it is. That's why the struggle is to stay in the
healthy relationship or even if it's, you know, to try and make a relationship healthy.
That's why we're battling it out
with your spouse.
That's why,
because you're fighting that front lines.
You ain't out there
eating buttholes off the internets.
You know,
random strangers off the internets
with their buttholes.
You're not doing all of that, you know?
And that's hard.
It's hard not to do.
It's hard not to do.
All right, let's keep it cruising.
Yeah, hi, Theo.
Hey, I just got done watching the 925 episode.
Thank you for checking that out.
As far as the kneeling at the national anthem, it just needs to stop.
Entertainers have opinions.
Football players need to play football.
The NFL needs to play football and stay out of the political realm.
Trump needs to shut his mouth and become a real president and stop talking a bunch of shit to people to get them stirred up.
It's not helping anyone move forward.
I agree. shit the people to get them stirred up. It's not helping anyone move forward.
I agree.
I mean, just as much as the media does it, Trump does it as well.
I mean, it's just, it's almost baffling where that comes from for him.
I mean, it's just like a baby. You know, it's like watching a tall baby with Twitter. Onward so this needs to quit needs to
end people need to come together and fucking stand up at the anthem and move
on you know we play football that's what that's about entertainment so I just
wanted to pass that along and I appreciate that wanted to pass that along. I appreciate that.
I just wanted to pass that along.
And as far as sleeping for payment, I'll tell you what.
I was married 21 years.
And at the end of my marriage, I would have paid someone $100 to sleep with my wife just to get her out of the fucking house.
So keep up the good work.
There you go.
That's love right there.
And that's love and that's divorce and that's what happens there.
You tip somebody who'd come in and take your wife out for a night on the town.
All right.
What else, man?
I got some more stuff about girls and dating.
We're going to get into that next week.
I feel like we've already been into a really long episode so far. We got a bunch of great calls and more of them will be on next week. I'm probably going to get into some stuff about dating. I've been dealing with some stuff in this therapy I've been going to. I've been dealing with some stuff about my issues lie when I'm unable to connect in a relationship.
When I'm unable to connect in a relationship.
I even get caught up.
I got intimate issues.
When it comes to being in love.
And getting a comfortable consistent level of intimacy.
That stuff.
That's hard.
That's hard for me.
It's hard for a lot of people.
Dude I'm telling you this. I'm sitting in a doctor's office the other day.
And I'm talking to him about something.
Something that's okay.
And I mentioned this, you know.
Just in passing, just about I was going to a therapist.
And out of the blue, this man closed the door.
And then he started telling me the problems he was having at home.
And this is a doctor.
was having at home. And this is a doctor. This is a doctor talking to me about the problems he's been having, you know, issues he's having in his bedroom. And so, man, it's just they got
people out there dealing with that. People out there dealing. We're afflicted, man. We're all
afflicted. And that's okay. We've all got a problem, man.
You know?
But you're going to be out there hiding it?
You know?
Are you going to be out there just saying what the problem is and how do you think we can solve it?
Because you could wear the disguise if you want.
You could put on the disguise.
Everything's fine.
You know?
Everything's fine.
Everything's fine. That's the Everything's fine. Everything's fine.
That's the disguise, man.
That's your Halloween, bro.
That's your Michael Myers outfit
you wear every day.
Or
you could take off the mask, man.
You know?
You know?
You could take off your mask
and see if daddy recognizes you.
You know? You could take off that mask and show up.
Show up with no mask on, no outfit, no costume.
Show up to whomever, to your boss, to your spouse, and let them know what's going on.
Let them know what's popping off inside of you.
You know, be vulnerable.
Sometimes you got to show up and be vulnerable, man.
So, and that's a tough thing to do.
It's a tough thing for men to do, you know,
and it's a tough thing, I think, for ladies, too.
Ladies getting confused.
Ladies used to be our maps, you know, I think at times for vulnerability. We would watch them. We would
marvel at who they were, and now sometimes we've been led in directions where we don't know,
you know, we don't know where we stand. We don't know who's who anymore. It's a little bit
confusing. That's okay. We just got to keep navigating, you know?
So if you Louis find your Clark,
you know, get you a Clark.
Be a buddy. Can be a loved one.
You know, get vulnerable with a friend, man.
Share. We just fucking
out here, dude. We out here.
We out here in space.
I don't have any shame, man.
You want shame, you keep shame.
I'm not holding on to that shit anymore. I appreciate
you guys calling, man. I'm going to take us out right here. This is Spencer Jacob Growl Band
with a song that I love from much, man.
You guys be good to yourselves.
I bet you deserve it.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm Jonathan Kite, and welcome to Kite Club,
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