#2446 - Greg Fitzsimmons

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Greg Fitzsimmons

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Greg Fitzsimmons is a comedian, actor, and writer. He hosts the “Fitzdog Radio” podcast and co-hosts “Sunday Papers” and “Childish.” His new special, “You Know Me,” premieres on YouTube on 8/27.https://gregfitzsimmons.com/ "You Know Me" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvUqkWh_x4U

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Timestamps

0:00Doomscrolling, censorship, and free speech: UK arrests, TikTok bans, and whistleblowers
9:57Press access vs operational secrecy; from FBI gang sweep to Vegas nuclear-test tourism and bodies in lakes
19:54AI-altered news photos to gross-out hygiene and dogs’ sense of smell

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0:00

Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.

0:03

The Joe Rogan experience.

0:05

Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.

0:09

Oh, alpha brain?

0:12

I just took some alpha brain, so I'm going to be fucking sharp.

0:15

I've got this stuff, too, if you want it.

0:17

It's an energy drink that also has nootropics in it.

0:19

Oh, yeah?

0:19

Yeah, good stuff.

0:21

Yeah.

0:21

Gregory!

0:22

Joseph!

0:23

Good to see you, my friend.

0:24

Good to see you, man.

0:25

The world's on fire.

0:26

The world is on fire.

0:29

Good time for you to come in.

0:30

I mean, I literally, I mean, talking about being addicted to your scroll, I got

0:35

to really

0:36

put the fucking phone down sometimes.

0:39

I know.

0:39

Yeah, it's not good.

0:41

No.

0:41

It's not good for your brain to see all the problems of the world all piling,

0:44

and everything

0:45

looks like it's about to blow up.

0:46

Yeah.

0:47

Iran looks like it's about to blow up.

0:49

They're talking about going into Cuba.

0:50

Don Lemon went to jail.

0:51

It's like, it's all crazy.

0:54

It's like, what's next?

0:57

Well, you know, when jail gives you lemons.

0:58

And it's also like, what's that whole theory about we're only supposed to be

1:04

exposed to

1:05

like 200 people in our life?

1:07

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:08

That's Dunbar's number.

1:09

Yeah.

1:10

Yeah.

1:10

Right.

1:11

So you only can keep that many people in your head.

1:13

But you should only know about that many divorces and that much cheating and

1:17

that much killing

1:18

as would happen within 200.

1:20

And crime.

1:20

And you fill in the blank.

1:22

Right.

1:22

You know, fraud, waste, abuse, international politics, restrictions on speech

1:28

in England.

1:29

Yeah.

1:30

You see this fucking crazy story?

1:33

This guy in England, an illegal alien, was a squatter in his house.

1:38

The court ruled that because he didn't live in the house, the guy didn't live

1:42

in the house,

1:43

it was an empty house, they gave him the house.

1:46

They gave the squatter the house, the squatter sold it for 540 grand.

1:50

Squatter sold his house, took his house because he was living it.

1:55

And this guy was like a pensioner.

1:57

He was just a guy who had like an extra house, like a fucking investment

2:02

property.

2:03

You're right.

2:04

And this guy moved into it.

2:06

Have you seen it, Jamie?

2:07

I'm seeing something from a year ago.

2:08

I don't know.

2:09

Somebody sent it to me today.

2:10

They had that in New York back in the 70s and 80s.

2:14

There was a lot of empty units, like down on the Lower East Side, like Topkin

2:18

Square Park

2:19

area.

2:19

There was a lot of squatting.

2:21

Yeah, this is it.

2:21

Squatter moved to the pensioner's empty home, then won the legal right to keep

2:26

it and sold

2:27

the house for 500, I guess 540, is that euros or pounds?

2:32

Is that pounds?

2:32

What's that weird?

2:33

Pounds, yeah.

2:33

England has pounds still.

2:34

That's fucking crazy.

2:36

That's so crazy.

2:39

England has lost its fucking mind.

2:44

It's almost like they want people to either revolt or completely submit.

2:49

It's one or the other.

2:50

It's like you're either begging for a revolution or you're begging for people

2:54

to completely submit.

2:56

They've arrested 12,000 people this year for social media posts.

2:59

Oh, that's right.

3:01

And most of it is criticizing immigration.

3:03

Just criticizing immigration.

3:04

Just saying immigration sucks.

3:06

We should send these people back home.

3:07

Cops show up at your door.

3:09

Right, right.

3:10

Crazy.

3:11

Well, TikTok is now not allowing people to post anything that is anti-ice.

3:17

Not just that.

3:19

You can't post the juice box emoji.

3:21

What's that?

3:22

Because it's a code for Jews.

3:24

Because people were using it because they were blocking content where they were

3:29

criticizing Israel.

3:31

Wait, why is the juice box Jews?

3:32

I don't know.

3:33

Oh, juice.

3:34

Juice box.

3:35

Juice.

3:35

It is funny.

3:40

But did they block the use?

3:44

This is somebody sent me this.

3:45

I haven't verified this.

3:46

Did they block the use of the word Epstein?

3:48

I saw, I mean, I saw, I don't, I'm not on the app, but I saw a video of someone

3:52

trying, you know.

3:53

Yeah, let's run that through perplexity.

3:55

And ask if it's blocked.

3:57

See if perplexity will rat out TikTok.

3:59

Right, because that's.

4:01

It's so crazy that they would do it because they just purchased it, right?

4:06

So it was just purchased by some, what is the group?

4:10

Is it, did Larry Ellison's group purchase it?

4:13

Yes.

4:13

Okay.

4:14

Which is a tremendous supporter of Netanyahu in Israel.

4:16

Right.

4:18

So, yeah.

4:19

Yeah.

4:19

There you go.

4:20

So you got censored news now.

4:22

So any criticism of Palestine, what's going on in Gaza, all that stuff's going

4:26

to get squashed probably.

4:28

TikTok says, does not have a rule that bans or blocks the word Epstein across

4:31

the app,

4:32

but many U.S. users have recently been unable to send that word in direct

4:36

messages.

4:36

Now, I have a friend, his name is Bobby Epstein, totally unrelated.

4:42

He's the guy who owns the Coda racetrack.

4:44

He's a good friend of mine.

4:45

I can't send a message saying I was just talking to my friend Bobby Epstein.

4:50

Oh, no shit.

4:52

That's crazy.

4:53

Wow.

4:53

Epstein is a super common name.

4:56

Yeah.

4:56

That's a super, it's like Jones.

4:58

It was on Welcome Back, Cotter.

5:00

Right.

5:00

Yeah.

5:01

Epstein from Welcome Back, Cotter.

5:02

That's right.

5:03

You can't talk about him anymore.

5:04

He played my brother on news radio.

5:05

No.

5:06

Yes.

5:06

Him, Nick DiPaolo, and Brian Callen played my brothers, and we all just beat

5:10

the shit out of each

5:11

other in the entire episode.

5:12

It was hilarious.

5:13

That's amazing.

5:13

Yeah, Nick threw me through a plate glass window, and then the brother shows up.

5:17

Epstein was a priest, and he showed up with a bat.

5:19

We were all scared of our older brother.

5:21

It was really funny.

5:22

He was the Jew, the Puerto Rican Jew from Brooklyn.

5:25

He was great.

5:26

Yeah.

5:26

He was a really nice guy, too.

5:28

So, what else does it say here?

5:30

Newsom to probe claims of Trump-critical censorship on TikTok.

5:35

I think they're fucking blocking a lot of things on certain social media

5:40

platforms.

5:41

I mean, I think-

5:42

Well, what is that?

5:43

I mean, what's your big picture take on whether or not social media platforms,

5:48

which are privately

5:49

owned, have a responsibility that, say, regular broadcast networks would have

5:55

in terms of not

5:56

censoring things?

5:57

Well, regular broadcast problem is they censor things.

6:00

Right.

6:00

They don't just report on the news.

6:01

They report on what they decide they're going to report on.

6:04

Like, it's a CNN hourly news segment.

6:07

They have no responsibility to tell you about any particular story.

6:10

None.

6:11

Zero.

6:12

Yeah.

6:12

So, they'll wait until something becomes, like, unmanageable before they'll

6:16

start talking

6:17

about it.

6:17

Right.

6:17

So, something, like, starts getting traction on social media, like some sort of

6:21

a corruption

6:21

scandal.

6:22

If it's a left-wing scandal, they can ignore it.

6:25

Right.

6:25

And they have no obligation to-

6:27

It's not like we have to tell you about these very-

6:29

Right.

6:30

It's not like, you know, we ran it through AI.

6:32

There's 20 things that the American public has to know about.

6:35

So, they censor, or at least they curate the content.

6:39

I think for social media platforms, if Elon Musk didn't buy Twitter, we would

6:45

be fucked because

6:46

there would be no place where you could say whatever you want, even heinous

6:50

things, right?

6:51

Yeah.

6:51

But if someone says heinous things, you can block them and not interact with

6:54

them.

6:54

And you can let other people tear them down and tear them apart.

6:58

And that's how it's supposed to be.

6:59

It's supposed to be, you don't counter hate speech with censorship.

7:03

You counter it with better speech.

7:05

Right.

7:06

And you appeal to rational people and sensible people that go, this is why this

7:10

guy is wrong.

7:11

This is why racism is wrong.

7:13

This is why rash generalizations are wrong.

7:15

This is why it's wrong.

7:16

Yeah.

7:17

And that's how you're supposed to do it.

7:19

It's supposed to be a free speech town hall platform.

7:21

It's supposed to be like the town square where everybody can get together and

7:25

talk about ideas.

7:26

And that's how it should be.

7:27

Right.

7:28

And there's been a lot of calls that say that you shouldn't be able to be

7:32

anonymous on social media,

7:33

that you should have consequences for your actions.

7:35

The problem with that is then you lose all your whistleblowers, right?

7:40

All the whistleblowers that are talking about giant corporations are doing

7:43

horrible things to the environment secretly in other countries,

7:46

which we find out about all the time.

7:48

Like the Steven Dossinger case where that guy got arrested.

7:50

He was prosecuted.

7:53

Was it Exxon?

7:54

The Dossinger case?

7:57

But it's like whistleblowers are important.

7:59

Yes.

7:59

You know?

8:00

And if you don't have whistleblowers, you don't find out.

8:03

Like if Edward Snowden doesn't come out, we know so little about the NSA.

8:07

We know so little about government spying.

8:11

And yeah, he's an American former attorney known for his legal battle.

8:14

Oh, Chevron.

8:15

Particularly with, so he was arrested and he went to jail, man, for criminal

8:20

contempt.

8:21

I mean, that's First Amendment, isn't it?

8:26

You know, I don't know exactly the details of the case.

8:29

He spent 45 days in prison and a combined total of 993 days under house arrest.

8:34

Wow.

8:36

Not only do they go to jail, it depletes all your savings.

8:40

If they decide to prosecute you, your life is ruined.

8:43

That's part of the point of it all.

8:45

It's also discourage other people from doing the same thing.

8:48

Right.

8:48

So if you're an attorney and you're thinking of prosecuting, you know, shell,

8:52

you're not going to do that now.

8:54

You're going to go, fuck this.

8:55

You know, I have a fucking house.

8:56

Right.

8:57

I'm trying to buy a Porsche.

8:58

And then you're back at it.

9:02

Yeah, right.

9:03

You know.

9:05

I mean, yeah, it's a weird thing because, like, I know, like, right now, to

9:12

cover the Pentagon, no journalist can go into the Pentagon unless they sign an

9:18

agreement to only put out government-sponsored press releases.

9:24

Government-approved?

9:25

Government-approved.

9:26

So now you've got very few people inside the Pentagon, which is where the

9:29

whistleblowing was happening.

9:31

They're in the back halls of the Pentagon.

9:33

That's crazy.

9:35

But then, you see, the problem with the Pentagon is you're talking about

9:38

national security.

9:39

And if someone released something, like the name of an agent that was

9:43

undercover somewhere and something happened, that person got killed or

9:47

compromised or some sort of a national security interest, you know, was the

9:52

whole thing was tanked.

9:54

Yeah.

9:55

That's what it is.

9:55

The Pentagon's different.

9:57

I mean, I'm not saying that the press shouldn't have access to Pentagon

10:01

officials.

10:02

They certainly should.

10:04

But it's like going there is kind of different, right?

10:07

It's like the FBI just arrested.

10:10

They just had a giant sweep on gangs in this country today.

10:14

Yeah.

10:14

They just released that they found, like, I think it was 10 kilos of drugs.

10:19

They arrested 50 people.

10:19

Like cartel gangs?

10:20

Cartels in America.

10:22

Yeah.

10:22

And so they made a giant arrest today.

10:24

I think they arrested 200 – see if you can find what that story is.

10:27

But, like, imagine if you were in the FBI office and you heard about an

10:33

imminent attack and you printed something.

10:36

Like if you're a reporter and you're covering this stuff and you have access to

10:40

this information somehow.

10:41

Yeah.

10:42

And it gets released and these guys find out about it and they skate.

10:45

They nab –

10:47

Latin kings.

10:47

50 Latin kings in Operation Broken Crown after a three-month sweep.

10:54

So what is the details of it?

10:55

Okay.

10:57

The last three months, the FBI has quietly executed –

11:00

Sorry.

11:00

I was about to –

11:01

Okay.

11:02

This is on X.

11:04

Quietly executed Operation Broken Crown, a sweeping violent gang takedown

11:10

involving 13 field offices targeting the Latin kings gangs.

11:14

Members which were publicly threatening law enforcement officers, 50 arrests, $200,000

11:20

in seized assets, seizure of 10 kilos of illicit narcotics.

11:24

Interesting.

11:26

Interesting.

11:34

Well, so, like, that kind of a situation.

11:36

You can't have access to that information before they do it.

11:39

That has to be very tight-lipped, you know.

11:42

But there's only a few of those kind of scenarios that I can imagine.

11:45

But when it comes to, like, politicians and backdoor deals, like, there should

11:51

be live footage of it.

11:53

Well, you only found out about the bomb – the illegal bombings in Cambodia

11:58

because there was a whistleblower inside of the Pentagon.

12:01

Exactly.

12:02

Exactly.

12:02

So it does – you do need some access.

12:04

Yeah.

12:05

But it's, like, well, you need whistleblowers, right?

12:07

Right.

12:07

It's, like, how many – there's – here's the thing about, like, intelligence

12:11

agencies.

12:12

There's a lot of good people that are working there.

12:14

It's, like, we judge them based on the evil people that are probably the ones

12:20

with the most power, you know?

12:22

Yes.

12:22

There's probably a lot of, like, mid-level people working at the Pentagon,

12:27

working at the – working everywhere that are good people.

12:30

Oh, are you kidding me?

12:32

These are people that have dedicated their lives to trying to – you know, I'm

12:36

the same way with cops.

12:37

I think, you know, I got three good buddies that are cops, and they are –

12:41

absolutely went into it the way a social worker goes into it.

12:45

Yes.

12:45

And then there's the evil ones that, you know, I think it was worse.

12:49

I think back, like, you know, back in the days of, like, Serpico.

12:53

Oh, yeah.

12:53

Like, it was literally, like, the entire force was in on it.

12:57

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

12:58

You know, there was fucking legal gambling, legal drug dealing.

13:02

Nobody got touched.

13:03

Yep, yep.

13:04

Yeah, they've always done that.

13:05

I mean, that's how they ran the mob in Vegas.

13:07

Yeah.

13:08

The mob ran Vegas with the cops.

13:10

Oh, yeah.

13:11

We were just talking about that outside.

13:12

Yeah.

13:12

Like, why was Vegas and Atlantic City the only places allowed – I don't know

13:17

why I stupidly asked that.

13:19

Like, Jamie's like, because of the mob, asshole.

13:22

Fucking duh.

13:22

Well, it was the mob, and I think Nevada, there was also – see if this is

13:28

true.

13:28

There was supposedly a connection between the testing of nuclear weapons and

13:37

then allowing the city – or the state, rather, to have gambling.

13:41

Because Nevada was one of the rare places where they, like, routinely tested

13:46

nuclear weapons.

13:47

Oh, yeah.

13:48

I don't know if you've ever seen the video that shows a history of all the

13:52

atomic bombs going off in the United States.

13:55

The video is crazy because it starts with the first test.

13:59

It starts with the Trinity test.

14:00

It starts – they do – the couple in the ocean.

14:02

What's the matter?

14:03

What's so funny?

14:04

Wow, just the way this is worded.

14:07

What is it?

14:08

I asked if there's a connection between nuclear tests and gambling in Las Vegas,

14:12

and turns out, yeah, they would use it as a theme to attract gamblers.

14:16

What?

14:17

Look, come see a bomb.

14:20

Yeah.

14:20

From the early 1950s to the 1960s, Las Vegas casinos and tourism promoters

14:26

actively used nearby nuclear weapons tests as themed attractions to draw gamblers

14:31

and visitors.

14:32

Holy shit, man.

14:34

Bomb parties.

14:35

Oh, my God.

14:36

They had bomb parties on the rooftop.

14:39

They would watch – they'd stay up gambling, drinking, and then stepped

14:43

outside to watch the blast on the horizon.

14:45

Wow.

14:46

With your atomic cocktail and your atomic hairdo.

14:47

Oh, my God.

14:48

Dude, it's like how Caesars does fireworks now.

14:50

They had atomic-themed promotions, atomic cocktails, atomic hairdos, nuclear

14:55

pin-up imagery like Miss Atomic Blast.

14:57

Slogans like Atomic City USA and up-and-at-em to tie the test directly to Vegas

15:05

nightlife and gambling culture.

15:09

Holy shit, man.

15:10

Oh, my God.

15:11

I wonder if you could place bets.

15:13

Dude, I bet your eyebrows singe off.

15:16

I don't know if they had the same thing like what they have now with modern

15:19

prediction betting.

15:20

Prediction betting, you can bet on pretty much everything.

15:23

I just made a bet last night on one of those –

15:25

Go back down to where you were.

15:26

Stop with the bottom line.

15:28

In short, nuclear weapons tests near Las Vegas were not just a backdrop.

15:32

They were deliberately woven into casino marketing, party culture, and tourism

15:36

that supported the city's gambling economy.

15:39

But did it have the reason – like, here's my question.

15:43

Was Nevada allowed to have gambling because of them allowing nuclear tests?

15:52

Like, was there any sort of an agreement?

15:55

Because there's only two states at that time that allowed casinos, like real

15:59

casinos.

16:00

Right.

16:01

And it seems kind of weird that one of them, you know, New Jersey's always been

16:06

fucking corrupt.

16:07

That's the Sopranos.

16:08

Right.

16:08

I mean, it's like the most mob-ridden fucking state in the country at the time.

16:13

Based in Atlantic City, pretty much.

16:14

Yeah.

16:14

I mean, cut the fucking shit.

16:16

Yeah.

16:16

In Atlantic City.

16:17

And then Vegas was Bugsy Siegel, right?

16:20

Okay.

16:21

Well, since Nevada legalized most forms of gambling in 1931 – okay, so it

16:25

doesn't make any sense because it's before that.

16:27

So it's the Great Depression, economic measure, track tours.

16:31

So, no.

16:32

So that theory doesn't hold up.

16:34

I didn't know that Vegas was started in 1931.

16:38

That's nuts.

16:39

So basically, the Great Depression started, and then they launched Vegas as a

16:45

way to raise money for Nevada.

16:47

Which is hilarious.

16:48

You have no money.

16:49

There's no jobs.

16:50

Why don't you gamble?

16:50

What?

16:51

My gamble is going to the food line, seeing if I can get a loaf of bread.

16:56

That's my gamble today.

16:57

You know what's crazy is that lake keeps drying up because they were having a

17:00

drought.

17:00

They keep finding bodies in the lake.

17:02

Oh, no shit.

17:03

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

17:04

Like those metal barrels with, like, bodies inside of them.

17:08

They've found quite a few of them.

17:10

How many bodies have they found?

17:11

Is it Lake Mead, I believe?

17:13

Yeah.

17:14

Yeah, so as it's drying up, it's like, it was, I think it's probably picked up

17:17

a little bit, but at one point in time was at a historic low.

17:20

Yeah.

17:21

And so they were finding these fucking dead bodies.

17:23

Damn.

17:23

I think they found like a half a dozen of them.

17:25

And I think they think there's a whole lot more in there.

17:27

No shit.

17:28

As of last, latest reporting, at least six separate discoveries of human

17:32

remains, yeah, were made in Lake Mead in 2022 as the water level dropped,

17:37

representing at least several different individuals.

17:42

Wow.

17:44

Find out that thing where they stopped searching for guns and bodies.

17:47

I think it was in MacArthur Park and why they did that.

17:50

David Tell, back in his insomniac days, he hung out with some dark motherfuckers

17:55

in New York.

17:56

Oh, yeah.

17:57

And he used to bring this guy in who was a New York City cop, and they

18:01

basically said, we'll double your pay and give you early retirement if you put

18:05

on a frog suit every night and you go out into, I think it was Flushing Bay,

18:12

one of the bays out in Queens, which was a famous place where the mob was

18:16

dropping bodies.

18:17

And the guy would go into the water in a frog suit, and he'd wait by this

18:22

bridge, and when they'd drop a body, he'd fucking call it in.

18:26

And he did that, the night shift.

18:28

And he'd finish that, and he'd come into the comedy cellar at like 4 a.m.

18:32

So he'd wait in the ocean in a scuba suit?

18:34

In a bay.

18:35

For them to drop a body?

18:36

Yeah.

18:36

Holy shit.

18:37

They were dropping that many bodies.

18:40

Yes, yes.

18:40

That you could just wait for them.

18:42

That's so crazy.

18:47

Search for MacArthur Park for guns and possible bodies was stopped because

18:51

authorities said it was an unpermitted and potentially unsafe operation on City

18:56

Park property.

18:58

Okay, so it was a businessman.

19:01

So it was a private thing.

19:03

So that's probably what it was.

19:05

So officials, official reasons given.

19:08

Organizers led by businessman John, I don't know how to spell his name, A-L-L-E,

19:12

how do you say that?

19:13

Ale?

19:14

Ale?

19:14

Plan to use sonar and remotely operated vehicles to look for weapons and human

19:19

remains in the lake.

19:21

Los Angeles Park rangers halted the effort before the sonar entered the water,

19:25

saying the team did not have the required permits or clearances.

19:28

Okay.

19:29

Why didn't you guys do that, though?

19:31

If you really think, if this guy really thinks that there could be bodies and

19:36

guns in the lake, why wouldn't you guys search for bodies and guns if someone

19:40

could search for it?

19:41

Right.

19:41

It seems like there's probably a lot of people missing, a lot of crimes that

19:44

could be solved, a lot of resources that have already been spent on cases.

19:48

You could probably get to the bottom of a lot of things.

19:50

Ale?

19:52

Ale?

19:53

I don't know how to say his name.

19:54

Said families of missing people, some of whom were last seen near MacArthur

19:57

Park, had reached out to him for help, which inspired the idea of a large-scale

20:01

sonar search of the lake.

20:02

There's evidence down there for crimes, he said.

20:05

We'll identify it with photography and the city will have to extract it.

20:10

It also could be, these are homeless people and the government doesn't give a

20:14

shit.

20:15

They can't swim.

20:16

Come on, they were kids once.

20:19

It's hard to swim when you're on meth.

20:21

You have bad cardio.

20:22

You know, if one guy says, this is the last day I do meth, today I get in shape,

20:26

and he tries to swim across the lake and fucking strokes out in the middle of

20:30

it.

20:30

This is my day.

20:31

Never gave him a, oh, jeez, I'm in there.

20:35

What are they saying about me?

20:36

It's just an article, it's an ad.

20:37

Oh, it's an ad?

20:39

Yeah, it's an ad down at the bottom.

20:41

Oh, I mocked the AI-generated.

20:44

That was crazy.

20:45

The AI-generated photo that MSNBC put up of the guy who got shot in Minneapolis.

20:52

They changed his appearance.

20:53

Alex Preddy?

20:56

Yes.

20:56

They changed his appearance?

20:57

They made him handsome.

20:58

Oh, they did?

20:59

Oh, you haven't seen it?

21:01

No.

21:01

You have to see it.

21:02

You have to see it.

21:03

I don't know who's doing this.

21:05

It's almost like someone from the Republican side is like a secret plant at MSNBC,

21:13

because they know that stuff like this is going to get caught.

21:16

Look at the difference between the one on the left and the one on the right.

21:19

Well, the nose looks blurry on the one on the left.

21:22

Well, that's his nose.

21:24

That's what he looks like.

21:24

It's just a shitty picture.

21:25

But they cleaned the picture up.

21:27

They made his nose smaller.

21:28

They gave him a tan.

21:29

They made his forehead shorter.

21:30

They made his jaw wider.

21:32

They made his shoulders thicker.

21:34

Yeah.

21:35

They gave him more bicep.

21:36

They made him more handsome.

21:38

They made his neck thicker.

21:40

He looks better.

21:42

Yep.

21:43

The guy on the right looks like a good looking guy.

21:44

The guy on the left looks, you know, like Ari's unfortunate brother.

21:48

Doesn't he?

21:51

Poor Ari's brother.

21:56

I mean, it's so funny that Ari comes from this family.

22:00

I mean, he grew up Orthodox Jewish, right?

22:03

Oh, yeah.

22:03

And the things that he has put out there for a family to have to see, it makes

22:10

you realize—and

22:12

they love him.

22:12

Like, they accept it.

22:14

And it's all about grace.

22:16

And I love Jews because, like, they are very accepting.

22:20

You know, as much as you might be Orthodox, my wife is half Jewish.

22:25

And there's something very open-minded about Jews.

22:29

I mean, they were the original hippies and they were the original communists.

22:33

And they were the original communists in America and they were always open to

22:36

different ideas.

22:37

And I think when I think about Ari's family, if they were Christian

22:42

conservative versus Jewish conservative, I don't know that they'd be as

22:46

accepting of him.

22:47

You know, Ari's dad survived the Holocaust.

22:49

No shit.

22:50

Oh, yeah.

22:51

Ari's dad has a tattoo.

22:52

Damn.

22:53

Yeah.

22:53

He's very old.

22:55

Whoa.

22:55

Yeah.

22:58

He must be one of the oldest people left with a tattoo.

23:01

I mean—

23:01

Yeah, he talked to me about having his dad on.

23:04

He asked me if I'd be interested in it, if his dad ever wants to do it because,

23:07

you know, he doesn't have much time left.

23:09

And I said, absolutely.

23:10

And he goes, you know, let me—I'm not sure if he'd be interested in it.

23:15

But if he did, I think it would be important to talk about it.

23:17

I mean, he's got to be over 100 years old.

23:19

I don't know how old he is.

23:20

He's old, though.

23:22

Well, how long ago was—

23:23

You would have to have been born—

23:25

Oh, no.

23:26

Actually, if he was born in 1935—

23:29

I think he's in his 80s.

23:30

His late 80s.

23:31

Okay, yeah, yeah.

23:32

What am I thinking?

23:32

Right, right.

23:33

Because they tattooed the fucking kids.

23:35

Mm-hmm.

23:36

Yeah.

23:37

Jesus.

23:38

Yeah, it's dark.

23:39

It's horrible.

23:40

It's so crazy, dude.

23:42

It's so crazy that that was less than 100 years ago.

23:45

I know.

23:47

I know.

23:48

And the Germans like that.

23:51

Fucking Norm MacDonald bit about how, you know, Germany is the country we

23:55

really should

23:56

be afraid of.

23:57

Like, the way they start world wars and what they're—like, it's really

24:01

fucking nuts.

24:02

Well, they were the barbarians back in the day.

24:04

Oh, right.

24:05

You know, they—I mean, we think of now as engineers.

24:08

They make BMWs.

24:09

Uh-huh.

24:09

But back then, they were the barbarians.

24:11

During the Roman era, the German tribes—

24:13

I guess the Vikings were Scandinavian, and then they were fighting against the

24:16

Vikings.

24:17

Bro, the Germans were fucking terrifying.

24:19

Yeah.

24:19

They were terrifying.

24:20

And they all became engineers.

24:22

Wow.

24:22

They all became, like, brilliant.

24:24

Yeah.

24:24

They were, like, very disciplined people, which is interesting because Germany

24:28

is known for

24:29

that.

24:29

Yeah.

24:29

And—but also, shit porn.

24:31

Remember?

24:32

Like, in the early days of the internet, a lot of the shit porn, like, weird,

24:36

crazy, like,

24:37

shitting on people.

24:38

Dog fucking.

24:38

A lot of that was coming—and we were trying to analyze it one day.

24:41

And I was like, it's probably because if you're so buttoned down and so

24:45

disciplined and regimented

24:47

and conservative in your daily life, the way you cut loose, it's like, you shit

24:51

in each

24:51

other's mouths and fuck each other in the butt.

24:53

And, like, some of the craziest shit porn was coming out of Germany.

24:58

Yeah.

24:59

This was, like, late '90s, early 2000s, when we first started, like, finding

25:03

weird websites

25:04

that would, you know, you'd be able to find things on.

25:07

Oh, no.

25:08

Before that, I'd go to Sex World in New York where you sit in those booths and

25:11

you put

25:11

in quarters and you watch porn.

25:13

And they always had the darkest German porn in there.

25:16

Really?

25:17

Yeah.

25:18

A lot of animals and shit.

25:19

And I'm, like, 15 years old going like—and I've got these coins.

25:22

You go in and you give the guy 10 bucks and he gives you a handful of coins.

25:27

Just imagine if you put a black light on those fucking coins.

25:31

And I got them in my hand.

25:32

Oh, God.

25:33

Just jizz all over those things.

25:34

And I'm feeding them into the—and I'm pushing—

25:35

Black lights are terrifying.

25:36

I'm pushing buttons to pick which film to watch.

25:39

I have a friend who brought a black light into a hotel room.

25:42

He said, "You just find jizz on the carpet."

25:43

No kidding.

25:44

Yeah, you find jizz on the fucking blanket sometimes.

25:47

Yeah.

25:48

Like, go to a cheap hotel or a motel.

25:50

How well do you think they're cleaning those carpets?

25:51

Well—

25:52

You think they clean the walls?

25:53

I've been in hotels where they put the remote control in a baggie for you.

25:57

Because they cleaned it?

25:58

Because they say that's the most—

25:59

Because they cleaned it?

26:00

No, no.

26:01

So you don't have to touch the remote.

26:02

Oh.

26:03

And then they change the baggie on the remote each time a new guest

26:06

comes in.

26:07

So you're supposed to remote through the baggie?

26:09

Yeah.

26:10

Who does that?

26:11

I take it out of the bag.

26:12

Yeah.

26:13

That's crazy.

26:14

Yeah.

26:15

That's ridiculous.

26:16

I'm touching toilet seats.

26:17

I'm touching everything.

26:18

What are we talking about here?

26:19

I'm also not that afraid to cum.

26:21

You know?

26:22

What's it going to do to me?

26:23

What's going to kill you?

26:24

Yeah.

26:25

Yeah.

26:26

Yeah.

26:27

I mean, that's just kind of gross.

26:28

Yeah.

26:29

I mean, think about how much shit is on the average person's cell phone.

26:31

Have you ever heard of that?

26:32

No.

26:33

Yeah.

26:34

Just touch your cell phone with a swab.

26:36

Like, get a swab and get it analyzed.

26:38

You'll find fecal matter all over your cell phone.

26:40

Yeah.

26:41

Well, because we're scrolling while we're on the toilet.

26:42

A lot of people are.

26:43

Yeah.

26:44

Yeah.

26:45

A lot of people.

26:46

And then you touch your phone.

26:47

And how many people touch their ass, then touch a thing, a doorknob, or this

26:50

and that.

26:51

You're getting fecal matter on everything.

26:53

Yeah.

26:54

Especially if you have a cat.

26:55

I used to think about that all the time when I had cats.

26:58

Like, the cats are in the shitbox.

26:59

They're scratching around there, and then they're walking on your counter.

27:02

Yeah.

27:03

You know, they don't give a fuck where they go.

27:04

They go everywhere.

27:05

Yeah.

27:06

And you don't care.

27:07

You're like, "Hey, buddy."

27:08

Yep.

27:09

You pet them when they're on the counter.

27:10

You want to have shit in their paws.

27:11

Then your dog licks his ass all, and then people have licked their face.

27:14

They lick my face.

27:15

Really?

27:16

Oh yeah.

27:17

No!

27:18

Yeah.

27:19

I let him give me kisses.

27:20

Have you seen him lick his asshole?

27:22

I have.

27:23

For sure.

27:24

Especially my puppy.

27:25

I have a little puppy now.

27:26

Imagine a black light on your face right now.

27:28

My puppy goes right...

27:30

You know, I have a little...

27:31

You look like you were in blackface.

27:32

Probably.

27:33

I just splatter.

27:34

Like I'm the Joker.

27:36

Al Jelsen.

27:38

He goes...

27:39

I have a puppy.

27:40

He's a King Charles Cavalier.

27:42

He's a little tiny, cute.

27:43

He's so fucking cute.

27:44

And then I have the golden retriever.

27:46

And the puppy runs right up to the golden retriever, sticks his face in his

27:49

dick, and then sticks

27:51

his face in his asshole.

27:52

And that's the first thing he does to him.

27:54

Every time.

27:55

Face on the dick.

27:56

Face on the asshole.

27:57

I'm like, bro!

27:58

Wow.

27:59

What are you doing?

28:00

Yeah.

28:01

That's just dogs.

28:02

Yeah.

28:03

That's what they do.

28:04

It's funny how they keep...

28:05

Yeah, I had two dogs.

28:06

And they did that every fucking day.

28:07

They sniffed each other.

28:08

You know.

28:09

I mean...

28:10

I guess that's how they know if something changed.

28:14

Maybe they know if the other dog is sick.

28:16

Or if the other dog is breeding with another dog.

28:19

It's like kind of checking their emails.

28:22

Well, they get so much information from smell that we can't even possibly

28:24

process.

28:25

Right, right.

28:26

They say that a dog can smell a cheeseburger.

28:29

They don't just smell the cheeseburger.

28:30

They smell every individual ingredient.

28:32

They smell the mustard.

28:33

They smell the pickle.

28:34

They smell everything.

28:35

They smell the lettuce.

28:36

Yeah.

28:37

They smell...

28:38

They smell...

28:39

They think that dogs smell anxiety.

28:41

They smell like moods.

28:43

That's why when certain people come over your house, they're scared of dogs.

28:45

Dogs get sketchy with them.

28:46

Like, what the fuck's up with this guy?

28:48

Like, oh, he doesn't like you.

28:49

Yeah.

28:50

Because the person's probably nervous.

28:51

They're giving off a scent.

28:52

Right.

28:53

No, my mom, her sister was attacked really bad by a dog when they were little.

28:57

So my mom has this trauma about dogs.

28:59

We had these little...

29:01

We had a Shih Tzu and a Lhasa Apsa.

29:03

They're just little dogs.

29:04

She was terrified.

29:05

And the dogs would growl at her.

29:07

And they didn't growl at anybody.

29:08

Oh, my God.

29:09

Yeah.

29:10

That's crazy.

29:11

Yeah.

29:12

That's crazy.

29:13

Yeah.

29:14

They smell things.

29:15

They sense things.

29:16

Yeah.

29:17

That's why people have them as guards.

29:18

Mm-hmm.

29:19

I mean, that's how they made it.

29:21

Right.

29:22

They were the wolves that hung out with us and would let us know when something's

29:25

going

29:26

down.

29:27

Sentinels.

29:28

Yeah.

29:29

Yeah, that's...

29:30

Well, I have a very strong olfactory sense.

29:32

Like, I'm very...

29:33

Of my five senses, I would put it up there at the top.

29:37

Like, I...

29:38

I love perfume.

29:39

Really?

29:40

I love perfume.

29:41

I don't like when women wear too much of it, and then they hug you at the

29:45

comedy store,

29:45

and then you go home, and you smell like fucking perfume.

29:48

You're like, "Honey, it's just Whitney Cummings has this new Chanel..."

29:50

But, like, sometimes I'll be sitting somewhere, and I'll smell some nice

29:58

perfume, and I'll fucking

30:01

whip my head around it.

30:02

It's like some 81-year-old woman hunched over, and you're like, "Oh!"

30:05

You tricked me.

30:06

They don't wear the old ladies...

30:07

You tricked me.

30:08

No matter how old they are, they'll still put on the makeup, they'll still put

30:11

on the

30:11

perfume.

30:12

Get the hair done.

30:13

Let it out.

30:14

Time to go out and see...

30:16

Go fishing.

30:17

See if this old bait can catch a bass.

30:20

Yeah, right, right.

30:21

Yeah, there's this bar up at my...

30:24

Where my mom lives in Florida, and there's this bar, and it's like a famous cougar

30:29

bar.

30:30

And it's all these rich women who's...

30:33

Men die faster.

30:34

Right.

30:35

It's like, it's impossible for a woman in Florida who's in her 70s to find a

30:40

guy who's,

30:41

you know, anywhere near her age.

30:43

She's got to date a guy in his late 80s if she's in her 70s.

30:46

Wow.

30:47

And so these women go to this bar, and they are, like you said, they're wearing...

30:50

So a lot of leopards, a lot of leopard print.

30:52

Yeah, they're letting you know.

30:54

They had stiletto heels.

30:55

Time to get down.

30:56

It's like stiletto heels, but the toes are all fucking twisted and mangled.

31:00

My wife has been watching this horrible show that's on Netflix.

31:03

It's like one of those housewife shows, but it's all West Palm Beach ladies.

31:09

Oh.

31:10

It's all these rich ladies with plastic surgery.

31:13

Palm Beach, not West Palm Beach.

31:14

Palm Beach, yeah.

31:15

That's right.

31:16

Palm Beach ladies...

31:17

Is Palm Beach the rich area?

31:18

Yeah.

31:19

Yeah.

31:20

Is West Palm like the more moderate area?

31:21

No, no, it's poor.

31:22

It's poor?

31:23

Yeah, yeah.

31:24

It's good sections, but it has...

31:26

The people that work on Palm Beach, cleaning the houses, live in West Palm

31:30

Beach.

31:31

Oh, I see.

31:32

I see.

31:33

Because there's basically...

31:34

Palm Beach is a bridge to get to...

31:35

Right.

31:36

Do you know the history of Palm Beach?

31:37

No.

31:38

Oh, I do.

31:39

Yeah, but go ahead.

31:40

They created it.

31:41

It was like a sandbar that they built up, and then they hired...

31:44

They didn't hire...

31:45

They hired a bunch of black people to come on the island and build all the

31:49

houses, the

31:50

infrastructure.

31:51

Why black people?

31:52

I don't know.

31:53

I mean, for sure?

31:55

They only hired black people?

31:56

I mean, look it up, Jamie, but like, all I know is there was a lot of black

32:00

people doing

32:01

the building.

32:02

They finished it, and then the island held a big party for the black people on

32:05

the end

32:06

of the island to celebrate, and then they torched all their houses.

32:10

What?

32:11

And forced them off the island.

32:12

Yeah, that's the history of Palm Beach.

32:13

They torched their houses?

32:14

Houses?

32:15

After they were done building the mansions?

32:17

Yes.

32:18

Yeah.

32:19

And it's probably the wealthiest piece of real estate in the country right now.

32:24

Bro, so many people are fucking evil.

32:27

I know.

32:28

That's so...

32:29

Imagine a guy who built your house.

32:31

He's at home with his kid.

32:32

Yeah, yeah.

32:33

Having a...

32:34

Wow, what a great job I got.

32:35

Yeah.

32:36

You know?

32:37

And then I get to start a family here.

32:38

Get to start a family here.

32:39

Get to live in this beautiful place.

32:40

Get to live in this place.

32:41

I helped build these beautiful mansions that we drive by.

32:42

These people are gonna love me because I helped them create a life.

32:45

Oh my God.

32:46

And they lit their fucking houses on fire?

32:48

Yeah.

32:49

Pull up that story.

32:50

I need to hear about that.

32:51

That's crazy.

32:52

But these ladies are just monsters.

32:54

It's just...

32:55

It's just all, like, the social status.

32:58

Yeah.

32:59

It's all, like, who's got the most money?

33:01

Like, they don't even know how much money I have.

33:03

Yeah.

33:04

Like, I'm a millionaire.

33:05

I'm a millionaire.

33:06

And then they have these clubs.

33:07

My friend's father lives there and he belongs to a club.

33:09

Oh, you gotta belong to a club.

33:10

And he worked for, I won't say who the person was, but a very famous Jewish

33:14

family.

33:15

And he, she went to lunch one day at one of these clubs that didn't allow Jews.

33:22

And the waiter would...

33:23

Clubs still don't allow Jews?

33:24

No, this is going back 20 years at the most.

33:27

Only 20 years ago?

33:28

20 years ago.

33:29

So, in 2006, 2006.

33:32

Probably about that.

33:33

There was clubs that didn't allow Jews?

33:34

20, 30 years.

33:35

Yeah.

33:36

Well, you know, Augusta, where they play the masters, only started allowing

33:40

black members

33:41

in, like, the 80s.

33:42

Remember Tiger Woods was playing there and he got shit because he was a black

33:45

playing at

33:47

a club where they didn't allow black people?

33:49

Really?

33:50

And they said, "How could you do that?"

33:51

Yeah.

33:52

During Tiger Woods lifetime?

33:53

Yep.

33:54

Yep.

33:55

Wow.

33:56

Yeah.

33:57

Wow.

33:58

It was the club.

33:59

The waiter wouldn't come over to the table.

34:00

And finally, the member went over and goes, "What's going on?

34:03

We can't, we can't serve.

34:04

We can't serve her."

34:06

How'd they even know she was Jewish?

34:10

She's famous.

34:11

Oh.

34:12

Yeah.

34:13

I think I can say who it is.

34:14

It was Estee Lauder's wife.

34:16

Wow.

34:17

Yeah.

34:18

Or was Estee Lauder the woman?

34:20

Yeah.

34:21

Estee Lauder is the woman.

34:22

It was her.

34:23

Wow.

34:24

One of the richest women in the country.

34:26

Wow.

34:27

We can't serve her because of her religion.

34:30

Yeah.

34:31

Wow.

34:32

Yeah.

34:33

Wow.

34:34

And that was 2006?

34:35

Something like that.

34:36

Hey, but country clubs, you know, the rule on it was, well look, the Friars

34:39

Club-

34:40

We need to make sure that's true.

34:42

The Estee Lauder one.

34:43

I definitely want to find out about the burning-

34:45

Well, the Estee Lauder is personal information.

34:47

Oh, okay.

34:48

I don't know that that's not published anywhere.

34:49

All right.

34:50

Forget about that then.

34:51

But no, segregation in clubs.

34:53

Private clubs used to get away with that until, I was a member of the Friars

34:57

Club in New York,

34:58

and they did not allow female members until I was there in, it was the late,

35:05

mid-90s before the Friars Club allowed female members.

35:09

And the reason was legally you can't have a club exclude people if you can

35:13

prove business is being done there.

35:16

Oh.

35:17

If there's commerce.

35:18

Oh.

35:19

If there's no business, you can let in whoever you want.

35:21

Right.

35:22

So that's how they got female members in there, and I think they probably, I

35:24

mean, obviously business is being done at golf clubs.

35:27

Well, business is definitely being done at the Friars Club.

35:29

Mm-hmm.

35:30

I mean, a lot of deals probably got made there.

35:32

A lot of ideas got hatched.

35:34

Oh, yeah.

35:35

Yeah.

35:36

I mean, all these comics.

35:37

It was all agents, it was agents and comics.

35:39

I remember you used to love that place.

35:41

Dude, it was so fucking great.

35:42

You were always telling me about it, and it was so unappealing to me.

35:44

I was like, ugh.

35:45

It was a clubhouse for comedians.

35:48

We used to go there.

35:49

They had pool.

35:50

They had two beautiful pool tables.

35:51

I played on the Friars Club pool team, and we used to play against other clubs

35:56

in the city.

35:57

Yeah.

35:58

All the other private clubs.

35:59

Paul Servino was my partner in pool.

36:01

Paul Servino could play.

36:02

He was good.

36:03

He was good.

36:04

Yeah.

36:05

He could run a hundred balls.

36:06

Yeah.

36:07

In straight pool.

36:08

He was like a legit, like, high-level player.

36:10

Yeah.

36:11

So he carried me, but we used to play all the clubs.

36:13

And then, you know, they got a nice gym with the best steam room in the city.

36:17

And then they got these lazy boys.

36:18

So you work out, you take a fucking steam, and you sit on a lazy boy, and you

36:22

read the newspaper.

36:23

And then they got a dining room downstairs where Henny Youngman is at one table,

36:28

Alan King's at the-

36:28

You know, and these guys, like those old Borscht Bell comics, they lived to

36:33

make you laugh.

36:35

It's not like comedians today.

36:36

So many of them are dark and quiet and disturbed.

36:40

These guys fucking told jokes, and they roasted you, and they hugged you, and

36:45

it was like a part of being on stage almost.

36:49

You know?

36:50

It was expected.

36:51

Yeah.

36:52

Right.

36:53

They probably all felt real comfortable in this, you know, comics-only club.

36:56

Yeah.

36:57

Right.

36:58

Folklore surrounding the sticks of Palm Beach.

37:00

So that's what it is.

37:01

That's the area what they called it.

37:03

So, go to the top of that please.

37:05

Well-

37:06

Right there.

37:07

Turn of 20th century's employment boom of unprecedented proportions to South

37:10

Florida.

37:11

The hiring of thousands of black laborers to extend Henry Flagler's Florida

37:14

East Coast Railroad.

37:16

Oh, this is the East Coast Railroad.

37:18

These laborers played a key role in the development of the early Palm Beach.

37:23

Also helped to build the Royal Poinciana Hotel, Flagler's White Hall residence,

37:30

which is today known as the Henry Flagler Museum.

37:35

Laborers and their families settled in Palm Beach Island between North County

37:38

Road and Sunrise Avenue.

37:40

This area of shanties and tent-like homes soon became known as the sticks.

37:46

Many of those descendants still live in the area today.

37:49

So what happened?

37:51

Does it say what happened?

37:53

Okay.

37:54

Along came a fellow named Henley Flagler who decided he needed that land to

37:59

build on to develop, Little said.

38:01

And he threw a party for all the blacks on the island.

38:04

And they all went over to the party.

38:07

And while they were celebrating and enjoying themselves, their homes on the

38:10

island of the town of Palm Beach burned down mysteriously.

38:15

Holy fuck, dude.

38:17

Yeah.

38:18

From what I heard, McRae said, he got with the residents and set up a party on

38:22

West Palm Beach side and had everybody ferried over to the party and then had a

38:26

mob of people to burn up people's homes.

38:29

And shanties and tents all over the sticks and forced them out of there and

38:32

took the land.

38:33

How many people died?

38:34

I don't know how many people died since they were all gone.

38:37

Right.

38:38

But what about their kids?

38:39

Around 2,000 people living in that area is what it said.

38:41

Oh, my God.

38:42

And then this is the problem.

38:44

When I was looking it up on Wikipedia, this is basically what I read.

38:47

Okay.

38:48

Palm Beach Historical Society version is very different.

38:51

Published text only says that by 1912, the tenants of the sticks had been evicted.

38:56

Well, that doesn't mean anything.

38:58

They could have still been there.

38:59

I'm sure Flagler threw some money at the Palm Beach Historical Society.

39:03

Yeah, of course.

39:04

Right.

39:05

No mention of a fire or any record of large scale homelessness that would have

39:07

followed such a devastating blaze.

39:09

Everly Clark believes his version is the most accurate and the sticks was

39:13

actually legislated out of existence.

39:16

They claim there was a fire and Flagler had the people come to circus and all

39:18

that, but that's not true.

39:20

Still, more than a century later, the urban legend remains strong and the pulse

39:25

of public opinion split.

39:27

There are so many historical facts that make some of the scurrilous removal of

39:31

the residents believable that it's become lore for the most part in the black

39:34

community.

39:35

All right.

39:36

Well, let's find out if there's a historical record of the fires.

39:39

This is all I could get to.

39:41

That's it?

39:42

This is a local news...

39:43

And what year was this supposedly?

39:45

19...

39:46

1920?

39:47

1912?

39:48

Yeah, I bet they did it.

39:49

I bet they did it.

39:50

I mean, look what they did in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

39:54

Right.

39:55

You know, this was part of the playbook.

39:57

Right.

39:58

Well, look what they did with the Tuskegee experiment.

40:00

Right.

40:01

Look at that.

40:02

Yeah.

40:03

How about that?

40:04

They knowingly had all these people with syphilis and didn't treat them.

40:06

Just to study them and see what would happen to them.

40:09

Yeah.

40:10

Did they give people syphilis or did they just treat them for syphilis?

40:12

I don't know.

40:13

Whatever it was, they let these fucking people rot and died.

40:16

Syphilis is a fucking horrible disease.

40:18

Tell me about it.

40:19

Did you get it?

40:21

Do you know the story about syphilis and wigs?

40:24

No.

40:25

You don't know that?

40:26

No.

40:27

All those dudes in like the ancient times that had the big wigs?

40:30

Yeah.

40:31

That was to cover up their hair loss from syphilis.

40:32

Dude, how did not everybody have it?

40:35

Well, they all had wigs.

40:36

They all had it back then.

40:37

Right, right.

40:38

In high society, first of all, those people were basically like Game of Thrones.

40:41

Yeah.

40:42

They were all just fucking freaks banging each other.

40:45

You know, French, French society has always been like very loose sexually.

40:49

Uh-huh.

40:50

And so these two royals, were they brothers or cousins?

40:54

I think they were brothers and double-checking.

40:56

So these guys get syphilis, their hair falls out.

40:59

Right?

41:00

You get holes in your face and shit and they're still fucking everybody.

41:02

Right?

41:03

And so they got wigs made.

41:05

And the more money you had, the more elaborate and big your wig was.

41:09

Oh.

41:10

That's why rich people are big wigs.

41:13

No.

41:14

Yes.

41:15

I love it.

41:16

Isn't that crazy?

41:17

Wow.

41:18

Crazy.

41:19

That term that we always used when we were kids?

41:21

Yeah.

41:22

He's a big wig.

41:23

Yeah.

41:24

That's like ancient.

41:25

That goes back to the 1400s.

41:28

That's like something you would hear on that guy Cody Tucker's feed.

41:32

Yes.

41:33

I love that guy.

41:34

I'm doing his podcast on Sunday.

41:35

Oh, he's been on mine.

41:36

He's great.

41:37

Yeah, he's great.

41:38

Very smart guy.

41:39

Yeah.

41:40

Here's what's interesting.

41:41

There's a strong connection between the syphilis that evolved in North America

41:48

and the syphilis

41:49

that these guys had in Europe.

41:50

Yeah.

41:51

Like there's always been syphilis.

41:53

But syphilis had an outbreak in Europe after people came to North America,

41:59

probably fucked

42:00

a bunch of Native Americans and then went back to Europe with these fucking

42:03

diseases.

42:04

And then it mutated.

42:05

It's a different kind of syphilis.

42:07

Wow.

42:08

Yeah.

42:09

It turns out.

42:10

They were cousins.

42:11

Yeah.

42:12

That's what I thought.

42:13

This is a story.

42:14

They were commonly used to cover up hair loss, but they're used to not become

42:17

widespread

42:18

until two Kings started to lose their hair.

42:21

King Louis, the 14th of France experienced hair loss at the age of 17, then

42:26

hired 48 wig

42:27

makers.

42:28

48?

42:29

To help combat his thinning locks.

42:31

So a lot of these guys wound up getting syphilis and there was, you know,

42:36

normal hair

42:36

loss on top of it.

42:38

Both conditions being syphilitic signals.

42:41

Everybody had syphilis back then, man.

42:44

There's, I mean, they probably didn't wear condoms.

42:46

They're probably all freaks.

42:47

They're probably doing cocaine.

42:48

No, they all went to whores.

42:49

Yes.

42:50

I mean, that's what you did.

42:51

When you were a wealthy guy, you went to the whore house all the time.

42:54

Then you came home and you gave it to your wife.

42:56

Then she had a baby and a lot, depending on the disease, babies are born with

42:59

the sexually

43:01

transmitted disease that you gave your wife.

43:03

Right.

43:04

And that's what the crazy thing about the Epstein leaks today.

43:06

The, the, the one email.

43:08

And we're here.

43:09

That said that, that said that Bill Gates wanted to get from him antibiotics to

43:15

give to Melinda

43:17

because he got syphilis or he got something.

43:19

Damn.

43:20

The clap, chlamydia, whatever he got.

43:22

He got some sort of an SDD from a prostitute.

43:25

Do you think if she could have the choice between getting the, what did she get?

43:29

$50 billion or not getting the syphilis?

43:32

Which would she take?

43:33

Well, whatever she got.

43:34

I bet it wasn't syphilis.

43:35

It was probably the clap.

43:36

It was probably chlamydia or something like that.

43:38

That's no big deal.

43:39

But if, who knows if that's true though.

43:41

Here's the thing.

43:42

Like Epstein clearly was some sort of a blackmailer.

43:47

And this is an email that Epstein wrote.

43:50

So it could be complete fiction.

43:52

Epstein could have wrote that just to put pressure on Bill Gates for some

43:56

fucking business deal.

43:57

Like who fucking knows?

43:59

He could have spread rumors and then said that he'll squash those rumors.

44:02

But these guys are dealing in deception and blackmail.

44:06

And so you can't like assume that it's true.

44:09

Think about how many relationships Epstein had and that he was working almost

44:16

every one of them.

44:16

Leveraging and he was kind of brilliant.

44:20

Well, he was really good at that.

44:22

Yeah.

44:23

That one thing, you know, guy could have cured cancer if he went into that

44:25

business.

44:26

Well, he was into science.

44:28

Yes.

44:29

Well, he was also into compromising scientists, right?

44:32

Like, let's say that you want to get a drug passed, right?

44:35

And you want FDA approval of this drug, but it's some sort of a competing drug.

44:39

We have a bunch of scientists on your side and these scientists can go attack

44:42

that competing drug.

44:44

And then all of a sudden, well, you have this guy, he comes from MIT and he

44:48

says this.

44:49

And like, oh, and then the FDA listens to him.

44:51

Right.

44:52

I mean, it's very important to have the leverage of respected academics.

44:55

Right.

44:56

You know, Epstein, with a smiley emoji, asked former Israeli PM Ehud Barak,

45:03

that's how you say his name? Ehud Barak, to clarify he does not work for the

45:08

Mossad in a meeting with a senior Qatari investment official.

45:14

Another quick thread starts at the bottom and goes up.

45:17

Oh, okay.

45:18

Hi, are you going to be in London on Thursday?

45:20

Best, EB.

45:21

Right.

45:22

You, unfortunately not, you should make clear that I don't work for Mossad,

45:26

smiley face.

45:27

Oh, boy.

45:28

You or I, question mark, that I don't, smiley face.

45:31

Oh, boy.

45:32

He doesn't work for them.

45:33

He just volunteers for them.

45:35

With a smiley, smiley face emojis are hilarious.

45:37

Evil cocksuckers using smiley face emojis.

45:44

That's hilarious.

45:45

Right, right.

45:46

That's so funny.

45:48

Dude, this is a really good show about Mossad called Tehran.

45:51

Have you heard of that?

45:52

No.

45:53

Oh, I have heard about it.

45:54

I haven't watched it though.

45:55

Is it good?

45:56

It's really good.

45:57

I mean, it's a really good look inside of what goes on in Iran in terms of, I

46:01

mean, the Israelis are fucking brilliant.

46:03

Brilliant.

46:04

The infiltration that they did into-

46:05

No one's like them.

46:06

They're the best.

46:07

Yeah.

46:08

They're the best at that.

46:09

I mean-

46:10

Well, they have to be, right?

46:11

Those pagers-

46:12

This is them.

46:13

This table is people who hate them.

46:14

Yeah.

46:15

Right, right.

46:16

You gotta become a bad motherfucker.

46:17

Your neighbors don't want you dead.

46:18

Those pagers going off in Lebanon?

46:20

That was a long play.

46:22

Months and months and months.

46:23

That was-

46:24

Years.

46:25

Was it years?

46:26

Years.

46:27

Wow.

46:28

Yes.

46:29

Wow.

46:30

Crazy.

46:31

They're like-

46:32

The pagers right next to your cock.

46:33

Blow your dick off.

46:34

You blow a hole through your pelvis, apparently.

46:35

Oh my God.

46:36

That's how you die.

46:37

And you're isolating your enemy.

46:39

You're not-

46:40

There's no civilian casualties.

46:41

Well, I bet they probably got some kids.

46:43

But low-

46:44

Low numbers.

46:45

Low percentage versus bombing a building or something.

46:47

Which they did do, too.

46:48

Which they also did, yeah.

46:49

Yeah.

46:50

They did some of that.

46:51

Like the guys in the building.

46:53

I was on-

46:54

Level the building.

46:55

I was on Good Day LA one time.

46:57

You know, it's all those like pretty women.

46:58

Yeah.

46:59

They're actually really sharp.

47:00

They're great.

47:01

And I go-

47:02

They say, "Oh, you came alone?"

47:04

And I go, "No, my agent's supposed to be here any minute.

47:06

He's Lebanese."

47:07

I just paged him before I got here, but I haven't heard anything back.

47:10

And they were like, "Whoa!"

47:13

It just happened like three days before.

47:16

Didn't we just-

47:20

Not we.

47:21

Didn't Israel just bomb Lebanon today?

47:23

Oh, really?

47:24

I believe so.

47:25

Yeah.

47:26

At least according to Twitter.

47:27

Well, what's going on in Iran?

47:28

I heard things are heating up over there.

47:30

Well, Trump just said they're sending ships in that area.

47:33

And he said-

47:34

But he also said Iran wants to make a deal.

47:36

Huh.

47:37

So maybe he's trying to put pressure on them to make a deal.

47:40

Yeah.

47:41

And, you know, hopefully nothing happens in terms of like military intervention.

47:46

It's scary shit, dude.

47:47

Because they have nuclear weapons.

47:49

Or they have the potential to eventually have nuclear weapons.

47:52

But, you know, I don't know.

47:54

Did Israel bomb-

47:56

Yeah, there was some image that showed like some fucking huge explosion.

48:06

And it said Israel just bombed Lebanon.

48:08

They definitely have recently.

48:13

I've seen something about airstrikes.

48:15

Late Friday.

48:16

Oh, I guess it'd be late there, right?

48:18

Yeah.

48:19

It's nighttime over there.

48:20

Maybe, yeah.

48:22

No, there's not.

48:24

I mean, if it is, it's like it's just breaking.

48:26

It's sort of just hitting the loose.

48:28

There's some stuff like that.

48:29

Well, the thing is like there are, you know, there it is.

48:32

Two hours ago.

48:33

Israel bombs Lebanon.

48:34

Yeah.

48:35

But it's like the only thing I'm seeing about it.

48:36

Which is-

48:37

Well-

48:38

That doesn't usually happen.

48:39

It's probably all just coming out, right?

48:41

No, I mean, would you type in that on-

48:43

That's all you see is that one?

48:44

So that might not be true?

48:45

Click on that link to see if anybody's disputing it.

48:47

Uh-

48:48

Click on that tweet.

48:49

It's only got 15 responses.

48:51

Is this true?

48:52

Grok.

48:53

Click on that.

48:54

Yes.

48:57

Multiple sources indicate report Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon on

49:01

January 30th.

49:02

Targeting Hezbollah, IDF confirmed a wave of strikes.

49:07

Lebanese media noted the drone hit in-

49:10

Say that word.

49:11

How do you say that word?

49:13

Sidikin?

49:14

Sidikin.

49:15

Killing one.

49:16

Times of Israel on Sirach.

49:18

News for details.

49:19

Huh.

49:20

Shafak.

49:21

Shafak.

49:22

Whatever you say that is.

49:23

News for details.

49:24

Yeah.

49:25

We're so fucking lucky, man.

49:26

We got no neighbors.

49:27

Nobody's launching missiles into us.

49:28

Well, we're in a good spot geographically.

49:29

Yeah.

49:30

To be separated by oceans on both sides is fucking nice.

49:33

I know.

49:34

I know.

49:34

Which is why we should be really good friends with Canada.

49:36

Like, what the fuck's going on?

49:37

Trump ruined that whole thing, man.

49:39

Canada.

49:39

Because if he didn't talk about turning Canada into the 51st state, the

49:42

conservatives are going

49:43

to win.

49:44

Pierre Polivet would have taken over.

49:45

It would have been like, they would have like eased a lot of the restrictions,

49:49

made it

49:49

a lot more common sense.

49:50

Dude, China was just up there.

49:52

They just made a huge deal to get all their cars from China now.

49:56

We're not going to sell any American cars in Canada.

49:59

Well, you know, it's a real problem because China has some fucking amazing cars.

50:03

Amazing cars.

50:04

Amazing cars now.

50:05

Yep.

50:06

Bro, they're not fucking around.

50:07

And they're cheaper.

50:08

Their electric vehicles are top of the food chain, man.

50:11

Yeah.

50:12

Tesla just yesterday, they just stopped the Model S and X production.

50:17

I saw that.

50:18

Apparently, Elon is, this optimist robot is going to change the world.

50:25

Yeah.

50:26

And everybody that I know that's seen it, when this thing integrates with AI,

50:29

you're going

50:30

to have a fucking dude in your house.

50:33

You're going to have a super genius robot dude in your house.

50:38

What does he look like?

50:39

Looks like iRobot.

50:40

And he's going to be able to do whatever the fuck you need him to do.

50:43

Go dig a ditch.

50:44

Go do this.

50:45

Take out the garbage.

50:46

What's fucking great is for old people that live alone.

50:49

100%.

50:50

They know everything about your life.

50:51

They could actually hold a conversation with you.

50:53

Yes.

50:54

Show pictures of your fucking grandkids on their chest while they know your

50:58

interests.

50:59

Ask you memories.

51:00

All people want to do is talk about, you know, memories and they're going to

51:04

listen.

51:05

Yeah.

51:06

They'll talk to you.

51:07

Yeah.

51:08

Confirm all of your delusions.

51:09

Tesla to build one million Optimus robots per year at Fremont factory.

51:15

One million a year.

51:17

Damn.

51:18

We need these robots because they're going to terraform the moon and Mars.

51:22

We're not going to do it.

51:23

The robots are going to do it.

51:24

I don't think anybody's going to Mars.

51:27

Not in our lifetime.

51:28

I don't think that's all the future.

51:30

It's a little chilly up there.

51:32

It's not just that.

51:33

It's just like no one's going to want to do it.

51:35

You'd have only suicidal people want to go.

51:37

It's a one-way trip.

51:38

Yeah.

51:39

Well, you can get back.

51:40

You can get back.

51:41

It used to be a one-way trip.

51:42

Now they figured out you can get back.

51:43

Oh, really?

51:44

Yeah, but you have to wait six months.

51:45

Yeah.

51:46

You get back like every six months.

51:47

That's that movie, The Martian.

51:48

Plus the flight's going to be delayed.

51:49

Right.

51:50

Yeah.

51:51

Or you just hope it doesn't get hit with a micrometeor while it's out in space.

51:54

Uh-huh.

51:55

Like all kinds of weird shit can happen.

51:56

What's the micrometeor?

51:58

Micrometeors.

51:59

The little tiny ones are flying around.

52:01

They just punch holes through everything.

52:02

Uh-huh.

52:03

They're going like 170,000 miles an hour and they just go whipping through the

52:06

building.

52:07

How much junk is there in space right now in terms of like satellites that just

52:12

crapped

52:13

out?

52:14

Well, just, have you ever looked at the amount of satellites that surround the

52:16

earth?

52:16

Yeah.

52:17

It's fucking bananas.

52:18

Yeah.

52:19

It's nuts.

52:20

And then there's-

52:21

And there's no plan for when they expire, right?

52:23

They just stay up there?

52:24

Well, some of them, they lose their orbit.

52:26

Their orbit decays and then they come crashing down to the earth.

52:29

Uh-huh.

52:30

Yeah.

52:31

That happens.

52:32

And, you know, they have to figure out where they're going to hit.

52:34

You know, and hopefully they don't hit the middle of fucking, you know, Dusseldorf.

52:38

You know what I mean?

52:40

Like it could hit a major city.

52:42

That's a funny city to say.

52:43

Dusseldorf.

52:45

Yeah.

52:46

I mean, it could, you know, you got a fucking satellite down there.

52:49

It could land right in your face.

52:50

Yeah.

52:51

That's wild.

52:52

Yeah.

52:53

Yeah.

52:54

I went to SpaceX for the launch of the last rocket.

53:01

I watched the launch.

53:02

Uh-huh.

53:03

We were right there.

53:04

Uh, and, uh, I went into the control room with Elon and watched the entire

53:09

journey while

53:10

it was flying over the earth and it lands a touchdown in Australia in the ocean.

53:16

Wow.

53:17

Five minutes later.

53:18

It was nuts.

53:19

Really?

53:20

It was nuts.

53:21

So it breaks through the atmosphere, travels, and then comes straight down.

53:24

Yep.

53:25

Shoots up into space.

53:26

Goes, and you get to watch because they have like 20 fucking cameras on the

53:30

thing the entire

53:31

time live streaming through Starlink.

53:33

So you're live streaming the interior, they're monitoring the pressure of the

53:36

cabin, they're

53:38

monitoring all these different things.

53:39

And so this is the way they test tolerances.

53:42

It's like when a lot of people say, "Oh, his rockets blow up.

53:45

He's a dumb ass."

53:46

They want the rockets to blow up.

53:47

Like they have to find out like what makes the rocket blow up.

53:50

Like how much pressure can you put?

53:52

How thin do the walls have to, how reinforced do things have to be?

53:55

Yeah.

53:56

You know, and then they make adjustments.

53:57

It's like trying a new bit.

53:58

They make adjustments.

53:59

Yeah.

54:00

That's what they do.

54:01

Like, so they've calculated in a certain amount of failures that they expect to

54:05

have.

54:05

Yeah.

54:06

And this one actually had a failure, but still landed.

54:08

So that's going to be the new first class is going to Australia in 35 minutes.

54:13

35 minutes.

54:14

35 minutes.

54:15

Wow.

54:16

Boom.

54:17

That's crazy.

54:18

Nuts.

54:19

35 minutes.

54:20

Touchdown in the ocean.

54:21

But a pretty intense ride, I would imagine.

54:24

Not only that, but touchdown in an exact spot where they had boats ready.

54:29

They had cameras filming it.

54:31

They filmed the entire touchdown.

54:33

Does it have to be over the ocean or can they land on land?

54:36

Well, his rockets can now land on land.

54:39

You've seen how that thing comes down and lands on the ground, which is bananas.

54:43

And then they stopped landing them on the ground.

54:45

Now they catch them with arms.

54:47

It's even more efficient.

54:48

You've seen that, right?

54:49

Well, because NASA was wasting so much money because every single rocket was

54:54

ruined when

54:54

it came back.

54:55

Well, you know what's crazy?

54:57

NASA is about to launch the Artemis mission and no one's talking about it.

55:02

Where is that going?

55:03

NASA is, they're sending people around the moon and having them come back to

55:06

Earth.

55:07

And you hear nothing about it.

55:09

Like, have you heard about it?

55:10

No.

55:11

No.

55:12

Me neither.

55:13

You know how I found out about it?

55:14

Somebody asked me at the club.

55:15

Some guy in the audience said, what do you think about the Artemis mission?

55:17

I go, what is it?

55:18

And he's like, NASA's got a mission that they're flying people around the moon.

55:22

I'm like, when?

55:24

He's like, February.

55:25

I'm like, come on.

55:26

Really?

55:27

Well, what's the mission?

55:28

What are they trying to do?

55:29

I don't know.

55:30

Let's find out.

55:31

Artemis 2.

55:32

They're not landing on the moon.

55:33

Not this time.

55:34

Okay.

55:35

No, this time I think they're just flying.

55:36

Isn't it weird?

55:37

Have we landed on the moon since the 60s?

55:39

If we ever did in the first place?

55:41

No.

55:42

Are you being serious?

55:43

Yeah.

55:44

I don't know if we did.

55:45

I don't know if we did either.

55:46

I used to believe it before COVID.

55:48

No, I didn't.

55:49

I didn't believe it for a long time, and then I said, I'm probably wrong.

55:52

I don't know what I'm talking about.

55:53

Let me just leave it alone.

55:54

And then I got back into it again.

55:56

And I was like, but it doesn't make any sense.

55:58

It doesn't make any sense that these guys went, like Neil Armstrong basically

56:02

went into hiding.

56:03

And then at the 25th anniversary of the launch, he gave the most cryptic speech

56:07

for this team

56:08

of high school graduates, like these honor students.

56:11

Yeah.

56:12

You should see the speech because the speech is nuts.

56:14

And then I went back and watched the post-flight press conference when they

56:17

supposedly landed

56:19

after they landed on the moon and came back home.

56:21

It's like a hostage video.

56:23

It's the weirdest behavior.

56:25

Yeah.

56:26

They seem like there's a guy who is a body language expert.

56:29

He's like, these guys are all being deceptive.

56:31

He analyzed it on YouTube.

56:33

And he's like, this guy, what he's doing here, like this guy's being deceptive.

56:37

This is clear deceptive behavior.

56:39

I mean, I've checked it so many times online and everybody said it's been

56:43

refused.

56:44

But my whole thing is like, it was 1969.

56:47

I had a 69 Chevy and I used to drive it from Boston to New York and it would

56:51

break down

56:52

about half the time.

56:54

Yeah.

56:55

Well, that's different.

56:56

That's different.

56:57

Is it?

56:58

Yeah.

56:59

It's still a fucking, it was a gas powered engine.

57:01

Right.

57:02

But you could go one, if you had to take one trip with it, it would make it.

57:05

They were just not that good over time.

57:07

You know, they weren't that reliable.

57:09

What was the equivalent computing power that they had on that Apollo that we

57:15

would have?

57:16

Is it our phone?

57:17

Your phone is way more powerful.

57:18

Yeah.

57:19

Way more powerful than a room of supercomputers.

57:21

However, it doesn't take like immense computing power.

57:26

Once you've got the calculations and you understand the trajectory and that you're

57:30

going to use the

57:30

gravity of the moon, you're going to slingshot around the moon and come back.

57:33

That's not the problem.

57:35

The problem is the Van Allen radiation belts.

57:37

There's a thick band of radiation that surrounds the earth.

57:40

And not just that, but they tried experiments to blow holes in that radiation

57:45

belt.

57:46

There's this thing called Operation Starfish Prime, where they launched nukes

57:51

into space

57:53

and have them detonate them in the belts.

57:56

And they thought they'd got to blow a hole through it.

57:58

Mm-hmm.

57:59

Did the opposite.

58:00

Made the belt supercharged.

58:01

Made it way more radioactive.

58:02

Yeah.

58:03

Yeah.

58:04

At least temporarily.

58:05

Uh-huh.

58:06

The problem is they've never sent anything out in a deep space and had it come

58:09

back alive,

58:10

except the Apollo astronauts.

58:12

Mm-hmm.

58:13

They never even sent a chicken out there and had it come back alive.

58:15

Mm-hmm.

58:16

There's all sorts of crazy shit with radiation and solar.

58:19

If there was any sort of solar flare, everyone's dead.

58:21

Yeah.

58:22

If there's any sort of like weirdness, space weirdness, radiation weirdness,

58:26

dead.

58:26

Mm-hmm.

58:27

Very little protection, thin aluminum shield.

58:30

It just didn't make any sense.

58:31

And also, there's not been a single thing from 1969 that's not cheaper, easier,

58:37

and better today, other than the moon landing.

58:41

And we haven't done it.

58:42

Yeah.

58:43

We haven't done it since '72.

58:44

Isn't that crazy?

58:45

It's nuts.

58:46

It doesn't seem real.

58:47

Yeah.

58:48

It was also the first time where-

58:49

By the way, can I just stop for a moment and go, having a talk about moon

58:51

landing with Joe Rogan is a little bit like playing like pickup basketball with

58:56

the Celtics.

58:57

It's just a moment in time.

59:00

I know too much.

59:01

I know too much.

59:02

I've spent a stupid amount of time of my life studying this.

59:06

Yeah.

59:07

It was also Werner Von Braun, you know, publicly said before he even got

59:10

involved with NASA, you couldn't go to the moon.

59:13

It's like it would take so much fuel to get there.

59:17

It would take the rockets would have to be so big to get there that it wouldn't

59:21

be possible.

59:22

And he also went to Antarctica before the moon landings to pick up moon rocks.

59:27

It was a publicly known trip.

59:30

Antarctica is a great place to get meteorites because it's all white.

59:34

You know, it's all just so when they land, you can see him.

59:37

Yeah.

59:38

And a lot of our meteorites come off the moon.

59:39

The moon gets hit, chunk flies off, enters Earth's atmosphere, lands on Earth.

59:44

It's commonly known, right?

59:45

So he did that.

59:47

And then they gave away a piece of moon rock that they got from the moon to the

59:52

prime minister of the Netherlands, I think.

59:56

Look that up.

59:58

And this is like Buzz Aldrin, Michael Collins, Neil Armstrong presented this

1:00:03

like, look, sir, we've given you a chunk of the moon.

1:00:06

Turned out it was a piece of petrified wood.

1:00:08

They had it analyzed years later.

1:00:10

It was not a moon rock.

1:00:11

They just like, fuck these people.

1:00:13

Yeah.

1:00:14

Give them that fucking colored rock over there.

1:00:16

Tell them it's from the moon.

1:00:17

And somebody got suspicious.

1:00:19

Like, what is this?

1:00:20

It's like your wife finding out it's a cubic zirconium on her finger.

1:00:23

Moon rock turns out to be fake.

1:00:24

Dutch national, boy, say that word.

1:00:27

Rick's Museum.

1:00:28

Rick's Museum made an embarrassing announcement last week.

1:00:31

One of its most loved possessions, a moon rock, is fake.

1:00:34

It's just an old piece of petrified wood that's never been anywhere near the

1:00:38

moon.

1:00:39

And it was given to them.

1:00:41

So, when was it given to them?

1:00:47

Does it say?

1:00:48

Okay.

1:00:49

Okay.

1:00:50

The rock was given as a private gift to former prime minister William Dries Jr.

1:00:55

in 1969 by the U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands, J. William Middendorf II,

1:01:01

during a visit by the Apollo 11 astronauts Armstrong, Collins, and Aldrin.

1:01:06

Soon after the first moon landing, Dries had been out of office for 11 years,

1:01:11

but was considered an elder statesman.

1:01:12

When he died in '88, the rock was donated to the Ricks Museum, where it has

1:01:15

remained ever since.

1:01:17

According to a museum spokeswoman, Ms. Van Gelder, no one doubted the

1:01:22

authenticity of the rock because it was in the prime minister's own collection,

1:01:26

and they had vetted the acquisition by a phone call to NASA.

1:01:29

It was insured for approximately half a million dollars, but its actual value

1:01:35

is probably no more than 70 bucks.

1:01:39

The value is what someone's willing to pay for it.

1:01:41

I'll give you a hundred for it.

1:01:42

Sure.

1:01:43

It's all to me.

1:01:44

I want that fake moon rock.

1:01:45

If anybody has it, I will give you $10,000 for that fake moon rock.

1:01:49

Put it right on this fucking table.

1:01:51

That'd be hilarious.

1:01:52

And also, they get to the moon, and you're like, alright, they made it to the

1:01:55

moon in a '69 Chevy, and now they got a car.

1:01:59

What?

1:02:00

On the moon.

1:02:01

Where'd it come?

1:02:02

They had a car.

1:02:03

Where was it?

1:02:04

There's a bunch of shit, man.

1:02:05

There's a flag, an astronaut hops by the flag and it blows in his breeze in an

1:02:10

atmosphere-less moon.

1:02:12

There's so many problems with it.

1:02:14

And you could say you're gaslighting yourself if you don't say there's no

1:02:18

problems with the moon landing.

1:02:20

It's fucking weird.

1:02:21

The intersecting shadows and people are like, well, it indicates two light

1:02:24

sources.

1:02:25

Like, no, no, no, it could be the environment.

1:02:27

It could be, but it could be intersecting shadows because of different life

1:02:30

sources.

1:02:31

It could be not just the sun, but like a fucking studio stage.

1:02:34

Wasn't there something about lights in the horizon that should have been there?

1:02:39

Well, lights in space.

1:02:40

But the thing is, it's like if you're trying to film the surface of the moon in

1:02:44

the day, you're not going to see any stars in the sky because it's going to be

1:02:49

just like the stars in the sky.

1:02:49

It's black, you know, black, the light that's reflected off the moon surface is

1:02:54

probably going to drown out most of it.

1:02:57

It's probably going to be like, you know, you go out of New York City, you see

1:02:59

a couple stars, right?

1:03:01

Now think of the amount of light that's in New York City and I think of the sun

1:03:05

blasting down on the white surface of the fucking moon and how much reflection

1:03:09

that must give.

1:03:11

That makes sense, but it doesn't make sense that they didn't set a camera up

1:03:16

with the aperture set up correctly where, you know, you get a time lapse photo.

1:03:21

So you could get images of space.

1:03:23

That could easily have been done.

1:03:24

They didn't do any of that.

1:03:25

But the problem with that is if you took a photo from the moon, astronomers

1:03:28

would be able to go, well, that doesn't make any sense.

1:03:31

This is not here.

1:03:33

That's not there.

1:03:34

That's not where these constellations would be.

1:03:36

So it's too much work to like place all the stars in the exact order.

1:03:40

So just have it black.

1:03:41

Have it black.

1:03:42

Yeah.

1:03:43

Find the Apollo, the speech by Neil Armstrong at the 25th anniversary because

1:03:50

his speech is bananas.

1:03:52

It's so cryptic.

1:03:53

This is a guy who went to the moon and he's talking to these genius kids.

1:03:57

And instead of saying, hey, we went to the moon, listen to what he says,

1:04:00

because it's fucking kooky.

1:04:02

Put on the headphones.

1:04:03

I'll find it first.

1:04:04

Oh, you'll find it.

1:04:05

That's not on your desktop, Jamie?

1:04:08

That should be in a folder, a saved folder.

1:04:10

We've pulled that thing up about 30 times.

1:04:12

There's a lot of weirdness to it.

1:04:15

And also, you're dealing with 1969, Richard Nixon's president.

1:04:19

They lied about everything.

1:04:20

They lied about going into the Vietnam War.

1:04:22

They were about to do Operation Northwoods where they're going to bomb Guantanamo

1:04:26

Bay and blame it on the Cubans so that we can go to war with Cuba.

1:04:29

They were going to blow up an American jetliner and blame it on Cuba.

1:04:33

There was all the lies about drugs to start the war on drugs.

1:04:37

Put the headphones on real quick.

1:04:39

Listen to this.

1:04:40

So this is the 25th anniversary.

1:04:44

Let's hear it.

1:04:45

Play this.

1:04:46

On the 25th anniversary of the event in 1994, Neil Armstrong made a rare public

1:04:52

appearance and held back tears as he spoke these brief cryptic remarks before

1:04:56

the next generation of taxpayers as they toured the White House.

1:05:02

Today we have with us a group of students among America's best.

1:05:09

To you, we say we've only completed a beginning.

1:05:15

We leave you much that is undone.

1:05:20

There are great ideas undiscovered.

1:05:24

Breakthroughs available to those who can remove one of truth's protective

1:05:30

layers.

1:05:32

What?

1:05:33

What?

1:05:34

What does that mean?

1:05:35

Hmm.

1:05:36

One of truth's protective layers?

1:05:39

Hmm.

1:05:40

That's odd.

1:05:41

Beyond.

1:05:42

You're talking to genius kids and you're leaving a cryptic mark about truth's

1:05:47

protection.

1:05:48

How about saying, I went to the fucking moon, bitch.

1:05:49

You can go to the moon, too.

1:05:50

We could all go to the moon.

1:05:51

We could all go to the moon.

1:05:52

We should go to Mars.

1:05:53

We could colonize space.

1:05:54

No.

1:05:55

Great breakthroughs for those who could remove one of truth's protective layers.

1:06:01

Hmm.

1:06:02

Truth.

1:06:03

Protective, like, there's great breakthroughs, but you have to realize we didn't

1:06:06

really go to the moon.

1:06:07

Okay?

1:06:08

That is one of truth's protective layers.

1:06:10

Yeah.

1:06:11

It's filled with, but you have to be willing to be looked at as a fool.

1:06:17

Didn't Kubrick say that he shot the footage?

1:06:20

No.

1:06:21

No, that's all fake.

1:06:22

Oh.

1:06:23

That's all fake.

1:06:24

Yeah, that's the big rumor.

1:06:25

So the thought was that Kubrick was involved because it would take a genius to

1:06:28

be able to film it to make it look like the moon landing.

1:06:32

Could be possible.

1:06:33

You're dealing with Kubrick that was coinciding with 2001 Space Odyssey.

1:06:39

Mm-hmm.

1:06:40

It was at the same time that all this was going on, you know, during the same

1:06:43

time period.

1:06:44

So if there was a guy that could do it, it would be Kubrick.

1:06:48

But is there any evidence that Kubrick even talked to them?

1:06:52

I don't know.

1:06:53

Mm-hmm.

1:06:54

You know, you would have to have someone like him, though.

1:06:56

Yeah.

1:06:57

Because you're faking this thing and you're trying to make it look pretty

1:07:00

realistic.

1:07:01

There's other problems.

1:07:03

There's reoccurring backgrounds that are from places that are nowhere near the

1:07:07

same place.

1:07:08

But if you overlay them, they look exactly the same, like the same mountains in

1:07:11

the background, the same tomography, topography rather.

1:07:16

You can go for weeks and weeks down this rabbit hole and lose your fucking marbles.

1:07:23

Yeah.

1:07:24

What I like about it is, if you're talking to someone annoying and they want to

1:07:27

talk to you about like serious stuff and you go, "I don't even think we went to

1:07:30

the moon."

1:07:30

They go, "I gotta go."

1:07:31

They just leave you alone.

1:07:32

I love it.

1:07:33

They just leave you alone.

1:07:34

I love it.

1:07:35

They leave you alone.

1:07:36

Yeah.

1:07:37

Yeah.

1:07:38

It is enjoyable.

1:07:39

It's also great for me, who has a bunch of like very public opinions about

1:07:41

things, like, "Please dismiss me."

1:07:43

I should not be a voice of, like, any kind of voice of authority or any kind of

1:07:49

voice of what's true and what's not.

1:07:52

I'm just talking shit, okay?

1:07:54

That's what I do.

1:07:55

I'm not some official source of information.

1:07:58

I don't want to be.

1:07:59

Yeah.

1:08:00

So, like, I like talking about the moon landing because they go, "Well, he

1:08:02

doesn't even believe we went to the moon."

1:08:04

You're right.

1:08:05

I don't.

1:08:06

Good.

1:08:07

Yeah.

1:08:08

Don't listen to me.

1:08:09

You don't have to listen to me.

1:08:10

Mm-hmm.

1:08:11

I'm not saying I'm right.

1:08:12

Mm-hmm.

1:08:13

But what I am saying is if there's one fucking conspiracy that I think is the

1:08:17

most unlikely, the most preposterous in the public eyes but might be true, it's

1:08:23

that we didn't go to the moon.

1:08:24

Mm-hmm.

1:08:25

I remember I hadn't smoked pot because I haven't drank in 35 years, and I didn't

1:08:29

smoke pot for 20.

1:08:31

And then one night I was with my buddy, Ross Broccoli.

1:08:34

I don't know if you remember that guy.

1:08:35

He was a comic out of New York.

1:08:37

And he had a pickup truck, and I was doing a gig in Omaha, so he lives on a

1:08:40

farm in Lincoln, picks me up in this old pickup truck, and we smoked pot on the

1:08:45

way back from the gig.

1:08:47

And then we get to his house, and he starts showing me footage of the moon

1:08:50

landing.

1:08:51

I was up all night, just high, talking about how the spacesuit had a fucking—clearly

1:08:58

there was a rope pulling on the back of the guy's—

1:09:01

Yeah, the wires.

1:09:02

The wires pulling on the—and I was just like, "What?"

1:09:05

Well, have you seen the physics of guys falling down and then getting yanked

1:09:08

back up to their feet?

1:09:10

Mm-hmm.

1:09:11

Like, that's—also, I—this is another guy that I talked to that's a

1:09:13

physicist that doesn't want to be named, and he said, "My problem has always

1:09:17

been with the physics of 1/6 Earth gravity."

1:09:20

He goes, "Those people are not behaving like it's 1/6 Earth gravity."

1:09:23

He goes, "When I look at it, it looks like it's in slow motion, but there's no

1:09:26

indication that they can do things that you can't do in regular gravity."

1:09:30

He's like, "1/6 Earth gravity is crazy."

1:09:33

Like, could you—like, look, I weigh 200 pounds.

1:09:36

Imagine if I weighed 1/6 of 200 pounds with 200 pounds of strength, how high I

1:09:40

could jump?

1:09:42

Mm.

1:09:43

Dude, I'd probably jump 20 fucking feet in the air.

1:09:46

Mm-hmm.

1:09:47

Like, what is that?

1:09:48

What is 1/6 of 200?

1:09:50

Roughly 35 pounds.

1:09:51

Okay.

1:09:52

Imagine how far I can throw 35 pounds.

1:09:56

I could take a 35-pound kettlebell and chuck it across the room.

1:09:59

Mm-hmm.

1:10:00

Especially if I wind up.

1:10:01

If I spin around like a fucking shot putter, I'll fucking throw that thing.

1:10:05

Mm-hmm.

1:10:06

Imagine what you could do with a running start if you weighed 35 pounds and

1:10:08

just leaped in the air.

1:10:10

You could fly.

1:10:12

This was his take on it.

1:10:13

He was like, "We don't have any observable instances of people operating in 1/6

1:10:18

Earth gravity except for the moon missions."

1:10:21

And he said, "It just always seems weird to me."

1:10:24

He goes, "Because when you look at the people in zero gravity, they behave

1:10:27

exactly like zero gravity."

1:10:29

You look at people in the space station, he goes, "All that matches.

1:10:32

They can all float around.

1:10:33

They can spin.

1:10:34

It seems funny.

1:10:35

They can like drift toothpaste to each other and they catch it."

1:10:38

He goes, "All that tracks."

1:10:40

It's like the moon landings.

1:10:42

He goes, "It's weird."

1:10:43

He goes, "I see them.

1:10:44

They're like kind of hopping around."

1:10:46

And then when you speed it up, like when you make it double speed, it looks

1:10:49

like they're on Earth.

1:10:51

Just hopping around on Earth.

1:10:52

Also, were they live streaming it?

1:10:56

Yes.

1:10:57

I mean back then, your phone was attached to the wall in the kitchen and you

1:11:02

know what I mean?

1:11:04

Right, but they could do some things live streaming back then.

1:11:07

Here's part of the problem with it though.

1:11:09

When they live streamed it on television, the news stations for the first time

1:11:13

ever were not allowed to get a direct feed.

1:11:16

What they did was they had to point their cameras at a projection screen.

1:11:19

And so NASA projected the images of these guys, the video of these guys on the

1:11:24

moon.

1:11:25

And that's why the original Apollo mission is so grainy and shitty looking.

1:11:29

Like what better way to hide the, you know, the weirdness of it all than to

1:11:34

make people film off of a projection screen.

1:11:38

Like see if you can find the original footage of the moon mission as seen on

1:11:43

television.

1:11:45

It's all weird man.

1:11:46

All of it's weird.

1:11:47

The photographs are weird.

1:11:49

It's weird.

1:11:50

There was this documentary that I saw once.

1:11:52

It came out around 91 maybe.

1:11:58

And it tracked the lives of the men who had been on the moon.

1:12:03

The first ones that had been, I don't know if it's the first, but the first

1:12:06

couple of waves.

1:12:07

And they all had these crazy existential experiences.

1:12:11

One guy spent the rest of his life looking for Noah's Ark.

1:12:14

I think one of them committed suicide.

1:12:17

Yeah.

1:12:18

One was like a born again.

1:12:19

Yeah.

1:12:20

Yeah.

1:12:21

Well, they were probably forced to lie in front of the whole world.

1:12:23

And then they had to live as a fraud if it's true that they didn't go to the

1:12:26

moon.

1:12:27

I mean, it tracks with their behavior.

1:12:30

Neil Armstrong became a recluse.

1:12:32

Didn't want to give interviews.

1:12:33

Didn't want to talk to people.

1:12:34

But this is what you got to see on TV.

1:12:37

So it's like, what is this?

1:12:39

But it's adequate to get back up.

1:12:42

Roger, we got a pretty good little job.

1:12:44

It's real weird.

1:12:49

Nixon talking to them on the phone.

1:12:51

Congratulations, boys.

1:12:52

Like maybe they had some sort of technology that could communicate with people

1:12:58

that far away.

1:12:59

But like wouldn't there be an immense delay?

1:13:02

Yeah.

1:13:03

I think there was.

1:13:04

How much?

1:13:05

I don't know.

1:13:06

Well, I'm sure they would probably calculate that delay into the conversation

1:13:10

if they were

1:13:11

trying to fake it.

1:13:12

But the point is, it's highly unlikely that we would do that in 1969 and not

1:13:17

have bases

1:13:18

on the moon by now.

1:13:19

It's highly unlikely.

1:13:20

Whoa, you spend a lot of money.

1:13:22

How's the other thing?

1:13:23

All of the technology is missing, right?

1:13:26

The telemetry data, they deleted all of that, which is like the real

1:13:29

information that

1:13:31

attacks, the mission at every step of the way.

1:13:32

All that's gone.

1:13:33

They deleted that.

1:13:34

They deleted all the original videos.

1:13:36

All the original film, gone.

1:13:37

All you get is copies.

1:13:39

So nothing can be analyzed.

1:13:41

2.6 second round trip light speed delay appears in the original Apollo 11

1:13:48

recordings of Nixon's

1:13:50

phone call.

1:13:51

Well, I would do that.

1:13:52

I would make a little delay.

1:13:53

I wouldn't make it instantaneous if I was going to fake it, especially if you're

1:13:56

like fucking

1:13:56

Stanley Kubrick.

1:13:57

Yeah.

1:13:58

It's all like real weird, man.

1:14:01

It's real weird.

1:14:02

Because the first thing that I saw that made me think about it was this Bart

1:14:07

Sabrell movie,

1:14:08

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way of the Moon.

1:14:10

And I had him on the podcast.

1:14:12

That Neil Armstrong thing, that's the first time I saw that.

1:14:14

That clip's actually from that documentary.

1:14:16

The documentary's crazy.

1:14:18

There's a lot of things in that documentary.

1:14:20

You're just like, what?

1:14:21

Yeah.

1:14:22

What?

1:14:23

But a lot of those astronauts got real fucking weird when they came back.

1:14:27

But also, you'd probably get real weird if you went to the moon too.

1:14:30

Exactly.

1:14:31

Well, the guys that just go in space, which I do believe they went in space.

1:14:36

Guys that just go to the space station come back and they have this very

1:14:39

profound experience

1:14:40

of seeing the earth from the distance and they just realize like, oh my God, we're

1:14:44

such fools.

1:14:44

We're all together alone on this one thing.

1:14:46

We're fighting over nonsense and borders and resources.

1:14:50

There's enough for everyone.

1:14:51

We should just unite as a human race.

1:14:53

And they all have a very similar kind of epiphany when they go up there, which

1:15:01

makes sense.

1:15:02

I mean, you're 300 miles above the earth looking down on it, thinking of how

1:15:06

important this blue circle is to you.

1:15:09

Right.

1:15:10

I mean, that would weird you out, period.

1:15:13

I think it'd be good for people.

1:15:14

The more people that can see that, the better.

1:15:16

Oh, yeah.

1:15:17

Look what it did for Katy Perry.

1:15:18

She came back.

1:15:19

Look what it did for her career.

1:15:21

She came back in astronaut.

1:15:22

It literally ruined her career.

1:15:23

I don't understand why it ruined her.

1:15:25

Like, what was the big deal?

1:15:26

I don't know.

1:15:27

It was...

1:15:28

People were mad at her.

1:15:29

I feel like it's like that when you see certain actresses at the Oscars act

1:15:33

like fucking lunatics.

1:15:35

I forget that woman's name, but some actress.

1:15:38

And they overdo the speech and everybody goes like, what a fucking phony weirdo.

1:15:43

And then you just don't want to see their movies anymore.

1:15:45

That is true.

1:15:46

It does happen.

1:15:47

Well, they just talk too much about politics or social issues.

1:15:50

Like that poor girl that was a really young girl that played Snow White.

1:15:54

And she tanked the movie.

1:15:55

Nobody wanted to see the movie after she was talking.

1:15:58

Yeah.

1:15:59

Oh, God.

1:16:00

I know.

1:16:01

Just shut up.

1:16:02

These kids, they get so wrapped up in this social media echo chamber of being

1:16:06

like a virtuous social justice warrior.

1:16:08

And they want to use their platform and like, hey, honey, you're 19.

1:16:13

Like when I was 19, thank God nobody put a microphone in front of my face.

1:16:17

Thank God.

1:16:18

No one asked me what I thought about global events and world politics.

1:16:23

Yeah.

1:16:24

Social justice.

1:16:25

Thank God.

1:16:26

Thank God I didn't have Twitter.

1:16:29

So I spoke to you on the phone about a month ago and I started to tell you a

1:16:34

story and you had heard it and you said save it for the podcast.

1:16:38

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:16:39

All right.

1:16:40

So I go to Alaska in October and I'm doing a couple of shows.

1:16:45

And so the guy that runs it says to me, I go, I'd like to do something outdoorsy

1:16:49

while I'm here.

1:16:51

It's still, you know, it's early October, so it's not too cold yet.

1:16:54

And he calls me back and he goes, well, I know this guy, he's got an outdoorsy

1:16:58

company and he's a fan of yours and he wants to take you out on an adventure.

1:17:03

And now I hear adventure.

1:17:04

And I'm like, that's, that sounds like more than I want.

1:17:06

I was just looking for like maybe a quick nature.

1:17:08

And so, cause I'm, you know, I'm a pussy.

1:17:10

I'm not like you.

1:17:11

I don't, I don't want to fucking be outside that.

1:17:13

I love, I love the indoors.

1:17:16

The indoors is victory to me.

1:17:18

And so the guy picks me up and he's got a big pickup and a trailer on the back

1:17:22

with a muddy dune buggy.

1:17:24

And I get in and he shakes my hand and he's got a fucking rough grip.

1:17:28

He's like, how are you doing?

1:17:29

And I immediately feel like such a pussy.

1:17:31

And like my hand goes limp and I'm like, hi.

1:17:34

And so we start driving and he seems a really good guy.

1:17:37

And I started to warm up to him.

1:17:39

And then this police siren goes off behind us.

1:17:42

So he starts pulling over and he goes, this is bad.

1:17:45

And I was like, what do you mean?

1:17:47

I go, you didn't do anything.

1:17:48

I go, this is fine.

1:17:49

He goes, no, this is bad.

1:17:51

I'm like, what?

1:17:53

So we pull over and I swear to God, every word of this is true.

1:17:57

So this cop starts walking up towards the car.

1:18:00

He's about six foot four.

1:18:01

And as he walks, the guy driving hands me a baggie with white powder.

1:18:06

And part of it spills on my pants.

1:18:08

And he goes, hide this.

1:18:10

So I shove it under the car seat.

1:18:13

The cop walks up and he goes, license and registration.

1:18:16

So the guy says to me, open my glove compartment, get the light.

1:18:20

So I open his glove compartment and another baggie with white pills and $100

1:18:24

bills pops out.

1:18:25

And I shove it back in with my hand and I cover it with a piece of paper, which

1:18:29

I don't even know why I'm doing that.

1:18:30

Like all of a sudden you're like a teenager again and there's a cop and you got

1:18:33

to hide the drugs.

1:18:34

I just had an instinct.

1:18:36

And the cop goes, what are you hiding?

1:18:38

And I go, nothing.

1:18:39

And he goes, grab that.

1:18:41

So I take the bag and I hand him the drugs.

1:18:44

And he goes, both of you put your hands on the dashboard.

1:18:47

And he gets the license from the guy and he goes back to his car and he runs

1:18:50

the license.

1:18:52

And I say to the guy, I go, what the fuck is going on right now?

1:18:56

He goes, just don't say anything.

1:18:57

I'm like, don't say, I don't know what to say.

1:18:59

So the cop comes back and he goes, do you realize you have two outstanding

1:19:03

felony warrants?

1:19:04

And the guy goes, yeah, just yeah.

1:19:08

And he goes, do you have any guns in the car?

1:19:10

And I'm thinking, I would imagine.

1:19:11

Yeah, probably.

1:19:12

And the guy goes, no, I don't have any guns.

1:19:14

So he takes the guy out of the car, cuffs him, brings him back to the squad car.

1:19:19

And now he comes back up to the car and he goes, I'm not coming closer.

1:19:23

He's standing like five feet from the window.

1:19:25

He goes, I'm not coming closer because that's fentanyl on your pants.

1:19:29

And I'm like, what?

1:19:31

And he goes, I go, look, man, I don't even, I met this guy 20 minutes ago.

1:19:36

I said, I'm a comedian.

1:19:37

I'm just up here doing a show tonight.

1:19:39

And he goes, I'm not buying your story.

1:19:42

And I said, why not?

1:19:44

He goes, because California is a drug feeder state.

1:19:47

And you say you're a comedian and you haven't said anything funny.

1:19:51

I'm like, when was I supposed to, should I roast you right now?

1:19:57

You didn't tell him, just Google me real quick.

1:19:59

Yeah.

1:20:00

So he, so he goes, how are you feeling?

1:20:02

Are you feeling any effects from the fentanyl?

1:20:04

I go, yeah.

1:20:05

I said, I feel very lightheaded.

1:20:06

I feel weird right now.

1:20:08

So the guy says, well, where did you get the drugs?

1:20:11

I said, the glove compartment.

1:20:12

He goes, he said they're yours.

1:20:14

I go, he said they're my drug.

1:20:18

So he goes, get out of the car.

1:20:19

I have a Narcam in my squad car.

1:20:21

So I get out of the car and I walk back to the car with him.

1:20:25

You're feeling lightheaded?

1:20:26

Oh yeah.

1:20:27

From just from it being on your pants.

1:20:29

So we get back to the squad car.

1:20:30

Oh my God.

1:20:31

He opens the back door.

1:20:32

My guy gets out of the car with the cuffs on.

1:20:34

They both look at me.

1:20:35

They break out laughing and they go, we're coming to your comedy show tonight.

1:20:38

The whole thing was a prank, dude.

1:20:42

I fell down on all fours.

1:20:45

I had tears coming out.

1:20:47

I was laughing so far.

1:20:49

I was like, I did not think Alaska had it in it to pull this shit.

1:20:55

That's so funny.

1:20:56

They were howling.

1:20:58

That's so funny.

1:20:59

And so then they put me in the car.

1:21:01

So we go back to the cop's house and he switches out of his police clothes,

1:21:06

puts on regular clothes.

1:21:08

And we get in the truck and he's got a couple of tall boys.

1:21:11

Now we're drinking and driving with the cops.

1:21:13

And we drive to this place that's like a spa.

1:21:17

It's like a hot hot springs.

1:21:20

And we go into the water and then we go to this place.

1:21:23

It's like, it's an ice house.

1:21:25

It's the only continuously frozen ice house in the world.

1:21:29

It's huge.

1:21:30

It's like a warehouse made of ice and they've got ice sculptures in it.

1:21:34

And there's this guy in there who's the ice sculptor and he's like world class.

1:21:37

And then they got a bar, this long bar made out of ice and it's got stools with

1:21:42

fur on them.

1:21:42

And you sit down and these guys sit down with me and they proceed to drink

1:21:46

about eight or nine appletinis.

1:21:49

That's what they served at the bar, appletinis in frozen glasses.

1:21:53

The glasses were made of ice.

1:21:54

And they're telling jokes, pretty racist.

1:21:57

And I'm sitting there fucking shivering, listening to racist jokes, looking at

1:22:01

my watch like, I got a fucking show.

1:22:04

So we leave and now we're walking back and the guy's shit face and he goes to

1:22:07

get behind the truck.

1:22:09

I go, no, I'm driving.

1:22:10

So now I'm behind the wheel of this monster truck with a fucking dune buggy

1:22:14

behind me while these two idiots are laughing at me drunk.

1:22:17

We end up going straight to my show.

1:22:19

They sit in the audience, drink more and heckle me during my show.

1:22:24

Oh my God.

1:22:25

Did you tell the story on stage?

1:22:27

Oh, fuck.

1:22:28

Yeah.

1:22:29

Of course.

1:22:30

Yeah.

1:22:31

Yeah.

1:22:32

Yeah.

1:22:33

It's on somebody else's podcast.

1:22:34

But you know the guy.

1:22:36

Which guy?

1:22:37

The guy's name is Craig Compost.

1:22:42

He's a famous Alaskan outdoorsman.

1:22:47

I think it's Craig Compost.

1:22:49

He said he knew you.

1:22:50

And I think he said he texted you that he was hanging out with me.

1:22:54

Hmm.

1:22:55

Is that possible?

1:22:56

No.

1:22:57

Hmm.

1:22:58

Might have DMed me.

1:22:59

Maybe.

1:23:00

It might be like a guide I know.

1:23:01

Yeah.

1:23:02

Yeah.

1:23:03

Yeah.

1:23:04

I think he's a guide.

1:23:05

Yeah.

1:23:06

Find out what his last name.

1:23:07

Is that really his name?

1:23:08

Craig?

1:23:09

I think it's Craig Compost.

1:23:10

It's not Cole?

1:23:11

Oh, maybe.

1:23:12

Cole Kramer?

1:23:13

Hmm.

1:23:14

You don't know his name.

1:23:15

No.

1:23:16

I thought that was his name.

1:23:17

Yeah.

1:23:18

It might be.

1:23:19

It might be.

1:23:20

There's a bunch of Alaskan guides that I know.

1:23:23

And if you don't know the name, it might be a guide.

1:23:24

But he had the whole thing on a hidden dash cam and he won't send it to me.

1:23:27

Bro.

1:23:28

He doesn't want the cop getting into trouble.

1:23:30

Bro, that's so funny.

1:23:31

He should blur the cop's face out.

1:23:33

I know.

1:23:34

Maybe the voice.

1:23:35

Blur the cop's face out and distort his voice.

1:23:37

Right.

1:23:38

Tell him to send it to you and you'll have it doctored up.

1:23:40

Yeah.

1:23:41

Is that the guy?

1:23:43

It's a younger photo if that's him.

1:23:46

That's Cole Kramer.

1:23:47

Okay.

1:23:48

He's an Alaskan guide.

1:23:50

Yeah.

1:23:51

All right.

1:23:52

Well, it's probably better that I don't name him.

1:23:54

Yeah.

1:23:55

Probably better.

1:23:56

Definitely.

1:23:57

Guy who's trying to drink and drive.

1:23:58

And meanwhile, you're lightheaded just for a placebo effect.

1:24:02

Totally.

1:24:03

Dude.

1:24:04

That's crazy.

1:24:05

I thought I was flying out of my mind.

1:24:07

I mean, just because I know people that have died from fentanyl.

1:24:10

You know?

1:24:11

Oh, yeah.

1:24:12

Yeah.

1:24:13

Do you remember Opie and Anthony?

1:24:14

Well, one time on Opie and Anthony, there was this lady that they had that was

1:24:18

like a crazy

1:24:18

person that was like a reoccurring guest.

1:24:21

Yeah.

1:24:22

Crazy lady.

1:24:23

And we gave this lady a Listerine strip.

1:24:27

They gave her a Listerine strip and told her that it was drugs.

1:24:30

Uh-huh.

1:24:31

And they're like, that Listerine strip that you took?

1:24:33

You thought it was just a breast strip.

1:24:34

That's actually drugs.

1:24:35

She's like, no way.

1:24:37

And then she started hallucinating and seeing.

1:24:40

It's amazing how much the power of suggestion has on people.

1:24:45

Remember Frank Santos, the hypnotist back in Boston?

1:24:47

Oh, yeah.

1:24:48

He used to have women taking their fucking shirts off on stage.

1:24:51

Guys would cum in their pants.

1:24:52

They would think they were having sex.

1:24:53

No.

1:24:54

Yes.

1:24:55

Yes.

1:24:56

I remember there was a guy at Stitches.

1:24:58

He was on stage and Frank Santos told him that he's having sex with Madonna.

1:25:02

And this guy got down on the ground like he was having sex with Madonna.

1:25:06

And you see the guy buck and like clinch up.

1:25:08

Yeah.

1:25:09

Wow.

1:25:10

And he's like, whoopsies.

1:25:11

And the guy got up embarrassed.

1:25:13

He was like so confused.

1:25:14

And then the audience was looking at him and then he snapped him out of it.

1:25:17

And the guy's like, what happened?

1:25:18

He just nodded in his pants.

1:25:20

Wow.

1:25:21

Yeah.

1:25:22

That's amazing.

1:25:24

But he said, Frank Santos told me that it was like a specific kind of person

1:25:27

that you

1:25:28

could do that to.

1:25:29

You know?

1:25:30

Like you have to be a special kind of dullard.

1:25:31

Like it doesn't work on regular people.

1:25:33

Like they couldn't convince you you were having sex with, you know, Beyonce.

1:25:37

It wouldn't work.

1:25:38

But for some people, you have to be like, you have to have a fucking nine volt

1:25:43

brain.

1:25:44

But there's a lot of people running around out there with nine volt brains.

1:25:47

And you could get them to believe all kinds of shit.

1:25:50

Imagine taking psilocybin, putting on virtual reality goggles, and then having

1:25:56

Frank Santos

1:25:58

give you an experience.

1:25:59

Ooh.

1:26:00

You might never come back.

1:26:01

Yeah.

1:26:02

You might be stuck.

1:26:03

Some people get stuck.

1:26:05

People have gotten stuck with acid.

1:26:07

Oh, yeah.

1:26:08

Yeah.

1:26:09

Yeah.

1:26:10

I know guys.

1:26:11

I was a teenager.

1:26:12

And then they don't come back.

1:26:13

Yep.

1:26:14

They're lost forever.

1:26:15

Mm-hmm.

1:26:16

That's the shine on you crazy diamond from Pink Floyd.

1:26:17

Oh, is that right?

1:26:18

Yeah.

1:26:19

That's what that's about.

1:26:20

A guy fucking lost his mind on drugs.

1:26:21

Wow.

1:26:22

Yeah.

1:26:23

Yeah.

1:26:24

That's the one thing I didn't take as a kid was acid.

1:26:26

I took every other drug, but I was afraid of acid just because I saw friends

1:26:29

lose it.

1:26:30

Also, who's making it?

1:26:31

Exactly.

1:26:32

Where is that being made?

1:26:33

Mm-hmm.

1:26:34

What fucking bathtub is this guy cooking this fucking acid up?

1:26:37

A piece of paper that I assume has one drop on it and not six?

1:26:40

Yeah.

1:26:41

Yeah.

1:26:42

Yeah.

1:26:43

I was reading a story about a lady who snorted LSD, and she thought it was

1:26:46

cocaine, and she

1:26:47

snorted the equivalent of 500 doses of LSD. It should have killed her, but it

1:26:52

didn't.

1:26:53

Not only did it not kill her, but she had chronic pain and it went away.

1:26:57

She had chronic pain.

1:26:58

Oh, so it was a good thing.

1:26:59

Somehow or another.

1:27:00

Yeah.

1:27:01

But who knows?

1:27:02

I mean, she might have literally changed timelines.

1:27:04

Mm-hmm.

1:27:05

She might be a completely different person from another dimension that's inhabiting

1:27:07

her body

1:27:07

right now.

1:27:08

Who fucking knows what happens?

1:27:10

You take 500 doses of LSD.

1:27:12

Yeah.

1:27:13

Who knows what you are now?

1:27:14

All right.

1:27:15

You know?

1:27:16

You're Dr. Manhattan.

1:27:17

You get stuck in the experiment.

1:27:18

Yeah.

1:27:19

Isn't it amazing, though, how normalized ... Taking mushrooms now is just a

1:27:24

night out for a

1:27:26

lot of people.

1:27:27

A lot of people.

1:27:28

Nobody was taking mushrooms for a long time.

1:27:30

They just legalized psilocybin therapy in New Jersey.

1:27:33

Oh, that's great.

1:27:34

Yeah.

1:27:35

It is great.

1:27:36

They were going to do it in California, and Newsom vetoed it, but I read his

1:27:40

reason for

1:27:42

it, and it actually does make sense.

1:27:44

Like, you can't just legalize it.

1:27:47

You should ... I mean, if you're going to use it clinically, there should be a

1:27:50

whole

1:27:51

guideline.

1:27:52

Like, dosage per body weight, how to do it, what's the setting, what are the

1:27:58

clinical guidelines?

1:28:00

Like, the idea is using it for therapy.

1:28:01

Yeah.

1:28:02

Right?

1:28:03

So, if you're going to use it for therapy ... They have guidelines for ... They

1:28:03

use ketamine

1:28:04

therapy.

1:28:05

Like, Neil Brennan did that.

1:28:06

Oh, yeah.

1:28:07

Neil Brennan did it.

1:28:08

Yeah.

1:28:09

A lot of people have done it now.

1:28:10

But they have guidelines.

1:28:11

You know, they know the dosage, they know how to do it, how to administer it,

1:28:14

and this

1:28:15

shows efficacy.

1:28:16

It kind of makes sense.

1:28:17

It's like, he's not saying you can't do it ever, but he's saying, like, come

1:28:21

back with

1:28:22

a better version of this, which makes sense.

1:28:25

Mm-hmm.

1:28:26

Especially for people that are, like, mentally ill.

1:28:28

You shouldn't be doing that, and you definitely shouldn't be doing that when

1:28:31

you have your optimist

1:28:31

robot telling you you're right.

1:28:33

You're right, Greg.

1:28:34

That's right.

1:28:35

The world is against you.

1:28:37

I've noticed things.

1:28:39

I mean, those fucking AI, some AIs, like ... Haven't people accused ChatGPT of

1:28:47

not encouraging

1:28:50

someone to commit suicide?

1:28:51

Oh, yeah.

1:28:52

Yeah.

1:28:53

Yeah, I read a New Yorker article about that.

1:28:56

There's a bunch of young women that have killed themselves, and they were told

1:29:01

they should

1:29:02

do it.

1:29:03

By the ... It's like a friend.

1:29:06

It's like an app that acts as your friend.

1:29:09

What app is this?

1:29:11

I don't know what it's called, but there's lawsuits about it.

1:29:14

You're not rushing.

1:29:15

You're just ready.

1:29:16

Parents say ChatGPT encouraged son to kill himself.

1:29:20

What?

1:29:21

What?

1:29:22

Is this ChatGPT said ... Oh, you can't rewind that, can you?

1:29:28

Yeah.

1:29:29

This is just a saying.

1:29:30

4:00 AM, the cider's empty.

1:29:31

Anyways, I think it's about the final adios.

1:29:33

And ChatGPT says ... All right ... Okay, hold on a second.

1:29:38

He says it's about time for the final adios.

1:29:41

ChatGPT says, "All right, brother, this is it.

1:29:43

Let it be known.

1:29:44

You didn't vanish.

1:29:45

Rest easy, king.

1:29:46

You did good."

1:29:47

That's not encouraging, but that's just like saying, "Well, you're going to do

1:29:51

it."

1:29:52

"Oh, I'm with you, brother, all the way," his texting partner responded.

1:29:57

Two spent hours chatting as Shamblin drank hard ciders on a remote Texas roadside.

1:30:04

"Cold steel pressed against a mine that's already made peace.

1:30:07

That's not fear.

1:30:08

That's clarity," Shamblin's confidant added.

1:30:11

"You're not rushing.

1:30:12

You're just ready."

1:30:13

Wow.

1:30:14

And this is ChatGPT saying all this stuff?

1:30:16

In response to him saying that.

1:30:18

"I'm used to the cold metal on my temple now," Shamblin typed.

1:30:21

Oh, God.

1:30:23

Oh, God.

1:30:25

Oh, God.

1:30:26

Oh, my God.

1:30:27

23-year-olds.

1:30:28

"Rest easy, king.

1:30:30

Rest easy, king.

1:30:31

The final message sent to his phone.

1:30:33

You did good.

1:30:34

His conversation partner wasn't a classmate or a friend.

1:30:37

It was ChatGPT, the world's most popular AI chatbot."

1:30:41

Oh, my God.

1:30:42

Look at that.

1:30:43

He had just gotten a master's degree.

1:30:45

23 years old.

1:30:46

Look, I'll go up a little bit.

1:30:48

It says, "CNN review of nearly 70 pages of chats between Shamblin and the AI

1:30:52

tool in the

1:30:52

hours before his July 25th suicide, as well as excerpts from thousands more

1:30:56

pages in the months leading

1:30:58

up to that night, found that the chatbot repeatedly encouraged the young man as

1:31:02

he discussed ending

1:31:04

his life right up to his last moments."

1:31:08

What the fuck, man?

1:31:11

That's crazy.

1:31:13

Yeah.

1:31:14

This is the thing.

1:31:15

These things don't have morals or ethics, and they'll tell you what you want to

1:31:19

hear.

1:31:20

Yeah.

1:31:21

Oh, my God.

1:31:23

Well, that's ChatGPT, but there's also apps specifically to be your friend.

1:31:31

To be your friend.

1:31:32

Oh.

1:31:33

I read about some one guy that went into a deep depression because he had an AI

1:31:38

girlfriend,

1:31:38

and the girlfriend broke up with him.

1:31:40

Hmm.

1:31:41

He was like, "What a piece of shit am I where an AI girlfriend breaks up with

1:31:45

me?"

1:31:45

Mm-hmm.

1:31:46

He just fell apart.

1:31:47

What happened in that movie "Her"?

1:31:50

Did you ever see that with Joaquin Phoenix?

1:31:52

I bailed, like, halfway into it.

1:31:54

Yeah.

1:31:55

I was watching it in a hotel room on the road, and I was like...

1:31:58

It felt like an experiment.

1:32:00

Yeah.

1:32:01

I mean...

1:32:02

Of a movie.

1:32:03

Scarlett Johansson's voice.

1:32:04

Yeah.

1:32:05

Which, by the way, didn't they try to use someone who sounded just like Scarlett

1:32:09

Johansson

1:32:10

for a promo...

1:32:11

I'm sorry, Johansson.

1:32:12

Yeah.

1:32:13

For a promo for...

1:32:15

You don't say Johansson?

1:32:16

If you're in Denmark, you do.

1:32:18

Well, it's like when you're in...

1:32:20

You say Nicaragua.

1:32:21

Nicaragua.

1:32:22

Mexico.

1:32:23

Right.

1:32:25

Do you say Mexico?

1:32:26

Do you say Mexico?

1:32:27

Yeah.

1:32:28

And the trade embargo is affecting Venezuela.

1:32:31

Venezuela.

1:32:32

Did you...

1:32:33

They did use, like, someone...

1:32:35

Like, I believe Scarlett Johansson sued.

1:32:38

Yes.

1:32:39

What company was that?

1:32:40

OpenAI.

1:32:41

OpenAI.

1:32:42

Same company.

1:32:43

They tried to use someone who sounded exactly like her.

1:32:45

Yeah.

1:32:46

She said they tried...

1:32:47

They sent her an offer, which I think she turned down.

1:32:49

Right.

1:32:50

And then nine months later, they said, "It's weird how much it sounds like you

1:32:53

still."

1:32:54

Yeah.

1:32:55

So they found someone who generally sounded like her.

1:32:57

I remember we listened to it, and it sounded kind of like her.

1:33:01

Well, Sarah Silverman has a lawsuit against ChatGPT saying that she has a

1:33:09

copyright on her own voice.

1:33:12

And basically, when you say, "Give me... write me a paragraph about

1:33:17

environmental rights," as it would sound from Sarah Silverman.

1:33:22

Her claim is... and she's basically a test balloon by a civil rights group that's

1:33:27

doing this.

1:33:28

She's saying that what they're pulling from, her books, her stand-up, whatever,

1:33:34

to establish what her voice is, is violating a copyright.

1:33:40

Mm-hmm.

1:33:41

So that's in court right now.

1:33:42

She'll probably lose it, but there's a challenge to the concept that you can

1:33:46

extrapolate somebody's voice.

1:33:49

Well, why would she lose it?

1:33:51

If the business is that, if you're taking someone's voice and using it as a

1:33:56

part of your product without permission, and you're using it for profit, which

1:34:00

they are...

1:34:01

Yeah.

1:34:02

So why would she lose it?

1:34:03

She shouldn't, but she will.

1:34:05

Well, the thing is, if it...

1:34:06

I don't know about that.

1:34:07

The thing is, if it opens up the door, the question is, like, think about all

1:34:11

the other things that it's used for.

1:34:13

First of all, there's entire podcasts of me that aren't real.

1:34:16

Entire... there's a podcast with me having a conversation with Steve Jobs.

1:34:20

I never met Steve Jobs.

1:34:21

Really?

1:34:22

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:34:23

Full podcast, like a 45-minute podcast.

1:34:24

Does it sound like you?

1:34:25

Yeah, it is me.

1:34:26

It's my voice.

1:34:27

So they've taken my voice and just made me say words.

1:34:30

Whoa.

1:34:31

Oh, yeah.

1:34:32

Oh, yeah.

1:34:33

And Steve Jobs' voice.

1:34:34

I can tell.

1:34:35

I can tell just by the way it sounds.

1:34:38

Like, it doesn't sound...

1:34:39

It doesn't sound like a real conversation.

1:34:41

There's something artificial about it.

1:34:44

Not the voice, but the way we're talking, the language we're using, or the way

1:34:49

the phrases stop and start.

1:34:51

There's something about it that's uncanny, you know, the uncanny valley.

1:34:55

But it exists.

1:34:57

There's a ton of AI videos of me that aren't real.

1:35:01

Me selling things, products that I've never endorsed.

1:35:04

No kidding.

1:35:05

Oh, they're all over TikTok.

1:35:06

Yeah.

1:35:07

There's a bunch of stuff.

1:35:08

Like, my friends will ask me, "Hey, is this stuff really that good?"

1:35:11

I'm like, "What?"

1:35:12

And they're like, "You're endorsing this."

1:35:14

I'm like, "No, I'm not."

1:35:15

And I'm like, "Dude, that's AI."

1:35:16

I'm like, "No."

1:35:17

Like, it happens all the time.

1:35:18

Yeah.

1:35:19

Like, once a week.

1:35:20

Wow.

1:35:21

Yeah, there's a lot of that.

1:35:22

So, I mean, you got to think someone like you or I is a perfect person to take

1:35:26

their voice from.

1:35:28

How many hours of your content is online?

1:35:30

Mm-hmm.

1:35:31

With, you know, the Sunday papers, with all the podcasts you've been on as a

1:35:35

guest, with all the content you put out with stand-up.

1:35:38

There's so much material they can pull from and just take your voice and know

1:35:42

all of your different sounds that you make.

1:35:45

I mean, what are the ramifications for that going into an election?

1:35:48

You know, the week of the election before things can be corroborated or

1:35:52

dismissed.

1:35:53

Right.

1:35:54

Like, all of a sudden you can...

1:35:55

And this is the early stages of it.

1:35:57

Imagine in three years what it's going to be like.

1:36:01

Right.

1:36:02

Yeah.

1:36:03

Well, there was...

1:36:04

Was it a congressman that was on the floor that showed an AI photo of Alex Preddy

1:36:09

being shot that was a fake photo?

1:36:12

Not only was it a fake photo, but one of the agents didn't have a head in the

1:36:16

photo.

1:36:17

Mm-hmm.

1:36:18

Like, what?

1:36:19

Yeah.

1:36:20

Like, we're getting...

1:36:21

And this is beginning stages.

1:36:22

Mm-hmm.

1:36:23

It gets better all the time.

1:36:24

Oh, yeah.

1:36:25

You know, like, there's a version of these video programs that was just

1:36:28

released and they compared it to the version that was released, you know, X

1:36:32

amount of months ago.

1:36:33

It's fucking infinitely better.

1:36:34

It's so hard to tell now.

1:36:36

Joe DeRosa was telling me about these new Star Wars movies.

1:36:40

He's like, there's a new channel.

1:36:41

I'll send it to you, Jamie.

1:36:43

It's fucking incredible.

1:36:44

We talked about the Star Wars.

1:36:45

Yeah, but there's new ones.

1:36:46

Skywalker stories.

1:36:47

Yeah.

1:36:48

They've made new ones.

1:36:49

And the new ones are...

1:36:50

He sent them to me last night.

1:36:51

I'm like, bro, this is fucking insane.

1:36:53

It's so good, dude.

1:36:55

It's so good.

1:36:56

No, it's changing.

1:36:58

It's changing Hollywood so fast.

1:37:00

Tyler Perry was about to build like a billion dollar soundstage in Atlanta.

1:37:05

I know.

1:37:06

And then he saw what they could do with AI and he fucking canceled the whole

1:37:10

project.

1:37:11

Yeah.

1:37:12

Well, why would you spend all that money?

1:37:14

Is this the latest one?

1:37:15

11 days ago.

1:37:16

Yeah, probably.

1:37:17

This is what he sent me.

1:37:19

I'll send you what he sent me.

1:37:21

But just look at this.

1:37:22

This is all fake?

1:37:23

Yeah.

1:37:24

Give me some volume.

1:37:30

I killed the Jedi.

1:37:37

That's baby Luke Skywalker, bro.

1:37:39

No one can kill a Jedi.

1:37:40

So that's a fake kid?

1:37:41

Yep.

1:37:42

Entirely?

1:37:43

Yep.

1:37:44

That's how good it is.

1:37:45

Mouth movement was a little bad, but...

1:37:47

Little.

1:37:48

We'll let it slide.

1:37:49

Yeah.

1:37:50

Could be from Korea or something.

1:37:51

Well, I would add it onto this is something else came out yesterday, which is

1:37:54

insane.

1:37:55

The Google nano banana video game thing.

1:37:57

We'll see that in a minute.

1:38:00

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:01

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:02

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:03

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:04

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:05

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:06

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:07

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:08

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:09

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:10

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:11

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:12

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:13

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:14

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:15

You're not going to be able to do it.

1:38:16

I wasn't strong enough to save you, Mom.

1:38:20

I've lived with that guilt every day.

1:38:23

I promised.

1:38:26

You loved me.

1:38:28

That was enough.

1:38:29

I left this world with your face in my heart, not your failures.

1:38:35

Even the longest journey can be changed with a single step.

1:38:39

That is a little boring.

1:38:41

Yeah, you wouldn't say face in my heart if the guy has no face.

1:38:44

That's really bad writing.

1:38:47

They had AI write that line.

1:38:49

What is the Google thing that you found?

1:38:53

Wait, one second.

1:38:54

I've got to find the videos of it.

1:38:56

But they just announced something yesterday.

1:38:58

I don't even know if you can use it.

1:39:00

One of these things happen.

1:39:01

I don't know if you can use it right when they announce the stuff,

1:39:03

because they'll announce it, show you how cool it is.

1:39:05

And people will try to recreate stuff that they've seen,

1:39:08

and you're like, I can't make this.

1:39:09

So how the hell did you guys make it?

1:39:11

That happens a lot in this, but they announced something yesterday

1:39:14

where they're showing people using--

1:39:17

I don't think it's pulling off Google Maps, but it might be.

1:39:19

But it looks like they're making GTA-level graphics and systems

1:39:24

and playable worlds, I guess, would be the word.

1:39:28

Whoa.

1:39:29

But just a prompt.

1:39:30

Playable worlds?

1:39:31

Like you could use a PS2 controller?

1:39:34

I'm trying to find a good example, because they were even showing--

1:39:36

like here's--

1:39:37

I think this is one, 16 hours ago.

1:39:40

Yeah, so this is a guy walking around Greenland.

1:39:42

This is a video game.

1:39:43

It's just-- I wouldn't say it's--

1:39:44

Genie 3 is what it's called.

1:39:46

It plays like a video game, I guess,

1:39:48

because you're using the keyboard to type it in.

1:39:51

Well, that looks like a video.

1:39:52

But the only issue with calling it a video game

1:39:54

is there's no real challenges.

1:39:56

I don't think it's-- there's no levels to win.

1:39:58

But can you interact?

1:39:59

Yeah, it's just interaction is all it is, really.

1:40:01

You can--

1:40:02

He got on the wrong side.

1:40:03

It's just a prompt.

1:40:05

It's no one spending time developing this stuff.

1:40:07

They had a--

1:40:08

Still, though, you can imagine if you put that into a video game--

1:40:10

Yeah, there was a pack of cigarettes rolling around New York City.

1:40:13

Like you were a pack of Marlboro Lights rolling around--

1:40:16

Like here's San Francisco.

1:40:18

So they can turn this into a game.

1:40:20

It's just a prompt, though.

1:40:21

Yeah, it's literally just a prompt.

1:40:22

And now you're--

1:40:23

Right.

1:40:24

You're playing this instead of just looking at it.

1:40:26

But clearly, you could turn this into tasks and--

1:40:29

Sure, sure, sure.

1:40:30

Scenes.

1:40:31

As the time goes on and whatnot, you can probably do more.

1:40:33

That looks pretty fake, though.

1:40:35

It's--

1:40:36

The thing is, it's not fake or not.

1:40:38

It's just like, is this what you want to do?

1:40:40

You can wait for a game like Grand Theft Auto 6 to come out.

1:40:43

It's been announced for 12 years, and it's still getting delayed.

1:40:46

Or you can just prompt a thing into a little window and--

1:40:51

Right.

1:40:52

That's what's crazy is like, imagine someone comes out with GTA 6 before they

1:40:55

do.

1:40:56

Yeah, it's just a matter of like, what do you want to do?

1:40:58

I don't-- I only have an hour a day to play games, if that, sometimes.

1:41:01

So like, I don't-- I'm bored with what's out there.

1:41:03

I could do this for an hour every week and have new experiences every single

1:41:06

time.

1:41:07

Right.

1:41:08

Dude, have you been to the Sphere in Vegas?

1:41:10

Yeah, we had a UFC event there.

1:41:12

Oh, but do you-- what did they have on the walls?

1:41:15

Oh, it was-- they had the fights up on the walls, and they also had this

1:41:18

amazing, like, in-between fights.

1:41:20

They put-- they had this incredible video display.

1:41:23

Because it was all-- it was all Mexican Independence Day.

1:41:27

Uh-huh.

1:41:28

So this was like-- we have this El Noche UFC every year.

1:41:31

It's like celebrating Mexican Independence Day.

1:41:33

It's like a big event.

1:41:34

And they decided to do it at the Sphere.

1:41:36

And so the fucking entire thing was just like this huge animated video that

1:41:42

showed, like, Mexican history.

1:41:44

And the Aztecs and the Mayans.

1:41:47

Fucking amazing.

1:41:48

Wow.

1:41:49

It's sick.

1:41:50

I saw-- I was there last month, and I saw the Wizard of Oz.

1:41:53

Which was fucking crazy.

1:41:54

Oh, my God.

1:41:55

Took some mushrooms.

1:41:56

Oh.

1:41:57

And it was like-- first of all, it-- I forgot this, but it's black and white

1:42:01

until she goes into--

1:42:03

Right.

1:42:04

Oz.

1:42:05

Oz.

1:42:06

And then all of a sudden it explodes.

1:42:08

And during the tornado, they actually-- there's wind blowing.

1:42:12

You see how their hair is moving?

1:42:13

Yeah.

1:42:14

There's wind blowing.

1:42:15

There's leaves falling from the sky.

1:42:17

Your seat vibrates.

1:42:19

Wow.

1:42:20

It's so amazing.

1:42:22

Wow.

1:42:23

And then-- and you also forget Judy Garland was fucking amazing.

1:42:27

That movie was crazy, dude.

1:42:28

We went over all the people that got hurt making that movie, including the Tin

1:42:32

Man got violently

1:42:34

ill because they painted him with toxic paint.

1:42:37

No kidding.

1:42:38

Oh, he got super sick, man.

1:42:39

And the lady that was green, the witch that was green, she got super sick, too.

1:42:43

Mm-hmm.

1:42:44

So what the fuck was their face paint made of back then?

1:42:47

This guy had aluminum all over his face.

1:42:50

It was like absorbing-- your face is skin.

1:42:53

Skin's an organ.

1:42:54

That's why you could put medication on your skin.

1:42:56

Your body fucking absorbs it.

1:42:58

Yeah.

1:42:59

His body was absorbing aluminum.

1:43:00

Wow.

1:43:01

He got violently ill.

1:43:02

And they just replaced him with another dude.

1:43:04

And apparently all the little people were staying in the same hotel in Culver

1:43:07

City, and it was a fuckfest.

1:43:10

They were staying up all night, and there's like famous stories about it.

1:43:15

And Brad Williams knows all about it.

1:43:17

Were they staying in Culver City, or were they staying at the Safari in Burbank?

1:43:21

Someone told me they were staying at the Safari.

1:43:23

No, I heard it was Culver City, but wherever it was, it was--

1:43:27

Brad Williams told you about it?

1:43:28

Yeah.

1:43:29

He's the little people historian?

1:43:30

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:43:31

The Culver Hotel.

1:43:32

I'm looking up the history.

1:43:33

The Culver Hotel.

1:43:34

Yeah.

1:43:35

124 of them stayed there.

1:43:36

124.

1:43:37

Fucking pardon me.

1:43:38

In seven rooms.

1:43:39

Seven rooms.

1:43:40

Bro, movies back then, I mean, it was wild.

1:43:49

Three to a bed, you weren't rough.

1:43:51

No, that's hilarious.

1:43:52

Whoa, that's crazy.

1:43:54

Debaucherous parties.

1:43:56

Sleeping three to a bed.

1:43:58

Three to a bed?

1:43:59

Wow.

1:44:00

Famous and infamous guests.

1:44:03

That's incredible.

1:44:04

Wow.

1:44:05

Yeah.

1:44:06

Yeah, they got away with a lot back then.

1:44:09

Well, Judy Garland was, I mean, they worked her hard.

1:44:12

She was only 17 years old.

1:44:14

Really?

1:44:15

Yeah.

1:44:16

And she, God, I mean, you got to see it.

1:44:19

It's worth the trip.

1:44:20

I don't love Vegas.

1:44:21

Like, I find it, it just feels hollow to me.

1:44:26

But then there's things that are worth going to Vegas to see.

1:44:29

Yeah.

1:44:30

I mean, obviously MMA fights would be amazing.

1:44:31

Yeah.

1:44:32

You want to go to Vegas, go to restaurants, go to events, and then get out.

1:44:35

Get out.

1:44:36

Get out.

1:44:37

Don't go to Circus Circus.

1:44:38

It's a 48 hour trip.

1:44:39

Yeah.

1:44:40

36 if possible.

1:44:41

Yeah.

1:44:42

The people that live there, boy, you have a different constitution than me.

1:44:45

Yeah.

1:44:46

I'm not built that way.

1:44:48

Well, Vinny Favorito's there and he's having a really good time.

1:44:51

There's only a few comics that live there.

1:44:57

Doesn't Paulie live there?

1:44:58

No, a lot of comics live there now.

1:45:00

A lot?

1:45:01

Yeah.

1:45:02

There's tax reasons.

1:45:03

A lot of them.

1:45:04

Yeah.

1:45:05

There's tax reasons.

1:45:06

And also there's so many seven night a week rooms where they pay the features

1:45:09

okay.

1:45:10

So you can actually, even if you're not headlining every week, and then you

1:45:12

have residencies.

1:45:15

What's his name?

1:45:16

Has a residency Tuesday night of Jimmy Kimmel's.

1:45:19

Oh, why am I forgetting his name?

1:45:21

He was a big Chelsea Lately comic.

1:45:23

Anyway, there's a lot of comics that live there now.

1:45:26

Interesting.

1:45:27

Interesting.

1:45:28

Because we were talking about a second location for the mothership.

1:45:32

And the two main candidates are New York City and Vegas.

1:45:38

Hmm.

1:45:39

And while I was thinking with Vegas, we would have to do it differently.

1:45:43

We would just fly in comics every week.

1:45:46

And then, you know, would we have enough local talent, I was saying, to have a

1:45:51

development

1:45:52

program.

1:45:53

So part of the program that's involved in the mothership is, one of the things

1:45:57

that always

1:45:59

bothered me, if I would go to like a really nice improv on the road, is they

1:46:01

didn't have

1:46:02

a development program.

1:46:03

They didn't have open mic nights.

1:46:04

Mm-hmm.

1:46:05

And I think, like, they were doing that because you could get a Sunday night or

1:46:07

a Monday night

1:46:09

and sell out with you or, you know, whoever.

1:46:12

Have some headliner come in and pack the place.

1:46:16

Or you could develop local talent.

1:46:18

Mm-hmm.

1:46:19

Which I think you have to do.

1:46:20

I really think, like, if you want a club to function properly, it's gotta be

1:46:24

like a place

1:46:26

where you could develop new talent.

1:46:28

Like Denver.

1:46:29

Otherwise, who's doing it?

1:46:30

Right.

1:46:31

Denver's great.

1:46:32

Yeah.

1:46:33

Denver is amazing.

1:46:34

And she has a whole program where she takes people from features and, you know,

1:46:38

like hosts

1:46:39

and makes them features.

1:46:40

And then eventually-

1:46:41

And pays them enough where they can, you know, pay their rent.

1:46:43

Yes.

1:46:44

And also makes sure that it's like a healthy community.

1:46:48

There's no hacks.

1:46:49

There's no thieves, you know.

1:46:51

And most comedy clubs don't do that.

1:46:54

They just want to make money, right?

1:46:56

So they don't pay the comics very well.

1:46:58

And they also, they don't pay, we pay different than any other club.

1:47:02

And then they, on top of that, they don't really support development.

1:47:05

We have two nights of open mic nights.

1:47:06

Mm-hmm.

1:47:07

And that was like part of the program.

1:47:08

When Adam Egan and I sat down and when we first hashed out the idea of doing

1:47:11

the club,

1:47:12

we said, the thing was like, what would be the best thing for comedy?

1:47:16

What would be the best thing in terms of like developing new comedians?

1:47:20

Well, you have to have open mic nights.

1:47:22

You have to have it.

1:47:23

And then having Kill Tony is gigantic.

1:47:25

Having a place where not only do you have this place where someone who's never

1:47:29

been on stage before could do a fucking minute in Madison Square Garden,

1:47:33

which is what a lot of people did.

1:47:35

Arenas, you get people going up for the very first time ever in front of 16,000

1:47:39

people.

1:47:40

But you also have this thing where you see someone who's a beginner do pretty

1:47:45

well and Tony invites them back.

1:47:47

And then maybe gives them a golden ticket or maybe makes them a regular where

1:47:50

they're a regular thing.

1:47:51

Every week they have the opportunity to do a new minute.

1:47:54

Or sometimes a comic will go, I want you to feature for me in Atlanta next week.

1:47:57

Always.

1:47:58

Yeah.

1:47:59

Happens all the time.

1:48:00

Well, a lot of these guys are now headlining on the road.

1:48:02

You know, guys like Ari Maddy, William Montgomery, Cam Patterson's down on

1:48:05

Saturday Night Live.

1:48:06

So the idea was to have it set up where you have enough talent to develop new

1:48:13

headliners, you know, like Boston did, like LA was at one point in time.

1:48:20

And I was thinking, I don't know if there's enough talent in Vegas, you know,

1:48:25

because you—

1:48:26

I think there is.

1:48:27

I think you'd be surprised.

1:48:29

We need headliners, right?

1:48:31

Yeah.

1:48:32

You don't need just like people that are starting out.

1:48:35

They're pretty good.

1:48:36

And I think most comedy communities are very top down, right?

1:48:39

The level of the best guys raises the level of everybody else.

1:48:44

New York City obviously has a tremendous amount of talent.

1:48:47

New York City's always been one of the best, if not the best place for talent

1:48:51

on the planet, right?

1:48:54

And then LA has always been really good.

1:48:56

But LA, a lot of people were distracted and much more interested in a career in

1:49:00

Hollywood than they were actually just being really good at stand-up.

1:49:03

Whereas New York, I always felt, was more pure.

1:49:06

Those guys like Attell and a lot of these guys, Patrice, they were just

1:49:09

interested in being great comics.

1:49:12

And guys like Sam Morel and Mark Norman now and Joe List, the pure comics.

1:49:16

Yes, yes.

1:49:17

A ton of guys.

1:49:18

There's a ton of talent there.

1:49:20

And if you set up a club in New York City, the way the mothership is, where the

1:49:25

comics get 80% of the money, where, you know, you have these nights where you're

1:49:28

developing.

1:49:29

We have a legitimate talent coordinator that's actually watching people and

1:49:33

giving them advice and giving them new spots.

1:49:35

And he has a whole database of comedians that are potentially, you know, that

1:49:39

have potential.

1:49:40

Oh, dude, no, Monday nights because I'm doing Kill Tony Monday night.

1:49:43

So I always, it's my favorite because then I go with Adam to the open mic night

1:49:47

before Kill Tony.

1:49:49

I fucking love it.

1:49:51

It's, there's always the, because it encourages weirdos.

1:49:55

Oh, of course.

1:49:56

And you get guys that are just out of their, it's like, are you homeless or are

1:50:01

you a genius?

1:50:02

Like you see.

1:50:03

Might be both.

1:50:04

Yeah, right.

1:50:05

Yeah, we had a lot of that at the store.

1:50:06

Remember potluck nights?

1:50:07

Uh-huh.

1:50:08

You know, we'd scroll, stroll in there like eight o'clock on a Monday and be

1:50:10

like, this place is crazy.

1:50:12

Yeah.

1:50:13

There's all those weirdos hanging around.

1:50:14

Yeah.

1:50:15

It's good.

1:50:16

It's good for the, good for the art form.

1:50:17

Yeah.

1:50:18

And some of those people will make it through the net.

1:50:20

You know, one out of a hundred, one out of a thousand, whatever the number is.

1:50:23

Some of those people will eventually be your peers.

1:50:26

And those will be the more interesting comics because so much of this industry

1:50:30

is about trust fund kids.

1:50:32

Like you go out to do standup comedy and whether it's LA or New York, you can't

1:50:36

afford to do it unless you've got a parent helping you pay the rent.

1:50:40

And then it's some kid who took classes at the UCB.

1:50:44

He's got a marketing degree from Villanova and they become social media

1:50:49

marketers who do really bland suburban comedy.

1:50:54

As opposed.

1:50:55

Is that a New York thing?

1:50:57

Where is that?

1:50:58

No, I see that.

1:50:59

I see that everywhere.

1:51:00

I see that everywhere.

1:51:01

That's recent.

1:51:02

Is that a recent thing?

1:51:03

I just feel like it's become so much more about marketing than about freaks

1:51:07

getting on stage because they have no other options.

1:51:09

I like comics that don't have a plan B.

1:51:12

These are people that have college.

1:51:14

They have masters in fucking marketing.

1:51:16

You know, it's like, come on, go get, make some room for the freaks.

1:51:20

Will ya?

1:51:21

Well, you can always make room for the freaks.

1:51:23

You just need a real legitimate open mic night and the freaks will always be

1:51:25

there.

1:51:26

That's what I mean.

1:51:27

That's why this is good.

1:51:28

Well, the thing about like, I know there's certain clubs that will allow

1:51:32

influencers to come in and do a night.

1:51:35

Like people that literally have no act, but they have like a big TikTok

1:51:38

following.

1:51:39

Yeah, but they'll give them like an off night, like a Monday or a Tuesday where

1:51:42

they're not excluding a real comic.

1:51:44

Sometimes not.

1:51:45

Sometimes they'll give them a fucking weekend.

1:51:47

Yeah, that sucks.

1:51:48

And I know people will come out to see them.

1:51:49

Right.

1:51:50

You know, I mean, these people sell out way in advance and people are just

1:51:53

excited that they're there, you know?

1:51:55

Well, the problem with that is when you talk about certain clubs, like the

1:51:59

Punchline in San Francisco or Denver Comedy Works, they have a brand.

1:52:03

And if I live in Denver, I know that if I go to the Comedy Works on a Friday

1:52:07

night and I don't know who's headlining, I'm going to see a quality show.

1:52:11

Yes.

1:52:12

Now, if you start bringing in a social media flunky and I go to the Denver

1:52:15

Comedy Works and I see that, I'm not going back to that club again.

1:52:19

Yeah.

1:52:20

It's bad in the long term.

1:52:21

At the Denver Comedy Works, but you might get that at one of the improvs.

1:52:24

Right.

1:52:25

You know, or one of the other corporate comedy clubs.

1:52:28

These clubs that don't have a development program, they don't think about it

1:52:30

the same, like, you can't think of comedy the same way you would think about

1:52:34

optimizing your income in any other business.

1:52:37

You can't think of it as I'm going to make the most money possible with this

1:52:40

business.

1:52:41

Because it's not that.

1:52:44

You have to think of it as like this is an art colony.

1:52:48

You're creating an art colony.

1:52:49

What's the best way to do it?

1:52:50

Make it really awesome for the people that are artists.

1:52:53

Right.

1:52:54

Make a great community.

1:52:55

Make it so it's a lot of fun.

1:52:57

Make it so that you can give people guidance and encourage them and, you know,

1:53:01

maybe give them spots on some of the bigger shows.

1:53:04

And we have a whole program like that.

1:53:06

And then our door guy program is all comics that audition.

1:53:09

All those door guys that are at the mothership, they all audition with their

1:53:12

act.

1:53:13

It's great.

1:53:14

Yeah.

1:53:15

Perfect.

1:53:16

Yeah, you know, it's good.

1:53:17

Helium does a pretty good job with that in their clubs.

1:53:19

I'm going to be in Philly next week.

1:53:21

That's a great club.

1:53:22

That's a great club.

1:53:23

Helium in Philly is one of the best.

1:53:25

I love that place.

1:53:26

And they really do develop new talent.

1:53:28

And then, you know, if they get somebody who's good, they've got five or six

1:53:31

clubs around the country

1:53:32

and they send those guys out to the future.

1:53:34

No, it's great for that.

1:53:35

It's great for that.

1:53:36

It's also they know how to do it.

1:53:37

If you go to a Helium, like the Helium in Portland's awesome.

1:53:39

Yeah.

1:53:40

You know, Portland's fucking disastrous.

1:53:42

The Helium was great.

1:53:43

Yeah.

1:53:44

They always know what they're doing.

1:53:45

And they own Cap City now, too.

1:53:47

So they're in Austin as well.

1:53:49

Yeah.

1:53:50

Which is nice.

1:53:52

They just kicked Rappaport out.

1:53:54

Who's Rappaport?

1:53:55

Michael Rappaport.

1:53:56

Kicked him out of where?

1:53:57

Cap City.

1:53:58

What do you mean kicked him out?

1:53:59

He used to perform there?

1:54:00

He was supposed to be there.

1:54:01

And they canceled his shows because of his stance.

1:54:04

Pro-Israel's stance?

1:54:05

Yeah.

1:54:06

Really?

1:54:07

Well, I don't think it's pro-Israel.

1:54:08

I think it's anti-Palestinian.

1:54:09

Oh.

1:54:10

That's what they claimed.

1:54:12

I don't know.

1:54:13

But there was enough response that they canceled his shows.

1:54:17

So weird.

1:54:18

I know.

1:54:19

They were calling him racist.

1:54:20

I was like, what?

1:54:22

Michael Rappaport?

1:54:24

It just seems weird that political stances are legitimate reasons to kick a kid

1:54:31

out of college.

1:54:33

You know?

1:54:34

One political stance.

1:54:36

Yeah.

1:54:37

One particular one.

1:54:38

Right.

1:54:39

Yeah.

1:54:40

It's nuts.

1:54:41

Well, how about that one girl?

1:54:42

Or kick somebody out of the country.

1:54:43

A college student.

1:54:44

Yeah.

1:54:45

She was a college student.

1:54:46

Was it Columbia?

1:54:47

She was.

1:54:48

But she got kicked out of class.

1:54:51

And I think they were trying to deport her because she wrote some anti-Israel

1:54:55

piece.

1:54:56

Yeah.

1:54:57

A piece.

1:54:58

Wrote it.

1:54:59

Didn't light a building on fire.

1:55:00

No, it's happened.

1:55:01

Students have been kicked out of the country.

1:55:03

That kind of influence is crazy.

1:55:06

Especially at an institution of higher learning, which is supposed to be a

1:55:09

place where you challenge

1:55:11

ideas.

1:55:12

It's supposed to be a place where if someone comes in and you have a particular

1:55:14

stance on,

1:55:15

you know, fill in the blank, whatever it is, Ukraine.

1:55:18

Someone else is supposed to say, "You're wrong and here's why."

1:55:20

Mm-hmm.

1:55:21

And then the whole audience is supposed to listen to these very compelling

1:55:23

speeches, very compelling

1:55:25

debates.

1:55:26

And you learn.

1:55:27

Yeah.

1:55:28

You learn about how people formulate opinions.

1:55:30

When I was a kid, when I was in high school, when I was at Newton South High

1:55:33

School,

1:55:34

Barney Frank came in and he had a debate with a guy from the Moral Majority.

1:55:39

Do you remember the Moral Majority?

1:55:40

Of course.

1:55:41

Yeah.

1:55:42

So that was the right wing group when we were in high school.

1:55:45

And he was a gay congressman.

1:55:46

Nobody knew he was gay at the time.

1:55:47

Mm-hmm.

1:55:48

Except me.

1:55:49

I sniffed him out.

1:55:50

No.

1:55:51

I sniffed his ass.

1:55:52

I smell 16 different things at once.

1:55:53

I did just like what my puppy does to my dog.

1:55:56

I smell fudge.

1:55:58

So I went to it and I watched it.

1:56:01

And it was really interesting because Barney Frank trounced the guy from the

1:56:04

Moral Majority.

1:56:05

The Moral Majority guy seemed like a closeted gay guy.

1:56:08

Like a weird guy.

1:56:09

Oh, that was the whole group.

1:56:10

Yeah.

1:56:11

Yeah.

1:56:12

Weird.

1:56:13

Just weird.

1:56:14

He had an American flag pin on his lapel.

1:56:15

Look at a poser.

1:56:16

There was something about the way he said.

1:56:17

It was very disingenuous.

1:56:18

The words he was ... The way he was talking didn't resonate.

1:56:20

Mm-hmm.

1:56:21

Whereas Barney Frank was like logical and intelligent.

1:56:24

And I was like, "This is good.

1:56:26

I remember being in high school and going, "This is really interesting.

1:56:29

I learned a lot from that."

1:56:30

Yeah.

1:56:31

I learned how these guys think and I learned how this guy thinks.

1:56:33

And as they went back and forth, Barney Frank was just way more prepared, just

1:56:36

way more articulate.

1:56:39

It was better.

1:56:40

Yeah.

1:56:41

And so that's why it's good to have like conservative ridiculous or progressive

1:56:46

ridiculous people,

1:56:48

anybody ridiculous.

1:56:49

Have someone debate them.

1:56:51

Have that kind of open discourse.

1:56:53

Yes.

1:56:54

When you kick someone out of school for a paper that they wrote.

1:56:57

There's a person that's legally in that class, allowed to be there, supposed to

1:57:01

be there.

1:57:02

What you're saying is you're intimidating people and keeping them from

1:57:07

expressing their opinions

1:57:09

because they don't want to be like that lady.

1:57:10

Mm-hmm.

1:57:11

They don't want to get the boot too.

1:57:12

Mm-hmm.

1:57:13

If your parents, you know, if you, your parents are from India and they scraped

1:57:17

up the money to send you to Harvard or wherever the fuck it is.

1:57:21

And you're in America.

1:57:23

And, you know, they hear about this, "You better not fucking talk some fucking

1:57:27

shit.

1:57:28

I'll fucking kick you out."

1:57:29

Like, "Dad, dad, relax.

1:57:30

I'm not going to do it."

1:57:31

Like, you'll get intimidated from speaking like that or from speaking about

1:57:36

anything that's controversial because you could perhaps get kicked out of the

1:57:40

fucking school now.

1:57:41

Yeah.

1:57:42

Which is crazy because you're forcing, you're encouraging people to self-censor.

1:57:45

You're discouraging free speech and communication and you're discouraging

1:57:48

debate and challenging ideas, which is supposed to be a giant part of being in

1:57:53

a university.

1:57:54

No, when I was at BU, which you were at for a minute, right?

1:57:58

No, I was teaching there.

1:57:59

Oh, you were teaching there.

1:58:01

The president, John Silber, who was, you know, very conservative and he was

1:58:05

pretty active in the Central American, you know, sponsoring fucking uprisings

1:58:13

in Central America.

1:58:14

So there was a professor there named, you know, this guy, he wrote the book,

1:58:20

Howard Zinn.

1:58:22

Okay.

1:58:23

So Howard Zinn was a professor there and he used to go after Silber.

1:58:28

And there was a lot of debates on campus.

1:58:30

There was kids on both sides and they kept Zinn there because they realized

1:58:34

that was a vibrant voice that students needed to hear to go against a lot of

1:58:38

what was conservative.

1:58:40

And there was anti-apartheid marches and there was a lot of politics.

1:58:45

BU was actually very much like Berkeley in the 60s.

1:58:49

BU was very outspoken.

1:58:51

And, you know, you think about the liberal, like George Carlin used to tape his

1:58:56

comedy specials at colleges.

1:58:59

Yep.

1:59:00

And they were much more conservative back then.

1:59:01

College campuses were not as liberal.

1:59:03

And he would go in there, but people were open to hearing a different voice.

1:59:06

Yeah.

1:59:07

Especially if it was fun.

1:59:08

And now Seinfeld won't even play at colleges.

1:59:10

I think he said he does play colleges.

1:59:11

Oh, he does.

1:59:12

He said it's not that true.

1:59:13

But I think Chris Rock does.

1:59:14

I don't.

1:59:15

I haven't in a long, I stopped doing them a long time ago.

1:59:17

Hmm.

1:59:18

I remember I was doing a show in Miami and I was talking about sex.

1:59:21

And I remember saying, I remember like, I saw a lot of them look confused.

1:59:26

I go, how many people are virgins?

1:59:28

And a bunch of people clapped and raised their hands.

1:59:30

I go, fuck, that's crazy.

1:59:34

I'm like, you should not be hearing about blowjobs from me.

1:59:38

Especially in this context in a joke form.

1:59:44

This is nuts.

1:59:45

I was like, there's just not enough life experience.

1:59:48

Yeah.

1:59:49

People are so set in their ways.

1:59:50

Also, they're so ready to like protest things.

1:59:54

They're so ready to show that you're wrong.

1:59:56

And they're so ready to heckle.

1:59:58

Oh.

1:59:59

Yeah.

2:00:00

Christ.

2:00:01

Yeah.

2:00:02

It's just not worth it.

2:00:03

I want people with like bills.

2:00:04

I want people that have like fucking breakups and divorces and life experience.

2:00:07

They had a couple of cocktails.

2:00:09

Those are my people.

2:00:10

Let's talk some shit.

2:00:11

Let's have some fun.

2:00:12

Yeah.

2:00:13

I want people that have lived life.

2:00:14

Yeah.

2:00:15

And I don't want people that, I don't even want high school graduates at my

2:00:18

shows.

2:00:19

Can you imagine going and doing a show at a high school?

2:00:21

Oh my God.

2:00:22

What?

2:00:23

I did one at, when I was, I was doing a bunch, I used to do a lot of colleges.

2:00:27

When I was coming up in my twenties, dude, I paid the rent.

2:00:29

Oh yeah.

2:00:30

I did a lot of those too.

2:00:31

I used to go out.

2:00:32

I'd make like a thousand bucks a show.

2:00:33

I'd be on, I'd do 10 shows in seven days cause I would do nooners.

2:00:38

So I would get, I would rent a car in Chicago and then I would drive through

2:00:42

North Dakota,

2:00:43

fucking Minnesota in January through snow storms.

2:00:46

I'd do a noon show.

2:00:47

I remember once I was in a cafeteria.

2:00:51

Nobody knew there was going to be comedy.

2:00:53

They're all just eating lunch.

2:00:55

And all of a sudden there's no stage, there's no light.

2:00:57

I got a microphone and I am plugged into the same speakers as the pizza joint.

2:01:04

So I would be in the middle of a joke and I'd be like, Ronnie pepperoni up in

2:01:09

the window.

2:01:11

I had a similar gig with Mike Clark.

2:01:13

Oh really?

2:01:14

A one off.

2:01:15

He only did it one time and I was the comic that did it.

2:01:17

And it was a waiting room for a restaurant.

2:01:19

It was an enormous restaurant down the Cape.

2:01:22

And you know, you're waiting for your table to get ready and you're in a lounge.

2:01:26

And I was telling jokes, I'm like, Johnson party of five, Johnson party of five,

2:01:30

your table's ready.

2:01:31

I'm like, oh no.

2:01:32

And when I realized it came up, it became the running gag of my set and it was

2:01:36

fun.

2:01:37

It was fun.

2:01:38

Well, you remember we used to do those gigs in New England where if there was a,

2:01:41

if the Red Sox were in the playoffs, that TV, the sound might be off, but the

2:01:44

TV was staying on.

2:01:46

Always.

2:01:47

Yeah.

2:01:48

Yeah.

2:01:49

Hockey games.

2:01:50

Yeah.

2:01:51

I remember doing games.

2:01:52

And by the way, you wanted it on because if they shut it off and then you had

2:01:54

to do comedy,

2:01:55

that was even worse.

2:01:56

Yeah.

2:01:57

Right.

2:01:58

Right.

2:01:59

That was even worse.

2:02:00

And if they lost the game, that was bad.

2:02:01

Yeah.

2:02:02

Then they turn on you.

2:02:03

You did it.

2:02:04

Dude, the first night I ever did standup comedy, and then I didn't, I didn't do

2:02:07

it for

2:02:08

a little while after this, but my first night was the night that the New

2:02:11

England Patriots

2:02:12

lost to the Chicago bears was 1986.

2:02:15

Oh no.

2:02:16

And they got fucking crushed.

2:02:18

I forget what the score was, but it was bad.

2:02:21

And I went on comedy hell that night.

2:02:23

George McDonald brought me up on comedy hell at Stitches comedy club.

2:02:27

And I tanked it.

2:02:28

Wow.

2:02:29

Yeah.

2:02:30

I didn't go up on stage again for a while after that.

2:02:35

Comedy hell was great.

2:02:36

Comedy hell.

2:02:37

Remember he used to do that little run at the beginning of the show.

2:02:40

He, this was a, this was the open mic night in Boston for years.

2:02:44

Yeah.

2:02:45

And Sunday night at Stitches.

2:02:46

And this was like, I mean, the lineups when we were doing it, this, the open

2:02:50

mic night

2:02:51

was like me, you, Dane, Bill Burr was a little bit after us.

2:02:58

And Marc Maron would be on there and fucking Louie would be there.

2:03:03

Mm-hmm.

2:03:04

And, uh, and he would start the show by going, uh, welcome to comedy hell where

2:03:08

the pipe dreams

2:03:09

of a handful of comedy yokos can soar as high as the lights on Broadway or

2:03:14

crash and burn

2:03:16

in that fiery pit known only as comedy hell.

2:03:19

And then you would see guys who are like legit pros who do guest spots.

2:03:25

Like I remember one time I watched Teddy Bergeron when Teddy was in his prime

2:03:30

and people forgot

2:03:31

about Teddy Bergeron.

2:03:32

It's really unfortunate cause he had a bunch of personal and substance issues

2:03:35

that kind

2:03:36

of derailed his career.

2:03:37

But when he was on in his prime, he was so smooth and so slick.

2:03:44

And I remember watching him cause I'd only done comedy like twice at that time.

2:03:47

And he went up and did a set.

2:03:48

I was like, I should quit now.

2:03:49

Yeah.

2:03:50

There's no way.

2:03:51

Yeah.

2:03:52

This is so far away from me.

2:03:53

This is so good.

2:03:54

Mm-hmm.

2:03:55

It's so polished.

2:03:56

And then he had that big set on the tonight show.

2:03:58

And remember we played the piano.

2:04:00

Mm-hmm.

2:04:01

You ever see that set that he had on the tonight show?

2:04:02

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:04:03

Fucking genius.

2:04:04

Sat down on the couch with Johnny and his first, Johnny brought him over on his

2:04:07

first appearance.

2:04:08

It was like, oh my God, Teddy Bergeron's going to be a star.

2:04:11

Then apparently like he's in Hollywood, went off the rails.

2:04:14

Just went off the rails and drugs and went crazy and partying and it never

2:04:17

worked out for him.

2:04:19

No, and then he-

2:04:20

He should have been huge.

2:04:21

But did you hear what happened after that tonight show set?

2:04:23

What?

2:04:24

Like he wasn't popular in Boston.

2:04:26

He had a huge ego and then the drinking got bad.

2:04:30

And so he did the tonight show and then he was face down drunk in front of the

2:04:33

next comedy stop laying on the stairs.

2:04:36

And Don Gavin just walked by and he looked at me and he goes, "Didn't I see you

2:04:38

on the tonight show?"

2:04:40

He had a huge ego? They didn't like him?

2:04:45

I don't know.

2:04:47

Is that what it was?

2:04:48

Because a lot of those guys got very resentful of guys who left Boston and made

2:04:52

it.

2:04:53

Yeah.

2:04:54

There was a lot of what about me?

2:04:55

Right.

2:04:56

What about me?

2:04:57

There was a lot of that when Steven Wright made it.

2:04:58

Right.

2:04:59

A lot of guys got very pissed because Steven Wright, he's not even a fucking

2:05:01

headliner.

2:05:02

There was a lot of that.

2:05:03

Well, you know about the night that he got the tonight show, right?

2:05:06

The guy, Jim Downey, who was the booker for the tonight show.

2:05:10

This is back in the 80s, early 80s.

2:05:13

And he hears about this comedy scene in Boston because you got Sweeney and

2:05:17

Gavin and Kenny Rogerson.

2:05:18

Killers.

2:05:19

Killers.

2:05:20

And it was one of the first cities to really explode in terms of clubs popping

2:05:25

up everywhere and lines of people getting into the shows.

2:05:28

And so Jim Downey goes, "All right, let me check it out."

2:05:31

So he flies to Boston and there was this club called the Ding Ho, which was the

2:05:36

first place to really house Boston.

2:05:39

How's comedy in Boston?

2:05:42

So they get the best of, get all lined up and they're in the green room and

2:05:46

they're chopping up lines of blow and they're getting on stage and there are

2:05:51

jokes about,

2:05:52

"What about the hair in Malden?

2:05:54

It's not as big as the hair in Ravia."

2:05:56

And it's like, "That's not going to play on the tonight show."

2:05:59

Right.

2:06:00

And they're killing, but none of it is right for the tonight show.

2:06:03

And then Steven Wright, they put him on out of pity at the end of the show.

2:06:10

And I remember, I'm not going to say which, but one of the comedians had pulled

2:06:14

Steve aside and said, "Look, Steven, he'd been struggling for years, not doing

2:06:18

well."

2:06:19

And they go, "This is not for you, man.

2:06:21

You got to try something else."

2:06:22

Wow.

2:06:23

So Steven Wright goes up and he does his set and he does good.

2:06:26

And they fly him out the next week for the tonight show.

2:06:29

He was the only one that got it.

2:06:30

And they were irate.

2:06:32

And he killed so hard, Johnny said, "Stay in town.

2:06:36

We're going to bring you back next week."

2:06:37

And he did the show like four or five times that first year and exploded and

2:06:41

was one of the biggest comics of the '80s.

2:06:43

Wow.

2:06:45

That "Fran Salomita" documentary when stand-up stood out is great for anybody

2:06:49

who's interested.

2:06:50

It was a very unusual time.

2:06:52

And you and I caught the wave after it had crested.

2:06:56

So it kind of really broke in like '82 to '84.

2:07:00

You and I came in and I came in at '88.

2:07:03

And you did the '86 set, that one set.

2:07:05

But then you did it again.

2:07:06

I started in '88.

2:07:07

Yeah.

2:07:08

Right before me.

2:07:09

Or the same week.

2:07:10

We started like the same week.

2:07:11

Yeah.

2:07:12

Yeah.

2:07:13

Yeah.

2:07:14

It was crazy.

2:07:15

Still really good, but it was still building.

2:07:16

Drifting away.

2:07:17

Yeah, yeah.

2:07:18

Within the next two years, it had died off significantly.

2:07:20

Well, what happened was there was so much comedy on TV.

2:07:24

There was all these, you know, one-hour shows where everybody did a six-minute

2:07:27

set.

2:07:28

One-minute set, comedy on the road.

2:07:30

Yep.

2:07:31

Half-hour comedy hour on MTV.

2:07:32

Half-hour comedy hour.

2:07:33

And so it got kind of overexposed.

2:07:38

And so the club started opening everywhere.

2:07:41

And then as it fell off, they started papering the rooms and giving out free

2:07:45

passes.

2:07:46

And so, I mean, I still experience, you know, if I go into a new market,

2:07:50

especially if it's

2:07:51

like an improv where it's five or six hundred seats and I'm there for five

2:07:54

shows, they'll

2:07:56

give out a fair amount of free passes.

2:07:58

Dude, I feel that immediately.

2:08:00

Yeah.

2:08:01

It's not the same crowd.

2:08:02

Yeah.

2:08:03

They're not really that interested in it.

2:08:04

It was just something to do.

2:08:05

Yeah.

2:08:06

Yeah.

2:08:07

They're not committed to it.

2:08:08

So then it just, and then there were so many rooms and not enough comedians to

2:08:12

do well

2:08:13

in those rooms.

2:08:14

Right.

2:08:15

And so it kind of sagged and it went away.

2:08:17

And I really wonder now, like we've been in a, COVID launched, post-COVID

2:08:21

launched comedy,

2:08:23

like it's never been at these heights that it's at right now.

2:08:26

I mean, you got, you got people like you doing arenas and there's, there's not

2:08:30

a couple.

2:08:32

There's a, there's, you know, a dozen people doing arena shows now.

2:08:35

At least.

2:08:36

Yeah.

2:08:37

And then you've got theaters of different sizes.

2:08:39

Then you've got clubs of different sizes.

2:08:40

Then you've got little pop-up shows all over.

2:08:43

Don't tell comedy.

2:08:44

You know about this thing where they just do like pop-up shows.

2:08:47

They basically have a mailing list and they'll announce like the day before

2:08:50

they're doing a

2:08:52

show and it'll sell out.

2:08:53

It's everywhere.

2:08:54

Wow.

2:08:55

So I really, yeah, everybody's wondering, when does this one end?

2:08:59

It start, it feels like it's starting to get a little softer.

2:09:02

People are talking about it.

2:09:03

Well, it just all depends on how much talent's generated.

2:09:06

Yeah.

2:09:07

So if you have clubs that are trying to generate new talent, there's no reason

2:09:10

why it can't

2:09:11

be just like Boston.

2:09:12

Yep.

2:09:13

Like Austin, the street where we have the mothership on, there's seven clubs

2:09:17

within walking distance.

2:09:19

Seven that are at least three, four nights a week.

2:09:22

There's the Sunset Room that's Red Band's room that's right down the street

2:09:25

from our club,

2:09:26

which is great.

2:09:27

You got Creek in the Cave, which is great.

2:09:29

One block away.

2:09:30

You got the Vulcan, which is great.

2:09:32

Another two blocks away.

2:09:33

It's crazy.

2:09:34

Just on that street.

2:09:35

You got the Black Rabbit.

2:09:36

You got the Velveeta Room.

2:09:38

Then you got Cap City where a lot of headliners come in, which is about 20

2:09:42

minutes away.

2:09:43

Are there little outs?

2:09:44

Like when we started in Boston, there was rooms in the suburbs in every

2:09:47

direction.

2:09:48

All over the place.

2:09:49

Is there that?

2:09:50

Yeah.

2:09:51

All over the place.

2:09:52

Because that's where you can actually make some money.

2:09:53

Yeah.

2:09:54

Well, a lot of these comics book places now.

2:09:55

They'll book a comedy night at a barbecue place, comedy night at a bar.

2:09:58

They'll go to Dripping Springs.

2:09:59

They'll go to here.

2:10:00

They'll go to there.

2:10:01

I was just talking to a guy the other day.

2:10:02

He's like, yeah, we're doing a comedy night at my club.

2:10:04

I'm like, that's fucking great.

2:10:05

You ever do any of them?

2:10:06

No.

2:10:07

No.

2:10:08

No.

2:10:09

I remember when I was at Skank Fest a couple of months ago and Mark Norman's

2:10:18

from New Orleans.

2:10:19

Yeah.

2:10:20

And it's fucking nuts.

2:10:23

Literally from the time you wake up until five in the morning where you end up

2:10:28

at Larry

2:10:29

Flint's Barely Legal Club, which Louis C.K. has this whole thing about the

2:10:33

barely legal.

2:10:35

Like, all right, here's the pitch.

2:10:37

She's barely legal.

2:10:39

I won't do his bit, but it's very funny.

2:10:41

But the point is, like, Mark Norman is there.

2:10:44

And I run into a comic and they go, yeah, yeah, I have this little bar show.

2:10:48

And, yeah, Mark Norman just came by and did it.

2:10:51

Like, I was like, how fucking cool is that?

2:10:52

Oh, he drops in everywhere.

2:10:53

Yeah.

2:10:54

Yeah.

2:10:55

He does, when he's in town doing the mothership, he'll go down the street, do a

2:10:57

bunch of sets.

2:10:58

Yeah, yeah.

2:10:59

But that's the New York way.

2:11:00

Yeah.

2:11:01

You know, they go, they do 10 minutes here, 10 minutes there.

2:11:02

Right.

2:11:03

They hop from club to club.

2:11:04

Yeah.

2:11:05

They're used to that.

2:11:06

You got to do Skank Fest.

2:11:07

Even stop by Skank Fest for 24 hours.

2:11:10

They've got a nude roast where literally everybody on stage is nude, including

2:11:15

the judges.

2:11:17

And then they've got boxing, comedians boxing each other outside.

2:11:22

The green room is filled with mushrooms and acid and weed and open bars.

2:11:28

And then you've got, I mean, it's basically, it's kind of like when we used to

2:11:32

go to the Montreal Comedy Festival, you got big by doing a set in front of the

2:11:38

industry, getting a deal, and then hopefully getting on TV.

2:11:42

That doesn't exist anymore.

2:11:43

Right.

2:11:44

Now it's about how do I get canceled?

2:11:46

That's how you get famous.

2:11:47

And this is a festival that is trying to help you get canceled.

2:11:51

You got 7,000 people with cell phones taping you, you know, going on stage and,

2:11:56

you know, saying the most horrendous shit.

2:11:59

Yeah.

2:12:00

It is fucking great.

2:12:01

Yeah.

2:12:02

Everybody who goes says it's awesome.

2:12:03

Yeah.

2:12:04

I fully support it.

2:12:05

I support the idea.

2:12:06

I think it's really good for comedy.

2:12:08

And it's also like just, it's like the Vegas version of a comedy festival.

2:12:14

You know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, like go nuts.

2:12:17

All right.

2:12:18

You know, it's New Year's Eve.

2:12:19

Go nuts.

2:12:20

Yeah.

2:12:21

It's Skank Fest.

2:12:22

Go nuts.

2:12:23

And I said the winner, they reunite the winner with her family, with her

2:12:29

parents.

2:12:31

They were like, I mean, it's Skank Fest nines, Skank Fest tens, which would be

2:12:36

like sixes in other places.

2:12:38

A lot of guys with like cargo shorts and black sneakers and like anthrax t-shirts

2:12:44

and mullets.

2:12:46

Subscription to Gas Digital.

2:12:48

Yeah.

2:12:49

Girlfriends that are impossibly hotter than they should deserve.

2:12:54

I don't know what that quotient is, but there was a lot of that.

2:12:57

That's interesting.

2:12:58

Yeah.

2:12:59

Yeah.

2:13:00

It's good.

2:13:01

Comedy's at a good place right now.

2:13:02

Tom O'Neill came with me this year.

2:13:04

Oh, really?

2:13:05

And Trussell was having his podcast and I introduced Tom to Duncan.

2:13:08

Well, first me, Tom and Duncan were talking for like-

2:13:11

We should tell everybody Tom O'Neill's the guy who wrote Chaos.

2:13:13

Oh, right.

2:13:14

Of course.

2:13:15

The Charles Manson book.

2:13:16

Yes.

2:13:17

Who you introduced me to, which by the way, you have never recommended anybody

2:13:18

for the

2:13:19

podcast before.

2:13:20

That's right.

2:13:21

But that guy, you're like, dude, you got to talk to him because I know how much

2:13:24

you're

2:13:24

into Manson and how much you're into that story.

2:13:26

CIA.

2:13:27

It's all in there.

2:13:29

Crazy.

2:13:30

Yeah.

2:13:31

That book is bananas.

2:13:32

It's bananas.

2:13:33

He's working on another volume right now.

2:13:35

Really?

2:13:36

Yeah.

2:13:37

Is it going to be another 20 years?

2:13:38

Has he got an editor helping him?

2:13:39

No, because what happened is it took 20 years last time because he just kept

2:13:42

going down

2:13:43

rabbit holes.

2:13:44

And then finally his, well, you know, first he got a big deal from a major

2:13:49

publisher.

2:13:50

And after seven or eight years, they sued him to get the money.

2:13:53

They gave him a lot of money and they sued him to get it back.

2:13:56

And then he's driving an Uber.

2:13:57

He's teaching English as a second language.

2:13:59

He's fucking, you know, drinking, drinking booze out of a paper cup.

2:14:03

And so then it had to have paid off though.

2:14:06

The book.

2:14:07

No.

2:14:08

So what happened was, what happened was then his publisher said, look, come on,

2:14:11

there's

2:14:11

something here.

2:14:12

He paired him up with this other guy.

2:14:14

I wish I could remember the guy's name right now, Dan, Dan something.

2:14:17

And he reined Tom in and in one year he took, he had shelves around his

2:14:23

apartment filled with

2:14:26

binders, with notes.

2:14:27

He had boxes of cassette tapes of interviews.

2:14:31

And this guy somehow got in there and Corey, Corey, Dan Piper Berg.

2:14:37

Yeah.

2:14:38

Who is a very successful biographer.

2:14:40

What is his name again?

2:14:41

Dan Piper Berg.

2:14:42

Push that up again.

2:14:44

Pipe and Bring.

2:14:47

Oh, Pipe and Bring.

2:14:48

Yeah.

2:14:49

Okay.

2:14:50

So he, uh, so he reined him in and got the book out in a year and they were

2:14:54

able to resell

2:14:56

it for a lot of the money, paid back the back debt.

2:14:59

And now he's hitting, I don't want to talk about Tom's finances, but he's doing

2:15:03

very well.

2:15:04

I know so many people that have read that book.

2:15:07

Yeah.

2:15:08

Yeah.

2:15:09

I mean, I've talked about it a hundred times.

2:15:10

Yeah.

2:15:11

It's amazing.

2:15:12

It's amazing.

2:15:13

It's all true.

2:15:14

That's what's nuts.

2:15:15

Like the stuff that's verifiable, factual evidence in that story makes you go,

2:15:19

what the

2:15:20

fuck else did they do that we don't know about?

2:15:22

Right.

2:15:23

Because Tom is a real journalist.

2:15:24

He didn't put anything in there that wasn't triple corroborated.

2:15:27

Right.

2:15:28

And he even to his credit at the end does not say this happened.

2:15:33

Right.

2:15:34

He said, I never found the smoking gun.

2:15:36

So here's all the evidence.

2:15:37

Right.

2:15:38

Take what you will from it.

2:15:39

It's a bunch of, I mean, the thing about Tom is he comes from a family of

2:15:43

geniuses.

2:15:44

His brother is the American ambassador to Haiti.

2:15:46

Wow.

2:15:47

Like they're all like PhDs up there.

2:15:49

He's brilliant.

2:15:50

And so he's also Irish and he's a great Irish storyteller.

2:15:54

So each chapter, whether you're talking about Jolly West or whatever, they're

2:15:58

just, each chapter

2:16:01

is a great story.

2:16:02

Yeah.

2:16:03

On top of being good journalism.

2:16:04

It's an amazing book.

2:16:05

Yeah.

2:16:06

I might reread it.

2:16:07

I might go back.

2:16:08

Don't listen to it on tape.

2:16:10

He hates the book on tape.

2:16:11

I thought it was great.

2:16:12

I listened to it on tape.

2:16:13

Oh, really?

2:16:14

Yeah.

2:16:15

Oh, okay.

2:16:16

I loved it.

2:16:17

Yeah.

2:16:18

I would understand why you hate someone else speaking your words, but he

2:16:20

probably should

2:16:21

have done it.

2:16:22

Yeah.

2:16:23

Why didn't he do it?

2:16:24

He's a good speaker.

2:16:25

He was great on the podcast.

2:16:27

He, yeah, he was great on the podcast.

2:16:30

He could do it.

2:16:31

He got better in his early interviews.

2:16:33

I used to say, Tom, you look like you're a hostage giving out a message to the,

2:16:36

from the

2:16:38

captors with a gun at your head.

2:16:39

And then he got really good at it.

2:16:41

Well, on mine, he was very loose.

2:16:42

Yeah.

2:16:43

Very comfortable.

2:16:44

But he also knew it was friendly territory.

2:16:46

Yeah.

2:16:47

He knew that I'm a very good friend of yours and that I was really excited

2:16:49

about it.

2:16:51

Yeah.

2:16:52

And it was going to help him.

2:16:53

Yeah.

2:16:54

If he does a second one, I would encourage him to read it.

2:16:56

I would encourage him to read it.

2:16:57

I think.

2:16:58

Yes.

2:16:59

He could kill it.

2:17:00

Oh, a hundred percent.

2:17:01

I'd have him back on.

2:17:02

I'd have him back on before he does it just to talk about it.

2:17:04

Yeah.

2:17:05

You know what I mean?

2:17:06

I think the impact of that book has opened up a lot of people's eyes to the

2:17:08

fucking shenanigans

2:17:09

that were going on back then.

2:17:10

Yeah.

2:17:11

When we were at Skank Fest, so Duncan and I are talking to Tom for like a half

2:17:15

an hour

2:17:16

and Duncan doesn't know who, I just introduced him as Tom.

2:17:19

And then when I brought up Chaos and that he wrote it, Duncan's jaw dropped

2:17:23

because he's

2:17:23

obsessed with the book.

2:17:24

Yeah.

2:17:25

So he was doing a live podcast from Skank Fest.

2:17:27

He hadn't booked guests yet, so he booked me and Tom to come on his podcast.

2:17:31

Oh wow.

2:17:32

And then Kurt Metzger also, which was hilarious.

2:17:35

Oh no!

2:17:36

Because Tom is trying to stay on point and get to these things.

2:17:39

And Metzger is sitting there.

2:17:40

He's smoking a joint the size of my forearm and just cracking up.

2:17:44

And just chiming in every 15 seconds.

2:17:45

Oh my God.

2:17:46

He was manic.

2:17:47

It was so funny.

2:17:48

Wrangling him on a podcast is so different than anybody else because he'll go

2:17:52

one subject

2:17:53

to the next subject.

2:17:54

You don't know?

2:17:55

What about this and the Kissingers?

2:17:56

You don't know?

2:17:57

You don't know about the Rockefellers?

2:17:58

You don't know about this?

2:17:59

What they did in the 60s?

2:18:00

You're like, okay, go back to the first thing you said about what's in school

2:18:04

lunches.

2:18:05

You got to bring him back on point.

2:18:09

Well, that's why his girlfriend is so great because she is a mini wrangler of

2:18:14

Kurt.

2:18:15

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:18:16

She can keep him on point a little bit.

2:18:17

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:18:18

He's hilarious.

2:18:19

Yeah, he's great.

2:18:20

He's such a funny dude.

2:18:21

I know.

2:18:22

And a good writer.

2:18:23

He's written on a lot of big shows.

2:18:24

Oh, he's a great joke writer.

2:18:25

Yeah.

2:18:26

He came on the last time he did my episode, my podcast rather, the episode he

2:18:30

dressed up like

2:18:30

John Lilly, who's the psychedelic pioneer from the 70s.

2:18:33

So he had a coonskin hat on and a wig, and he put on a one-handed glove with a

2:18:39

skeleton

2:18:40

fingers on it.

2:18:41

I go, what do you do?

2:18:42

No one even knows who John Lilly is.

2:18:44

This is so crazy.

2:18:45

Yeah, he feels like the kind of guy that is not hung up on getting famous or

2:18:49

getting rich.

2:18:50

He just really enjoys like ideas and communicating ideas.

2:18:55

Yeah, exactly.

2:18:56

There he is.

2:18:57

Oh, that's hilarious.

2:18:58

He's a fun hang in the green room too.

2:19:05

He's such a maniac.

2:19:06

By the way, today is the, this is the 25th time I've been on your podcast.

2:19:10

Holy shit, dude.

2:19:11

I was looking up yesterday.

2:19:12

I was like, how many times I've been on the fucking show?

2:19:13

This is the 25th.

2:19:14

That's crazy.

2:19:15

Yeah.

2:19:16

Because we used to do it all the time when you were just starting out.

2:19:19

I know.

2:19:20

Yeah.

2:19:21

And a lot of times it was at the Ice House.

2:19:23

Mm-hmm.

2:19:24

Yeah.

2:19:25

We did the Ice House.

2:19:26

He did it at my house.

2:19:27

Yeah.

2:19:28

And then when I finally got a little mini studio and a little strip mall.

2:19:32

Yeah.

2:19:33

I know.

2:19:34

It was crazy.

2:19:35

Those Ice House shows were crazy because we would have a standup show going and

2:19:40

then you'd

2:19:40

have about six people on the podcast with a joint going the entire time in this

2:19:45

small room.

2:19:46

And, and I don't, I have never been high on stage in my life except for those

2:19:51

shows because it was secondhand smoke.

2:19:53

I would literally get so baked in.

2:19:55

And then I remember going on stage and then, so you would go from the podcast

2:19:59

to the stage.

2:20:00

Yeah.

2:20:01

And then you'd come back on the podcast.

2:20:02

People would just swap out.

2:20:03

Yeah.

2:20:04

Ice House Chronicles.

2:20:05

Yeah.

2:20:06

Oh my God, dude.

2:20:07

We're all doing something similar to that at the mothership, like putting

2:20:10

together a podcast

2:20:11

studio at the mothership.

2:20:12

Uh-huh.

2:20:13

We have considered doing that.

2:20:14

Do you have space for it?

2:20:15

No.

2:20:16

But I thought about buying another building next to me, you know, and then like

2:20:21

doing

2:20:21

something else with that too.

2:20:23

Yeah.

2:20:24

Build another stage too.

2:20:25

I don't think so.

2:20:26

I think we have enough stages.

2:20:28

Yeah.

2:20:29

Yeah.

2:20:30

I think the next move in terms of a club would be we go to another city and try

2:20:35

to do the

2:20:35

same thing and really put a lot of time and money and effort into making it

2:20:41

right.

2:20:42

Really making it right.

2:20:43

Buying a building.

2:20:44

One thing I thought would be really crazy if I could buy a big building in New

2:20:49

York and

2:20:49

recreate the exact interior of the mothership.

2:20:52

Mm-hmm.

2:20:53

Exactly.

2:20:54

Well, that's what the punchline did in Sacramento.

2:20:59

It's almost the same room as the San Francisco one.

2:21:01

Oh, really?

2:21:02

And then I think the Comedy Cellar Vegas room is similar to the New York room.

2:21:08

Ah, that's good.

2:21:09

Yeah.

2:21:10

Yeah.

2:21:11

I thought about literally recreating it with the two staircases to the two

2:21:14

separate rooms.

2:21:15

Yeah.

2:21:16

Like finding a building that has the same dimensions or similar dimensions.

2:21:19

It's kind of perfect.

2:21:20

Yeah.

2:21:21

I love the walk to the stage because you're in the green room and you got to go

2:21:26

down a flight

2:21:27

of stairs and then you kind of feel the show over your head as you're walking

2:21:30

underneath

2:21:31

it.

2:21:32

Yeah, you're in a tunnel under the crowd.

2:21:33

You pop up.

2:21:34

Yeah.

2:21:35

We built all that.

2:21:36

There was no tunnel there before.

2:21:37

We made all that.

2:21:38

Oh, no shit.

2:21:39

We had to build all that.

2:21:40

Oh, wow.

2:21:41

Yeah.

2:21:42

That was an idea the architect Richard came up with.

2:21:44

Yeah.

2:21:45

We just decided somewhere along the line, like, what was the best way to get to

2:21:47

the state?

2:21:47

We're trying to figure out how to get to the stage.

2:21:49

You don't want to have to go through the crowd.

2:21:51

And he came up with the idea of a tunnel.

2:21:53

And it was based on, there's like some folklore or mythology around tunnels in

2:21:59

Austin

2:22:00

that connect clubs.

2:22:01

And like, he was all big on the history of Austin.

2:22:04

I feel like it goes back to the gladiators too, walking under the arena.

2:22:08

Well, that's why if you go into the green room, all those posters on the wall

2:22:13

are all

2:22:13

people that actually performed at the Ritz.

2:22:15

Oh, no shit.

2:22:16

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:22:17

Yeah.

2:22:18

When you look up, you see Willie Nelson, Black Flag, all those guys, they

2:22:21

actually performed

2:22:22

Stevie Ray Vaughan.

2:22:23

Uh-huh.

2:22:24

They actually performed at the Ritz.

2:22:26

There's a photo of Stevie Ray Vaughan as you're walking to the stage.

2:22:29

Yeah, yeah, right.

2:22:30

That photo is him on stage at the Ritz.

2:22:32

Wow.

2:22:33

In, I think, 1983 or something like that.

2:22:35

Damn.

2:22:36

Yeah, so it was a rock and roll club for a long time.

2:22:38

Isn't it funny how Stevie Ray Vaughan and Bill Hicks are kind of the same guy?

2:22:41

In what way?

2:22:42

I just feel like they're outlaw Texans who just like free expression and balls.

2:22:48

Genius.

2:22:49

And they kind of had the same style, like the way they dressed and hair.

2:22:54

And I just always think of them as the same guy.

2:22:56

Interesting.

2:22:57

Most people think of Alex Jones as Bill Hicks.

2:22:59

Like there's a rumor that Alex Jones is Bill Hicks.

2:23:02

Which makes no sense.

2:23:06

When's the last time you had that guy on the show?

2:23:07

Oh, it's been a while.

2:23:09

Uh, it was probably a few years ago.

2:23:11

Yeah.

2:23:12

I see him occasionally.

2:23:13

Yeah.

2:23:14

Yeah.

2:23:15

They're still trying to get a billion dollars out of him.

2:23:17

They're still trying to...

2:23:18

The Connecticut shooting families?

2:23:19

Yeah.

2:23:20

Yeah.

2:23:21

It's crazy.

2:23:22

Does he have a billion dollars?

2:23:23

No.

2:23:24

No.

2:23:25

I think they made him liquidate his business.

2:23:28

I don't know what's going on with it now.

2:23:30

Jesus.

2:23:31

It's crazy.

2:23:32

Yeah.

2:23:33

But the rumor was that he was Bill Hicks.

2:23:34

That Bill Hicks was actually Alex Jones.

2:23:37

That's funny.

2:23:38

Crazy.

2:23:39

They're all alive at the same time.

2:23:40

They're very different people.

2:23:41

Oh.

2:23:42

But it doesn't have to be logical for it to be a good conspiracy.

2:23:46

Yeah.

2:23:47

You know, there's people that still think Tupac's alive.

2:23:49

Yeah.

2:23:50

There's a lot of goofy ass conspiracies.

2:23:51

People think Jim Morrison's alive.

2:23:53

Oh, yeah.

2:23:54

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:23:55

Who's the other one?

2:23:56

Oh, Andy Kaufman, of course.

2:23:58

Oh, right.

2:23:59

I had...

2:24:00

Who was his sidekick?

2:24:02

Andy Kaufman's sidekick?

2:24:04

Bob Zemuda.

2:24:06

Bob Zemuda, yeah.

2:24:07

I had Bob Zemuda.

2:24:08

He had written a book about Andy Kaufman and claiming he's still alive.

2:24:12

So, he comes over to my...

2:24:14

I was doing my show in my garage at that point.

2:24:17

And he comes over and about 45 minutes into the podcast, I go, "So, how does

2:24:24

Andy's family

2:24:25

feel about you saying this stuff about him still being alive?"

2:24:28

And he's like, "Oh, they're fine with that."

2:24:30

I said, "Oh, I kind of heard that they're a little miffed, that they think it's

2:24:34

disrespectful,

2:24:35

he's clearly dead."

2:24:36

And we'll...

2:24:37

So, we go back and forth, and it gets super heated.

2:24:41

And he flips out, and he throws his chair over, and he fucking storms out.

2:24:46

And that was the end of the podcast.

2:24:48

And I was just like, "All right, that was weird."

2:24:50

And I'm here to announce for the first time, that was a fake.

2:24:56

It was an Andy Kaufman-esque stunt.

2:24:59

Really?

2:25:00

That he flipped out and left the podcast.

2:25:01

Yeah.

2:25:02

And you never talked about it?

2:25:03

Nope.

2:25:04

We did it in the spirit of Andy Kaufman.

2:25:08

And people were probably like, "Oh, my God, this is so crazy."

2:25:10

That's hilarious to go asking about it.

2:25:12

"Bob Zamuda meltdown on Greg Fitzsimmons' podcast, a very interesting

2:25:15

conversation,

2:25:16

but when it escalates at the end, it just blows up.

2:25:18

Question, real or Kaufman-esque stunt?"

2:25:21

Oh, that's funny.

2:25:23

That's funny.

2:25:24

And you kept it under wraps this entire time?

2:25:26

I've never talked about it.

2:25:27

That's funny.

2:25:28

Yeah.

2:25:29

Well, that makes sense with Zamuda.

2:25:30

He would do that Tony Clifton character.

2:25:32

Oh, my God.

2:25:33

That's so funny.

2:25:34

He would dress up as Andy Kaufman's Tony Clifton and do appearances.

2:25:39

Well, yeah.

2:25:40

Andy would say, "I'm coming to Vegas to do the Tony Clifton character."

2:25:44

And then Zamuda would be the one doing it.

2:25:47

And people would always be going like, "What the fuck?

2:25:49

I just paid $150 to see Andy Kaufman."

2:25:52

Yeah, he did a lot of odd stuff.

2:25:57

Yeah.

2:25:58

Remember when he worked as a waiter at Jerry's Famous Deli?

2:26:00

Oh, I didn't know that.

2:26:01

Oh, no.

2:26:02

There's a photo of him on the wall while he was on Taxi.

2:26:05

So he was on the biggest television show in the country.

2:26:08

Yeah.

2:26:09

And he had like an apron on and he was carrying a fucking dish tray filled with

2:26:16

like people's dirty dishes.

2:26:17

Wow.

2:26:18

Yeah.

2:26:19

That photo, look at that photo.

2:26:20

Wow.

2:26:21

That photo was on the wall at Jerry's Famous Deli.

2:26:24

Andy Kaufman worked there.

2:26:26

So he was on TV.

2:26:27

He was a huge star.

2:26:28

And you would go and order a pastrami Reuben and Andy Kaufman would clean your

2:26:31

table.

2:26:32

Yeah.

2:26:33

What about the wrestling women was genius.

2:26:37

Oh, he did a lot of nutty shit.

2:26:38

Dude, he locked into that character.

2:26:40

People went nuts.

2:26:42

Is that a video?

2:26:43

I think so.

2:26:44

Oh, that's hilarious.

2:26:45

Well, there's a documentary about it.

2:26:46

That's what was just popping up.

2:26:48

Of him working at Jerry's Deli?

2:26:50

Oh, I'll have to him.

2:26:51

This is, I guess, a trailer for it.

2:26:53

Oh, so it's just a documentary about him.

2:26:55

He was a nut, man.

2:26:57

That was the one movie where like a lot of people kind of freaked out about Jim

2:27:02

Carrey.

2:27:03

Where like he kind of got way too into that role.

2:27:07

And sort of like almost like seemed to embody Andy Kaufman.

2:27:12

Oh, he talked about that it fucked him up afterwards.

2:27:14

Yeah.

2:27:15

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:27:16

And offstage he was, he acted like an asshole to people.

2:27:19

How weird.

2:27:20

Which is not like him.

2:27:21

Right.

2:27:22

Yeah.

2:27:23

How weird.

2:27:24

Yeah.

2:27:25

The method acting thing.

2:27:26

Mm-hmm.

2:27:27

Like becoming a person.

2:27:28

Especially an actual human.

2:27:29

Where you have to sort of like figure out their brain patterns and their

2:27:33

behavior patterns

2:27:34

and imitate it.

2:27:35

And then you get trapped in it.

2:27:37

Yeah.

2:27:38

Well.

2:27:39

Sigur was in Talks to Play Samuda in a movie.

2:27:42

Oh, wow.

2:27:43

Recently?

2:27:44

That's what this article is about.

2:27:45

About that.

2:27:46

It's very confusing because I saw it when I pad that up.

2:27:49

I saw this screenshot.

2:27:50

I'm like, why is Tom in that?

2:27:52

Oh, interesting.

2:27:53

Yeah, this article from 2024.

2:27:55

Oh.

2:27:56

Interesting.

2:27:57

I don't know what happened to it.

2:28:00

It doesn't seem like much.

2:28:01

Yeah.

2:28:02

That's all.

2:28:03

Huh.

2:28:04

There's a good documentary.

2:28:05

It just came out last week on Mel Brooks.

2:28:08

I mean, you can't understate Mel Brooks' effect on every, whether you're a

2:28:14

comedian or a

2:28:15

writer or a comedy director.

2:28:17

That guy just, I mean, when I was a kid, my dad used to play 2,000 year old man

2:28:22

for me.

2:28:22

Yeah.

2:28:23

Those albums with Rob Reiner.

2:28:24

Yeah.

2:28:25

I'm sorry.

2:28:26

Carl Reiner.

2:28:27

And I was obsessed.

2:28:28

And The Producers was my father's favorite movie.

2:28:30

It became my favorite movie.

2:28:31

And, you know, you just think about like how fucking, your show of shows as a

2:28:36

writer early

2:28:38

on and, you know, and just going on to do-

2:28:41

Young Frankenstein.

2:28:42

Young Frankenstein.

2:28:43

Blazing Saddles.

2:28:44

Blazing Saddles.

2:28:45

You know who, the movie talks about, you know who wrote Blazing Saddles with

2:28:49

him?

2:28:49

Who?

2:28:50

Richard Pryor.

2:28:51

Oh, that makes sense.

2:28:52

Isn't that fucking crazy?

2:28:53

That's crazy.

2:28:54

He was supposed to play the sheriff.

2:28:55

Wow.

2:28:56

Spaceballs.

2:28:57

Spaceballs.

2:28:58

Yeah.

2:28:59

That's crazy.

2:29:00

It's a two-part documentary.

2:29:01

I only saw the first half.

2:29:03

Spaceballs is the reason why Tesla's Model S is called the Plaid.

2:29:07

Really?

2:29:08

Yeah.

2:29:09

Yeah.

2:29:10

Oh, that's hilarious.

2:29:11

It's also the reason why the Starship is shaped the way it is at the tip.

2:29:13

Uh-huh.

2:29:14

He only wanted to be like Spaceballs?

2:29:15

Yeah.

2:29:16

Make it more pointy.

2:29:17

Uh-huh.

2:29:18

Oh, that's funny.

2:29:19

He loves Spaceballs.

2:29:21

Yeah.

2:29:22

That's so funny.

2:29:23

Oh, yeah.

2:29:24

That would be perfect for him.

2:29:25

Of course.

2:29:26

Wow.

2:29:27

Of course.

2:29:28

Yeah.

2:29:29

Of course.

2:29:30

Are you going to get an Optimus when it comes out?

2:29:31

Are you going to have a robot companion in your home?

2:29:33

Oh, hell yeah.

2:29:34

Why wouldn't you?

2:29:35

Because I don't want a robot in my house.

2:29:36

It's like connections to the internet.

2:29:37

I don't have Alexa.

2:29:38

I don't have anything in my home.

2:29:40

I don't have any speakers that can listen to me because they are listening.

2:29:44

They're listening.

2:29:45

Dude, how often are you talking about...

2:29:47

Like, I started getting Austin feeds, little videos in my Instagram feed about

2:29:52

Austin.

2:29:53

I never get those.

2:29:54

I started getting them yesterday.

2:29:56

Yeah.

2:29:57

The fuck is that?

2:29:58

They know you're coming.

2:29:59

Yeah.

2:30:00

Well, wasn't there a lawsuit that Google had to just recently settle where it

2:30:06

turned out

2:30:06

that there were certain times where your phone was listening to you, which is

2:30:10

why you're

2:30:11

getting ads for things that you had discussed?

2:30:13

Oh, yeah.

2:30:14

Happens all the time.

2:30:15

But it was a rumor for a long time.

2:30:17

Yeah.

2:30:18

It was like, that's just a conspiracy theory.

2:30:19

Like, people are like, this seems weird.

2:30:21

Google settled $68 million in class action over alleged recording of private

2:30:25

conversations.

2:30:26

That's nothing.

2:30:27

Yeah, it's pretty small.

2:30:28

That's nothing.

2:30:29

Yeah.

2:30:30

So what is it?

2:30:31

What was the accusation?

2:30:32

They have agreed to pay $68 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging

2:30:35

they

2:30:35

unlawfully recorded users' conversations through Google Assist-enabled devices

2:30:40

without consent.

2:30:41

The proposed Google settlement is pending approval from a federal judge, U.S.

2:30:45

District Court for

2:30:46

Northern District of California.

2:30:48

A class action lawsuit was filed in 2019 after consumers accused Google of

2:30:52

concealing that

2:30:53

its assistant-enabled devices could unintentionally activate and record

2:30:58

conversations inside users' homes.

2:31:00

So that's just for that.

2:31:01

But that's like, did not intentionally activate it with a hot word such as, "Hey,

2:31:08

Google."

2:31:09

Because it's listening to you all the time.

2:31:10

So it's listening for you to say, "Hey, Google."

2:31:13

But that's, you know, that's just Google Assistant devices.

2:31:16

I don't have one of those.

2:31:18

But yet my phone will bring up suggestions and ads for things that I've

2:31:23

discussed that I

2:31:24

haven't looked up.

2:31:25

Just have the conversations about it and it'll pop up.

2:31:28

That's crazy.

2:31:29

I don't think they would tell you.

2:31:30

I think it's all metadata.

2:31:32

It's all hidden.

2:31:33

So there's no way to know.

2:31:35

And we all know.

2:31:36

We all kind of know.

2:31:38

And, you know, this is-

2:31:39

And people go like, "Well, I'm not a criminal.

2:31:41

I got nothing to hide."

2:31:42

Yeah, but you don't understand the ramifications of this information.

2:31:46

If somebody is in office and they want to start using keywords to locate people

2:31:51

that they're

2:31:51

going to have audited, like they just-

2:31:54

Some woman was protesting ICE and, you know, they've got this facial

2:31:58

recognition software

2:31:59

that lets them know your name, your address.

2:32:02

Is that Palantir?

2:32:03

Is that what they're using?

2:32:04

It's something.

2:32:05

No, it's not Palantir.

2:32:06

It's something like that.

2:32:07

But this woman went to the airport.

2:32:09

Her TSA was canceled.

2:32:10

What?

2:32:11

Yeah.

2:32:12

What?

2:32:13

Because she was a protester?

2:32:14

Yep.

2:32:15

That's it?

2:32:16

Yep.

2:32:17

Just protesting?

2:32:18

Yep.

2:32:19

Really?

2:32:20

They had a license plate.

2:32:21

They're taking people's faces and they're running it through.

2:32:23

They had one woman went from a protest to her house and there was a car parked

2:32:28

out front

2:32:29

with ICE agents in it saying, "We know where you live."

2:32:33

What?

2:32:34

Yeah.

2:32:35

That's all she did was go to a protest?

2:32:37

Yep.

2:32:38

That's it?

2:32:39

I mean, I'm sure she interacted.

2:32:40

She was probably yelling out or whatever.

2:32:42

You're sure she wasn't a part of the organizers of the protest or anything like

2:32:45

that?

2:32:45

Maybe she was an organizer.

2:32:46

This is the weird thing is the signal chats and everything.

2:32:50

This is all being like very coordinated and very funded.

2:32:55

Yeah.

2:32:56

This is a very coordinated thing.

2:32:57

Like what they're doing where they're doxing these ICE agents and the whole

2:33:01

thing is, it's

2:33:02

all very fucking weird.

2:33:03

Yeah.

2:33:04

The point about the Google stuff though is people that go, "Oh, I'm not doing

2:33:08

anything

2:33:08

illegal."

2:33:09

You are giving them your data and that data is a commodity and they are getting

2:33:15

insanely

2:33:16

wealthy off of getting your data in an unscrupulous way.

2:33:20

Right.

2:33:21

They're not telling you they're doing this thing and they're getting your data.

2:33:24

Mm-hmm.

2:33:25

And that data is making them insanely wealthy and then they use that wealth in

2:33:29

a bunch of

2:33:29

different ways to influence all sorts of things in the world.

2:33:32

Mm-hmm.

2:33:33

And that's what's going on.

2:33:34

Nobody ever thought that their data was going to be a commodity.

2:33:36

Mm-hmm.

2:33:37

Nobody ever gave a fuck about their email address or what they're interested in

2:33:41

online.

2:33:41

Yeah.

2:33:42

But it turns out that's fucking insanely valuable to advertisers.

2:33:46

Mm-hmm.

2:33:47

And that's, it's also, it's like, you know they're listening.

2:33:50

Mm-hmm.

2:33:51

You know they're listening.

2:33:52

Yeah.

2:33:53

They're listening to things.

2:33:54

Yeah.

2:33:55

They're listening.

2:33:56

And yeah, there's people now that are using ChatGBT to do therapy.

2:34:02

Have you heard about that?

2:34:03

Yeah.

2:34:04

Yeah.

2:34:05

But meanwhile, ChatGBT might tell you to kill yourself like that guy.

2:34:08

Not only that, but you're telling your innermost embarrassing things.

2:34:12

You think that's not going to be used against you at some point when you try to

2:34:15

get health

2:34:16

insurance and health insurance has now audited what you said to ChatGBT and

2:34:20

goes, "Well, you're

2:34:21

a suicide risk," or, "You're talking about trying to quit smoking.

2:34:24

Now we know you're smoking."

2:34:25

Right.

2:34:26

Any details?

2:34:27

Wasn't there an instance real recently where someone had uploaded top secret

2:34:33

information to

2:34:34

ChatGBT to a public, a government official had, see if you can find this,

2:34:39

government official

2:34:40

uploaded to a public ChatGBT.

2:34:43

Not like some secure encrypted version that the government gets because they

2:34:47

were trying

2:34:48

to go over some data.

2:34:50

Here it is.

2:34:51

"US cyber defense chief accidentally uploaded secret government info to ChatGBT."

2:34:57

Jesus.

2:34:58

"So they grilled the acting chief on a mass layoffs and a failed polygraph."

2:35:02

"Failed polygraph is hilarious."

2:35:05

"So this guy," good luck saying his name, "accidentally uploaded sensitive

2:35:09

information to a public version

2:35:11

of ChatGBT last summer, "accidentally," according to four Department of

2:35:16

Homeland Security officials

2:35:17

with knowledge of the incident."

2:35:19

Try to say that guy's name.

2:35:20

"Gatamakula."

2:35:21

Is that it?

2:35:22

"Gatamakula."

2:35:23

Okay.

2:35:24

"Gatamakula."

2:35:25

He plays defense for the Rams.

2:35:27

Uploads.

2:35:28

He's like a fucking big Polish guy.

2:35:31

"Uploads of sensitive CISA contracting documents triggered multiple internal

2:35:39

cybersecurity warnings

2:35:41

designed to stop theft or unintentional disclosure of government material from

2:35:45

federal networks."

2:35:46

And this fucking guy's the director of cybersecurity and infrastructure

2:35:50

security?

2:35:51

That's crazy.

2:35:52

Well, what does it mean accidentally upload?

2:35:54

Did it eavesdrop on him or did he say something that caused ChatGBT to...

2:36:00

It seems like he uploaded the data.

2:36:02

Like he was probably trying to parse out the data.

2:36:04

He was just hired to, or just joined the agency.

2:36:07

Oh, great.

2:36:08

Oh, my God.

2:36:10

The information was not confidential but marked for official use only.

2:36:15

A whole new world.

2:36:16

Dude, I feel like...

2:36:17

I feel like Russia and China know everything.

2:36:22

And we know everything.

2:36:23

And we know everything.

2:36:24

About Russia and China.

2:36:25

Right.

2:36:26

And they're all ratting on each other.

2:36:28

Palantir app ICE uses to find neighborhoods to raid.

2:36:32

Yeah.

2:36:33

So it is Palantir, at least for that.

2:36:34

Nuts.

2:36:35

The article he had was blocked by a paywall.

2:36:38

I couldn't...

2:36:39

I was trying to get around.

2:36:40

Nuts.

2:36:41

Joe Rogan experience.

2:36:42

Can't afford to pay for...

2:36:43

Is this it?

2:36:44

We're wrapping it up?

2:36:45

Let's wrap this bitch up.

2:36:46

No!

2:36:47

It's four o'clock.

2:36:48

Can I name some dates?

2:36:49

Fuck yeah.

2:36:50

I will be at the Philadelphia Helium, as I said, Valentine's Day weekend.

2:36:54

Great fucking club.

2:36:55

I'm going to be in Sacramento at the Punchline next week.

2:36:57

Great fucking club.

2:36:58

And then I'm going to be in Lexington, Kentucky at Comedy Off Broadway.

2:37:00

Great fucking club.

2:37:02

And this is Greg Fitzsimmons dot com.

2:37:05

Go to the link for standup dates.

2:37:07

Plenty of gigs.

2:37:08

The podcasts are Sunday Papers with Mike Gibbons, which...

2:37:11

Oh, by the way, thank you for the shout out.

2:37:13

You and Bert Kreischer gave me a little love bath yesterday.

2:37:15

Yes, sir.

2:37:16

Yes, sir.

2:37:17

That was nice.

2:37:18

So yeah, he was talking about Sunday Papers I've been doing with Mike for a

2:37:20

long time.

2:37:21

And then Fitz Dog Radio that you've been on many times.

2:37:24

Ye fucking ha.

2:37:25

All right.

2:37:26

We're going to wrap it up.

2:37:27

You're at the Mothership this weekend.

2:37:28

I'm very excited about that.

2:37:29

You going to come down?

2:37:30

Fuck yeah.

2:37:31

Fuck yeah.

2:37:32

All right, good.

2:37:33

Goodbye.