#2452 - Roger Avary

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Roger Avary

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Roger Avary is a director, producer, and Academy Award-winning screenwriter known for “Pulp Fiction,” which he co-wrote with Quentin Tarantino, as well as “The Rules of Attraction” and “Killing Zoe.” He is the co-host, along with Tarantino, of “The Video Archives Podcast.” www.youtube.com/@videoarchivespodcast www.patreon.com/videoarchives www.avary.com

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Timestamps

0:00Classic behind-the-scenes audio and Orson Welles’ filmmaking innovations
9:56Netflix-driven formulas vs theatrical magic; film vs digital production and image aesthetics
20:19Film vs. video aesthetics and modern cinematography; critiques of del Toro and Herzog’s Nosferatu

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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

Come on, Roger!

0:13

Yeah, fuck it.

0:15

Fuck it!

0:16

Fuck it!

0:16

Go for it!

0:17

Fuck it, we'll do it live!

0:19

Yeah, do it live!

0:19

That's a classic.

0:20

Yeah.

0:21

That's a classic look behind the scenes.

0:23

Do it live!

0:25

Fuck it!

0:26

Crazy people telling you the news.

0:28

Yeah.

0:29

That's good, and the William Shatner one where the studio guy, he says, Shatner's

0:38

doing

0:38

some ADR for the cartoon, the Star Trek cartoon, and he says, he uses the word

0:46

sabotage, and

0:49

he gets corrected by the studio guy.

0:51

He's like, Bill, it's pronounced sabotage.

0:54

Please, don't correct me.

0:57

It disgusts me.

0:58

It sickens me.

0:59

And you say sabotage.

1:02

I say sabotage.

1:03

I absolutely love William Shatner.

1:09

My favorite ones are the Orwell, excuse me, fuck, I can't remember his name.

1:15

Rosebud.

1:17

Orson Welles.

1:18

Jesus Christ.

1:18

Orson Welles.

1:19

What happened?

1:19

You started saying it.

1:20

I know.

1:21

What happened?

1:21

My brain just said, nope, no access.

1:24

When Orson Welles was doing the Gallo wine commercials.

1:26

Oh, yeah.

1:27

Remember those days?

1:27

Yeah, yeah.

1:28

Orson Welles.

1:29

He's selling the wine before it's time.

1:32

I know.

1:32

And then he was like.

1:33

Everything was like an exhaustive sucking of air to come in to speak.

1:37

Then he was making fun of how shitty the wine was in between takes.

1:41

Like he was angry.

1:42

Yeah.

1:43

There is a CD that you can get.

1:47

I can't remember what it's called, but I have them at home.

1:49

And it's like all these radio things like that where just when celebrities, you

1:53

know, lose

1:54

it on while doing voiceover and ADR, it's hilarious.

1:59

Orson Welles is a crazy story, right?

2:01

Because when he made that movie, when he made Citizen Kane, which was about

2:04

William Randolph

2:05

Hearst.

2:06

Yeah.

2:06

William Randolph Hearst essentially shut down one of the most talented guys

2:11

alive at the

2:12

time.

2:12

Shut down his career.

2:13

Yeah.

2:13

Because the movie was kind of an insult about, you know, the whole thing about

2:17

Rosebud

2:18

is that's the name of his girlfriend's clitoris.

2:21

Oh, really?

2:22

That was his nickname for her clitoris.

2:24

And so Orson Welles was doing a kind of very like he was jabbing at him in a

2:33

very low

2:34

level way.

2:34

Really?

2:36

Yeah.

2:36

Rosebud.

2:36

How did he know that that was the nickname of his girlfriend's clitoris?

2:40

People in Hollywood know these things.

2:41

Oh, boy.

2:42

Word gets around.

2:43

Word gets around.

2:45

I would keep that one just to her.

2:47

Yeah.

2:48

Who told?

2:48

Yeah.

2:49

That's crazy.

2:51

But I mean, if you go back to like War of Worlds and then Citizen Kane, I mean,

2:55

this guy

2:56

was a dynamo.

2:57

And then they shut him down.

2:58

Well, yeah.

2:59

And he was doing things that nobody else would do.

3:01

It's like, he's like, oh, I want the camera down here, like on the phone.

3:04

Well, we can't get the camera lens down that low.

3:07

You're like, what you're talking about is impossible to do.

3:09

And so he would just grab like a pickaxe and just start chopping away at the

3:14

studio concrete

3:15

and dig a hole in the ground so you can put the camera down that low.

3:19

He was obsessed with getting a vision on screen that was, even today, is so

3:26

advanced.

3:27

There's a shot in the very beginning when young Kane is like a little kid and

3:32

he's out there

3:33

playing with Rosebud.

3:34

He's out there playing with the sled in the snow and the camera is on him and

3:38

then it kind

3:39

of starts pulling back and it pulls through a window and then we see his

3:43

parents and the

3:44

trust attorney and the camera keeps backing up all the way into the room.

3:49

Well, to do that in a studio and to have all that snow and everything, you need

3:53

so much

3:53

light, but you also need a lot of light inside the, because the exposure change.

3:59

It's like an amazing, incredible dolly shot, a reverse tracking shot.

4:05

It's fantastic.

4:06

And what year did he do this to?

4:07

I don't know the exact year.

4:12

Citizen Kane has to be 40s, right?

4:14

Yeah, yeah, probably.

4:15

It's, yeah, it's in the late 40s, I would think.

4:19

Is that when it was, Jamie?

4:21

Yeah.

4:22

Tell us the...

4:23

It should be on my, yeah, 41 is when it came out.

4:25

41.

4:26

Early 40s.

4:27

Early 40s.

4:28

Wow.

4:28

Yeah.

4:29

Wow, let me see that shot.

4:30

Wartime.

4:30

Can we find that?

4:31

Wartime.

4:31

It's a wartime film.

4:32

What, Jamie?

4:33

I was looking for it.

4:34

I was lost and not some other ones.

4:35

Wartime 40s, right?

4:37

Yeah.

4:37

Right.

4:37

It's a wartime movie.

4:38

Yeah, yeah.

4:39

I didn't even think of that.

4:41

Yeah.

4:41

Oh my God.

4:42

A lot of stuff going on back then.

4:44

Probably hard to get people to go to the movies back then.

4:46

No, it would be easy to go to the movies.

4:48

In fact, wartime and depression and when things are bad, that's usually the

4:53

best time for entertainment

4:54

because people just want to escape.

4:56

Well, that actually makes sense.

4:59

Be careful, Charles.

5:00

It's Kane.

5:01

Pull your muffler around your neck, Charles.

5:03

Kane, I think we shall have to tell him now.

5:05

Yes.

5:06

I'll sign those papers now, Mr. Thatcher.

5:09

You people seem to forget that I'm the boy's father.

5:12

It's going to be done exactly the way I've told Mr. Thatcher.

5:15

There ain't nothing wrong with Colorado.

5:17

I don't see why we can't raise our own son just because we come into some money.

5:21

If I want it, I can go to court.

5:23

A father has a right to, a border that beats his bill and leaves worthless

5:27

stock behind.

5:27

That property is just as much my property as anybody's now that it's valuable.

5:32

And if Fred Graves had any idea all this was going to happen, he'd have made

5:35

out those certificates

5:36

in both our names.

5:37

However, they were made out of Mrs. Kane's name.

5:39

So in order to maintain that background exposure of the little kid in the

5:43

window and the foreground, what you're not knowing is how much light they're

5:47

using on the interior part in order to create that balance between the two with

5:52

the film stocks back then.

5:54

And the other thing is that table gets flown in.

5:57

Like, they move that table into the shot because it's in the way of the camera

6:00

move.

6:00

Wow.

6:01

And so there's all sorts of, like, you know, mathematics going on in the

6:04

creation of this shot.

6:06

And most people would just, you know, be like, oh, just, you know, shoot the

6:09

kid outside and then cut inside.

6:10

You know, just do it like that.

6:12

But, you know, Wells was, I mean, he was thinking on a complete other level.

6:16

It's just we have robbed.

6:17

We got robbed of so many films.

6:19

If you really think about it, what he could have made.

6:21

You know, yes and no.

6:24

My favorite film of his is Touch of Evil.

6:26

And there's this amazing shot with Charlton Heston where he's playing a Mexican.

6:30

And he's got, like, this, like, pencil-thin, you know, mustache.

6:35

And, like, Chuck Heston as a Mexican is fantastic.

6:38

And then everybody's so sweaty in the movie.

6:40

And it takes place in Mexico, but it's shot in Venice, California.

6:43

And so the whole opening, which is this setting of a bomb in the trunk of a car.

6:48

And then, yeah, here's the opening shot.

6:51

And you can tell that it's actually downtown Venice.

6:53

And this is supposed to be Mexico?

6:55

Yeah, this is supposed to be, like, a border town in Mexico.

6:59

I don't know if it's Tijuana or some other border town.

7:02

But he does this amazing, amazing single shot.

7:08

Wow.

7:09

And which, back then, this is really hard to do.

7:12

And this is kind of a, I mean, it's Charlton Heston essentially saying,

7:16

I believe in Orson Welles and his vision.

7:20

This is crazy.

7:21

See, that's downtown Venice.

7:22

The beach is just beyond that.

7:24

Oh, wow.

7:25

God, what year is this?

7:28

Actually, I'm sorry.

7:28

The beach might be behind us.

7:29

What year was this?

7:31

1958?

7:32

Yeah, 1958.

7:32

Wow.

7:34

It's an incredible shot.

7:38

And this is incredibly difficult to do as well because you've got a crane on a

7:42

car.

7:42

And now you're following the people.

7:44

Now you're following the people.

7:45

And there's Charlton Heston with his mustache.

7:47

And we know as an audience that there's a bomb in that car.

7:51

But he doesn't know.

7:54

And so, you know, he's still, you know, the, just the fact that this is all one

8:01

shot is crazy.

8:02

And for back then, I mean, it's a big deal.

8:04

Back then, the camera that you're using isn't just some little handy cam or

8:08

something like that now, you know, an iPhone.

8:11

It's a Mitchell BNCR, which is, you know, it takes four guys to move that

8:15

camera.

8:15

It's made out of cast iron.

8:16

And, you know, it's a giant camera with a blimp.

8:19

A blimp?

8:21

A blimp is a soundproofing device.

8:24

So you have the camera and then you've got to build a giant encasing for the

8:27

camera.

8:28

Because it makes so much noise?

8:29

You don't want to hear that.

8:31

Oh.

8:31

What did that look like?

8:33

I have one in my home.

8:34

Of course you do.

8:38

Well, I, that shot's incredible.

8:40

I would have never, I didn't know that film existed.

8:43

I bought, I bought mine from this commercial director named Charles Wittenmeyer.

8:46

And he had a massive collection of stuff.

8:49

And then he liquidated everything.

8:50

He just kind of cashed out of Los Angeles.

8:52

And he's, he had a warehouse full of stuff.

8:54

And so I went in and he's like, you know, well, here's, you can get this and

8:58

you can get this.

8:58

I was like, okay, the Mitchell BNCR.

9:00

And we went over to it.

9:01

And he's like, you know, this Mitchell BNCR was used, you know, to shoot The

9:06

Godfather.

9:07

So that's what it looks like with the big lid on it?

9:10

Yeah, that's actually, yeah, that's basically the camera.

9:12

That's, that's the camera.

9:13

Is that the blimp?

9:15

Is the thing on top of it?

9:16

Yeah, the blimp is, well, the whole thing is actually, the whole thing is a blimp.

9:20

I mean, well, there's, there's a smaller area with a blimp on it.

9:24

The, the big one, like the whole thing is a blimp.

9:27

And when you can actually open up all of these, uh, these trap doors on it to

9:31

reveal the camera inside of it.

9:33

And then the reels that are in, there you go.

9:35

It's, there's an opened one, an opened up one.

9:38

Wow.

9:39

It looks like it's holding an Aerie on the inside, an Aerie 100.

9:42

One of the things about old movies is they would let a scene cook, you know,

9:47

the, you had so much time before people would talk.

9:50

And you just let the, like the average daily life sort of play out.

9:56

Yeah.

9:56

And it set the tone for the film and they don't, now it's like, it's like built

10:01

for Netflix.

10:03

Well, yeah.

10:03

Well, now you have a white paper that Netflix gives you and that I think, uh,

10:06

was it Ben Affleck that was talking about it?

10:09

You know, how, you know, you've got to have a beat in the beginning and you've

10:12

got to have this and this and this and regular things.

10:14

I mean, there was this book by Sid Field, which was a screenwriting book, um,

10:19

that, uh, you know, at one hand, it gave a kind of formula on what a movie

10:23

should be.

10:24

You know, by page seven, you know, by page seven, your inciting event should

10:26

happen.

10:27

And by page 30, the first day, you know, he had everything mapped out by page

10:30

and that eventually found its way into the hands of studio executives.

10:34

And they were like, oh, now we know what a screenplay is supposed to be

10:38

structured like, you know, in order to have proper story arcs and structures

10:42

and a satisfying, uh, design.

10:45

And, uh, and that's just the next iteration is Netflix giving you a white paper

10:49

saying you have to shoot with these cameras.

10:52

You have to, uh, process at these labs.

10:55

You have to have, you know, tech specs that are within this range.

10:59

And that's now extending to story because they've analytically looked at what

11:04

audiences are, you know, able to process now, which is less and less probably

11:09

because of the COVID shot, you know, uh, completely frying their pineal glands.

11:14

So they can no longer pay attention to anything.

11:17

And then on top of that, the, uh, the mind control device of, uh, cell phones

11:22

and, um, you know, with all of that, they, they're now like, well, how do we

11:27

maintain the audience?

11:29

And so you end up with white papers.

11:31

Don't you think it's options too?

11:32

It's almost like if something is not really fascinating within the first 20, 30

11:37

seconds, people just want to, let's see what else is on.

11:40

They just want to keep searching.

11:42

Well, there is that.

11:43

I mean, there's something magical about being in a movie theater.

11:45

You know, it's, uh, you know, you're, you're, you're, you're in this

11:50

congregation.

11:51

Yeah.

11:52

You know, Quentin always talks about how, you know, movies are my church.

11:56

Well, it is a congregation and you're having, you're sitting in the dark next

12:00

to someone you don't even know.

12:02

They might have completely different ideologies, uh, you know, race, creed,

12:06

color, like everything is different about them.

12:09

And yet you're sitting in the dark next to them having this ecstatic dream,

12:13

this waking dream, sitting like insects, looking at the flicker on the screen.

12:19

And you're sharing this kind of experience that you're physically trapped in.

12:22

You know, like you, you don't, you know, you don't get up and leave the theater

12:25

and, well, you might if you have to go to the bathroom or get some popcorn or

12:28

something, but they'll even bring that to you now.

12:30

You, uh, you know, you're having this kind of ecstatic experience absorbing the

12:35

movie with someone you don't know.

12:37

And you're sharing your bodily electricity with them.

12:40

And I think this kind of, uh, this is the magic that they often talk about of

12:44

movies.

12:45

It's not necessarily the, the movie itself on screen.

12:50

It's the shared experience of being next to people.

12:53

Yeah.

12:54

And that there is a kind of unseen electricity between people that unifies us.

13:02

And I think that there are dark forces in the universe that are attempting to

13:06

divide people up and to take that away, to take away that congregation.

13:11

Do you really think that that's on by design or you think that's just a natural

13:15

function of streaming and televisions and phones and having access to things

13:19

instantaneously?

13:21

I mean, I personally think that streaming was by design to eliminate residuals.

13:25

Like by design, but isn't it just a function?

13:28

I mean, you notice technology emerging.

13:29

You notice that all of the executives.

13:30

Well, yeah, I mean, part of it is technology, but technology gets pushed and

13:34

brought to the forefront for specific reasons.

13:36

And, you know, digital cinema hasn't been the greatest thing for the creative

13:41

process.

13:42

And I think we see that in the works that we're looking at.

13:45

I mean, if you watch stuff on Netflix and whatnot, we can see that it doesn't

13:52

have the same power and impact.

13:55

And also, you know, when you were making a movie, when you were making a film,

14:01

on film, it was like every time you turn on the camera, you're burning money.

14:07

It's like every single frame is like four cents or whatever, whatever the

14:11

calculation was.

14:12

And so that was actually an expensive part of the process.

14:16

And so, you know, there was all this preparation to get everything ready.

14:20

Like, oh, we want to get all of the props in place, you know, right before we

14:23

shoot.

14:24

And the actors are in their trailer and they're figuring out what they're going

14:28

to do.

14:28

And then you're on your way to set and people are like, hey, I'll see you in

14:32

the moment.

14:32

And what they mean by that is when the cameras turn on and you actually hear

14:37

that happening, suddenly everything pops into play.

14:41

And suddenly you're performing in front of, you know, what you're attempting to

14:46

do is capture lightning in a bottle.

14:49

And you don't even know that you have it right away.

14:52

You ask your DP, like, do we have it?

14:54

And it's like, oh, well, there's some dust in the frame or a hair in the frame.

14:57

Let's get another one.

14:59

You get another one.

15:00

And, like, then you hold that all in the dark, all that film, because you can't

15:04

expose it and you send it off to the lab.

15:06

And then some alchemist at the lab at the castle, you know, puts it into a

15:10

potion.

15:11

And the next day what comes out are these, like, little stained glass windows.

15:15

And you watch it and you realize what you caught.

15:18

And you're like, we did it.

15:18

We captured something.

15:20

Okay, now everything is different.

15:23

You, you know, you show up on set and everything's digital and you've got

15:29

producers and network executives and broadcasters and everybody's there, studio

15:35

people, in video village.

15:37

And they set up, like, a little tent and everybody's sitting there in their

15:42

Canadian goose jackets on high chairs.

15:44

And they're looking at a big color-corrected monitor and there's a guy doing

15:47

color correction in a van.

15:49

And they're basically watching an approximation of what it's going to look like

15:53

in the end.

15:54

And they're sitting there.

15:54

Okay, on my first film, there was none of that.

15:57

I had to stand next to the camera.

15:58

We didn't even have videotap.

15:59

Stand next to the camera and look at the actors and see, did the actors do what

16:03

I wanted them to do?

16:05

And now, you know, they just turn on the camera and it's, it costs more money

16:10

to stop the camera and to restart it again.

16:13

So you just let it roll and you're just like letting it go.

16:16

And you're like, hey, you know, the director now is like, hey, go back, start

16:20

over and smile this time.

16:22

And then they redo it.

16:24

And then the editor is now, like, having to take those takes and separate them

16:28

in the editing room.

16:29

And the actors are like, suddenly, the moment is gone, in other words.

16:34

It's vanished.

16:35

It's...

16:36

Is there a way to do both?

16:37

I mean, is it the medium of film?

16:39

I mean, it seems like it's the environment as well.

16:43

You're describing an environmental thing, right?

16:45

Well, it's a...

16:46

The executives.

16:47

Yeah, and the problem is now suddenly you've got a chorus of people sitting

16:50

there who are like, oh, yeah, you got it.

16:52

I saw he got it.

16:53

Didn't he get it?

16:53

Yeah, you got it.

16:54

But you as the director still have to run back and forth to the camera and to

16:56

the actors and everything.

16:57

And you're like trying to keep it all in place.

17:00

And look, it's...

17:02

Neither is worse than the other.

17:05

Right.

17:06

They are both paint.

17:07

But one is watercolor and one is oil paint.

17:10

And those are opposingly different.

17:13

You know, if you were an oil artist during the British Renaissance of

17:18

watercolor paint where all of a sudden watercolor came out and everybody wanted

17:23

watercolor, why would you try to make your, you know, watercolor paint look

17:30

like oil or vice versa?

17:32

They're just completely different mediums.

17:34

They're both paint, but they're different.

17:36

And so digital has its advantages and its purposes.

17:40

You can, you know, because you can run like a long mag of video.

17:47

I call it video.

17:48

Everybody calls it digital cinema.

17:49

But that was just to push it through, you know.

17:53

And actually the technology is different.

17:55

You know, with film, light travels through the glass.

17:59

It travels through a gate.

18:01

It exposes the silver and the acetate.

18:04

And then you keep it all in the dark and send it away.

18:09

With video, the light travels through the glass.

18:12

It strikes the golden sensor and then it bounces back into the glass.

18:16

And that's why video or digital cinema is flatter by nature than most film.

18:22

Because, and so to combat this, filmmakers have started to do the exact

18:28

opposite of what we used to do.

18:30

It used to be that you would go to shoot something.

18:33

You're on, you're outside.

18:34

You're on set.

18:35

I've got my camera on Joe and I have the sun behind me because I want all that

18:39

light on you for the most part.

18:40

I'm over exaggerating my point.

18:43

But, and the analogy would be, or the, the saying would be that at the end of

18:47

the day, you go home and the back of your neck is sunburned because you've

18:50

always had the light behind you.

18:51

Now, because the image is flatter, they rotate the camera 180 degrees and they

18:56

shoot into the sun to get lens flare.

18:58

And lens flare gives you the, the, the illusion of depth where there is none.

19:04

This episode is brought to you by Zip Recruiter.

19:07

The best way to learn anything is to ask questions, be engaged, be curious,

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have a conversation.

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Whether you want to know more about a friend, start a new hobby like surfing or

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20:19

I always thought that like when you would watch soap operas, I was like, why do

20:23

they look so weird?

20:25

And it's because they were shooting them on video instead of on film.

20:29

Like when we were filming news radio, the sitcom, we were doing it on film and

20:33

they were like really adamant about doing it on film.

20:36

Like they really wanted it to be on film.

20:38

And then there was some process where you could make video look like film.

20:42

And I was like, this is so interesting.

20:44

It's like we're designed like when you take your photo with your camera on your

20:47

phone and you use portrait mode.

20:49

Yeah.

20:50

Which is you blur out the background.

20:51

Yeah.

20:51

So you're making it shittier.

20:52

You're doing an artificial.

20:54

Yeah.

20:54

That's because we associate, you know, we associate the faults of media as film.

21:05

Like people think of like old movies as gate weave and sepia tone and dust and

21:11

scratches and kind of fast motion.

21:13

Well, when those movies were originally made, the motion was corrected by the

21:17

cranking of the projector.

21:18

And so it was natural motion.

21:20

There was no sepia tone change.

21:24

There was no dust.

21:25

It was originally and there was no gate weave because it was a fixed image.

21:30

The image, the celluloid hadn't yet shrunk or anything like that.

21:34

And so we now we have this kind of filter, nostalgic filter that we associate

21:40

with what an old movie looks like.

21:42

And so if you want to make something look old, you start adding all this crap

21:45

to it.

21:45

You're adding the faults.

21:46

And it's the faults of cinema that actually make it really good.

21:49

It's not the perfection of cinema.

21:50

That's in my opinion.

21:52

Because you would never be able to sell that if cinema never existed.

21:55

Like if cinema never existed and video came around and then it was normal video,

22:00

like soap opera style, and then someone came along and said, hey, let's make it

22:04

blurry in the background.

22:05

It's almost like we've become accustomed to the faults and nostalgically we

22:11

look at them as if it's a positive.

22:14

And it's also led by, you know, everything is shot on iPhones now.

22:17

And so that's becoming the cinematic vernacular, the grammar that people are

22:22

used to.

22:22

And they now expect that in a big movie.

22:25

And so suddenly you see something like the latest James Gunn Superman or Guillermo

22:31

del Toro's Frankenstein.

22:34

And they've got these crazy wide lenses where there's no distortion and, you

22:37

know, kind of infinite depth.

22:39

And they're shot in a very large format.

22:43

But what they're replicating is an iPhone.

22:46

Right.

22:47

And it just – I watched both of those movies and I thought, OK, both of them

22:52

are amazingly technically competent.

22:55

And they're made by, you know, highly professional people.

22:59

But, you know, it looks like iPhone footage too.

23:02

I'm a huge Guillermo del Toro fan.

23:04

I even loved his book, The Strain.

23:07

Like it was really good until about like three quarters of the way through.

23:11

And it seemed like he just wanted to finish the book.

23:13

Yeah, probably.

23:14

Like a bunch of shit just sort of just happens in the last quarter of the book

23:17

where I was like, this is kind of jarring.

23:19

It became dinner time.

23:20

It was almost like, put this aside.

23:23

I'm going to go eat.

23:24

It just seemed like, fuck, I can't keep going with this book.

23:26

It's what it felt like.

23:28

It felt rushed, just my opinion.

23:30

But I'm a huge fan of that guy's book.

23:31

I love Pan's Labyrinth.

23:32

I love a lot of his films.

23:34

But I didn't like Frankenstein.

23:36

I, you know, like I love Guillermo and I love his spirit.

23:43

And I love his artistry.

23:45

He is an amazing artist.

23:47

He is, he's just literally as a, as an artist, you know, his, his sketchbooks

23:52

are beautiful.

23:54

And he brings a great amount of passion to his work.

23:57

He brings that kind of Mexican passion to his work.

24:01

And I adore his, him as a, as a person.

24:05

But to be perfectly honest, I'm not wild about his movies that much.

24:09

I, you know, I, I didn't like Pan's Labyrinth.

24:12

I, I liked parts of it, but as a whole, I, it just kind of, I don't know what

24:19

it is, you know, about it.

24:21

But, I mean, Blade 2 is probably my favorite film of his because it's like the

24:26

least of, of, well, actually it's quite a bit of him.

24:29

But, um, it's just the most accessible for me.

24:33

I didn't know he did Blade 2.

24:34

Which one was that Patton Oswalt was in where he had the, the whole bit about

24:38

Wesley Snipes and then they replaced him with a cool, cooler Wesley Snipes?

24:44

I think that was 3.

24:46

Yeah, it was probably Blade 3.

24:47

Blade 3.

24:47

I don't remember Blade 2.

24:48

I don't remember Blade 2.

24:50

Blade 1 was awesome though.

24:51

Yeah.

24:51

That's my favorite of all the comic book vampire, well, comic book movies.

24:56

Yeah.

24:57

Because I, I was just a giant fan of the Blade comic book series.

25:00

I also like his Pacific Rim movie.

25:02

And I like parts of, like, the moment in Frankenstein that I think is, for me,

25:06

the entire movie.

25:07

Like, I could have, like, left the rest of it.

25:09

So much of it was just so melancholic and.

25:14

You know, it was just like, I just couldn't engage with it.

25:18

And, but the part that I absolutely loved was at the Miller's house where he's

25:24

learning language.

25:26

To me, that was the movie when he's kind of secretly learning how to speak and

25:31

how to be and learning morals.

25:34

And to me, the, I could have watched an entire movie about that sequence.

25:39

And it was also beautifully made, that part.

25:42

I just, the rest of it with, I could have done without.

25:47

It was just a little flat.

25:48

I don't know.

25:48

And also, it's like, why does it have, it's so freaking long.

25:52

Right.

25:53

Like, he could really, like, learn a lesson.

25:55

Well, I was going to say he could learn a lesson from Ridley Scott who just

25:58

clips through things.

25:59

Like, he takes, you know, there's a dialogue scene.

26:02

I'm just going to do the essentials and just get out.

26:04

Like, it's a commercial.

26:05

This dialogue scene doesn't need to be any longer than 30 seconds.

26:08

And he just clips along somehow, yet his movies are still, like, two hours long.

26:13

Well, they're so involved.

26:15

Yeah.

26:15

You know what I really loved?

26:17

Nosferado.

26:18

Did you see the new Nosferado?

26:19

No, I haven't.

26:20

You know, I don't want to sound like a persnickety guy, but I had to be in the

26:25

right.

26:26

I want you to be persnickety.

26:27

I had to be in the right mood to engage with that movie because, I mean, I like

26:32

that guy's

26:32

first movie, The Vivitch or The Witch.

26:35

I never saw that.

26:37

I heard it's great, though.

26:38

I love that film.

26:39

I think that's a great movie.

26:40

And he's, like, a production designer.

26:41

He's doing a werewolf movie right now.

26:43

Yeah, of course he is.

26:44

I'm very excited.

26:44

Of course he is.

26:45

I love a good werewolf movie.

26:46

I did not like his Moby Dickish Lighthouse movie.

26:49

Oh, I didn't see that.

26:51

That was the Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson.

26:53

Yeah, the Willem Dafoe one, it was just garish and kind of, I felt like, lost

26:59

its way halfway

27:00

through.

27:00

But, and then, you know, this latest one, Nosferatu, look, I am a Werner Herzog

27:10

nut, and so, like,

27:13

I adore Werner Herzog, and I love his Nosferatu, so for me to, you know, like,

27:20

watch this guy's

27:21

version of that, I have to be in the right mood.

27:25

I have to be in the right mood.

27:26

I just wasn't yet in the right mood to accept it.

27:28

Which one is Werner's?

27:29

Who plays Nosferatu?

27:30

Oh, Klaus, the, the incomparable Klaus Kinski.

27:34

And I know I've seen it.

27:36

I mean, the thing about Werner Herzog, when he made his Nosferatu, what's, you

27:40

know, the

27:41

Murnau movie, which is the original Nosferatu, the very first one with Max Schreck.

27:47

Yeah, I saw it at the library when I was, like, 10 years old.

27:51

So, the thing about Werner Herzog as a filmmaker is that most filmmakers have

27:56

their forefathers

27:57

that they can look back to.

27:58

They can, you know, they have a generation before them that they can kind of

28:01

imprint on.

28:02

And because of the brutality and tragedy of World War II, he had none.

28:11

There were no German filmmakers that he could look to.

28:13

And so, he had to look to his grandfather, basically, which was Murnau, when he

28:17

made it.

28:18

And so, his film is almost, like, haunted by the, by the original.

28:22

And then he bring, you know, Werner Herzog grew up not using a telephone until

28:26

he was in

28:27

his teens.

28:27

He'd never seen a telephone before.

28:29

He had grown up, like, in, you know, upper Bavaria in the mountains.

28:34

And, you know, so he comes, like, his film is almost displaced in time.

28:39

It's, like, skipped a generation.

28:41

And he does things like, you know, he'll show two actors in the most emotional

28:46

part of the

28:47

movie when Mina and Jonathan Harker are, you know, at the beach and they're

28:51

basically saying

28:52

goodbye and normally, you know, Hollywood film, they would cut to a close-up so

28:57

that we could

28:57

see the tears.

28:58

You know, we would cut to that close-up.

29:00

But because his film is, you know, because he's displaced in time, he stays

29:06

back.

29:06

Like, he doesn't even bother shooting a close-up.

29:09

To him, it's more melancholic to show them just isolated as figures, you know,

29:15

in a wide

29:16

shot.

29:16

And it truly is.

29:18

And so his film is super powerful that way.

29:21

And then you have Klaus Kinski, you know, who is, you know, like, the madman

29:27

actor of

29:28

German cinema and who is, you know, who was, like, I mean, there's a

29:33

documentary called

29:35

My Best Fiend, which is about the relationship, you know, between Herzog and Kinski.

29:43

And there's an amazing scene in the beginning of that where he, Werner Herzog,

29:48

visits the

29:49

apartment that he rented in, I think it was in Berlin, that, you know, that

29:53

where he was

29:54

first becoming a filmmaker and where he first met Klaus Kinski.

29:57

And he goes there and it's now occupied by these two, you know, just very

30:01

conservative,

30:02

this German couple.

30:04

And he starts going through the house and saying, oh, yes, here, this is where

30:09

Klaus, you

30:10

know, went crazy.

30:12

And he started smashing it and shitting on the walls and like, you know, like,

30:16

because

30:16

he was an insane guy.

30:17

He was like, his whole thing was about provocation.

30:20

And so he brings a kind of crazy vampire.

30:25

I mean, it feels like a real vampire.

30:28

I remember it now, but I haven't seen it forever.

30:30

What year was that?

30:31

You mean the Kinski one?

30:32

Yes.

30:33

I think it was in the 70s.

30:34

So I'm thinking it was like 78 or 79, maybe even earlier.

30:37

I know I've seen all the Nosferados.

30:39

Let me see.

30:41

Give me a clip from Werner Herzog's.

30:44

I will eventually see this new one.

30:45

It's fucking good, man.

30:46

It's good.

30:47

The dude who plays the vampire, what's his name?

30:50

The guy who played the clown in It?

30:54

Oh, yeah, Bill Skarsgård.

30:56

He's so good.

30:57

He's so good.

30:59

So is this the scene when he meets the vampire?

31:03

I don't know.

31:04

I just clicked on it.

31:05

Yeah, this is...

31:06

Oh, he cuts the...

31:07

Yeah, this is it.

31:08

Yeah, this is...

31:08

I mean, that's...

31:09

I mean, Kinski brings just an amazing, deep empathy.

31:20

It could give you blood poisoning.

31:22

Oh, and this is the English version.

31:23

Please, let me do it.

31:25

It's the oldest remedy in the world.

31:27

Oh, forget it.

31:29

It's hardly worth mentioning.

31:31

Just a little cut.

31:33

You know, it's only for the best.

31:50

The original jerk in German.

31:58

Yeah, it's incredible.

32:03

Oh, that's so awesome.

32:05

And that's probably Kinski, like, you know, they're supposed to cut, and Kinski

32:08

just keeps

32:09

going.

32:09

And look at him.

32:11

Yeah, I mean, Bruno Gans, I think it's Bruno Gans, is probably terrified in

32:16

real life, because

32:18

he doesn't know.

32:18

Kinski's crazy enough where he'll bite him.

32:20

Right.

32:20

And he's got those fake teeth then.

32:22

Yeah.

32:23

Let's sit up for a while.

32:32

All right, show me a clip from the new one.

32:38

You got to see the new Nosferatu.

32:42

I mean, I had never seen a vampire like that.

32:44

And then I think Salem's Lot was made after the TV movie Salem's Lot.

32:48

Yeah, Salem's Lot was super similar to it.

32:49

Yeah.

32:49

There's a scene when he meets the guy at the castle.

32:56

I did see one scene from this online with Lily Rose Depp kind of reacting to

33:02

something, which

33:03

was, like, very compelling.

33:04

Go full screen to this.

33:05

This is when he makes it into the castle.

33:07

It's really dark, man.

33:10

He did a fantastic job of, like, capturing the creepiness of it and also the

33:16

surreal aspect

33:17

of him being under the trance of this vampire.

33:21

You recognize that reality is all fucked up and skewed.

33:25

Like, time passes very quickly.

33:27

It doesn't make sense.

33:28

He's super confused as to what's going on.

33:39

I mean, I have to say, this movie feels haunted, as haunted by the Herzog

33:45

version as Herzog was

33:46

haunted by the Murnau version.

33:49

As if it's a continuation for me.

33:51

It would be, like, I encourage anybody to, like, enjoy all three of them, I

33:55

guess.

33:55

Yeah, I wonder if he was haunted by that or if I wonder if he was haunted by

33:58

the original.

33:59

But this is, with the use of all...

34:03

Yeah, the little step frame.

34:04

...modern ability.

34:06

Yeah.

34:06

But it's just the way they made the castle and the way they made him is very

34:10

unique.

34:11

There's so many aspects of it that I thought were very unique.

34:14

Even the way the vampire feeds on people is unique.

34:17

This guy is a, he's a very, very, very good filmmaker.

34:22

I just, uh...

34:24

I don't know so much about the way he's talking.

34:43

It's weird, but it grows on you.

34:46

It grows on you.

34:47

Well, I'm sure it has a, like, a haunting quality over time.

34:50

Yeah, like, like this.

34:51

The guy just disappears and all of a sudden he's way far away.

34:54

There's a lot of that in this movie.

34:56

So the scene when they get him to sign papers, when he's, get up to that.

35:01

Questions about the, um...

35:05

I'm sure Prince Charles was, like, jacking off to this film.

35:27

Before they made that painting.

35:28

Well, he, he, apparently he visits, uh, Castle Dracula, like, every year.

35:34

Well, isn't he related to Vlad Tepes?

35:37

Yeah, it doesn't surprise me.

35:38

I mean, he's, he's German, he's of German ancestry, so...

35:41

I think Prince Charles is related to the original Vlad the Impaler.

35:46

That would track...

35:48

You can go further ahead so they get...

35:50

That would track with the whole baby-eating thing.

35:51

They give you a look at what he looks like.

35:53

I think it cuts off, probably.

35:57

I think this is gonna cut it off.

36:02

They don't want to give away too much.

36:07

That was the other thing, like, you don't really get to, get a look at him for

36:11

quite a while.

36:11

And when you do, it's horrifying.

36:13

Yeah.

36:14

And the movie is made in washes of darkness.

36:17

Mm-hmm.

36:18

It's very dark.

36:19

I mean, it's very much a candlelit movie.

36:24

Which I like because I don't like a film where you're pretending that people

36:28

are in a candlelit, but it's really well lit.

36:30

Well, and that's an example of where video actually is a better medium to

36:35

choose.

36:36

Right.

36:37

Because it, like, digital loves darkness.

36:40

And it can do things in darkness that film just doesn't have the capacity to do.

36:45

Right.

36:45

And so it's an excellent choice.

36:46

When we did Silent Hill, we made the choice of whenever we're in the dark, we're

36:50

shooting on digital.

36:51

And whenever it's during daylight, we're shooting on film.

36:54

Oh.

36:54

To create a kind of dissonance between the two.

36:58

And so, and that's largely because digital loves dark.

37:02

And this is a great use of it.

37:04

I'm warming up to it.

37:06

I, like, I've been waiting.

37:08

I bought it on Blu-ray.

37:10

I have the movie.

37:11

I mean, I keep it.

37:12

It's in that stack.

37:14

I've just been waiting to, you know, for the right time to expose it, expose

37:17

myself to it.

37:18

I loved it.

37:18

Where I'm in the right mood.

37:19

I loved it.

37:20

I'm no film expert, but it's my favorite vampire movie ever.

37:23

Well, that's actually saying a lot.

37:27

I love it.

37:27

That's incredible.

37:28

I loved it.

37:28

That's incredible.

37:29

My, a fun vampire movie is 30 Days of Night.

37:32

Yeah, 30 Days of Night is great.

37:35

I love that one, too.

37:36

I mean.

37:36

It's not as good as this.

37:37

This is, this is a better movie.

37:39

I think I Am Legend is actually a pretty good vampire movie.

37:42

The, the one with Will Smith.

37:44

I thought they were zombies.

37:46

Well, they're kind of, it's a contagion film, technically.

37:49

They're not really zombies, but they've been turned into, like, vampire-like

37:52

creatures.

37:53

They're, you know, in that film.

37:55

That's a really good one.

37:56

And then that one that, what's his name?

37:59

Taitiki Wakatakalakalataka.

38:01

That Polynesian director who did the Thor movie did.

38:06

God, what was it called?

38:07

The, we are, I can't remember the name of it.

38:15

But it's like a comedy version of vampires, like, kind of all living in a house

38:21

and, and sort of.

38:22

How old is that?

38:23

This was made in, sometime in the mid-2000s, I think.

38:27

Hmm.

38:28

Vampires living in a house?

38:30

What we do in the shadows?

38:31

Yeah, what we do in the shadows.

38:32

Did you see that?

38:33

Nope.

38:34

That is an incredible vampire movie.

38:37

Really?

38:37

It's kind of like a mockumentary, like, where they're, they're, they're, but it's,

38:43

it takes

38:43

all of the kind of vampire mythology and it makes it really, really fun.

38:47

I've never even heard of this.

38:48

It's fantastic.

38:49

This is his best film.

38:50

This is, I'm sure, the foundation of everything he's done has been on what we

38:55

do, for me,

38:55

what we do in the shadows.

38:57

Huh.

38:57

That's so crazy.

38:58

I never even heard of it.

39:00

Yeah, it's, it's wonderful.

39:02

Show me the trailer, Jamie.

39:03

We are granted protection for the subjects in this film?

39:10

Oh, it's like a Blair Witch Project type deal.

39:13

It's been like this the whole time, Deacon, on dishes, and it still hasn't

39:19

moved in five

39:20

years.

39:20

You're a cool guy, but you're not pulling your weight in the flat.

39:24

Oh, I'm glad to hear that I'm cool.

39:28

No, that's not the point, though.

39:29

Yeah, no, I know, I know.

39:30

Not the flat meeting about how cool you are.

39:32

When you get three vampires in a flat, obviously there's going to be a lot of

39:38

tension.

39:39

Viago was an 18th century dandy.

39:43

Look, a ghost cat.

39:46

Vladislav is a bit of a pervert.

39:49

This is my torture chamber.

39:50

Deacon's like the young bad boy of the group.

39:54

I'm supposed to pay rent, but I don't.

39:57

The trouble with being a vampire is you have to be invited in.

40:02

When you're coming to the bar, please walk in.

40:05

Will you invite us in?

40:07

We need some fresh blood.

40:08

The whole movie's like that.

40:11

It's fantastic.

40:12

Oh, that's funny.

40:13

Will you invite us in?

40:15

Just invite us in.

40:17

The bouncer's like, no.

40:17

And they can't do anything about it because they're vampires.

40:21

Let the right one in.

40:22

Oh, okay.

40:23

That is, of all the modern vampire movies, I mean, I haven't seen the, what's

40:28

his name?

40:29

Eggers?

40:29

The American version of it?

40:30

No, I hate the American version.

40:32

The American version is, let them in, is terrible.

40:36

Like, I had to wash my eyes afterwards with another movie.

40:42

I didn't mind it.

40:43

I hated the, but because I loved the-

40:47

I loved the foreign version.

40:47

Who, which country was it from?

40:49

I think Sweden.

40:50

Sweden.

40:51

It's really good.

40:51

It's an outstanding, outstanding film.

40:54

And the book is fabulous as well.

40:55

It's an amazing novel.

40:57

Yeah.

40:58

I just love a good horror movie.

41:00

A well-made horror movie.

41:01

Because, like, the suspension of disbelief is, like, inherent to the enjoyment

41:05

of the film.

41:06

Like, you know?

41:07

Like, just show me.

41:08

Show me how the guy turns into a monster.

41:10

Yeah.

41:11

Show me.

41:11

Yeah.

41:11

Let's go.

41:12

Make it so.

41:12

Make it so.

41:13

And also, you can see, you know, like, I mean, they have been making Dracula

41:20

movies again and again and again.

41:22

It seems like every year there's another vampire movie coming out, or every

41:26

couple years at least.

41:27

And, you know, there never seems to be an exhausted-

41:32

The market never seems to be exhausted by it.

41:34

No.

41:35

You know, it's zombie movies.

41:36

They continue making them.

41:38

You know, it's like-

41:39

That's the most overused genre, is zombie films.

41:42

Zombie films, zombie TV shows.

41:44

I mean, how many versions of The Walking Dead are there?

41:46

There's multiple.

41:47

Yeah.

41:47

And I'm not a big fan of the-

41:49

I like-

41:50

I mean-

41:51

The beginning was great.

41:52

I think first season of The Walking Dead is great.

41:53

When it started, but then I realized, oh, it's just sadism.

41:57

And, I mean, I get the point.

41:59

After the first season, I realized, oh, the point is that The Walking Dead are

42:02

the living.

42:03

They're actually The Walking Dead.

42:05

Yeah.

42:05

Because they've become emotionally-

42:07

I didn't like-

42:08

It got into the point where they were just-

42:10

It was just murder porn.

42:12

Yeah.

42:12

And that-

42:15

I mean, I think I even talked about this before.

42:17

Like, that's a real problem with television, is that they're just trying to get

42:21

the serotonin

42:22

levels spiked by killing someone that you care about.

42:25

Mm-hmm.

42:25

And, you know, real television, you return because you love the characters and

42:29

you want

42:30

to return to it.

42:30

Well, sometimes it's done well.

42:32

Like, Game of Thrones did a fantastic job of doing that.

42:36

But even that kind of lost its way after a while.

42:38

I mean, actually-

42:39

Well, there's like eight seasons.

42:40

I'm re-watching it right now.

42:42

We're actually on season three right now.

42:44

It's fucking great.

42:46

I kind of forgot how great it was.

42:48

But when you get to binge it and you don't have to wait, like, there was years

42:52

in between

42:53

seasons because it took so long to produce.

42:55

Have you seen The Pendragon Cycle?

42:58

The Rise of the Merlin?

43:01

No.

43:02

Okay.

43:02

So these days, like, you almost don't know where television, where to find

43:07

television.

43:09

And that's because you can find it anywhere.

43:11

Like, and the main, the mainstay producers of it, the studios and everything,

43:16

they're no

43:17

longer reliable in producing quality television.

43:20

And so suddenly, we see stuff rising, you know, out of places that is

43:24

completely unexpected.

43:26

And this was produced by The Daily Wire of all people.

43:31

Yes.

43:32

And the CEO of The Daily Wire directed it.

43:35

This guy, Jeremy Boring.

43:37

Yeah.

43:37

I hope I'm not mispronouncing his name.

43:39

His name is Boring.

43:40

But-

43:43

And this is good?

43:44

Okay.

43:44

This is, to me, this is better than, you know, it's-

43:49

I have a very high watermark for Arthurian mythology.

43:56

Like, to me, Excalibur is the high watermark.

43:59

And this really went through, this, like, I had a chip on my shoulder when I

44:03

started watching

44:04

this.

44:04

I was like, okay, this is very unlikely that I'm going to enjoy this production.

44:08

But they did it for, like, a, for a micro-budget, effectively.

44:12

They made something that is absolutely kind of reinvents the mythology.

44:17

And they do it like proper television, where you kind of love the characters

44:22

and they weave

44:23

an entire reality and universe that is just fantastic.

44:26

And it's done for, like, you know, for very, very little.

44:29

You know, they're spending billions making these Lord of the Rings things.

44:33

And, like, nobody cares.

44:35

They're just awful to watch.

44:37

And in the meantime, these guys just, you know, without anybody paying

44:42

attention, cranked this

44:44

out.

44:44

And I've only seen four episodes of it.

44:47

But I am, like, completely blown away by it.

44:50

That's so interesting.

44:52

That Daily Wire.

44:52

Because I haven't heard anything about it.

44:54

I think that's part of the problem.

44:55

Well, that's because, well, like, we don't hear about a lot of things.

44:59

Right.

44:59

And media is, like, the least of it.

45:01

Well, certainly.

45:02

Right.

45:03

Good point.

45:04

But certainly with Daily Wire, the problem is it's, like, associated with this

45:08

right-wing

45:09

production company.

45:10

If you can get over that and, like, and put that behind you, then, I mean, this

45:16

is, to

45:17

me, as good as classic television.

45:19

It's, I, my prejudice was initially, oh, they're going to somehow or another

45:25

embed right-wing

45:26

ideology in this.

45:27

Well, everybody's embedding their own ideology.

45:30

Whenever you make any media, there's usually, you have corporate propaganda and

45:35

personal propaganda.

45:36

And usually there was a balance between the two.

45:39

You know, if you're making Midnight Express, for example.

45:43

Okay.

45:44

That movie was nothing like the book at all.

45:47

Really?

45:47

Not even close to the book.

45:49

And it's a complete alternate experience.

45:52

And you wonder, why did that movie, why was that movie such a big success?

45:55

Why was that movie such a overwhelmingly, like, Oscars and everything?

46:02

Okay.

46:03

I think it had a little bit more to do with the politics of what was going on

46:06

with Turkey at

46:06

that time than anything else.

46:08

And, you know, what's his name?

46:12

Billy Hayes, who, you know, experienced it, lived it, spent the rest of his

46:17

life basically

46:17

apologizing for the movie.

46:19

Why?

46:22

Because he wasn't, like, raped in a Turkish prison.

46:25

Oh, the original guy who wrote the book.

46:28

That's like a joke that gets, you know, in Airplane, they're making jokes about

46:31

it.

46:32

Right.

46:32

And so, yeah, Billy Hayes, he was the actual character or the person who lived

46:37

the experience.

46:38

And so the movie is a kind of propaganda element.

46:42

And that's like all Hollywood does that.

46:45

We, you know, you kind of accept whenever you're making a movie that you're

46:49

being used in a certain level to do something, whether it's to, you know, on a

46:54

very basic level, whether it's just to, like, you know, mortify or scare

46:58

audiences or, you know, to do things.

47:01

And we see that more and more, obviously, in media as the director, the

47:04

personal propaganda, when you have something personal that you want to get on

47:08

screen, has become more and more diminished.

47:11

And you have, you know, sort of more corporate propaganda kind of taking over.

47:16

And I think the most probably crass example of that is DEI stuff, you know, in

47:22

movies and pushing characters in situations that are just completely out of

47:28

whack.

47:29

Did you see the Star Trek that they tried to make like that?

47:32

Okay.

47:34

I'm like a big Star Trek guy.

47:35

I watch Star Trek every day in my house.

47:38

We watch like two or three episodes.

47:39

And I'm not kidding.

47:40

My wife is like a Trekkie.

47:43

She is like crazy for Star Trek.

47:44

That's amazing.

47:45

And so she puts Star Trek on, you know, like at around five o'clock, Star Trek

47:48

comes on.

47:49

Well, we cycle through, we go chronologically from, you know, the original

47:56

series through the next generation.

47:59

And then DS9 and then Voyager and then Enterprise.

48:03

And then we look back to.

48:05

And sometimes, you know, when you show an episode like in DS9, there's an

48:09

episode called Trials and Tribulations where all the characters go into the

48:12

past and they kind of interact with Trouble with Tribbles.

48:16

And they kind of blend them into the set and everything that's happening.

48:19

We'll then go back and watch Trouble with Tribbles or, you know, same thing

48:24

with Wrath of Khan.

48:25

We'll do this, you know.

48:26

So we'll kind of connect it all together.

48:30

And so but every day there's at least two or three episodes of Star Trek

48:34

playing in my house.

48:35

It's like I usually have to wrestle away the controller to say we're watching a

48:39

movie now.

48:39

And so and my children were like basically raised on Star Trek and, you know,

48:46

the sort of morals behind Star Trek.

48:50

And, you know, you know, and people complain about, oh, you know, I don't like

48:55

DS9 as much.

48:56

It's not as dynamic.

48:57

I hate Bajor and blah, blah, blah.

48:58

But I think Captain Sisko is one of the most amazing captains there is because

49:03

he's also a father.

49:05

And there's all these like father son lessons that are going on throughout it.

49:09

It's like really elaborate television.

49:11

And by the way, all that kind of DEI stuff is still in it.

49:16

It's still there.

49:17

They're, you know, they're exploring all sorts of things in Star Trek The Next

49:20

Generation.

49:20

Riker, who's like the second in command to Picard.

49:27

In that one, there's an episode where he goes to a planet of neuters that are

49:32

just, you know, they have one gender.

49:35

And he falls in love with one and they kind of waken up out of their single

49:39

gender thing and realize, oh, I'm female.

49:41

And that person then gets taken and reprogrammed.

49:44

And then there's an episode where Cork is turned into a woman in order to for

49:49

some cockamamie reason that they come up with in the show.

49:53

And he kind of likes it.

49:55

He's like getting into it.

49:55

So it's not like they aren't exploring gender.

49:59

They're not just beating you over the head with it.

50:01

It's somehow integrated into good storytelling.

50:04

And I think something happened at, you know, at the studios where they fired

50:09

all of the legacy people and they hired on a bunch of new people who just weren't

50:14

as good at storytelling and or as respectful of the, you know, the canon, I

50:21

guess you could say.

50:23

Right.

50:24

Is what it was.

50:25

But, you know, those seasons of Star Trek are, which I guess you could call the

50:30

from the Gene Roddenberry into the Rick Berman era.

50:34

And I mean, they had such amazing writers.

50:37

They had guys like Rene Achevarria and Naren Shankar.

50:40

And they had technical advisors.

50:42

And, you know, so if you were just into the tech, you could really like, you

50:47

know, and most of our technology and most of our aspirations have come from

50:51

Star Trek.

50:52

You know, our telephones are basically, you know, like tricorders.

50:56

Tricorders, yeah.

50:57

And, you know, when we see it on Star Trek, like, oh, we talked to the computer.

51:02

Well, I want to have that.

51:03

And so somebody figures out a way to develop that and to make it so.

51:07

And now we have that.

51:08

Didn't he actually say computer?

51:09

Yeah.

51:10

Like he would say computer and ask the question?

51:12

Well, hey, Siri.

51:14

Hey, Siri.

51:14

Same thing.

51:15

Yeah.

51:16

Wow.

51:17

And so, you know, it's a, I mean, I think it's a fantastic show.

51:21

And then this dweeb Alex Kurtzman comes along and just shits all over

51:25

everything, just like craps all over it.

51:28

And, I mean, I went in and met with the guy.

51:30

You know, I was like, hey, I will write for scale.

51:34

You know, I'll write on your new show.

51:36

I, like, I just want to be part of it.

51:39

Just as an opportunity to work on Star Trek.

51:41

And he was, and I basically found out he didn't want anybody who had any kind

51:44

of fondness for the original show.

51:46

He wanted to do something new and to create something new.

51:50

And, boy, has he shit the bed, like, in a big way.

51:54

And this latest thing that they've made, this Starfleet Academy.

51:59

Now, it's still ongoing.

52:00

Maybe it writes itself at some point.

52:02

I think they canceled it.

52:04

Did they?

52:04

Good.

52:05

The newest, the newest, the newest, they read the room.

52:08

Super woke version.

52:08

They read the room.

52:09

Finally.

52:10

Is it, um, they didn't, they stopped the idea of a season two?

52:14

That fucking Alex Kurtzman, man.

52:16

His company's called Secret Hideout, I think.

52:19

He's going to need a secret hideout after all these, like, after destroying

52:23

Star Trek for, like, this latest generation.

52:25

Are we talking about the newest one?

52:27

The one with Tig Notaro?

52:28

That's the newest one.

52:29

Starfleet Academy?

52:30

Starfleet Academy is an abomination.

52:32

Is that what you're talking about?

52:34

I could not, I could not get, yes.

52:35

I could not get through three episodes of Discovery.

52:38

And, I mean, they're just like, it is just awful, awful storytelling.

52:43

Well, it's also clunky dialogue and bad acting.

52:47

It's just horrible.

52:48

And they're, they're more interested in, um, in the corporate, corporate policy,

52:53

in the corporate propaganda than they are with any kind of personal propaganda.

52:58

Right.

52:58

It seems like that's the imperative.

53:00

It's like they get across this inclusive, you know, concept.

53:05

The card, the card was terrible.

53:06

It was, it was sad, actually.

53:08

It was just depressing for me.

53:10

And so, like when, you know, when Seth What's-His-Name did that show, The Orville,

53:14

and like, that is like, you know, the proper successor.

53:17

Like, they brought back guys like James Conroy, the, uh.

53:22

But I don't know what The Orville is.

53:23

Uh, it was kind of like a comedy version, Seth MacFarlane did, but he hired all

53:28

the original people that they had fired from Star Trek and basically used them

53:33

to do his show.

53:34

And it actually feels a little bit more like a, like a continuation.

53:40

I've never heard of this either.

53:41

And it's on Hulu?

53:43

Yeah.

53:44

Yeah.

53:44

Is it, it is a Star Trek or is it?

53:46

No, it's not Star Trek.

53:47

It's The Orville.

53:48

So they just ripped off Star Trek?

53:50

They basically just ripped off Star Trek.

53:52

And they, they have a sort of like tongue in cheek quality, but they, they

53:56

bring all the, you know, all the writers from the original and showrunners and,

54:00

uh, you know, people like that.

54:01

And the original directors like, um, you know, like Jim, God, I'm like blanking

54:06

on his name, Conroy.

54:08

I want to say Conroy, but it's, I think it's, ah, whatever.

54:11

Um, and, uh, so they bring everybody back and it has a little bit more of the

54:15

same spirit.

54:16

Another really good Star Trek-ish thing is Galaxy Quest.

54:20

It's something that got kind of buried and with, uh.

54:23

Sigourney Weaver?

54:24

Sigourney Weaver.

54:25

Yeah, that was good.

54:26

Galaxy Quest is hilarious.

54:28

If you love the original series of Star Trek, Galaxy Quest is amazing.

54:33

Like, it's so fantastic.

54:36

I love Sigourney Weaver.

54:37

Yeah.

54:38

She's one of my all-time favorites.

54:39

That, that's a good example of a movie that was like a DEI movie that you never

54:44

even noticed it was Alien.

54:46

Yeah.

54:47

Like, you have a female lead and you, you never think about it that she's the

54:49

hero.

54:49

It's not like we didn't have like powerful women in movies before.

54:53

We've like had them throughout history.

54:55

Right.

54:56

You know, uh, the history of cinema is built on, uh, you know, and, and by the

55:00

way, a, you know, a complex woman character can have faults.

55:04

Right.

55:05

Like, that's part of it is characters have faults.

55:08

Characters have things wrong with them.

55:10

Yeah.

55:11

You know, they're not always just, you know, like, you know, uh, you know.

55:14

Dominant and noble.

55:16

Dominant and, and like, can do everything immediately.

55:19

Right, exactly.

55:20

Like the, some of the Star Wars ones that went woke, there was, there was a few

55:24

of those.

55:25

Well, yeah.

55:25

I mean, you know, it's funny.

55:26

You had, I think it was, I think it was here.

55:28

Ben Affleck was on and they were talking about AI and how it always goes to the

55:33

middle and, well, you know, it always goes to the middle and always goes to the

55:36

middle.

55:37

And I was like, like, J.J. Abrams always goes to the middle.

55:42

And boy, was that Star Wars he did the middle where he just basically took the

55:47

Luke Skywalker story and just reinterpreted it with a strong, strong woman, you

55:51

know, character.

55:52

And I just thought it was bland and just tasteless and just, you know, nothing

55:59

new.

55:59

He just went to the middle.

56:01

So you don't need AI to go to the middle.

56:03

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57:01

No.

57:01

No, you just need a mandate.

57:05

And the thing about Alien 2 was like you didn't know who the hero was.

57:10

Alien 2 or Aliens?

57:11

You mean Aliens?

57:12

Aliens as well.

57:13

I mean Alien 1.

57:14

I didn't like Aliens 2 as much.

57:16

It was fun.

57:17

But it was like why are they so easy to kill now?

57:19

Why are they so obvious?

57:21

No, they were, you know, space Marines.

57:23

I know.

57:23

And Marines are tough.

57:24

Marines are badass.

57:25

I know.

57:26

And Marines can like...

57:27

But the first alien was clever.

57:27

But those aliens, they still overwhelmed her.

57:29

I know.

57:30

But the first alien was clever.

57:31

He was hiding.

57:32

He would sneak around.

57:33

He would jump.

57:34

He didn't get to see much of it.

57:36

And that was also cool too because it kind of captured you with the suspense.

57:40

It's one of the best movies ever made.

57:42

And it's a 1979 movie too, which is crazy.

57:45

People don't even know how old it is.

57:46

What's funny, I recently went back and started watching all the Ridley Scott

57:50

movies I hadn't

57:51

seen.

57:51

You know, like there's a ton of them that I just, you know, kind of missed

57:55

along the way.

57:56

And I started off with, God, what was it?

58:02

Oh, I started off with Napoleon and like, because I just missed it when it came

58:06

out.

58:06

And I'm like, what happened to Ridley Scott?

58:10

And I have not liked any of his recent alien movies.

58:14

I just think they're, I'm confused by them, to be honest.

58:17

The Prometheus ones.

58:18

It's just like when you need a web episode in order to understand what the hell

58:21

he's talking

58:22

about in the movie, you failed.

58:24

And they're just like, they're technically, technical marvels.

58:29

Like nobody shoots big canvas cinema like Ridley Scott.

58:33

Like no one shoots a helicopter crashing like Ridley Scott shoots a helicopter

58:37

crashing.

58:38

And, you know, you watch Napoleon and sure, the Battle of Austerlitz, amazing

58:45

to watch.

58:46

You know, cannonballs going into the lake and the ice breaking and people

58:51

falling in the

58:52

water.

58:52

But the minute anybody talks in that movie, it just collapses on its own weight.

58:58

It's just like, you just don't care.

59:00

My wife was like, this is the worst date movie.

59:03

You're not going to sleep with me after this.

59:06

What's wrong with it?

59:07

I didn't see it.

59:08

It's well, Joaquin Phoenix, who, and I think he made a choice because I

59:13

consider him to be

59:14

an excellent actor.

59:15

But in this movie, I think he made a choice to just play it like, you know,

59:19

contemporary,

59:20

like he just kind of talks.

59:22

Everybody else is doing sort of a British or French-ish accent.

59:25

Like they're all kind of pretending that they're in a period piece.

59:29

But not Joaquin Phoenix.

59:30

He just plays it like he just, you know, walked off Hollywood Boulevard.

59:33

Really?

59:33

And just like the battle scene.

59:36

There's no passion in any of his performance.

59:39

It's kind of this weird, dead, dead performance.

59:43

And so I...

59:45

He did it on purpose to betray like a sociopath.

59:47

I think he came on.

59:49

He was like, I am going to do whatever I want to do the way Napoleon would.

59:53

And I'm not going to try.

59:55

I'm a Corsican.

59:56

And I'm not just...

59:57

I'm going to be an outsider to all of these other people who were...

59:59

I think there was an intellectual idea behind what he did.

1:00:02

And it completely failed.

1:00:03

And so I'm like, okay, I adore watching Ridley Scott do these big scenes.

1:00:07

But what a terrible movie.

1:00:09

And, you know, like failure.

1:00:12

And then I...

1:00:14

And so then after that, I'm like, okay, let's watch something else.

1:00:17

Well, oh, he did Exodus.

1:00:18

I've never seen that.

1:00:20

Gods and Kings with Christian Bale.

1:00:22

Same thing.

1:00:24

It's like you start watching that movie.

1:00:26

And there's some interesting things in the film.

1:00:27

He's got like chariot battles and, you know, archers shooting things.

1:00:32

And like, you know, whenever he's doing that, like Ridley Scott's like, oh,

1:00:32

this is my day on set.

1:00:36

And he's got a cigar and 20 cameras.

1:00:38

You know, put cameras everywhere.

1:00:39

And he's like, shoot from every angle.

1:00:41

And he's like a great general, you know, shooting.

1:00:44

But the minute anybody talks, that movie falls apart.

1:00:47

And actually, I mean, I don't know how to say this, but that movie almost did

1:00:52

its best to turn me on the Jews.

1:00:54

Like, I'm watching it and I'm like, this is like...

1:00:58

First of all, is anybody even Jewish making this?

1:01:01

Like, it seems like nobody involved in it was Jewish.

1:01:05

And like, they start like, you know...

1:01:07

How is that even possible?

1:01:08

Well, Moses, as a character, when he's an Egyptian, when he's like the adopted

1:01:13

Egyptian brother, I'm like totally with him for some reason.

1:01:16

And then he becomes Moses after getting like hit in the head with a rock.

1:01:19

And all of a sudden, he's, you know, kind of, he's like a lunatic.

1:01:25

And you're like, everybody's following him?

1:01:27

Like, he's distasteful all of a sudden.

1:01:32

But every now and then they would show a battle scene.

1:01:35

And it's like, okay, I can like Ridley Scott's doing his thing again.

1:01:39

And like, and you know, who's also really good in it is, God, I can't remember,

1:01:42

Joel Egerton, who plays Ramses.

1:01:45

It's really funny because Joel Egerton is, you know, usually you imagine

1:01:49

Egyptians when they're cast as being kind of tall and, you know, sort of noble

1:01:54

looking and everything.

1:01:56

He's kind of like this butch, like sort of tough, you know, wide bodied butch

1:02:01

Ramses, like just kind of like a tough Ramses.

1:02:04

And every now and then his Australian accent comes out.

1:02:06

And so he's like, oh, he's like an Australian Ramses.

1:02:09

And John Turturro plays his father, you know, a bald.

1:02:14

I'm like, is that John Turturro?

1:02:15

Like, what a crazy choice this is.

1:02:17

And so there were all sorts of like interesting things going on in the movie.

1:02:22

But again, I was like, oh, this is awful.

1:02:25

Is it impossible for you to watch a movie without just becoming hypercritical

1:02:29

about all these different aspects, like how I would do it, what I don't like?

1:02:34

Yes and no.

1:02:35

So the next Ridley Scott movie I watched, which I stayed away from and with

1:02:40

great apologies to Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, was The Last Duel.

1:02:45

And I just kind of avoided it.

1:02:47

I was doing other things at the time and the poster looked awful and it was

1:02:50

like, I'm not going to go see that.

1:02:52

And then I put it on after watching these other two and I was like, okay, here

1:02:57

we go.

1:02:58

Let's go again.

1:02:59

And lo and behold, one of the best films of the century in my opinion.

1:03:04

Really?

1:03:04

Absolutely.

1:03:05

First of all, those guys know how to write a script.

1:03:08

And I know that they wrote it with Nicole Hofsen-Otter or whatever her name is.

1:03:12

And look at Ben Affleck.

1:03:15

When I saw him blonde, I was like, that's one of the reasons it kept me away

1:03:18

from it.

1:03:19

But he's hilarious in the movie.

1:03:20

He's a genius in the film.

1:03:22

I never even heard about this movie.

1:03:24

I was gripped by this film.

1:03:26

And this is a great date movie.

1:03:28

Like this, my wife got turned on after this film.

1:03:30

Believe it or not.

1:03:32

That's hilarious.

1:03:35

I don't know anything about this movie.

1:03:36

And Adam Driver is magnificent.

1:03:38

And like this relationship that these two guys have.

1:03:41

And it's kind of a Rashomon story, meaning that like Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon,

1:03:45

which was three stories that are all sort of the same event told from different

1:03:49

perspectives.

1:03:50

And so, and Matt Damon is like a revelation.

1:03:53

And this movie says so much about Hollywood.

1:03:55

Like when I watched this, I was like, okay, I'm Matt Damon and Quentin is Adam

1:03:59

Driver, for sure.

1:04:00

Like Adam Driver totally knows how to, like, you learn about Hollywood in this

1:04:05

film.

1:04:06

And I'm sure they're writing it, like knowing about Hollywood, that the way to

1:04:10

really get along in court is to join the orgies.

1:04:12

You know, to be in the orgy with everybody is like how you get along.

1:04:16

It's like we all fuck together and that's how we do it.

1:04:20

But Matt Damon, who by all accounts in this, is a great, you know, he's a

1:04:25

fighter.

1:04:26

He's a great knight.

1:04:27

He's true in his heart.

1:04:29

But he's just like a pill to hang out with.

1:04:32

And he doesn't go to the orgies.

1:04:33

And because of that, he's just kind of marginalized.

1:04:35

And the whole movie plays off of this friendship that just kind of goes awry

1:04:40

where jealousy comes into play.

1:04:42

And it's ruinous to everything until they're finally fighting in the very end.

1:04:47

And this is where Ridley Scott just does what he does, which is he has this

1:04:53

insane fight between these two guys, which, like, was just every blow was

1:04:59

painful to look at.

1:05:00

And this, to me, was the best Ridley Scott movie I've seen of the century.

1:05:04

I mean, I guess Black Hawk Down, I also very much like Gladiator, although Gladiator

1:05:09

2, I throw that in.

1:05:11

I never saw that.

1:05:11

Throw that in with Exodus, Gods and Monsters.

1:05:14

It was actually boring to watch.

1:05:16

I loved Gladiator 1, though.

1:05:17

Gladiator 1 is magnificent.

1:05:19

It had some kind of secret sauce in it that was fantastic.

1:05:23

And Gladiator 2, it just kind of goes through the paces.

1:05:26

It's just kind of everybody shows up.

1:05:28

Speaking of showing up, when Sigourney Weaver shows up in Exodus, Gods and

1:05:32

Monsters, she's not even trying at all.

1:05:35

She knows that she's there for a paycheck.

1:05:37

Like, she just shows up and she just, like, does not put on an accent of any

1:05:41

kind.

1:05:41

She just shows up and just speaks the lines.

1:05:44

And I'm out of here.

1:05:45

I'm going into Morocco or whatever, into town.

1:05:48

I'm going to go party for a while.

1:05:50

Do you think she just thought it was a bad film and just checked out?

1:05:54

I'm not sure what she was thinking, but, like, she may have been thinking what,

1:05:58

I mean, maybe she was trying, but I don't know.

1:06:00

It just didn't look like it.

1:06:02

It just looked like she was.

1:06:03

Well, that's got to be a weird thing when an actor makes a choice with a

1:06:06

character and it just doesn't work and they don't realize it, but they're

1:06:10

committed to it.

1:06:11

And the other Ridley Scott movie that I just watched that I hadn't seen, again,

1:06:16

I avoided it partly because of the title of the film.

1:06:20

And there's just nothing excited.

1:06:21

I thought it was a comedy.

1:06:22

In fact, I'd been avoiding it.

1:06:24

It was on my plex.

1:06:25

There it is.

1:06:26

I look at the thing.

1:06:27

It looks like a comedy.

1:06:28

It's got Javier Bardem and Cameron Diaz and they're all kind of Javier Bardem

1:06:33

looking exactly like Robert Downey Jr.

1:06:36

Like, and it, like, just kind of this crazy, Robert Downey Jr. in his crazy

1:06:39

phase, you know, with, like, colorful glasses and everything.

1:06:42

Robert Downey Jr. with, like, a broken up nose or whatever's going on with that

1:06:46

nose.

1:06:47

And, okay, so I put on The Counselor and this movie, so looking at that, I

1:06:52

thought this was a comedy.

1:06:54

I thought, oh, it's going to be a romantic comedy.

1:06:57

This movie, after I saw it, I was like, I feel like I've seen too much.

1:07:01

I feel like I know too much now about the world.

1:07:05

Like, it's, and it's made, like, right before, you know, I think this movie was

1:07:10

kind of a disaster for Ridley Scott.

1:07:13

And he, you know, had to recover from it, probably, because of the failure of

1:07:19

it.

1:07:20

I never even heard of it.

1:07:21

It's written by, oh, my God, Cormac McCarthy.

1:07:26

And so it is dark, dark, dark.

1:07:28

And it is an analysis of how power works in the modern world, which is

1:07:35

basically a giant cartel.

1:07:38

The cartel runs everything, and you cannot escape the cartel.

1:07:42

And it is such a spectacular, I think that's such a spectacular movie.

1:07:47

I loved it.

1:07:48

I loved it.

1:07:49

When did that come out?

1:07:50

Like, 2014, I think.

1:07:52

2013.

1:07:52

2013.

1:07:53

Did you ever hear of it, Jamie?

1:07:55

I don't think so.

1:07:56

There's too much content.

1:07:58

Well, there's too much content.

1:07:59

And yet Ridley Scott, and he's cranking out movies, like, every year he's doing

1:08:02

a movie.

1:08:03

It's like, just knocking him back, knocking him back.

1:08:05

He's constantly making films.

1:08:07

And so that was why I hadn't—and so finally I was like, well, I've got to

1:08:11

catch up on some Ridley Scott.

1:08:12

And Quentin had been talking about Black Hawk Down and how much he loved it and

1:08:17

how he thought it was the best film of the century.

1:08:19

And, you know, he's largely correct.

1:08:22

That's not a bad—I could have done without the UNICEF commercial at the very

1:08:28

beginning, where it's just like, you know, a little UNICEF commercial about

1:08:33

people starving in Africa and Somalia.

1:08:36

But the rest of the movie is just insanely beautiful.

1:08:39

And so I wanted to check out all the movies I hadn't seen of his.

1:08:42

And so that's why I started researching them and looking them up again.

1:08:46

And, like, The Counselor, how did that fall through the cracks?

1:08:48

And it gets terrible reviews.

1:08:50

Like, people hated the film, apparently.

1:08:52

What's the criticism?

1:08:54

People, like, I think they were just like, we don't believe it.

1:08:59

You know, they just don't believe that that's what the world is like.

1:09:01

And, you know, I found the film to be, like—

1:09:05

Do you think that's just because of the time period it was released?

1:09:07

Yeah.

1:09:08

I think it was more innocent—

1:09:09

I think Ridley Scott knows things that—and Cormac McCarthy know things about

1:09:14

the world that they put on film before everything was known.

1:09:19

Like, I think if that movie was released today, people would be like, yeah,

1:09:22

that's what's happening today.

1:09:24

Yeah.

1:09:25

And so, yeah.

1:09:26

Oh, yeah.

1:09:26

Oh, they're putting people in sulfuric acid into drums.

1:09:30

Yeah, what the fuck?

1:09:32

And shipping them around the world, you know, as a joke, you know, like—

1:09:36

That's in the film?

1:09:37

Yeah, there's all sorts—

1:09:38

Well, did you see the thing in the Epstein files?

1:09:39

Oh, yeah.

1:09:40

They ordered—

1:09:41

Those Epstein files—in fact, I can't believe that, like, everybody's just

1:09:44

kind of like, oh, okay, and they're moving on with their lives.

1:09:47

Did you see that guy at the Atlanta airport flipping out, the well-dressed

1:09:52

black dude who just freaks out in the—

1:09:55

When?

1:09:55

Just, like, a couple of days ago, I saw it on YouTube—no, I saw it on Twitter,

1:10:00

or X.

1:10:00

And this guy's just freaking out in the Atlanta airport.

1:10:05

He's like, you know, I read the Epstein files!

1:10:08

Like, all of you, you're going about your lives like nothing's happening!

1:10:11

Look at your old zombies!

1:10:13

And he's right.

1:10:14

It's like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

1:10:16

Everybody is just numb to everything.

1:10:19

Like, dudes, we had a global pandemic, aliens, you know, all these, like, revelations.

1:10:26

People are, you know, eating babies.

1:10:29

Here's—

1:10:30

This is the guy.

1:10:31

Miles have been released, and all of y'all are acting normal!

1:10:36

All of y'all!

1:10:38

And there's a longer version of that, where he's—but he's basically like, you're

1:10:44

all acting like nothing's happening.

1:10:46

Like, what the fuck?

1:10:48

You know, you're all just pretending you're just drones going on in your normal

1:10:51

lives.

1:10:51

Well, I think people are waiting for a condensed version that lays out all the

1:10:56

facts.

1:10:56

It's the people that are, like, really interested in reading all the emails.

1:11:00

I think the Luciferians cast a spell on the world.

1:11:04

For real?

1:11:05

Oh, absolutely.

1:11:06

Like, you know, it's just like how vampires can't go into a house unless they're

1:11:10

invited.

1:11:11

They tell you, you know, what's going on ahead of time.

1:11:15

It's predictive programming.

1:11:16

And once you say it out loud and you put it out there and make fun of it and do

1:11:20

a little skit, like they—like Stephen Colbert did a little skit on his show

1:11:24

where, oh, here's a baby.

1:11:25

I'm going to take this baby, and I'm going to give it to Moloch.

1:11:28

And he goes into, like, a cloudy red, you know, furnace and hands the baby over.

1:11:34

And he goes, oh, and the baby's going to be fine.

1:11:35

And they make a joke about it, and the audience laughs.

1:11:37

Okay, we're all now conditioned to it.

1:11:39

We've all seen it.

1:11:40

And by laughing at it, we're complicit.

1:11:43

You think that that's on purpose, that this is, like, some sort of a grand

1:11:47

design to get us to be desensitized to the idea of demons eating babies?

1:11:51

Yeah.

1:11:52

For sure.

1:11:53

Really?

1:11:54

For sure.

1:11:54

And by the way, nobody's doing anything about it.

1:11:58

We know what's happening.

1:11:59

But that has to take, like, there has to be a person or some group of people.

1:12:04

Yeah, like about 8,500 people.

1:12:06

Yeah.

1:12:07

That are manipulating the Colbert show?

1:12:09

That are manipulating everything.

1:12:10

It's all an illusion.

1:12:12

Like, reality as we know it is fake.

1:12:16

That's the revelation that that guy is having.

1:12:20

And he's looking around, and he's like, it's like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

1:12:23

Well, it's – see, I don't – the thing about the emails is – one of the

1:12:29

things is it's just stuff written down.

1:12:32

And so that's sort of hard to digest.

1:12:35

Like, what is this?

1:12:36

Like, what are they saying?

1:12:37

Like, some of it is in code.

1:12:38

Like, walking over beef jerky.

1:12:40

Like, saying – talking about jerky.

1:12:43

Could you walk beef jerky over to this person?

1:12:45

Like, what does that mean?

1:12:45

For all this pizza they're talking about, you never see any pizza.

1:12:48

Right.

1:12:49

Yeah, yeah.

1:12:50

They're ordering pizza.

1:12:51

Like, I'm going to get some gr-rape soda.

1:12:54

It's like, with my cheese pizza.

1:12:57

Yeah.

1:12:58

And, like, there's all this coded language, and everyone's like, you know, oh,

1:13:01

that's – you're just – you just have periola.

1:13:04

You know, the – you're just seeing things where you want to see them.

1:13:08

No, there's clearly a code.

1:13:09

Well, that was the thing about pizza game.

1:13:10

No, it's absolutely a code.

1:13:11

And, in fact, mundus volt disipi, ergo disipiatur.

1:13:14

It's a long-known concept.

1:13:16

And so, in Latin, mundus volt disipi means the world wants to be deceived.

1:13:22

Ergo, disipiatur.

1:13:24

Therefore, it is.

1:13:26

We want to be deceived.

1:13:28

We don't want to believe the horrors that are actually behind the veil.

1:13:34

Well, I think with the Epstein files, people are – because of these emails

1:13:39

that have been released, people are just now starting to be aware of the bizarreness

1:13:44

of the code and some of the things – like, the facts.

1:13:48

Like, let's just talk about the sulfuric acid.

1:13:50

So, this was, like, right after he was indicted in 2018.

1:13:55

Yeah, I got to get rid of some bodies.

1:13:57

Yeah.

1:13:58

I got to dissolve up some bodies.

1:14:00

What did it say he ordered?

1:14:02

Like, let's –

1:14:04

Like, 8,000 gallons or –

1:14:08

Half a dozen, 55 gallons.

1:14:09

Maybe we can get our sponsor, Perplexity, to process this and give us a synopsis

1:14:14

of what exactly happened, some sort of a breakdown.

1:14:19

Because one of the things they're saying is, like, he was indicted, and then

1:14:23

right after he's indicted, he orders – how many gallons?

1:14:27

Six 55-gallon containers full of sulfuric acid.

1:14:32

Jesus Christ.

1:14:33

Jesus Christ.

1:14:36

What?

1:14:40

What?

1:14:42

They're eating babies, man.

1:14:44

Like, that's the –

1:14:45

So, that you think is real.

1:14:46

So –

1:14:47

Well, yeah, not only that.

1:14:48

I think that there's, you know, sacrifices going on every day in Los Angeles.

1:14:52

I mean, you know, allegedly, like, you know, high-level musicians, let's say,

1:14:59

high-level female musician, is, like, you know, killing chickens every day,

1:15:05

doing sacrifices.

1:15:06

Like, you know –

1:15:07

High-level.

1:15:08

I don't want to say names because I don't want to get sued.

1:15:11

And I don't want to be dead either.

1:15:13

What does it rhyme like?

1:15:14

Here's the purchase order.

1:15:15

I go –

1:15:15

Okay.

1:15:15

I start looking at the comments for some stuff.

1:15:17

Not that this is the best answer, but a quick answer someone gives is that this

1:15:21

could be for, like, a reverse osmosis water treatment system.

1:15:25

It's true.

1:15:25

He is on an island.

1:15:26

He's on an island.

1:15:26

I mean, there's enough pushback because mundus volt dissipi, ergo dissipiatur.

1:15:31

You know, we – but, like, the timing of all of that, like, you know, where

1:15:36

are the purchase orders for all of that sulfuric acid before that?

1:15:39

Oh, no, I just want to put sulfuric acid into my swimming pool.

1:15:41

Muriatic acid.

1:15:42

Well, that's the question.

1:15:43

Was there orders for sulfuric acid before this?

1:15:46

If they do have a water treatment plan?

1:15:48

How does sulfuric acid play into water treatment?

1:15:51

It says it here.

1:15:52

It says it's commonly used.

1:15:53

This explains it.

1:15:55

I don't fucking know.

1:15:56

Okay.

1:15:56

It says RO plant reverse osmosis seawater desalination facility.

1:16:03

Sulfuric acid is commonly used in the maintenance of such facilities.

1:16:06

Not everything you don't understand adds up to the worst possible thing it

1:16:09

could be.

1:16:10

Deception.

1:16:11

Look, maybe they're all eating pizza and grape soda.

1:16:13

How many –

1:16:13

Who is that guy that's saying this?

1:16:14

How many billionaires do you know that, you know, sit down and eat lots of

1:16:17

pizza and grape soda and ice cream?

1:16:19

This is weird.

1:16:20

A trial lawyer is saying this.

1:16:22

That's why I just go with grain of salt.

1:16:25

This is just a plausible answer.

1:16:26

I don't know that it is the answer.

1:16:27

It could even be wrong.

1:16:28

Okay.

1:16:29

So does he have a desalination plant on the island?

1:16:33

Oh, it's a reverse osmosis.

1:16:34

Oh, yeah, for sure.

1:16:35

He had everything.

1:16:37

He had a dump and, like, they had all sorts of stuff.

1:16:40

So that's – tunnels and –

1:16:42

So they were using that, so they were taking seawater and converting it into

1:16:45

fresh water for what?

1:16:47

For irrigation or for drinking, for all the above?

1:16:50

One similar email that he wrote to someone said that, like, around his island

1:16:53

is like Damascus.

1:16:54

And I'm like, what the fuck does that mean?

1:16:56

He was like, you go explore buried shit around my island?

1:17:00

Or what else could he mean by that?

1:17:02

Huh.

1:17:04

What does that mean?

1:17:05

I don't know.

1:17:06

I mean, they say a lot of things, and they're not really coding it very much.

1:17:11

Well, the code, it's glaringly obvious.

1:17:14

When they say pizza and when they say jerky, that's glaringly obvious.

1:17:17

How do you walk jerky?

1:17:18

Yeah.

1:17:19

You know what I'm saying?

1:17:20

And why do I need a chilled container to –

1:17:23

Right.

1:17:23

You know, a chilled bag or whatever they said.

1:17:25

Jesus Christ.

1:17:26

You know, and –

1:17:27

So you think they're eating babies?

1:17:28

Oh, yeah.

1:17:29

I absolutely believe that.

1:17:31

You should get together with Kurt Metzger.

1:17:32

You two would go crazy.

1:17:34

I don't doubt it for a second.

1:17:36

Well –

1:17:37

And I think this dates back, like, you know, a long, long time.

1:17:41

This is Moloch worship.

1:17:44

Oh.

1:17:45

Well, there was the other email that said, thank you for the torture video.

1:17:49

I enjoyed the torture video.

1:17:51

Yeah.

1:17:52

And it's like people just –

1:17:55

But that is so –

1:17:56

They don't want to accept it.

1:17:57

Like, people don't want to believe it.

1:17:58

They don't want to accept it.

1:18:00

Okay.

1:18:00

Some commentary notes that a remote island with water treatment and energy

1:18:04

systems could plausibly

1:18:06

stockpile such quantities for a one to two years of operations, although others

1:18:11

argue

1:18:12

that using it directly for reverse osmosis, as stated in one social post, is

1:18:15

technically questionable

1:18:17

for membrane health.

1:18:18

Hmm.

1:18:20

Highly corrosive, strong mineral acid that can severely burn skin, eyes, dehydrate,

1:18:26

and

1:18:26

char organic material, which is why it features in both legitimate industrial

1:18:30

processes and

1:18:32

in darker hypotheticals online.

1:18:35

Darker hypotheticals.

1:18:36

Darker hypotheticals is where I'm leaning.

1:18:38

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:18:38

When you get indicted for sex trafficking and then you order six drums of

1:18:44

sulfuric acid

1:18:45

right away, are you really worried about your reverse osmosis plant right after

1:18:49

you get indicted?

1:18:50

I feel like you know you're going to jail.

1:18:52

If it looks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, it's probably a duck.

1:18:55

It's probably a duck.

1:18:56

330 gallons of sulfuric acid.

1:19:00

It says this was the only documented purchase order for it.

1:19:05

Oh, boy.

1:19:05

I came out here last time and I talked about, you know, the pedo cult inside of

1:19:09

the Kubrick

1:19:10

film.

1:19:10

Yeah.

1:19:11

By the way, that went viral.

1:19:12

And I got so much blowback from that.

1:19:14

You know, online critics are like, no, no, there's nothing in there.

1:19:17

Mundus volt dissipi.

1:19:18

They don't want to see it.

1:19:20

They don't want to see those two guys walking away with that girl in the end.

1:19:23

They just like, well, no, no, it wasn't in the Schnitzel or novel and blah,

1:19:27

blah, blah.

1:19:28

I mean, dude, look at that movie.

1:19:31

It's about a cult.

1:19:32

Like, what are you talking about?

1:19:34

It's a secret cult.

1:19:34

And in fact, Sidney Lumet's character even says at one point, you know, do you

1:19:39

know what

1:19:39

these people do?

1:19:40

I'm not going to tell you what they do, but let me tell you, if I told you what

1:19:42

they do,

1:19:43

they would like scare the hell out of you.

1:19:44

I mean, like that's after he's been to the place and seen everybody walking

1:19:51

around at the

1:19:52

in the sex club.

1:19:53

I mean, it's obviously, there's obviously more going on in that movie, but

1:19:57

people don't

1:19:58

want to see it.

1:19:59

I like, like I had, what was it?

1:20:01

New York magazine or whatever went so far.

1:20:04

It's like, you know, aggressively trying to get me to debunk it.

1:20:07

And, uh, and which is fine, just fine.

1:20:11

It's just an interpretation of a movie.

1:20:13

Right.

1:20:14

But that, that interpretation resonated.

1:20:16

I mean, that clip went very, very viral.

1:20:18

Especially now.

1:20:19

It's like people are like, uh, looking at it and they're like, well, you know,

1:20:22

he was

1:20:22

obviously saying something, even if you extract that out of the movie, he's

1:20:26

obviously saying

1:20:27

something about people at high levels of power.

1:20:29

Well, there's always been weird secret groups and rituals.

1:20:33

Yeah.

1:20:34

And it's one of the ways to ensure that you're compromised.

1:20:38

You'll stay.

1:20:39

It's a confidence operation.

1:20:40

Yeah.

1:20:41

And so what you do is you find somebody when they're young and they're, you

1:20:44

know, less

1:20:45

inhibited and, and they, you know, or uninhibited and you catch them doing

1:20:51

something that

1:20:52

is illegal and maybe you even provide the mechanism for that to happen.

1:20:57

And then once it's happened, you, uh, you now have the, the video proof or the

1:21:03

audio proof

1:21:04

or whatever proof you have, you've got proof of it and you show it to them and

1:21:07

you say,

1:21:08

look, this is what we have on you and, uh, and we can ruin you at any minute,

1:21:14

but you

1:21:14

know what we're going to do?

1:21:15

We're going to give you $20,000 a month, or we're going to give you $20 million

1:21:19

a year,

1:21:19

whatever level that is.

1:21:21

Instead, and you're going to work for us and, uh, and, and what else explains

1:21:27

some of these

1:21:27

people who were so flipped out about like, you know, about Trump, like he's a,

1:21:32

he's a

1:21:33

putz, he's a, like there, it's over the top.

1:21:36

It's, you know, what it's, it's strange how people are, how people behave in,

1:21:42

uh, um,

1:21:43

regarding that.

1:21:44

It's bizarre.

1:21:45

Don't you think that's also just because the democratic party didn't want him

1:21:49

to get into

1:21:49

power because he was a complete outsider.

1:21:52

I don't think there are parties.

1:21:53

I don't think there, there, I think that's all an illusion also.

1:21:56

I think everything that you think that it is, is an illusion.

1:22:00

It's all fake.

1:22:03

I don't think that any history before 1600, I think everything has been, uh,

1:22:07

falsified

1:22:08

before the year 1600.

1:22:10

How so?

1:22:11

Well, um, there's this guy, Anatoly Fomenko, who's a Russian mathematician and

1:22:16

historian.

1:22:18

And he wrote a book called the new chronology.

1:22:20

It's actually a series of books.

1:22:22

It's like six volumes and I've read them all.

1:22:24

And, and, um, and, uh, and also his addendum book, the new chronology.

1:22:31

He has an addendum book about it.

1:22:33

And, uh, he basically says that, uh, all of history has been changed.

1:22:40

About a thousand years have been added to the timeline in order to justify land

1:22:45

claims.

1:22:45

And those land claims largely have to do with, uh, Eurasian, the Eurasian horde

1:22:51

and the elimination

1:22:52

of the Eurasian horde by, uh, collusion between, uh, you know, the Vatican, the,

1:22:59

uh, Romanovs,

1:23:01

the, uh.

1:23:02

So you mean like the Mongols and the Huns?

1:23:04

Yeah, there was a, and if you look on very, very old maps, uh, you see that

1:23:08

there used to

1:23:08

be a country called Tartaria that was, uh, that was in existence.

1:23:13

And at a certain point they wiped them out.

1:23:17

And so his theory, and it's just a theory, it's just a posit.

1:23:20

But when you see how history is constantly being rewritten in real time, it's

1:23:24

not so hard

1:23:25

to believe.

1:23:25

And then he uses, you know, uh, um, astronomical, uh, evidence and, you know,

1:23:31

mathematically kind

1:23:33

of proves it.

1:23:34

And he basically says that, uh, let's see if I can get this right, that, um, uh,

1:23:40

Rome and

1:23:41

Greece and, you know, those, uh, and Egypt were, um, actually active till

1:23:47

around 1600 and

1:23:49

that Rome actually fell around 1600.

1:23:50

So kind of imagine, or more like late 1400s, 1492.

1:23:55

As opposed to what's the conventional timeline?

1:23:57

Uh, about a thousand years before.

1:23:59

And so, and so, you know, if you can wrap your head around it, the Salem witch

1:24:04

trials took

1:24:06

place around the same time as the Inquisition.

1:24:07

Columbus was discovering America around the time Rome fell.

1:24:12

And that, uh, all of this was designed to justify and, or to, uh, erase this

1:24:18

entire civilization

1:24:20

from history.

1:24:21

And then there are people who believe that there are a lot of buildings that

1:24:23

are still in

1:24:24

existence that, uh, that were this, they, uh, they, they claimed that, uh,

1:24:28

Jesus Christ

1:24:29

was, um, I can't remember, um, the emperor's name.

1:24:33

It's kind of a composite story.

1:24:35

There's a number of, uh.

1:24:37

So they think a thousand years are missing from the time.

1:24:40

Well, yeah, think about it.

1:24:41

If you're a Byzantine guy and you're like, hey, I want to move to the country

1:24:44

and you

1:24:44

look over at, uh, France, let's say, and Germany and, and you're like, yeah,

1:24:48

there's all these

1:24:49

like indigenous peoples there and we want to wipe them out.

1:24:52

And so you hire, you know, a mercenary, you hire a guy named Charlemagne and

1:24:56

you get him

1:24:57

to go in there and kill all the chieftains in one day, like 5,000 chieftains

1:25:02

were killed

1:25:03

in a single day, apparently by Charlemagne.

1:25:04

And you completely wipe out everything.

1:25:07

And then you move in, you become Jerome, uh, the, Jerome the first, and you run

1:25:11

Paris or you begin, you know, France.

1:25:13

And what it really is, is just land.

1:25:16

And so you add time to the timeline in order to justify that land claim.

1:25:20

Because what makes more sense that history was cruising along like this and

1:25:25

then suddenly

1:25:25

flatlined for a thousand years and then picked up again?

1:25:28

Or does it make more sense that somebody took that time that, uh, the dark ages

1:25:34

and kind

1:25:35

of added, added to the timeline?

1:25:38

So I'm, I'm confused.

1:25:40

So, but isn't there like documented history from multiple cultures about that

1:25:46

time period?

1:25:47

Yeah.

1:25:48

But it's all like, you know, written down by the Jesuits who were completely in

1:25:51

the control

1:25:51

of, uh, you know, it's that history, history is easily changed.

1:25:55

And in fact, we see history being changed before our eyes in real time.

1:25:59

And so the deep past is, is easy to change.

1:26:02

So we're not in 2026.

1:26:04

No, we're like in the 1700s.

1:26:06

Oh, Jesus.

1:26:09

Oh my God.

1:26:12

Just a theory.

1:26:12

It's just this guy, Antony, Antony, Antony, uh, Fomenko.

1:26:19

And, uh, and it's a very interesting theory.

1:26:22

And so I read that and I kind of had a tent pole collapse.

1:26:25

I was like, well, holy crap.

1:26:26

Explain to me the flatness.

1:26:28

Like, what do you mean by history goes up and then flattens up?

1:26:31

Well, the progression, the progression of humanity through history as we kind

1:26:34

of are progressing

1:26:35

as we go.

1:26:36

And then all of a sudden there's this flat line called the dark ages where

1:26:39

nothing happened.

1:26:40

Is there a conventional explanation for this flat line for a thousand years?

1:26:46

The, the, the collapse of Rome and, uh, and falling into barbarism, the time of

1:26:50

barbarism.

1:26:50

That's not plausible.

1:26:53

Everything is plausible.

1:26:55

It's plausible that sulfuric acid is used for RO, uh, reverse osmosis, uh,

1:27:01

water cleaning.

1:27:02

And so everything is possible.

1:27:04

The question is, is it probable?

1:27:06

Well, Jamie just pulled up that that was the first time they had ever ordered

1:27:10

that.

1:27:10

Oh, really?

1:27:11

Yeah.

1:27:12

Okay.

1:27:12

So, well, there it is.

1:27:13

Yeah.

1:27:13

That's not good.

1:27:15

Yeah.

1:27:15

That's not good.

1:27:16

I mean, that's the least of the things.

1:27:19

The thing is we become desensitized to stuff.

1:27:21

I mean, look at everything that has happened in the last six years.

1:27:24

It's like an insane amount of stuff has happened and everyone's just kind of

1:27:28

like numb to it.

1:27:29

Well, they get desensitized.

1:27:30

And I think it literally is that people's brains have been fried.

1:27:33

You think by COVID vaccines?

1:27:35

Yeah, for sure.

1:27:36

Well, there's some scientific evidence that for some people, at least, it

1:27:41

crossed the blood-brain barrier and had some sort of a detrimental effect on

1:27:44

their cognitive function.

1:27:46

MRNA is reprogramming your system.

1:27:49

And we're, I think, and we've been looking at a giant die-off of people.

1:27:55

People are collapsing left and right.

1:27:56

Nothing is normal anymore.

1:27:58

I mean, that guy at the airport who's flipping out, that's what he's realizing.

1:28:03

He's having a sudden awakening and he's tweaking over it.

1:28:07

He's like, and he's looking around and no one cares.

1:28:11

Everyone just wants to, like, you know, get through their day.

1:28:15

Everyone wants to just make their next movie and maybe they'll let me make

1:28:18

their next movie.

1:28:19

And everybody wants to just, you know, I just want to keep going at my job and

1:28:21

I just want to do my thing and I just want to protect my thing.

1:28:24

There's certainly a lot of that going on.

1:28:26

British only care about it as long as I have my daily pint at the end of the

1:28:28

day.

1:28:29

That's all I care about.

1:28:30

You know, in the meantime, their entire country is being overtaken and overrun

1:28:35

by, like, when else?

1:28:37

In history, has this happened and ended well?

1:28:39

No.

1:28:41

Well, it's so shocking how quickly it's happening in England that you just go,

1:28:44

how do you bounce back from this?

1:28:46

Like, what is the remedy?

1:28:47

Yeah.

1:28:48

Because they're doing this mass arrest thing with social media posts, which is

1:28:55

bizarre.

1:28:56

It's bizarre to watch.

1:28:57

And then they eliminate jury trials for anything other than, like, murder and

1:29:01

rape.

1:29:01

If you say anything, you're in jail.

1:29:03

Yeah.

1:29:03

If you post, if you repost anything, you're just immediately sent to jail.

1:29:07

Look at what's going on in Canada right now, you know, with Kearney.

1:29:10

I mean, like, I think that's insane what's going on.

1:29:14

And most Canadians are just kind of vibing along with it.

1:29:16

Nobody wants to rock the boat.

1:29:17

Nobody wants to be racist.

1:29:18

Nobody wants to be, you know, nobody wants to be discriminatory in any kind of

1:29:23

way.

1:29:24

Rightfully so, like, you know, you and you want to believe that your leaders

1:29:29

are are taking care of you and they're not.

1:29:32

And it's over.

1:29:33

We've lost.

1:29:34

It's over.

1:29:35

I mean.

1:29:36

You think it's over here in America as well?

1:29:38

Well, it got slowed down a little bit.

1:29:42

It got so whether you like Trump or not.

1:29:44

And I'm not like a I don't really like anybody, but it's a healthy perspective.

1:29:49

It definitely added a road bump in the in in the actions of the cabal of the

1:29:55

Clintons and the Obamas and and the bankers that that control them.

1:30:02

And that's when you see the movie The Counselor.

1:30:05

That's what you realize is that, wow, the cartels are the banks and they are

1:30:10

law enforcement and they are the media and they are everything.

1:30:15

And there is no fighting it.

1:30:16

There is no individually fighting it.

1:30:19

Like there's nothing any of us can do.

1:30:22

That is.

1:30:23

And I don't mean to be.

1:30:24

I mean, the only thing you can do is, you know, affect what's happening around

1:30:29

you locally within the moment.

1:30:31

But don't you think that more people are aware of what's going on right now?

1:30:35

There's more pushback than ever before.

1:30:37

And so there's a possibility that it could be stopped.

1:30:39

Yeah.

1:30:40

Look at that guy.

1:30:40

Look at that guy in the airport.

1:30:41

There are nobody.

1:30:42

Everyone's like he's crazy.

1:30:43

Yeah.

1:30:44

But you're yelling at a fucking airport.

1:30:46

I would think he's crazy, too.

1:30:47

Well, it's like I was there waiting for my flight to go visit my parents.

1:30:50

And there's some fucking guy yelling out the Epstein file.

1:30:52

You just live in your life.

1:30:53

Like, yeah, what do you want me to do, dude?

1:30:55

I'm headed to Florida right now.

1:30:57

Invasion of the Body Snashers was about McCarthyism and what was going on at

1:31:00

that time.

1:31:01

Really?

1:31:02

Oh, yeah.

1:31:03

It was the original Invasion of the Body Snatchers was all about McCarthyism.

1:31:07

And I'm a fan of the Donald Sutherland one.

1:31:10

Well, and look at it.

1:31:11

And look at how that ends.

1:31:12

That ends with you're walking through the streets pretending.

1:31:15

And he's like, you know, like you're just pretending to not be an alien, hoping

1:31:21

that you can get by.

1:31:22

And then, you know, the minute you show any kind of emotion, that's it.

1:31:25

You're caught.

1:31:26

And then they're going to make you go to sleep.

1:31:27

And so, I mean.

1:31:30

So that the original script was written about McCarthyism?

1:31:32

The original film.

1:31:34

Yeah.

1:31:35

The Kevin McCarthy movie.

1:31:37

Okay.

1:31:38

And in the end, look how that movie ends.

1:31:40

That movie ends with him like that guy in the airport on the street.

1:31:44

You know, they're, you know, they're, it's, it's, they're aliens.

1:31:48

He's basically, you know, running through the street just in traffic.

1:31:51

And people just keep driving.

1:31:54

I don't remember the original one.

1:31:55

I might not have even seen it.

1:31:57

But the Sutherland one was amazing.

1:32:00

I never would have thought that that's what it was about.

1:32:02

I mean, we're experiencing a kind of Bolshevik revolution at the moment right

1:32:06

now.

1:32:06

And so.

1:32:07

In what way?

1:32:09

Well, there's a rise of Bolshevism.

1:32:11

You know, it's like we see it, we see it occurring.

1:32:14

How do you define Bolshevism?

1:32:16

Well, it's the Bolsheviks were essentially a kind of, I mean, it's, it's, it's,

1:32:25

it's, it's, it's, it's not correct to say communism, but it's basically a kind

1:32:30

of authoritarianism, you know, in the guise of egalitarianism and, and, and

1:32:35

helping the world know we're all going to be equal and everything, but it.

1:32:39

And they were social, social, socialism.

1:32:41

Yeah.

1:32:42

They were murdering Christians and social, and, you know, we're very, very

1:32:45

close to that now.

1:32:47

We're very, very, we're on, we're standing on, civilization is standing on the

1:32:51

precipice at the moment.

1:32:53

And by the way, you know, after this podcast comes out, people are going to be

1:32:58

like, oh, Avery's crazy.

1:33:00

Avery went to jail.

1:33:01

Avery's, you know, a killer.

1:33:04

They're going to say all sorts of shit about me to discredit anything that I

1:33:08

say.

1:33:08

And that's fine.

1:33:09

Like, I'm easy to discredit.

1:33:11

And so it's not really my right to speak up anymore about anything.

1:33:16

And so.

1:33:16

You're a human being.

1:33:17

It's always your right to speak up.

1:33:19

Well, it is, but.

1:33:20

They can eat shit.

1:33:22

As I look, as I look around, like, civilization is on the precipice.

1:33:26

And, you know, mostly good people tend to not take action against stuff.

1:33:32

Until they have to.

1:33:33

Until they have to.

1:33:35

We were talking about this yesterday, actually, with Cheryl Hines.

1:33:38

And I was saying, I think we were talking about this.

1:33:40

Well, I was talking about this recently where I was saying that it's almost

1:33:43

like we need something like a 9-11 to wake us up.

1:33:47

I would never want that to happen.

1:33:49

But I do remember that after 9-11, we were united because we realized, oh,

1:33:54

threats are real.

1:33:55

Danger is real.

1:33:56

Like, we really do need to be united as one group, a community.

1:34:01

And recognize that, that we, our brothers and sisters in the streets are not

1:34:05

our problem.

1:34:06

And.

1:34:07

Yeah.

1:34:08

But we even know about 9-11 now that, like, so much of it was, like, Building 7,

1:34:14

Thermite.

1:34:15

Like, the evidence is there for anyone to look at.

1:34:18

Nobody wants to look at the event.

1:34:19

And nobody wants to look at it.

1:34:21

Yeah.

1:34:21

Because, and that is.

1:34:22

Nobody wants to look in the conspiracy.

1:34:23

Like, how did these guys get a hold of these planes?

1:34:26

How did they fly into the building?

1:34:28

Who, why were the dancing Israelis watching it, cheering it on?

1:34:33

Why did they get, you know, shipped out of the country?

1:34:35

Yeah.

1:34:35

And that guy who owned the building, who bought it, who took out, like, the

1:34:39

insurance policy.

1:34:41

And then, you know, had Elliot Spitzer kind of push it through and force it

1:34:45

through so that he could receive his billions in insurance claim.

1:34:48

And why did he say he made the decision to pull it?

1:34:51

Because they wanted to tear down that building and it would have been too

1:34:54

expensive to do.

1:34:54

And all the asbestos and everything.

1:34:56

So, hey, better to just destroy it.

1:34:58

It's like, what was that building housing?

1:35:00

Like, Building 7.

1:35:01

Well, Building 7 was housing all sorts of, it was like, what is it, an IRS, I

1:35:05

mean.

1:35:06

NSA.

1:35:07

Yeah.

1:35:07

It was NSA.

1:35:08

What was in Building 7?

1:35:10

Let's find that out so we don't just, I think.

1:35:13

But there was certainly some intelligence and data that was being collected in

1:35:17

building.

1:35:18

The fact that no one wants to admit that that building fell like a controlled

1:35:23

demolition is really crazy.

1:35:24

And, again, I'm not saying it's a controlled demolition.

1:35:27

But the fact that people want to say, no, it wasn't like a controlled demolition.

1:35:32

Like, when was the last time you ever saw a fucking building collapse like that,

1:35:36

ever?

1:35:36

Only controlled demolitions.

1:35:38

Yeah.

1:35:39

There's been many buildings that have been very badly damaged and lit on fire,

1:35:42

but their frame remains.

1:35:43

Reputable structural engineers have basically also proven the towers could not

1:35:47

have fallen the way they fell without explosives, you know, pre-planned

1:35:53

explosives.

1:35:54

And the people on the scene, the rescuers on the scene, the people who were

1:35:57

there said, yeah, I heard explosion, boom, boom, boom, boom.

1:36:00

And they're describing the sounds of controlled demolition.

1:36:04

U.S. Secret Service, floors 9 through 10, CIA, the Department of Defense,

1:36:09

sharing the 25th floor with the IRS, and the Equal Employment Opportunity

1:36:13

Commission.

1:36:14

Like, you put all that together, CIA, Department of Defense, IRS, you know, who

1:36:20

thinks any of those people have your-

1:36:23

Right.

1:36:23

Like, also, if you wanted to destroy data.

1:36:25

Your best interest in mind.

1:36:26

You wanted to destroy data.

1:36:28

Like, didn't the part of the Pentagon that got hit, and that was also a day

1:36:31

after Rumsfeld was saying that there was trillions of dollars that were unaccounted

1:36:35

for.

1:36:36

Yeah.

1:36:36

Didn't the accounting part of the Pentagon get hit by that, air quotes, plane?

1:36:42

Yeah.

1:36:42

Yeah, that plane that came in very-

1:36:45

What's that, Jamie?

1:36:45

On the screen.

1:36:46

Last second.

1:36:47

The building contained about 24,000 gallons of diesel fuel for generators used

1:36:52

by tenants like Salomon Brothers and the Emergency Command Center.

1:36:55

Floors 46 through 47 and parts of the lower level were mechanical spaces, while

1:37:00

files from federal investigations, Secret Service cases, were stored there but

1:37:05

lost in the collapse.

1:37:07

And the SEC.

1:37:07

And the SEC.

1:37:09

Whoopsies.

1:37:10

And has the world been the same since then?

1:37:12

The SEC, like, having that there, too, boy, that's super convenient.

1:37:17

Guys, we lost the data.

1:37:19

Let's just start from scratch.

1:37:20

Yeah.

1:37:21

There's no case anymore.

1:37:22

Whatever they were doing.

1:37:24

And yet, nobody wants to accept it.

1:37:26

And nobody cares, actually.

1:37:27

Well, it's the video of it that is, like, really shocking.

1:37:30

I had this really dumb guy on the podcast once that was a skeptic, a

1:37:34

professional skeptic, and he was really angry with me for saying that it looked

1:37:38

like a controlled demo.

1:37:40

You know, you're promoting a dangerous conspiracy theory.

1:37:45

I'm like, no, I'm saying it looks like you're saying it doesn't look at control.

1:37:49

Let's watch it.

1:37:50

I'm like, let's watch it.

1:37:51

I mean, conspiracy theorists have had a pretty good run lately.

1:37:54

Let's watch it.

1:37:55

Let's watch Building 7 collapse because it's kind of kooky.

1:37:58

Now, one thing that people do point out that is true is that the center, like,

1:38:03

there is a small structure at the top of the roof of Building 7 that collapses

1:38:08

first.

1:38:08

And it does it, like, I think a minute before the actual building collapses.

1:38:13

Yeah, but these are skirt buildings.

1:38:14

And what that means is that's actually the most structurally sound part of the

1:38:17

building.

1:38:18

The rest of the movie is a facade that's hanging off of the inner structure.

1:38:21

The rest of the building.

1:38:22

Yeah, that's the most sound part of the building.

1:38:24

It was built over a Con Edison substation requiring large transfer trusses on

1:38:29

lower floors to support the tower above, creating long-span floors vulnerable

1:38:33

to thermal expansion.

1:38:35

Long, unsupported floor beams and girders up to 50 feet connected to critical

1:38:41

interior columns, like column 79, with sheer studs that failed under fire-induced

1:38:47

lateral loads rather than just gravity.

1:38:50

It was the auto-manual flip-flop.

1:38:51

The exterior tube frame provided stiffness, but the open interior layout lacked

1:38:57

redundancy to prevent fire-induced progressive collapse with connections not

1:39:02

designed for horizontal thermal forces.

1:39:05

Okay, that's a cute way of saying that's why it fell at free-fall speed and

1:39:11

looks like a controlled demolition.

1:39:14

Because if that was my building, I would say, give me my fucking money back.

1:39:18

You made this shit-ass building?

1:39:19

This building got lit on fire and just collapsed on itself?

1:39:22

Let's watch it collapse.

1:39:23

Because the way it collapses is so kooky.

1:39:27

Because it really does it at free-fall speed or close to it.

1:39:31

It's strange.

1:39:32

Like, there's never been a building that looks that intact that falls like that.

1:39:38

It's weird, man.

1:39:40

I mean, it's fucking weird.

1:39:41

Anybody that says it's not weird, look, this is how it happened.

1:39:46

It's weird.

1:39:47

Now, the planes hitting Tower 1 and Tower 2, okay, that makes maybe more sense

1:39:54

to me.

1:39:55

Does it?

1:39:55

Yeah.

1:39:56

Does it?

1:39:56

Yeah, because it fell from the top down like it looks normal.

1:40:00

It doesn't collapse into its base.

1:40:02

Tower 7 collapses into its base.

1:40:05

But how about the testimony of people saying they heard multiple pop, pop, pop,

1:40:08

pop, pop explosions?

1:40:09

Is that just girder snapping?

1:40:11

It could be.

1:40:11

Yeah.

1:40:12

I mean, you've got to think you have immense, immense amounts of weight.

1:40:15

And it is collapsing.

1:40:17

So, if it does collapse the way it looks, it's collapsing from the top down, it's

1:40:21

not going

1:40:22

to be silent.

1:40:22

You're going to hear tremendous explosions when concrete hits the slabs below

1:40:26

it.

1:40:26

It's going to sound like explosions.

1:40:28

Also, you have the fog of war, right?

1:40:30

So, you have these people that are involved in an extremely traumatic situation,

1:40:34

and their

1:40:35

memory is very fucked.

1:40:36

Like, your memory is fucked when you experience something like this.

1:40:40

You remember things funny.

1:40:41

You have confirmation bias.

1:40:43

There's a lot of weird stuff that happens.

1:40:45

So, this is the explanation, that a piece of the plane falls down and hits that

1:40:50

building.

1:40:50

And there's a big tower on top.

1:40:51

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:40:52

I'm sorry.

1:40:53

A piece of the building.

1:40:54

The aerial antenna.

1:40:54

I meant to say.

1:40:55

Sorry.

1:40:55

So, that piece of the building falls down and, not a plane, obviously, hits the

1:41:01

building

1:41:01

next to it, Tower 7.

1:41:02

And that gash is all it took to take that building down.

1:41:07

That's super suspect.

1:41:09

And I do know that there was a fire inside the building.

1:41:11

I'm sure.

1:41:11

I'm sure there was.

1:41:12

But the way it fell was crazy.

1:41:15

That, see, Tower 1 and Tower 2, it's like, I don't know what happens when a jet

1:41:20

flies into

1:41:20

a building like that, and neither do you.

1:41:22

And also, you've got to deal with corrupt construction companies, cutting

1:41:27

corners, not doing things

1:41:29

up to code.

1:41:29

Perhaps.

1:41:30

Perhaps.

1:41:31

I'll give you that.

1:41:32

I'll be super charitable.

1:41:34

But with Building 7, I'm like, come on, man.

1:41:36

That's weird.

1:41:38

That one's fucking weird.

1:41:39

Because it doesn't fall like 1 and 2.

1:41:41

1 and 2 fall from where the impact was, the deterioration of the structure, the

1:41:47

weight of what's above

1:41:48

the impact.

1:41:49

It falls down on it, and you see a progressive collapse from the top to the

1:41:53

bottom.

1:41:53

Tower 7 is nuts.

1:41:56

Tower 7 just drops.

1:41:59

It just drops all at once, free fall speed into its base.

1:42:04

That's weird.

1:42:06

Anybody that doesn't think that's weird is being naive.

1:42:09

Yeah.

1:42:10

That's never happened before to a building that hasn't been a controlled demolition.

1:42:14

Again, not saying it's a controlled demolition.

1:42:16

Maybe it's accurate that these enormous drums of diesel are creating this fire,

1:42:21

unprecedented

1:42:22

load on the structure of the building.

1:42:25

But see, even with everything else that occurred, with all the tangential stuff

1:42:29

that's occurred,

1:42:30

you're still giving the benefit of the doubt.

1:42:34

You'll have suspension of disbelief.

1:42:35

No, no, no.

1:42:35

But I'm saying right now, I was trying to finish, that fire is not on every

1:42:39

floor uniformly.

1:42:41

So why is it collapsing uniformly from the top down into the base?

1:42:45

Why doesn't the base where you have this incredible fire load, why doesn't that

1:42:50

weaken and it fall

1:42:52

over sideways because it no longer has structure anymore?

1:42:54

Why is it every floor has the same amount of damage and it gives in at the

1:43:00

exact same time?

1:43:02

That kind of doesn't make sense because the fire is not uniform throughout the

1:43:05

building.

1:43:05

It's not like the building is one gigantic flame ball and then it all gives out

1:43:11

at the same time.

1:43:12

But even then, I would think it would tip over.

1:43:15

It would fall to the side.

1:43:17

Falling into its base, that seems to indicate some sort of a control.

1:43:23

Like it was done uniformly.

1:43:25

They time it.

1:43:26

When you watch like in Vegas when they blow up a casino, it's like,

1:43:30

and then it does that.

1:43:32

Let's watch an actual controlled demolition.

1:43:36

So when you watch an actual controlled demolition, it looks just like that.

1:43:41

It looks just like that.

1:43:42

And then I don't know.

1:43:45

I mean, the testimony of your eyes are telling you the truth.

1:43:48

But your brain, you know, will come up with all sorts of stuff because Mundus Vult

1:43:54

Decepi.

1:43:55

Well, I'm not allowing it to with Tower 7.

1:43:58

I've always maintained a pretty open mind with that.

1:44:01

But also, I lean towards shenanigans in that one because that one just seems

1:44:08

fucked.

1:44:09

Tower 1 and Tower 2, maybe.

1:44:11

Maybe.

1:44:12

Tower 7, come on.

1:44:14

Yeah.

1:44:14

Tower 7, nobody looks.

1:44:16

And if they're telling you that Tower 7 seems normal, they seem so gaslighty.

1:44:22

Everybody that says that seems like they're gaslighting.

1:44:24

So here we go.

1:44:26

Hit it.

1:44:28

Okay.

1:44:30

This one, they're setting up for a controlled demolition.

1:44:32

So anyhow, that's kind of a shitty one.

1:44:34

There's other ones that I've done a better job with.

1:44:36

But it's the same kind of thing.

1:44:38

It's still falling onto itself.

1:44:40

Yes.

1:44:40

It's falling into itself the same way Tower 7 did.

1:44:43

See, that movie, that building has a different shape.

1:44:45

That has a skirt building.

1:44:47

It's got a center structure.

1:44:48

Yeah.

1:44:49

It's a different kind of structure.

1:44:50

It has a different look to it.

1:44:51

Let's watch that one.

1:44:52

Okay.

1:44:52

There.

1:44:53

Like there.

1:44:54

Come on.

1:44:55

That looks exactly like Tower 7.

1:44:58

When you watch that, back that up again a little bit, please.

1:45:01

Watch that from the top, from the beginning.

1:45:03

Just a little bit before, right before it drops.

1:45:06

So watch.

1:45:06

They're looking.

1:45:07

They're watching.

1:45:08

We're going to watch the building drop.

1:45:09

There it is.

1:45:10

That fucker goes right down like Tower 7.

1:45:13

Like from there, come on.

1:45:14

That's exactly like a controlled demolition.

1:45:17

And even the way it looks as it's going down looks exactly like Tower 7.

1:45:22

You know, we were talking about predictive programming and how movies and like

1:45:26

spells can predict stuff in advance and, you know, kind of prepare you for the

1:45:32

future of what's coming.

1:45:35

You know, in 1999, a movie came out, which was effectively a manifesto, and

1:45:40

that movie was called Fight Club.

1:45:42

And what's the end of that movie?

1:45:45

The end of that movie is the collapsing of the buildings, which are the

1:45:48

financial system, you know, of the future so that they can create a new future.

1:45:53

Who produced that movie?

1:45:54

Arnon Milchan.

1:45:56

Who is Arnon Milchan?

1:45:58

And they got a commercial director to do it, Fincher.

1:46:00

And, like, he's an excellent director.

1:46:02

And I think it's an excellently, beautifully made film.

1:46:06

But who is Arnon Milchan?

1:46:07

Well, you know, he himself has said, I am a Mossad agent.

1:46:12

And he said that out loud.

1:46:15

Like, that's not me saying that.

1:46:16

That's him saying that.

1:46:17

And Fincher said, oh, yeah, my last movie, oh, that was made by an arms dealer.

1:46:22

Well, that's him.

1:46:23

That's Arnon Milchan.

1:46:24

And so, you know, what's another Arnon Milchan movie?

1:46:29

The Medusa Touch with George C. Scott and, I think, Lee Remick.

1:46:34

And in that movie, what happens?

1:46:35

An airplane crashes into a building.

1:46:37

You could probably pull that one up, too.

1:46:39

An airplane crashes into a building.

1:46:41

This guy's obsessed with airplanes crashing into buildings and buildings

1:46:44

collapsing in movies.

1:46:46

And so what's likely?

1:46:47

You know, has he been reading the scenario plans that defense departments make

1:46:54

and that are maybe, you know, Mossad plans that are made?

1:47:01

I've worked for the DOD through John Milius.

1:47:04

And we wrote scenarios that gathered together a bunch of Hollywood writers into

1:47:08

a, you know, into a, what is it, like a conference room?

1:47:11

Like a, it was like more like a ballroom, but like a small one.

1:47:14

And gather a bunch of us together around a table and said, let's come up with

1:47:17

ways on how to attack Los Angeles.

1:47:19

And we all wrote scenarios on how to attack L.A.

1:47:23

And now they just use A.I. to do all that.

1:47:25

But so, you know, has he just been like reading these?

1:47:30

Does he have access to them?

1:47:31

And so he just puts them into his movies?

1:47:33

Well, that movie was made in 1999.

1:47:35

And what happened right after that movie got released?

1:47:37

Those buildings came down.

1:47:38

9-11 came down.

1:47:40

And so is it predictive programming where you're showing the world what's to

1:47:45

come and that makes it almost somewhat acceptable to do?

1:47:48

Whoa.

1:47:49

Or is it just coincidence?

1:47:52

And most people out there will say, oh, no, it's just coincidence.

1:47:54

It's coincidence.

1:47:55

And he just happens to be.

1:47:56

I mean, that's what he has said.

1:47:58

I don't know if he is or not, Mossad, but that's what he said.

1:48:02

Well, that's the thing about the majority of term conspiracy theorist.

1:48:06

It's slapped on things and it immediately sort of diffuses any real questioning

1:48:11

of, oh, my God, are things this bad?

1:48:13

Is there this much?

1:48:15

But as time goes on and you're confronted with more and more information, and I

1:48:20

think we're in the beginning.

1:48:22

I think stages of reckoning with these files that were just released where so

1:48:25

many people – like, I haven't really read much of it.

1:48:29

I've only read the things that are really outrageous that my friends have sent

1:48:32

me because I'm just trying to maintain my sanity.

1:48:35

Well, that's just it.

1:48:36

Most people want to maintain sanity.

1:48:38

I'm just – like, I just want to get through the day.

1:48:40

You know, I just want to, like –

1:48:41

You're busy.

1:48:42

Yeah.

1:48:42

Well, and it's even more than busy.

1:48:44

I want to be happy.

1:48:45

Right.

1:48:45

I want to raise my children in a world that is, you know, a peaceful world and

1:48:50

where people respect each other and where we can, like – you can make

1:48:55

something out of yourself, you know, through hard work and through merit.

1:48:59

You know, it's like that's the world I want to live in.

1:49:01

And more and more, it feels like we're not in that world.

1:49:04

Did you see that thing that was just released today?

1:49:08

I think it's the AI company Anthropic.

1:49:11

I think that's the company.

1:49:13

So, one of its engineers resigned and essentially said that humanity is doomed

1:49:19

and he's going to move to the U.K. and just write poetry and just wait it out.

1:49:25

Hasn't that guy seen Threads?

1:49:26

Like, the U.K. is, like, one of the most dangerous places to be.

1:49:31

That's where he's going to wait it out?

1:49:32

Like, that's –

1:49:33

Well, he probably has this romantic idea.

1:49:35

Well, when he says U.K., does he mean, like, where does –

1:49:37

I'm not sure.

1:49:37

Maybe it means, like, the Scottish Highlands.

1:49:40

Maybe he's going to hide and go into some small town and fucking just hang out

1:49:44

at a pub.

1:49:45

Yeah, they're going to populate that town with suddenly 800 war-capable men

1:49:51

from another country are going to move in and they're going to move into the

1:49:56

local town.

1:49:57

Some place that the West has conveniently been bombing and creating refugees on.

1:50:02

Yeah, creating angry people.

1:50:03

Yeah.

1:50:03

Yeah, and who have a –

1:50:05

God, you don't want to think that it's all planned out like that, but –

1:50:09

Of course you don't.

1:50:09

Like, you know –

1:50:10

But that was a bit of the exposure of USAID.

1:50:12

You know, so I, like many people, thought USAID was about aid.

1:50:17

I thought it was, like, a beautiful philanthropic program where the United

1:50:21

States donates money to all these poor countries.

1:50:23

That's how they get food.

1:50:24

Like, I had Bono on the show.

1:50:25

And he's like, I've heard that 30,000 people have already starved to death

1:50:30

because of this.

1:50:31

30 million people are going to die.

1:50:33

And I'm like, okay, but do you know how much corruption was involved with this?

1:50:37

Do you know that it's not aid?

1:50:39

It's the Agency for International Development and mostly what they were doing

1:50:43

was regime change shit?

1:50:44

And Mike Benz laid it out and he said USAID was for tasks that were too dirty

1:50:50

for the CIA.

1:50:51

Which is crazy.

1:50:53

So, like, if they've been engineering this long game and engineering the

1:50:57

collapse of legitimate governments all throughout the world, bombing places,

1:51:02

creating refugees, and then having these not just open border policies, but

1:51:09

inviting and helping people get into countries and then giving them money when

1:51:13

they get there.

1:51:15

Like, so many people do not want to admit that that was really going on,

1:51:19

despite all of the evidence.

1:51:21

That's another, like, it's designed to destroy whatever confidence you have in

1:51:27

law enforcement, in civilization, in the electoral process.

1:51:33

Yeah, what's the answer?

1:51:33

Okay, so given a choice between totalitarianism or cannibalism, you know, which

1:51:39

would you prefer?

1:51:41

Right, right.

1:51:42

You take cannibalism because you don't want to be eaten.

1:51:44

No, I mean, you take totalitarianism because you don't want to be eaten.

1:51:48

I would rather not be in the movie The Road, but I feel like we're-

1:51:53

I turn that one off immediately.

1:51:53

I feel like we're increasingly in the movie Children of Men.

1:51:56

And, I mean, that movie was a pretty accurate futurist example of where we're

1:52:02

heading with collapsing birth rates and at least portions of civilization

1:52:08

looking at extinction.

1:52:11

Yeah.

1:52:11

I mean, they're experiencing that right now.

1:52:14

Voluntary and-

1:52:14

South Korea, Japan.

1:52:15

Yeah, yeah.

1:52:16

What is, can you find that guy's manifesto or, excuse me-

1:52:19

I think, yeah, Cuaron is a genius for making that film, I just want to say.

1:52:22

Children of Men?

1:52:22

Yeah.

1:52:23

Fantastic movie.

1:52:24

Fantastic movie.

1:52:24

So, today is my last day at Anthropic.

1:52:27

I resign.

1:52:28

Here's the letter I shared with my colleagues explaining my decision.

1:52:32

That's a lot to read.

1:52:33

What is the synopsis?

1:52:34

Just ask perplexity what the synopsis of what this guy said.

1:52:39

Okay.

1:52:40

Sharma, who built defenses against AI-assisted bioterrorism and pushed for

1:52:44

transparency on model risks at the San Francisco AI firm, announced his

1:52:48

resignation on Monday.

1:52:49

He described struggles to let values guide actions amid mounting pressures,

1:52:54

planning to return to the UK for a poetry degree and step back from the

1:52:58

spotlight.

1:52:59

His exit follows other safety team departures amid Anthropic's launch of Claude

1:53:04

Opus 4.6 in a massive $20 billion funding round at $350 billion valuation, fueling

1:53:11

debates on balancing safety with commercial speed.

1:53:15

Okay, but what is he saying specifically is the issue?

1:53:21

Let's click on that.

1:53:24

Let's, fuck it.

1:53:25

Let's click on his-

1:53:25

His AI started talking to him and scared the bejesus out of him.

1:53:28

Like the safeholds.

1:53:29

He's part of the guiding of the-

1:53:33

Damn it.

1:53:34

Lost the word.

1:53:35

Yeah.

1:53:36

Bioweapon.

1:53:39

I mean, look, this guy's built something and all of a sudden he's realizing all

1:53:44

the players that are funding it are likely, you know, scary, scary people.

1:53:50

Yeah.

1:53:51

Scary people who are comfortable.

1:53:52

Who are all in the same club, you know, drinking baby blood and awful together.

1:53:56

What's awful again?

1:53:58

Shit.

1:53:59

Meconium.

1:54:00

Meconium, which is like, it's a thing.

1:54:02

Baby poop.

1:54:03

Yeah.

1:54:03

That's in the files.

1:54:05

What comes next, I do not know.

1:54:06

I think fondly of this famous Zen quote, not knowing is most intimate.

1:54:11

What?

1:54:13

My intention is to create a space to set aside the structures that have held me

1:54:17

these past years and see what might emerge in their absence.

1:54:20

He's already working on his poetry right here.

1:54:22

I feel called to writing that addresses and engages fully with the place we

1:54:28

find ourselves and that places poetic truth alongside scientific truth as

1:54:34

equally valid ways of knowing.

1:54:37

Yeah, it was written for him by AI.

1:54:38

Elon said something very bizarre recently.

1:54:41

He was talking about the speed of light, that the speed of light cannot be –

1:54:46

you can't bypass or exceed the speed of light.

1:54:49

If you believe Einstein.

1:54:50

He said unless we live in a simulation.

1:54:52

Or unless Einstein was wrong.

1:54:54

Right.

1:54:55

I mean, a lot of astrophysics is based on a false premise that P equals P prime

1:55:00

and that the sun is, like, designed a certain way.

1:55:04

And it's completely wrong.

1:55:05

And everything that we know about the stars and how we view the nature of the

1:55:09

universe is fundamentally incorrect.

1:55:12

How is it wrong?

1:55:14

It's based on this idea of the stability of Kelvin temperatures in the sun,

1:55:22

which is this P equals P prime thing.

1:55:26

And the guy who invented, like, CAT scan machines, there's sort of a Venn

1:55:31

diagram overlapping of, you know, this photographic technique and astrophysics.

1:55:36

And what he realized is, holy cow, that is not true.

1:55:40

And therefore, so much of everything that we know about how we view the cosmos

1:55:46

is incorrect.

1:55:47

And so –

1:55:50

Now, how did they find out that it was incorrect?

1:55:51

Well, he's a mathematician.

1:55:53

He figured it out.

1:55:54

I would have to look up his name and everything.

1:55:56

And what is incorrect about it?

1:55:58

Do you remember that?

1:55:59

Well, it's – at the beginning of astrophysics, there is this formula.

1:56:05

And if that formula is wrong, then the preceding calculations are also wrong or

1:56:10

at least off.

1:56:11

And so the idea is that, you know, what we view is really just – it's kind of

1:56:17

a cartoon that's painted for us using all these formulas and using radio

1:56:22

telescopes.

1:56:24

And so, you know, it's – things are not as they seem.

1:56:29

Well, they already have issues with the findings from the James Webb telescope.

1:56:34

Oh, yeah.

1:56:34

Well, that's probably part of it.

1:56:36

You know, I have to say, like, I mean, I'm a provocateur.

1:56:41

And so I'm always interested in finding that which upsets people's, you know,

1:56:48

concepts of things.

1:56:50

And that's partly because I'm a screenwriter and I'm looking for these kind of

1:56:54

conflicts and interesting ideas and stuff like that.

1:56:57

So take what I'm about to say with a grain of salt.

1:56:59

But the big one, the biggest conspiracy theory that freaks everybody out is

1:57:05

flat earth.

1:57:07

Now, I don't know what the earth is, but experientially, through the testimony

1:57:12

of the eyes, it is flat.

1:57:14

And there is very little chance that I will ever in my life or most of us will

1:57:19

ever in our life experience anything other than what is effectively a flat

1:57:25

earth.

1:57:26

And, you know, the way laser sighting across large bodies of water or

1:57:32

navigation maps for air travel, you know, for pilots is always a presumption of

1:57:39

a flat earth.

1:57:41

It's always in the pilot manuals and on maps.

1:57:45

How so?

1:57:46

Well, if you're flying a jet at low altitude, you're not making corrections for

1:57:49

curvature, even though you're going fast enough where you should be.

1:57:53

And so what's actually happening there?

1:57:56

Well, and so the idea is, look, I don't know what the world is or what the

1:58:02

realm that we're in is.

1:58:05

But experientially, from my perspective in life, it is nothing but it's a flat

1:58:10

earth.

1:58:11

But what about travel routes?

1:58:12

Like, what about when they fly over Antarctica?

1:58:14

What about what if they...

1:58:16

Well, they don't fly over Antarctica.

1:58:17

Well, you can watch the sun rise and fall as you fly.

1:58:20

They don't even fly from Cape down to Buenos Aires.

1:58:23

There's an understanding of the procession of the equinoxes.

1:58:26

They travel up into the other hemisphere and, like, land in London or something

1:58:30

and then travel back down whenever you're doing a flight across the Atlantic.

1:58:35

And so, like, when you look at it on a flat earth map, and there are plenty of

1:58:39

them...

1:58:40

Yeah, but there's satellite photographs of earth from space.

1:58:42

Those are all cartoons.

1:58:43

What are you talking about?

1:58:44

I'm saying that even the NASA, the guys who actually do those composites, those

1:58:49

are composite imagery of...

1:58:51

Listen, I'm not...

1:58:53

I am not saying that...

1:58:54

But it seems like you're saying that the earth is possibly flat.

1:58:57

I'm saying experientially.

1:58:58

Right.

1:58:59

But that's a scale.

1:59:01

From your daily...

1:59:01

That's a scale issue, though.

1:59:03

Correct.

1:59:03

We're a tiny little thing on an enormous thing.

1:59:06

Correct.

1:59:07

But, you know, snipers have to calculate for the curvature of the earth when

1:59:10

they shoot.

1:59:11

Only the curvature of the landscape that they're on.

1:59:14

Right.

1:59:15

Why do you think the landscape curves?

1:59:16

The landscape doesn't curve.

1:59:18

It is a mountainous and uneven...

1:59:20

Not always.

1:59:21

No, no, on flat planes, you have to do the same thing.

1:59:24

If you're making a long shot over a flat area, like if you had to shoot...

1:59:29

Well, then why don't pilots make adjustments for...

1:59:32

I'm not a pilot.

1:59:33

I don't know.

1:59:33

But I do know that when you look at the...

1:59:36

Navigation maps always say, presume a flat earth.

1:59:38

When you look at the film from the space station, you see an earth that's not

1:59:43

just round, but spinning.

1:59:45

I see...

1:59:45

What I...

1:59:46

Actually, the space station, you know, the international space station is

1:59:52

actually not high enough to see curvature.

1:59:54

And what you're seeing is lens, you know, the lens distortion.

1:59:58

And...

1:59:59

But it's not high enough to see curvature when you look out into the horizon?

2:00:02

It's actually even, like, it's very, very close to the...

2:00:06

Let's look at footage from the space station of earth.

2:00:09

So, when you see satellite images that are taken of the earth, you think they're

2:00:14

lying?

2:00:15

You think there's this grand conspiracy to piece all these pictures together

2:00:18

and turn it into a circle instead of have it flat?

2:00:20

All I'm saying is that's the fundamental conspiracy theory that unravels

2:00:25

everyone.

2:00:26

And...

2:00:27

Well, it doesn't make any sense because everything that we see in the cosmos

2:00:31

that's a planetary body is round, including stars.

2:00:34

So, it's all round, except for small moons.

2:00:37

Everything is round, and that's because...

2:00:40

I'm not even...

2:00:41

I'm not even certain...

2:00:42

Certain...

2:00:43

That space exists.

2:00:44

That...

2:00:45

Well, that the moon is anything more than a plasma.

2:00:47

A plasma?

2:00:49

Yeah.

2:00:49

What does that mean?

2:00:51

That it's a...

2:00:52

That it's a plasma effect, a lenticular effect of some kind.

2:00:56

So, that it's not a real thing, but it affects the tides.

2:00:59

It is something that we have landed.

2:01:01

I'm saying it's...

2:01:02

At the very least, we've landed probes on.

2:01:03

We don't know that it affects the tides.

2:01:05

Other countries have ran...

2:01:05

People theorize...

2:01:06

So, this is...

2:01:07

That it affects the tides.

2:01:08

...footage from the space station.

2:01:09

Live.

2:01:10

This is live footage from the space station.

2:01:13

And I'm saying that that's lens...

2:01:15

You can clearly...

2:01:15

And I'm saying that's lens curvature and that what you're actually seeing...

2:01:17

Why do you think that's lens curvature?

2:01:18

And that what you're seeing is horizon.

2:01:20

So, what you're talking about is like a fisheye lens.

2:01:22

I'm saying if I'm trying to provoke you, that's what I'm saying.

2:01:24

Right.

2:01:24

But let's not do that right now because I don't want you to be completely

2:01:28

fucking insane.

2:01:28

Because this is a round body just like the moon, just like Mars, just like

2:01:33

Jupiter, just like Uranus.

2:01:34

All the ones that we...

2:01:35

That appears to be a...

2:01:37

But in your practical life experience, you have to accept a certain amount of

2:01:42

faith is what I'm getting at at any moment.

2:01:44

But they understand the procession of the equinoxes.

2:01:47

Okay.

2:01:49

Do you know that the procession of the equinoxes is how they measure the sky

2:01:53

over a period of 26,000 years?

2:01:55

I see right there a little stitching, like right there.

2:01:59

I just said this would just keep going straight forever or not.

2:02:02

Do you see that line right there?

2:02:04

What is that?

2:02:05

What is that line?

2:02:05

Yeah.

2:02:06

What is that line?

2:02:07

Well, that looks like stitching to me.

2:02:09

It looks like they've stitched together and it crosses over there through that

2:02:12

mountain range right there.

2:02:13

That is weird.

2:02:14

Whatever that is.

2:02:15

So by your very example, I'm just saying that you have to have a certain amount

2:02:19

of faith in that.

2:02:20

And on the surface, Mundus Volte De Seppi.

2:02:22

Okay.

2:02:23

Okay.

2:02:23

You're freaking me out.

2:02:24

Go back to that, Jamie.

2:02:26

So what is the explanation?

2:02:28

Go back a little bit.

2:02:29

Yeah.

2:02:29

What is the explanation of that line right there?

2:02:31

I don't know.

2:02:31

Right.

2:02:31

But how weird is that?

2:02:32

That is weird that there's this line.

2:02:35

Right.

2:02:35

Because that in itself is a composite image, a cartoon that has been put

2:02:39

together for you to look at this apparent live imagery.

2:02:44

So is this multiple images that are supposedly pieced together?

2:02:50

Is that what they're—

2:02:51

I'm saying that things fall into—like, the way perspective works is that

2:02:55

things appear to fall into the horizon.

2:02:57

But now you use a—what is that camera?

2:03:00

Is it a P200 camera?

2:03:03

Where you can actually zoom in and lift things out of the horizon that have

2:03:06

appeared to fall into the horizon.

2:03:08

This live video—this live video feed from the International Space Station has

2:03:11

been—

2:03:11

Has been interrupted because you're watching too much.

2:03:14

Do either a change in the onboard camera configuration or a loss of signal with

2:03:18

the communications network.

2:03:19

The video will return when the connection is reestablished.

2:03:22

So this is during the live feed.

2:03:24

This isn't from NASA's YouTube channel.

2:03:26

It's just down right now.

2:03:27

It's just down right now.

2:03:28

Okay.

2:03:28

So you're saying that this is like a fisheye effect of a lens.

2:03:33

Yeah, I'm saying that—

2:03:34

Potentially.

2:03:34

I'm saying that—and that we can even see that whenever they're up there

2:03:39

shooting with cameras outside, you're like, oh, there's the—

2:03:42

But do you know how many people—

2:03:43

There's the curvature.

2:03:44

And then every now and then the camera turns and it inverts for a moment.

2:03:47

Then it goes back down.

2:03:48

I've never seen that.

2:03:49

I watch a lot of NASA stuff.

2:03:52

Listen, I'm not saying that we're not living on a globe or at least an oblate

2:03:56

spheroid, as Neil deGrasse Tyson says, but have you ever noticed how spasticated

2:04:01

that guy gets whenever you throw out the word flat earth?

2:04:04

He flips out like the way Robert De Niro flips out on—irrationally, he flips

2:04:10

out.

2:04:11

Well, he flips out when you say that men can't be women, which is very weird.

2:04:15

Yeah, exactly.

2:04:16

And that they should be able to compete in women's sports, which is very weird.

2:04:20

Like a man—for a man of science, that's bonkers.

2:04:22

Or that they should be able to go to jail and that a sex offender who has been—

2:04:26

Yeah, fucking insane.

2:04:27

Not just that, but rapists.

2:04:29

Yeah.

2:04:29

Like people have raped children.

2:04:30

He's then put in jail with women and it's like—

2:04:32

And then they have to pay for their electrolysis and breast augmentation, which

2:04:36

is okay.

2:04:37

At what point in time do you say that this is some sort of a bizarre agenda

2:04:41

that you're trying to get us to accept something that doesn't make any fucking

2:04:45

sense?

2:04:45

So much so that you're willing to house male prisoners in with females because

2:04:51

they say they're a male with an intact penis?

2:04:53

And then even if they get, like, female prisoners pregnant or rape them?

2:04:57

We're all just trying to construct what reality is.

2:05:01

And it tends to be a consensus of what it is.

2:05:06

But, you know, there are fringes that, on the ends, that don't believe with

2:05:10

what the consensus says.

2:05:11

Are they wrong?

2:05:12

But do you know how many people would have to be involved to promulgate this

2:05:17

idea that there's a flat earth and you've got to cover up that thing and

2:05:21

pretend it's round?

2:05:22

And what's the motivation of covering up the fact that the earth is flat?

2:05:26

I mean, if we're really fundamentally getting down to it, it's about God.

2:05:30

And it's about what is this realm that we're in and are we part of creation and,

2:05:36

you know—

2:05:37

But why would it be more likely God if it was flat?

2:05:40

Every culture throughout recorded history draws us in this kind of flat, earthish

2:05:47

environment with a dome, a firmament that covers it up until, like, when?

2:05:53

The 1930s or so?

2:05:54

Right, when they start making telescopes.

2:05:56

Well, and—

2:05:58

Right?

2:05:58

I mean, so this is a grand conspiracy?

2:06:00

Like, Galileo was wrong, Copernicus was wrong, all these people didn't know—

2:06:04

All of recorded history is wrong.

2:06:06

And, I mean, the other option is that we are just specks of nothing floating

2:06:12

around in an endless, vast nothing that goes on forever and that you are

2:06:17

completely insignificant, that you are not God's perfect creation, which I

2:06:21

think you are.

2:06:22

Well, that doesn't—they're not mutually exclusive.

2:06:25

You know, just because we are in this vast cosmos that's almost impossible for

2:06:31

our mammal minds to grasp the magnitude of it doesn't mean that God's not real.

2:06:37

It's exclusive to people who believe the Bible word for word.

2:06:41

I'm not saying I do necessarily.

2:06:43

I am—I would be considered apostate, you know, by most people.

2:06:51

I've been reading the Bible a lot, and one of the problems that I find is it's

2:06:55

clearly got the hand of man on it.

2:06:57

Well, it's been edited.

2:06:58

Yes.

2:06:58

It's been edited, you know, the King James—who was King James?

2:07:01

He wrote Bible—he wrote books on demons as well.

2:07:04

And so, who was—

2:07:06

Well, even the Old Testament.

2:07:07

The Old Testament has the hand of man on it.

2:07:09

Not just that, but it's also been translated so many different times.

2:07:13

Like, ancient Hebrew, the letters double as numbers.

2:07:16

There's no numbers in ancient Hebrew.

2:07:18

So words have numerical value to them.

2:07:21

And, you know, imagine translating such a complex language where, like, the

2:07:26

word God and the word love, they have the same numerical value.

2:07:30

I believe.

2:07:30

I read—here's another thing.

2:07:32

I've read that.

2:07:33

I don't know if it's true.

2:07:33

So let me find out if that's true.

2:07:35

Put that into perplexity.

2:07:37

There's a lot of weird stuff in the Bible.

2:07:39

In Genesis, when the Nephilim come down and they find women comely.

2:07:45

And so they're like, okay, what's actually going on there?

2:07:49

These angels, or Nephilim, are coming down and they're taking women from men

2:07:55

and having sex with them and then creating, you know, hybrid offspring.

2:08:02

Representative Anna Paulina Luna was here.

2:08:05

She told me about the Book of Enoch.

2:08:06

She's like, you have to read that.

2:08:07

Have you ever read it?

2:08:08

I don't know.

2:08:08

So I read it.

2:08:09

Holy—

2:08:10

Have you seen The Carpenter's Son?

2:08:12

The Nicolas Cage movie?

2:08:13

No.

2:08:13

Incredible.

2:08:15

I just—

2:08:16

What did I just have you look up, though, before I lose my train of thought?

2:08:18

That King James Bible thing?

2:08:19

What?

2:08:22

That's what I was trying to ask specifically.

2:08:23

Which part did you want to ask about?

2:08:24

No, what I asked you was ancient Hebrew.

2:08:28

So the letters also double as numbers.

2:08:30

The letters double as numbers.

2:08:31

That's what that movie Pi is all about.

2:08:32

And that the word love and the word God have the same numerical value.

2:08:36

I'm very, very certain that that's true, but I want to really double-check.

2:08:41

Well, numerology exists around us everywhere.

2:08:43

And, you know, everything, you know, it seems to have a kind of—

2:08:48

And that's what the Aronofsky film Pi was kind of all about, is that—

2:08:52

That was a great movie.

2:08:52

Yeah, it's a very—

2:08:53

There was also—

2:08:54

He's a very interesting filmmaker.

2:08:55

A really fascinating statement by this mathematician.

2:08:58

We talked about it on a recent podcast, was that how strange is it that we find

2:09:05

out that

2:09:06

the universe is made out of math and that it's encoded in the universe itself.

2:09:12

So a tool that we used, that human beings created to measure the universe, it

2:09:18

turns out

2:09:19

that that tool is how the universe is actually encoded.

2:09:23

Well, this gets back to what Elon is saying about the world being a simulation.

2:09:27

Uh-huh.

2:09:27

You know, I mean, what is a simulation?

2:09:29

A simulation is a—

2:09:29

So it says, no, in ancient Hebrew, whatever that word is, Gematria, no direct

2:09:35

name of God

2:09:36

shares the exact same numerical value as the word for love.

2:09:40

So what is the basis of that rumor?

2:09:42

A sacred name equals 26, a name for God equals 86.

2:09:49

Mm-hmm.

2:09:49

Okay.

2:09:50

Is there a word for God?

2:09:53

Elohim.

2:09:53

Does that have the same—

2:09:56

It's a name.

2:09:56

Right.

2:09:57

What is the value of—click on that below that, below that, where it says,

2:10:03

what is the gematric—what is that word?

2:10:06

I had to look it up.

2:10:06

It's a—

2:10:07

Gematria.

2:10:07

Gematria.

2:10:08

Gematria.

2:10:09

Primary Jewish mystic—oh, Kabbalah.

2:10:11

Yeah.

2:10:11

Religious studies to find hidden spiritual meanings in sacred texts.

2:10:15

Okay.

2:10:15

It is fascinating that there's numerical value in words.

2:10:19

Like, there's no way you're going to get that when you translate it to Latin.

2:10:22

So that is a—

2:10:24

Or Greek.

2:10:24

That is a value of 86.

2:10:26

And what is love's value?

2:10:28

What is the value—what is the ancient Hebrew word for love?

2:10:33

What is the ancient Hebrew word for love?

2:10:43

What you mean by love is going to be very—you have to say.

2:10:47

Do you mean, like, love between two people?

2:10:48

Okay.

2:10:49

What is the gematria—

2:10:50

Love that doggy in the window?

2:10:51

Yeah.

2:10:51

Do you like your child?

2:10:52

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:10:52

That's a good point.

2:10:53

That's a good point.

2:10:54

Because they're going to have different words for it.

2:10:55

Definitely.

2:10:55

So what is that?

2:10:57

Click on that.

2:10:58

What's the gematria value of avala?

2:11:00

Right there?

2:11:01

Right there?

2:11:02

Yeah.

2:11:03

Click on that.

2:11:04

It's 13.

2:11:08

Oh, brother.

2:11:09

So that's a different number, too.

2:11:10

Interesting.

2:11:13

13 twice equals 26, the value of Yahweh.

2:11:16

Yeah.

2:11:17

Huh.

2:11:18

This movie, The Carpenter's Son, is all about the infancy of Jesus, I think, as

2:11:23

written by Matthew.

2:11:24

And it's part of these—I may have this wrong, but Coptic texts.

2:11:34

And it is—like, Nicolas Cage is so good in this movie.

2:11:40

So twice 13 equals 26, the value of Yahweh, implying love mirrors or completes

2:11:48

God's essence.

2:11:49

Okay.

2:11:50

So that's where that comes from.

2:11:51

I was going to ask where it came from.

2:11:53

Right.

2:11:53

That's where it comes from.

2:11:54

God is love.

2:11:56

So love twice is God.

2:11:58

So here's a question.

2:12:01

What happened—so go put—

2:12:05

I understand.

2:12:06

I understand.

2:12:06

Go to ask a follow-up.

2:12:07

So how was the numerical value of ancient Hebrew language lost when they

2:12:17

translated it to Latin?

2:12:20

To Greek.

2:12:21

But to Greek first, right?

2:12:22

How is the numerical value of ancient Hebrew words lost when they translated it

2:12:35

to Greek?

2:12:37

Because it seems like if the—it's not just context.

2:12:41

Like, what is your word for that?

2:12:43

Like, the word meant a different thing to them, you know?

2:12:47

Numerical values of ancient Hebrew words calculated via Germatria, where

2:12:53

letters double as numbers, was not preserved in Greek translations.

2:13:00

Hebrew letters inherently carry fixed numerical values, enabling word sums.

2:13:05

Greek letters have their own values.

2:13:09

Equivalents rarely match Hebrew sums exactly.

2:13:13

So you're going to lose it.

2:13:14

Like, you know when you read, like, Russian translations of English or English

2:13:18

to Russian?

2:13:19

It gets, like, super screwy.

2:13:21

For sure.

2:13:21

For sure.

2:13:22

Is this for sure, like, real or accurate?

2:13:23

Ancient Spanish.

2:13:24

What name is?

2:13:25

It's incredibly difficult.

2:13:27

Like, all words mean another number that all have some sort of secret meaning?

2:13:32

Runic writing from the Nordics is the same thing.

2:13:36

And there is a striking resemblance between many of the runes with Hebrew.

2:13:41

And so these ideas and these glyphs and symbols that Odin first saw while

2:13:46

hanging upside down from the tree and learned language and how to speak are

2:13:51

somewhat universal across the planet.

2:13:54

Let's get to that for a second, but let's find out what Jamie's saying.

2:13:57

Primarily used in Jewish mysticism and religious studies to find hidden

2:14:01

spiritual meanings in sacred texts like Torah by assigning numerical values to

2:14:06

Hebrew letters and words, revealing connections between concepts and exploring

2:14:11

the universe's underlying structure.

2:14:13

What's interesting is, like, it's an older language, but doesn't that seem like

2:14:17

a more complex language, a language that combines numerical value with words?

2:14:22

Like, if you said something to me, it's not just implied by your tone or by the

2:14:28

context of what you're saying that I understand what it means to you, but it's

2:14:34

in the numerical value of the words.

2:14:37

That seems like a better way to communicate than just nouns and verbs and adverbs.

2:14:42

Rather than bifurcating numbers and letters together.

2:14:46

It sounds like a way better move.

2:14:48

I mean, doesn't it?

2:14:49

It seems like if you can understand that and if you grew up with that, that

2:14:53

seems like that would be a much richer and deeper way of communicating.

2:14:57

Isaac Asimov wrote a book called Asimov on Numbers, which is fantastic, which

2:15:01

talks about this.

2:15:03

And he talks about Kalahari Bushmen who have no concept of the number zero and

2:15:08

how they process and understand concepts like, you know, when no one is around,

2:15:13

you know, if the village is empty and things like that.

2:15:17

And so, you know, just different people are just trying to figure out how to

2:15:21

articulate everything.

2:15:23

And, you know, computer programming is a language that utilizes numbers.

2:15:28

It's weird when there's like certain languages that don't have a word for

2:15:32

something.

2:15:33

So people really grasp.

2:15:35

They have a hard time grasping what the fuck you're trying to say.

2:15:38

Yeah.

2:15:38

Like, what's the translation for this?

2:15:40

Like, we don't have a word for that.

2:15:41

We don't understand the concept of empathy.

2:15:44

Well, there's certain cultures that are like tribal cultures that can't

2:15:50

understand the concept of maintenance.

2:15:53

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:15:54

They don't have it.

2:15:55

I've heard that.

2:15:56

Yeah.

2:15:56

Which is weird.

2:15:57

Like, you think about it, like, oh, right.

2:15:58

Why would they need maintenance?

2:16:00

Right.

2:16:00

Why would they need maintenance?

2:16:01

If you live a subsistence lifestyle, you live off the land, you don't need

2:16:03

maintenance.

2:16:04

And then suddenly you're thrust into the 21st century and the Chinese are

2:16:08

building highways for you.

2:16:10

And the highways collapse.

2:16:12

Yeah, and the highways just collapse because no one's maintaining it.

2:16:14

Right.

2:16:15

Yeah.

2:16:16

It's interesting.

2:16:17

But it's interesting when-

2:16:19

Because you're pulling people out of the Stone Age and dropping them into, or

2:16:22

maybe the Iron Age, and dropping them suddenly into-

2:16:26

So to take this back to this idea that we're missing 1,000 years.

2:16:30

So if we really are missing this 1,000-

2:16:32

There's two things I want to get to that.

2:16:34

Added 1,000 years.

2:16:35

Yeah, yeah, added 1,000 years.

2:16:36

I really want to get to that, and, well, I meant by missing, like, they don't

2:16:41

exist in the real world.

2:16:43

Right, right.

2:16:43

I want to get to that, and I want to get to, is there a conventional

2:16:45

explanation for that stitching?

2:16:47

Why that image?

2:16:49

Like, what is the mainstream-

2:16:51

Well, I got to dig up what that, what we're even looking at.

2:16:53

Right.

2:16:54

I don't know.

2:16:54

It was not the NASA channel we were looking at.

2:16:56

I don't, you know, I can dig down that rabbit hole.

2:16:58

What were we looking at?

2:16:59

I tried to pick up a video of live-

2:17:02

You know, the globe imagery that-

2:17:03

Hold on a second.

2:17:04

So that image might not have been an official image?

2:17:07

That might have been something that someone created?

2:17:08

I'm not saying that.

2:17:09

Well, let me retract so words aren't taken out of context.

2:17:13

I'm just saying it seemed like a live video.

2:17:15

It was live on YouTube.

2:17:17

Oh, but it could have been AI or shit.

2:17:21

I don't know who-

2:17:21

Yeah, I have to go back to look at the-

2:17:22

Right.

2:17:22

I'm trying to work fast over here.

2:17:24

No, I get it, dog.

2:17:25

I get it.

2:17:26

That's why I found-

2:17:27

But, Jamie, you do the job of 15 dudes.

2:17:29

So I appreciate what you're doing.

2:17:30

I found a video from 11 years ago on Vimeo that is from SpaceX.

2:17:34

So it's not NASA.

2:17:36

It's someone else.

2:17:36

And it's like, it's up and down of the rocket.

2:17:39

You can argue all day that it's got curvature.

2:17:41

It doesn't have curvature.

2:17:42

When you see a rocket launch, what does it do?

2:17:43

It goes kind of sideways across the sky.

2:17:46

And so, like, we've now seen that, you know, pretty regularly.

2:17:50

And that's because they're really not going above the troposphere, which-

2:17:54

Well, I watched the SpaceX launch live.

2:17:57

I was there.

2:17:58

It went straight up in the air.

2:17:59

And then it curves and it travels sideways across the sky until it meets the

2:18:02

horizon.

2:18:03

Well, it gets to a certain orbit and then it traveled and dropped off in

2:18:06

Australia 35 minutes later.

2:18:08

I went to the commands-

2:18:08

But out of your view.

2:18:09

No.

2:18:10

I watched the entire thing from the command center.

2:18:14

I watched it from, like, 24 different cameras.

2:18:17

But how high did it go?

2:18:18

Did it go above the troposphere?

2:18:19

Not likely.

2:18:22

Like, this is not above the-

2:18:23

What is the troposphere?

2:18:24

Is that-

2:18:24

This is like-

2:18:25

How many miles is that up?

2:18:26

This is low Earth orbit where-

2:18:28

Right.

2:18:29

But at low Earth orbit, Jesus Christ, that looks like a globe, huh?

2:18:32

But watch as the camera rotates.

2:18:34

This is also an edited video.

2:18:36

I don't want to get stuck in this fucking space.

2:18:37

Right, right.

2:18:37

Like, this-

2:18:39

As Elon would say, it's real because it looks fake.

2:18:43

Or when it looks fake, that's when you know it's real.

2:18:45

Say that about Bigfoot then, bitch.

2:18:47

Because Bigfoot looks fake as fuck and it's definitely not real.

2:18:52

You know what's real?

2:18:54

That Turkish sharpshooter.

2:18:55

That dude was a G up in the corner.

2:18:57

Press play.

2:18:59

See what this is supposed to be.

2:19:00

It cuts.

2:19:01

It cuts.

2:19:02

Yeah.

2:19:02

Okay.

2:19:02

Oh, I see.

2:19:04

I see.

2:19:04

Yeah.

2:19:04

So it cuts a bunch of different images.

2:19:06

See, now you can actually see an inversion occurring on the horizon right there.

2:19:11

Oh, you're only seeing a small piece of it.

2:19:12

Correct.

2:19:13

But the lens distortion on the side of the frame is causing the horizon there-

2:19:17

To go the opposite way.

2:19:18

To invert.

2:19:19

And that's because of lens distortion.

2:19:20

I see what you're saying.

2:19:21

It is.

2:19:22

And the fact of the matter is, even at the height that these are orbiting at,

2:19:26

and I'm

2:19:26

not saying, like, presuming a globular planet, and even the word planet, plane,

2:19:34

it's like

2:19:35

a plane at, you know, or the horizon is horizontal.

2:19:39

Like, you know, even presuming that, the height that they're at right now, you

2:19:45

would still only

2:19:46

see, you know, a circular, you would see the limit of your vision, which has a-

2:19:53

Because it's so massive.

2:19:54

Yeah.

2:19:55

Because it's so massive.

2:19:56

You're still high enough.

2:19:57

Well-

2:19:58

You're still not high enough to truly see curvature.

2:20:00

If we are in a simulation, and if consciousness, it affects the reality of

2:20:05

things, and they

2:20:06

are only real if we are experiencing them, that's when things get really squirrely.

2:20:11

The testimony of your eyes.

2:20:13

Yeah.

2:20:13

Like, I know that I am here right now.

2:20:15

Not just the testimony of your eyes, but your consciousness interacting with

2:20:20

reality is what

2:20:21

creates it.

2:20:22

Correct.

2:20:23

I mean-

2:20:23

That's where things get super squirrely.

2:20:25

How do you know gravity exists, for example?

2:20:27

Well, gravity's not clearly defined, right?

2:20:29

Correct.

2:20:29

We understand the numbers.

2:20:31

Gravity is a concept, and it's a truly non-provable concept, because you can

2:20:35

prove the exact same

2:20:36

thing through density and buoyancy.

2:20:38

You know, the density and buoyancy, you know, make a lot of-

2:20:42

How come the oceans, you know, react to the way they do and don't-

2:20:48

You know, it's not necessarily provable, but it's believable.

2:20:54

You come to a certain point where you're like, okay, faith takes over at this

2:20:58

point.

2:20:58

My faith in gravity, my faith in the globe, because that's what's been told to

2:21:05

me since

2:21:06

I was a baby.

2:21:08

At a certain point, that just takes over.

2:21:09

Not just that, but also-

2:21:10

And you accept that as a fundamental piece of what reality is, because we want

2:21:14

to believe

2:21:14

we understand the universe.

2:21:16

What I'm saying is, we don't understand jack shit about the universe.

2:21:20

We don't know anything.

2:21:21

And all we do is we believe what they tell us, and they is just the cumulative

2:21:28

understanding

2:21:29

of how things are.

2:21:30

But in ancient times, they had a different understanding of things, and that

2:21:34

was how it

2:21:35

was back then.

2:21:36

And so, because they had no other way to describe-

2:21:39

Right, but even then, they built things based on where the sun was going to be

2:21:45

during the

2:21:46

solar equinox.

2:21:47

They also were aware of the procession of the equinoxes, which is the wobble of

2:21:52

Earth's

2:21:52

orbit.

2:21:53

So, Earth spinning around doesn't spin perfectly.

2:21:56

There is a 26,000-year wobble, and you can predict it by the night sky.

2:22:01

And somehow, Polaris remains centered in the sky, and all stars rotate around

2:22:06

it.

2:22:07

That's extraordinary.

2:22:08

If we're traveling-

2:22:09

Wait, what do you mean?

2:22:10

So, during the procession of the equinoxes, over a 26,000-year cycle, Polaris-

2:22:14

No, it has remained in the exact same spot?

2:22:17

Supposedly, that's because that's where we're flying towards as a solar system,

2:22:21

as we travel

2:22:22

through the galaxy-

2:22:23

Right, but with the perception of the equinoxes, this wobble, over a 26,000-year

2:22:28

period, it

2:22:28

will move in the sky.

2:22:29

Well, the point of Polaris will always remain where it is, directly to the

2:22:35

north.

2:22:36

The point, but our perspective of it will vary, depending upon where we are in

2:22:40

this 26,000-year

2:22:41

cycle.

2:22:42

It undergoes a kind of penumbra of sorts, a kind of motion of sorts.

2:22:48

It changes.

2:22:48

A figure-eight motion through time.

2:22:50

It changes.

2:22:51

Look at it.

2:22:52

It says right here, due to the 26,000-year axial procession cycle, the north

2:22:57

star changes

2:22:58

over millennia.

2:22:59

While Polaris is the current north star, other stars have held this position,

2:23:04

including Thuban,

2:23:05

3000 BC, and future stars will include Arai, Alderman, and Vega.

2:23:14

So, it's not the same star.

2:23:15

It's just what is dependent upon where we are in the procession of the equinoxes.

2:23:21

That's why.

2:23:22

Well, there it is.

2:23:24

It's not that the Earth is flat.

2:23:25

I know it's true because it's on Google.

2:23:26

But it's not just that.

2:23:27

We know where they've been able to accurately predict the motion of the procession

2:23:32

of the equinoxes

2:23:33

based on the constellations, which are clearly mapped out.

2:23:36

So, we understand this wobble.

2:23:37

And this wobble may be responsible for cycles of Earth's climate.

2:23:43

How things change and be dependent upon where the equator sits and where these

2:23:49

poles sit

2:23:49

and how it wiggles around.

2:23:51

Remember when we were younger, the sun was kind of yellow and orange, and now

2:23:54

it's just

2:23:55

like white?

2:23:55

Like, reality is changing.

2:23:58

I mean, things change.

2:23:59

The sun looks exactly the same to me.

2:24:00

Does?

2:24:01

Yeah.

2:24:01

You think the sun is the same?

2:24:02

To me, it's-

2:24:03

I think pollution has affected it somewhat, especially if you live in LA.

2:24:06

Well, there used to be more pollution, and so maybe that's an excuse of why the

2:24:10

sun would

2:24:11

be more yellow.

2:24:12

But I've lived all over the world.

2:24:13

Did you see Epstein talking about gravity?

2:24:14

Oh, boy.

2:24:15

Oh, here we go.

2:24:16

Here we go.

2:24:17

It's not, I don't know, it's very, I'll just say-

2:24:20

What does he have to say?

2:24:21

It's fine.

2:24:21

It's only 45 seconds.

2:24:22

I just let it go.

2:24:24

So, someone's pushing the ball.

2:24:28

Because I know that, I am confident that the only thing that gets something to

2:24:32

move is

2:24:32

with a force that pushes.

2:24:33

So, there's a force that's pushing the ball down.

2:24:36

In fact, he called it gravity.

2:24:42

He measured how fast it was pulled, but never was able to explain why it

2:24:49

happened.

2:24:50

How is it?

2:24:51

What is gravity?

2:24:52

It's this, everybody says, well, why did the ball fall to the ground?

2:24:56

Because gravity took it.

2:24:57

But what's gravity?

2:24:58

That's, as Feynman would say, that's the name of the thing.

2:25:01

We have no idea what it is.

2:25:04

That's the end of that clip.

2:25:05

Or it's just density and buoyancy.

2:25:06

He was really into this topic, apparently.

2:25:09

Apparently.

2:25:10

He knew a lot about it.

2:25:11

You know who you should have on is Eric Dubé.

2:25:13

Do you know who this guy is?

2:25:14

Oh, he's the flat earth guy.

2:25:15

Yeah, he's the flat earth guy.

2:25:17

And he's written a book called A Hundred Proofs.

2:25:19

And in order to prove something, you also have to prove things wrong.

2:25:22

You went down some rabbit holes, Roger Avery.

2:25:24

Look, I'm a screenwriter.

2:25:26

And so I'm always looking for things like this to write stuff about.

2:25:29

And so it's...

2:25:30

So in order to prove, say that again?

2:25:32

I take it all...

2:25:32

In order to prove what?

2:25:33

Whenever you have a proof, you also have to disprove.

2:25:35

And so he wrote a book called A Hundred Proofs about the nature of the earth

2:25:44

and how it is.

2:25:46

And it has explanations for many of the things you're talking about.

2:25:51

Hasn't he debated people that actually understand how you can prove that the

2:25:55

earth is round?

2:25:56

He does it very calmly and it infuriates people.

2:25:59

Right.

2:26:00

But I don't think he's done well.

2:26:02

Actually, it's very enjoyable to watch because it's really funny.

2:26:04

But to people that are actual cosmologists, he's not performed well in these.

2:26:08

Well, the cosmologists will say things that still need to be...

2:26:13

If you're making statements, they still need to be...

2:26:16

You still need to disprove the other proofs.

2:26:21

Right, but there's plenty of people that have disproven that the earth is flat.

2:26:24

All I'm saying is experiential, the Joe Rogan experience throughout life, you

2:26:32

are really...

2:26:33

Like when you go up into an airplane, I do not see the curvature of the earth.

2:26:36

Well, you can't because of perspective because you're so tiny.

2:26:39

Correct.

2:26:39

Correct, because we're so tiny.

2:26:40

So all I'm saying is that through experience, that the testimony of your eyes,

2:26:45

you will never experience a globular earth.

2:26:48

You can't...

2:26:50

But you do experience the effect of an earth that's a globe if you go to the

2:26:55

other side of the earth and it's dark out when it's sunny in California.

2:27:00

They've made models of how that could work on the flat earth.

2:27:04

Oh, dorks have.

2:27:05

Dorks have made models.

2:27:06

But it doesn't line in with our understanding of cosmology.

2:27:09

It doesn't line in with our understanding of our orbit around the sun.

2:27:12

That's assuming you believe that we orbit around the sun.

2:27:14

And listen, I'm not saying that we don't orbit around the sun.

2:27:17

I'm not saying we don't live on a globular earth.

2:27:18

But the numbers match.

2:27:20

Don't take me wrong.

2:27:20

But the numbers match.

2:27:22

If you do assume that they're correct, that we orbit around the sun, their

2:27:25

calculations are completely accurate.

2:27:28

If they make the calculations on their flat earth model as well, then you still

2:27:32

have to prove that wrong.

2:27:34

Right.

2:27:34

But is NASA doing that?

2:27:35

Is MIT doing that?

2:27:37

NASA, of all people to believe, the ones who are digitally stitching shit and

2:27:42

saying, that's a government agency.

2:27:46

You went so deep with this.

2:27:48

Boy.

2:27:48

No.

2:27:49

All I'm saying is my experience.

2:27:52

You know, when I get on the plane later today and I'm flying back and I look

2:27:57

outside, I'm going to see a flat, you know, a flat horizon, a horizontal

2:28:03

horizon before me.

2:28:05

And when I land and, you know, it's everything else is faith-based.

2:28:12

Well.

2:28:13

That's all I'm saying.

2:28:14

It's not, though.

2:28:15

It's science-based.

2:28:17

It's based on data.

2:28:19

It's based on our understanding.

2:28:20

The word science means observation.

2:28:22

It means testimony of the eyes.

2:28:24

Which is data, which I'm talking about, the measurements, data.

2:28:27

The data is so far removed, one, from my ability to understand, but from most

2:28:31

people's ability to understand.

2:28:33

You can understand the circumference of the earth, right?

2:28:36

You can understand the numbers, and the numbers line up exactly with how much

2:28:40

time it would take for the earth to go around in a day.

2:28:43

Sure.

2:28:43

And it works.

2:28:45

What other experiment can you show me where water clings to a spinning ball?

2:28:50

Like, that's kind of the classic flat earther thing that they'll ask you.

2:28:56

Like, well, show me any other example of that.

2:28:59

Well, show me a fucking ball that's 24,000 miles wide.

2:29:01

And the answer to that is gravity.

2:29:03

And what he's talking about in that clip that you just showed is gravity is

2:29:07

just sort of this idea that we came up with to justify that.

2:29:10

But there's clearly a force that does that, right?

2:29:13

That's density.

2:29:14

Just density?

2:29:15

Yeah, density.

2:29:16

Well, then how come these two things will fall at the same time if I drop them

2:29:19

when this is far heavier?

2:29:21

How come?

2:29:22

I do not have an answer for that.

2:29:24

Right.

2:29:24

But gravity does, right?

2:29:26

Gravity is, like he said, it's just a measurement.

2:29:29

It's a measurement of how things fall.

2:29:31

Right.

2:29:31

And so, but that measurement.

2:29:33

And the word that they invented, gravity, is just an explanation for how

2:29:38

objects are pulled downward.

2:29:41

Right.

2:29:41

But those objects, if it was just density, wouldn't a heavier object?

2:29:47

Drop faster.

2:29:48

Well, when a...

2:29:50

There's two balls.

2:29:51

There's a bowling ball and feathers dropping in a vacuum and they're falling at

2:29:54

the exact same time.

2:29:54

Yeah.

2:29:55

How weird.

2:29:56

Vacuum.

2:29:57

No density.

2:29:58

They both fall at the same time because of gravity or whatever the force we

2:30:01

call gravity is.

2:30:03

But there is some sort of a force that we call gravity that could be measured

2:30:06

in a vacuum.

2:30:07

Look how excited they all are.

2:30:09

Yeah.

2:30:09

Brian Cox would be pissed if he was here right now.

2:30:12

He'd be shitting the whole view.

2:30:12

Oh, no.

2:30:13

He'd be...

2:30:13

I'm not...

2:30:13

Listen, I'm not...

2:30:14

All I'm saying is that my experience in the world...

2:30:17

Of course, but your experience is based on perspective of being a tiny little

2:30:21

thing on an enormous thing.

2:30:22

Correct.

2:30:22

Yeah.

2:30:23

That is correct.

2:30:24

Yeah.

2:30:24

That is correct.

2:30:25

There's a few YouTube channels that have broken down all of those flat earth

2:30:28

ideas too.

2:30:29

A ton.

2:30:29

I'm going to watch those.

2:30:30

I tried years ago and I gave up.

2:30:32

It is absolutely a rabbit hole.

2:30:35

But what's interesting about it is that if you extract like the faith that you

2:30:45

have in these kind of ideas and you supplement it with the faith of these other

2:30:53

ideas, they're exchangeable.

2:30:57

They're only exchangeable if you don't understand the data and if you don't

2:31:00

understand what's actually been measured or if you don't understand the path of

2:31:03

satellites or if you don't understand how many different people would have had

2:31:06

to lie about this shit and not achieve the same observational results that all

2:31:12

these different space agencies have.

2:31:14

That the idea that they're all in collusion, that Japan and India and even

2:31:18

countries that hate each other, they're all in collusion on this lie that the

2:31:23

earth is round.

2:31:24

Well...

2:31:25

It seems much more likely that there's a bunch of people with schizophrenia

2:31:28

that think that the earth is flat and they make these YouTube videos where they're

2:31:31

very compelling because they're articulate and they use great words and they

2:31:34

say it all in a nice way without being challenged by real facts along the way

2:31:38

by someone who actually has studied this their whole life.

2:31:41

Right.

2:31:42

I still saw digital stitching on your example.

2:31:45

Yeah, it wasn't my example.

2:31:47

It was some shit Jamie randomly pulled offline.

2:31:50

That was weird though.

2:31:51

And that's perfect for this world that we live in, to have sort of a glitch

2:31:55

like that.

2:31:56

But that's kind of what I'm getting at is there's so much out there is so much

2:32:00

out there that it just falls to faith.

2:32:03

And also, what does it really matter?

2:32:05

That's kind of what I'm getting at ultimately is what does all of that really

2:32:10

matter?

2:32:11

What does it matter to anybody that there's a cabal of 8,000 plus people who

2:32:16

are secretly controlling the world and doing occultism and drinking baby blood?

2:32:21

What does it really matter as long as you can just have your daily pint?

2:32:24

This is a very different subject now.

2:32:26

We've shifted.

2:32:27

We've moved away from the concept of the earth being flat and it's a giant lie

2:32:31

that's promoted by a huge group of people that aren't even connected in any way,

2:32:36

shape or form to evil people that are involved in cult-like rituals, which has,

2:32:42

by the way, always existed.

2:32:44

And this is why it's very difficult for people to imagine today that some of

2:32:48

the things that you're hearing from the Epstein files, like the potential that

2:32:52

they were eating children or killing children or that they use that sulfuric

2:32:56

acid to boil bodies.

2:32:57

We don't want to believe in evil that is that deep.

2:33:02

But in my opinion, if you can find out that evil is real, right?

2:33:06

Evil most certainly is real.

2:33:08

There's evil acts that we have documented all throughout the world.

2:33:11

There's evil that the cartel does.

2:33:13

I just watched a video where the cartel chopped this guy's head off and put it

2:33:17

on a drone and flew it over to where the other cartel was to show them.

2:33:20

They probably thought that was funny.

2:33:21

They probably thought it was funny.

2:33:22

Having a good time.

2:33:23

That's clearly evil.

2:33:26

There's plenty of evil.

2:33:27

Do you believe in demons?

2:33:28

I believe in the concept of demons.

2:33:32

I mean, demons don't materialize before us necessarily.

2:33:35

They rest upon the shoulders of men and whisper into their ears.

2:33:39

And then people do evil things.

2:33:40

This is what I believe.

2:33:42

I believe that if I was a demon or if demons were real, they would get people

2:33:47

to do things which are verifiably true that they have done.

2:33:53

If you were a demonic idea and you got into Oppenheimer's head or Patton's head

2:33:59

or anybody's – and you wanted them to do something horrific to a bunch of

2:34:05

innocent people and you could say, this is because we're at war.

2:34:10

So we're going to drop a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima.

2:34:13

Like that's a demonic act.

2:34:15

It's a demonic act of eliminating hundreds of thousands or 100,000 plus people

2:34:20

off the face of the earth who did nothing.

2:34:23

They're just citizens that are unfortunately involved in a country that is in a

2:34:27

conflict with some people that they don't even know and then they just got

2:34:31

vaporized like that.

2:34:32

That seems demonic.

2:34:33

You've just expired 150,000 souls.

2:34:36

But there are people who would argue that the war would have continued.

2:34:39

I've heard this argument before.

2:34:41

I've heard that argument too.

2:34:42

That the war would have continued and so many more would have died.

2:34:44

Well, if I was a demon, I would want to propagate that idea.

2:34:47

I would want you to think that you have to do it.

2:34:49

And so like is evil justification of things?

2:34:55

Certainly.

2:34:58

Of actions?

2:34:59

If you wanted to find a way where a demon – just like assume that demons are

2:35:07

real, how would demons best be able to enact demonic things on earth?

2:35:15

Would they do it by saying I'm a demon and this is what you should do and this

2:35:20

is horrible and evil?

2:35:22

Or would you creep into someone's head and find justifications for doing a

2:35:27

demonic thing?

2:35:30

Like there's a lot of things like clearly.

2:35:32

Well, you would creep into someone's head.

2:35:33

Right.

2:35:34

And you would boil the frog slowly.

2:35:36

Like let's imagine this is the AIDS crisis and you know that AZT is killing

2:35:42

people.

2:35:42

But you also know that you are making an insane amount of profit off of killing

2:35:48

people with AZT and you have already established a narrative.

2:35:54

And Fauci said this publicly that the reason why they only prescribe AZT is AZT

2:35:59

is the only thing that is both safe and effective.

2:36:02

He literally used the same language that he used during the COVID crisis.

2:36:05

He's been doing this for a long time.

2:36:06

He has.

2:36:07

If I was a demon, I'd want to get in that guy's head and I'd want to get him to

2:36:11

keep doing it and say, look how much money they're making.

2:36:14

You got to keep this money.

2:36:15

There's a way to justify this.

2:36:17

You're the purveyor of information.

2:36:19

You are the gatekeeper of the truth.

2:36:21

You just find a way to dance around these numbers.

2:36:24

You do not know what you are talking about.

2:36:27

This is not gain of function.

2:36:29

I mean think just what he did there that was evil.

2:36:32

By taking a virus, funding it, even though it was illegal to fund it in the

2:36:36

United States, by doing it through EcoHealth Alliance and then farming it out

2:36:42

to them.

2:36:42

They do it at the Wuhan lab and you are, in fact, doing gain of function

2:36:47

research on a virus designed for human beings to make it more deadly and more

2:36:51

contagious.

2:36:53

That's demonic.

2:36:54

You don't have a cure.

2:36:57

There was a researcher in Canada at the Manitoba Level 4 lab, Dr. Kui, I think

2:37:02

is how you pronounce her name.

2:37:04

And she was the one who solved Ebola.

2:37:07

Like she had come up with the vaccine for Ebola, which is manufactured by a

2:37:11

California company that is basically a Chinese company.

2:37:15

And like a rock star, she had made a like it was like a hit.

2:37:22

She had a hit, a huge hit.

2:37:24

And just like a rock star, everybody's asking you what comes next, what comes

2:37:27

next?

2:37:28

And so she started actively working, working really, really hard at at coming

2:37:34

up with that next thing.

2:37:37

And, you know, like most people, you don't want to stand in line.

2:37:40

And these Level 4 labs, you know, they have to, whenever you move your research

2:37:44

from one lab to another, you have to go through all sorts of stuff in order to

2:37:49

do that because it's all patented.

2:37:51

All of these microbes and viruses and Ebola strains and whatnot, it's all patented.

2:37:57

And so, for example, there was this one kid who was working at the lab in

2:38:03

Canada and he was moving, I think, to the one in Atlanta.

2:38:07

And so he was crossing the border and he didn't want to like, you know, have to

2:38:11

reproduce all of his work.

2:38:12

And so he just put it into a thermos inside of a thing and tried to cross the

2:38:15

border and he got caught.

2:38:16

Well, she got caught in 2019 by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, basically

2:38:23

moving stuff from Canada via Air Canada Freight from Manitoba, from Winnipeg.

2:38:30

This is the Winnipeg lab to Wuhan.

2:38:34

And they were moving everything.

2:38:35

And I tracked where those were, because I was writing a screenplay about it.

2:38:39

And so I tracked, like, where did that come from?

2:38:43

Well, it's like the cutter or maybe it was Abu Dhabi.

2:38:46

I can't remember the lab there.

2:38:48

And then that went through, in order to get around it, got sent to the one in

2:38:51

Amsterdam and that got sent to her.

2:38:52

And she was able to do all this stuff.

2:38:54

And she was basically just shipping, you know, everything, Hanta and all these

2:39:00

patented things to Wuhan, you know, in order to do it.

2:39:04

And the Royal Canadian Mounted Police basically, you know, stopped it.

2:39:08

And she got, like, walked out of the laboratory and everything because they

2:39:12

were like, is there a misappropriation of money going on here?

2:39:15

Like, what are all these flights that are occurring?

2:39:16

And they redacted who her financer was.

2:39:21

And we still don't know who her financer was.

2:39:23

But it's one of three people, and it's the people you probably can guess, you

2:39:29

know, these people who have an interest in this.

2:39:33

And – but her thing was just ambition.

2:39:37

It was just like anybody.

2:39:39

She was just wanting to have that next hit.

2:39:41

And she would do anything to, you know, to do it, to repeat what she did with

2:39:46

Ebola.

2:39:47

So she was helping to engineer viruses?

2:39:51

Yeah, they were engineering stuff.

2:39:52

And then she would ship them via Air Canada Freight from Winnipeg to –

2:39:57

directly to Wuhan on – literally on Air Canada flights.

2:40:00

So you're flying on Air Canada to Wuhan and down below in cargo there's all

2:40:04

this, like, you know –

2:40:06

Some shit that can kill everybody.

2:40:07

And, yeah, some horrible strain of something.

2:40:10

It's something that's patented.

2:40:11

And then they're just shipping it over to – and, you know, none of this has

2:40:15

come out.

2:40:15

Like, some papers in Canada, you know, like the Winnipeg Free Press or

2:40:20

something was trying to cover it.

2:40:23

But, you know, it just gets kind of buried.

2:40:24

That was one of the weird things that I had also seen that I don't know if it's

2:40:28

true in the Epstein files, that there was talk about engineering a pandemic.

2:40:34

Yeah, yeah.

2:40:35

Was it – did you –

2:40:37

Yeah, I read that too.

2:40:37

I read that too.

2:40:38

That they were, like, actively working on it, like, you know, running models

2:40:43

and figuring it out.

2:40:45

And, you know, well, if we do this, then this will happen.

2:40:47

And, you know, they were pretty successful at that.

2:40:49

But why would Epstein be involved if he's a financier?

2:40:52

He was involved in everything.

2:40:54

Right.

2:40:54

He was involved in everything.

2:40:56

It was, like, amazing the energy that that guy had.

2:40:58

Who has the energy to be, like, doing all this stuff, like, all over the world?

2:41:04

And, like, oh, in Nigeria we're doing this.

2:41:05

And in Yemen we're doing this.

2:41:07

And here we're doing that.

2:41:08

And at the same time trafficking all these girls and, you know, and young

2:41:14

children and, like, all this stuff.

2:41:17

Right.

2:41:17

Who has the energy to do that?

2:41:19

It says no credible evidence in the recently released Epstein files links

2:41:22

Jeffrey Epstein or his associates to

2:41:24

engineering the COVID-19 pandemic.

2:41:26

Claims stem from a misinterpreted 2017 email referencing routine pandemic

2:41:32

preparedness discussions, not a plot.

2:41:36

So, what was the claim, the original claim?

2:41:38

I didn't ask it about COVID-19 also.

2:41:40

Right.

2:41:41

You just asked it about engineering a pandemic.

2:41:43

So, what is the pandemic claims?

2:41:45

Scroll up a little so I can read that.

2:41:47

That's all.

2:41:47

Scroll down a little.

2:41:48

There it goes.

2:41:49

So, 2017 email originally from 2015 discussions to Bill, widely assumed to be

2:41:55

Gates, forwarded to Epstein,

2:41:58

proposed recommendations and technical specifications for pandemic modeling of

2:42:03

various strains.

2:42:05

It focused on healthcare data, simulations for preparedness and neurotechnology,

2:42:11

not creating or engineering a virus.

2:42:14

Gates Foundation later ran public event 2001 and 2019, a standard exercise with

2:42:21

John Hopkins and WHO, predating COVID reports.

2:42:25

That whole public event 2001 is fucking weird.

2:42:30

Event 2001 is weird.

2:42:32

Context and debunking pandemic simulations are common public health tools like

2:42:39

those for SARS or flu.

2:42:41

Right.

2:42:41

But why is Jeffrey Epstein involved in these discussions?

2:42:46

He's involved in everything.

2:42:47

He's involved in gravity.

2:42:48

But how fucking weird is that?

2:42:49

How weird?

2:42:51

A pandemic was reportedly mentioned in the Epstein files.

2:42:56

He was running the world.

2:42:57

Three years before COVID-19.

2:42:58

He was running the world.

2:42:59

Well, this is what my friend Eddie Bravo believes.

2:43:01

And creating the illusion.

2:43:02

In the meantime, Ghislaine Maxwell is running the Reddit forum on World News.

2:43:07

Like, she's literally shaping the World News Reddit forum.

2:43:10

She was running the World News forum on Reddit?

2:43:15

Yeah, she was.

2:43:15

And it all went dark the minute she got picked up, her person.

2:43:19

But she was like the main contributor, did thousands of posts, like all day

2:43:24

long, posting world news, shaping our perception of things.

2:43:29

One email was a subject, preparing for pandemics, was sent by a person whose

2:43:34

name was redacted.

2:43:36

By the way, did you see that?

2:43:38

Why would they redact the person who sent that?

2:43:41

That's not a victim.

2:43:42

You're supposed to redact victims.

2:43:44

I think they just – they did like – supposedly they just did massive redacting.

2:43:47

But sometimes you can see like, oh, the name is short.

2:43:50

It's probably Bill.

2:43:52

And then the one that comes after that, if it's a little longer, it might be

2:43:55

Clinton.

2:43:56

And if it's a little shorter, it might be Gates.

2:43:58

But again, that's just, you know, there's no – it's like plausible deniability

2:44:05

until they release all these names.

2:44:08

Did you notice that Jeffrey Epstein's Fortnite account suddenly became active

2:44:16

in Tel Aviv?

2:44:17

And that somebody is playing under his – right after his supposed death.

2:44:21

Right.

2:44:21

Suddenly he's playing Fortnite again.

2:44:23

Yeah.

2:44:24

He doesn't even have the decency to make a new account.

2:44:27

Well, he wants to keep all of his like, you know –

2:44:29

His stats.

2:44:29

His stats.

2:44:31

He wants to keep all that stuff.

2:44:32

Yeah.

2:44:32

And he's safe in, you know, in another country.

2:44:36

So do you think they just like did – that's another thing.

2:44:38

There was another Reddit thread about some guy who said that he was a guard.

2:44:44

It was a 4chan thread.

2:44:45

It was a 4chan?

2:44:46

Yeah.

2:44:46

So it was a 4chan thread where this guy said that he was a guard at the

2:44:50

facility and he posted this before Epstein was killed.

2:44:54

He was a guard.

2:44:54

They uncovered using whatever way they do it, using phone records or whatever

2:44:58

from 4chan.

2:44:59

He discovered he was a guard and that he was like a legit guy.

2:45:02

He got caught basically talking about it, that they snuck – they used a decoy

2:45:07

body.

2:45:07

There was an unscheduled ambulance arrival that night.

2:45:12

They never logged in and you're always supposed to log in.

2:45:15

There's footage of like, you know, orange – people in orange moving through

2:45:21

the facility on the – you know, just glimpses of it on the cameras.

2:45:24

So you think he's alive somewhere?

2:45:25

It's –

2:45:27

It's not impossible.

2:45:29

It's not impossible.

2:45:30

It's probable.

2:45:32

Also didn't –

2:45:34

It's a probability.

2:45:35

It made – whatever – it's more than a possibility.

2:45:37

The guy who did the autopsy, did anything happen to him?

2:45:40

The guy who –

2:45:43

He committed suicide.

2:45:44

Yeah.

2:45:45

Let's find that out.

2:45:46

That would be fucking crazy because that happened to the guy who did the autopsy

2:45:50

on Andrew Breitbart.

2:45:52

Didn't he wind up dying shortly after that?

2:45:54

Like Andrew Breitbart?

2:45:56

Yes.

2:45:56

And who's the guy who said that Podesta –

2:45:58

Alarming amount of people commit suicide.

2:46:00

Alarming.

2:46:01

Yeah.

2:46:01

Who are, you know, doing this stuff.

2:46:03

Or die of something real weird.

2:46:04

Real reason to do so.

2:46:05

Yeah.

2:46:05

Suddenly they do it.

2:46:06

I saw people in jail who committed suicide and they didn't commit suicide.

2:46:09

They got killed by their celly.

2:46:10

Nobody bothered checking in on that.

2:46:13

Yeah.

2:46:13

That makes sense.

2:46:15

The guy who did the autopsy for Jeffrey Epstein, did anything happen to him?

2:46:21

I mean, it was a woman.

2:46:22

A woman?

2:46:23

Chief – New York Chief Medical Examiner, Dr. Barbara Sampson.

2:46:26

And she just resigned like a couple – like a year ago.

2:46:29

Okay.

2:46:30

So nothing happened to her.

2:46:30

You're talking about evil – you know who the devil was in The Exorcist?

2:46:34

Who?

2:46:35

Well, they say – it's like Pazuzu and we're presented with an actual devil.

2:46:41

But when you actually watch the movie, there's kind of evidence that – and

2:46:45

people have talked about this – that, you know, there's evidence within the

2:46:52

film that it's more than just demonic possession.

2:46:57

That the demonic possession comes from some place.

2:46:59

And by the way, Jeffrey Epstein was doing also funding research in how trauma

2:47:05

affects, like, clairvoyance and telepathy and things like that, how you're able

2:47:11

to invoke those out of trauma.

2:47:14

And in The Exorcist, there's – you know, you have Reagan, who's Linda Blair,

2:47:22

and there's that party scene.

2:47:25

And you remember in The Exorcist, they're making a movie within the movie.

2:47:28

You know, they're actually shooting a movie.

2:47:30

The character of the mother is – she's acting in a film inside of the movie.

2:47:37

And there's a director in that film.

2:47:38

And they have a big party scene after it.

2:47:41

And the director, you know, he's basically yelling at the butler, her house man,

2:47:48

you know, calling him a Nazi and stuff like that.

2:47:53

And he's, I bet you went bowling with Goebbels and things like that.

2:47:57

Well, for a while, he vanishes from the party.

2:48:00

And we later see, like, Reagan afterwards, like, completely flipped out, like,

2:48:04

laying in bed.

2:48:05

And then after that, she comes – and then he's leaving the party.

2:48:09

And he turns to the mother.

2:48:11

And he's like, I have to tell you something.

2:48:14

I have to tell you something.

2:48:16

Fuck it.

2:48:19

And he leaves.

2:48:21

And so – and then after that, Reagan comes down and she looks to the

2:48:25

astronaut guy and says, you're going to die up there.

2:48:28

And then she pisses on the floor.

2:48:29

And everybody's like, shit.

2:48:31

And from that moment on, there's all this, like, highly sexualized devil

2:48:35

speaking through her with a British accent.

2:48:38

And the guy, the director, is a British guy.

2:48:41

And so the implication – and then he is, for some reason, left with Reagan

2:48:45

and then gets thrown out of the – the balcony and his head is twisted all the

2:48:49

way around.

2:48:49

And he dies as a character.

2:48:52

So the implication is that the director is the one who has raped Reagan and

2:48:57

thus invoking this demonic presence into her.

2:49:01

And it turns out that –

2:49:04

I thought it was some totem that they found and it was possessed.

2:49:08

All of that stuff is there.

2:49:10

The Ouija board is there and everything.

2:49:11

But it turns out that William Peter Blatty actually made a movie called John

2:49:17

Goldfrapp, Your Life is – blah, blah, blah.

2:49:21

I can't remember the exact title of the film.

2:49:23

And he made that movie with Shirley MacLaine.

2:49:25

And the director of the film is this guy, J. Lee Thompson, British director,

2:49:30

who looks exactly like the actor in that.

2:49:33

And so the idea is that Reagan's mother is Shirley MacLaine.

2:49:39

And Reagan is her daughter, Sasha.

2:49:43

And the British director is J. Lee Thompson.

2:49:47

And when you start looking at his movies, they're a little strange.

2:49:49

You know, there's like, you know, he directed the original Cape Fear, which has

2:49:54

a kind of strange pedophilic thing going on in it.

2:49:58

So does the second one.

2:49:58

Yeah, yeah.

2:49:59

They all do.

2:50:01

And then, you know, especially, they amplify it in the second one.

2:50:04

Yeah, with Juliette Lewis and Robert De Niro.

2:50:06

He did this movie, Kinjite, with Bronson.

2:50:08

And that all has kind of like a weird pedophilic thing.

2:50:10

He did this movie, The Reincarnation of Peter Proud, where Peter Proud dies.

2:50:15

And then, or rather, Peter Proud remembers his reincarnation.

2:50:21

He remembers his iteration of his other self who was murdered.

2:50:24

And then he hunts down the woman who maybe did it and then starts sleeping with

2:50:28

her daughter, which is basically sleeping with his daughter because he's

2:50:33

reincarnated.

2:50:34

So this guy, as a filmmaker, has done all this.

2:50:36

And so the question, and so William Peter Blatty worked on that film with

2:50:40

Shirley MacLaine and shortly thereafter wrote the book, The Exorcist.

2:50:45

And Sasha, in her, you know, autobiography, even mentions, you know, the person

2:50:50

on the cover of the book looked a lot like me.

2:50:53

And everyone's just saying, oh, it's just a coincidence.

2:50:55

And, you know, well, I never walked down the stairs on all fours and I never

2:51:00

vomited, you know, pea soup or whatever.

2:51:03

None of that ever happened to me.

2:51:05

But there's a pretty dark implication behind the whole film.

2:51:09

And I brought it up with William Friedkin.

2:51:11

Hey, is this meant to be J. Lee Thompson?

2:51:14

Did this, like, is this a way to talk about that that actually happened, you

2:51:19

know, in real life?

2:51:20

He said, I cannot talk about that, but I'm not saying you're wrong.

2:51:23

Whoa.

2:51:24

And so, you know, and there's actually a moment where Reagan is talking to her

2:51:29

mother and she's like, well, do you like him?

2:51:33

Do you like him like you like daddy?

2:51:34

And so there's this idea that he's been coming over and they've been having

2:51:38

this affair.

2:51:39

And then all of a sudden she says to her daughter, and it kind of jumped out at

2:51:43

me when I rewatched it.

2:51:44

She says to her daughter, well, I like pizza, but I wouldn't marry one.

2:51:49

And I was like, oh, my God, there's like a pizza reference in the middle of

2:51:53

this, in the middle of everything that's happening.

2:51:56

How long is that?

2:51:57

That's Periola.

2:51:58

Ben Swan brought up during the whole Pizzagate thing that got him fired.

2:52:03

But how long has the term pizza been used?

2:52:06

Well, it jumped out at me and The Exorcist is in the early 70s.

2:52:11

And so, what is it, 1971, and that movie that he did with Shirley MacLaine, who

2:52:17

is effectively—that's the movie that they're shooting inside of the movie.

2:52:21

And so this was a way for Peter Benchley—I mean, not Peter Benchley, yeah,

2:52:26

William Peter Blatty—to kind of transcode all of that.

2:52:30

And the astronaut in the film, Shirley MacLaine, talks about the—I can't

2:52:34

remember if it was her husband or boyfriend that she remarried, who was an

2:52:38

astronaut.

2:52:39

And in her autobiography, she talks about how he was cloned.

2:52:42

He came back from space and a different person that he was cloned.

2:52:46

And she kind of—everybody kind of laughed it off, like, oh, it was just kind

2:52:50

of a joke that I wrote into my autobiography.

2:52:52

But it's kind of weird.

2:52:54

Real weird.

2:52:56

Yeah, it's really strange.

2:52:57

So, people speak through movies, and they hide information in films.

2:53:04

And so, I think that—

2:53:06

Some more than others, right?

2:53:07

Yeah, William Peter Blatty, kind of—who was doing all sorts of Ouija stuff

2:53:11

with Shirley MacLaine, who was really into that kind of thing back in the late

2:53:16

60s and early 70s.

2:53:18

And, you know, he sits down to write his book, and what's he writing about?

2:53:24

Well, he's writing—that movie's about Shirley MacLaine, her daughter, Sasha—Sachi,

2:53:31

I'm sorry, Sachi.

2:53:32

And, you know, the astronaut, and, you know, it's all—and J. Lee Thompson,

2:53:39

who basically he eviscerates within the film, but in a way that nobody really

2:53:44

connects it.

2:53:46

It all happens off-camera.

2:53:48

But the implication is that she was raped by that director.

2:53:52

And from that moment on, has a kind of, you know, she's speaking with a British

2:53:58

accent as the devil.

2:54:00

It's his voice, actually, that's coming out of her.

2:54:03

She's talking about, you know, being raped by a crucifix.

2:54:07

That actor, that's his voice?

2:54:09

Is that what you're saying?

2:54:09

Yeah, that's what I'm saying.

2:54:10

It's like the voice of—I think his name is Gowan, and he was—he died, like,

2:54:16

shortly after the film was made, also.

2:54:19

Shortly after The Exorcist was made.

2:54:22

Well, we know that people have encoded very bizarre things.

2:54:25

Like, Kubrick was famous for it.

2:54:27

Yeah, well, that's—Kubrick—everybody does it.

2:54:29

I do it.

2:54:30

Everybody does it.

2:54:31

I mean, motion pictures are a kind of magic spell.

2:54:35

And, you know, when you write, you're hearing—I hear voices, and they come

2:54:41

through me, and they land on the page.

2:54:43

And I don't know where they come from.

2:54:45

But it is a kind of invite to possession, and that these things come into you,

2:54:52

and that you put it on the page, and then you make this movie, and everybody,

2:54:57

like I said, sits in a theater in the dark, and watching a flicker of this

2:55:01

thing.

2:55:01

And it's telling you both our myths and traditions, but it's also predictive

2:55:05

programming, everybody.

2:55:06

And so—

2:55:08

Jesus, dude.

2:55:09

Have you seen—

2:55:10

Have I seen what?

2:55:15

Well, actually, I was thinking about, like, that—the Daily Wire thing.

2:55:20

But, you know, media comes from a lot of different places now.

2:55:23

We—you know, we—you don't know where you're going to find your next

2:55:27

entertainment.

2:55:29

Right.

2:55:29

And there's this show that—I really like that show, Rome.

2:55:32

Did you see Rome?

2:55:33

No, I never saw it.

2:55:34

Okay, I loved Rome.

2:55:36

It was—

2:55:36

I watched the first episode, and I thought it was flat.

2:55:39

I love—because it told the story of ancient Rome through, you know,

2:55:44

through Shakespeare, and through history, and through Plato, and, you know, all

2:55:49

these kind of ideas of ancient Rome, or Socrates, and all these ideas of

2:55:56

ancient Rome.

2:55:57

And then it told a very ground-level story from the perspective of, like, handmaidens

2:56:02

and centurions, and it still has Mark Anthony and Cleopatra and everything

2:56:05

going on in it.

2:56:06

But it tells a very, you know, soap opera-like drama through it.

2:56:10

And so there was this other show, and it had been out, like, three seasons when

2:56:14

I started watching it.

2:56:15

And it did the exact same thing.

2:56:18

Nobody had ever—like, nobody was talking about it.

2:56:21

Nobody had ever heard about it.

2:56:22

Most people don't even know about it.

2:56:23

It's The Chosen.

2:56:24

Do you know this show?

2:56:25

What was that?

2:56:27

It does the exact same thing, but it does it with the Gospels.

2:56:29

And it's all about Christ.

2:56:31

And it's, like, a low-budget, or it was low-budget, crowdfunded story of Jesus.

2:56:39

And it just basically, like Rome, tells this historical tale about Jesus.

2:56:45

And, okay, so I'm watching—I've seen every movie about Jesus ever made.

2:56:51

I've seen King of Kings, both versions.

2:56:53

I've seen, you know, the Zeffirelli film.

2:56:56

I've seen Last Temptation of Christ.

2:56:58

I've seen The Passion of the Christ.

2:57:00

I've seen all of them.

2:57:01

I've seen the Jeremy Sisto Jesus movie.

2:57:06

I've seen everything.

2:57:07

I worked with Paul Verhoeven on his Jesus film that was unproduced.

2:57:12

And so, like, I've had a lot of experience in it, and I never really got it, to

2:57:17

be perfectly honest.

2:57:18

I never really understood the story.

2:57:20

Anyway, this show, I started watching it, and I was like, okay, I've got a chip

2:57:23

on my shoulder.

2:57:24

Let's see.

2:57:25

And it's really cheap.

2:57:26

It's, like, rocks are made out of styrofoam.

2:57:28

They can't afford a, you know, a house.

2:57:33

And so they just use blankets and a gourd hanging.

2:57:35

And so it's, like, it's really, really inexpensive.

2:57:38

And the script is even a little bit contemporary, which almost becomes, like, a

2:57:42

joke as you're watching it.

2:57:43

It's kind of funny.

2:57:44

But lo and behold, I'm watching it, and there came a moment by about episode

2:57:49

three where it was like, ding, I get it.

2:57:52

Like, Jesus is kind of punk rock.

2:57:55

He's basically saying there are no rules to anything.

2:57:59

Like, you know, you can commit miracles on the Sabbath.

2:58:03

You know, there are no rules.

2:58:05

Anybody is like, all you need to be is wanting of salvation.

2:58:08

And it was like a third eye opened up to me.

2:58:11

And this show is fantastic.

2:58:12

And it breaks all the rules.

2:58:14

It's outside of the Pharisees of Hollywood.

2:58:17

You know, one guy, this guy, Dallas Jenkins, who's absolutely my favorite

2:58:23

modern filmmaker right now.

2:58:26

I think this guy's brilliant.

2:58:27

He's directed every single episode of this show.

2:58:30

And they've got, like, seven seasons out.

2:58:32

And you can watch it for free.

2:58:33

On what?

2:58:34

On anything.

2:58:36

Like, if you have an Apple TV, you can just look up the chosen app.

2:58:39

And boop, up comes the chosen app.

2:58:43

So it's an app thing.

2:58:44

Or you can watch it on YouTube.

2:58:46

Or you can watch it.

2:58:47

I think Netflix eventually.

2:58:48

I think it was Netflix.

2:58:49

Eventually bought it.

2:58:50

Now they're showing it.

2:58:51

Basically, you can see it anywhere.

2:58:52

They give it away the way the Gideons give away the Bible.

2:58:54

And, you know, I thought it was fantastic.

2:59:00

And then season two came around.

2:59:01

And suddenly they had all this money.

2:59:03

And they're doing all these, like, you know,

2:59:05

they've got this ancient Judea set with cobblestone streets.

2:59:08

And, you know, like this detailed set and Roman colonnades and stuff like that.

2:59:13

And I was like, wow.

2:59:14

Like, they really got a big budget.

2:59:16

And then I looked it up.

2:59:16

And I was like, oh, no.

2:59:17

They're using the Mormons have all these standing sets for their biblical

2:59:21

productions in Utah.

2:59:22

And they're incredible.

2:59:23

These sets are unbelievable.

2:59:25

If I had known, it's like Chinichitta in Utah.

2:59:28

It's it's it's it's absolutely fantastic.

2:59:30

And and the characters are like they only have money for like three Romans

2:59:36

costumes, probably.

2:59:38

And so they're kind of like making do with what they have.

2:59:41

But they've got this guy playing the legate there who is hilarious.

2:59:45

He's in the first season.

2:59:47

He is absolutely hilarious.

2:59:48

And the show is great.

2:59:50

And then like proper television, you're watching it and you're starting to love

2:59:53

these characters.

2:59:54

And you're starting to like it's and it's you know what it is.

2:59:58

The bread and butter of Hollywood is revenge and wrath.

3:00:01

Like that's what makes that's the the fuel that that pushes most Hollywood

3:00:05

movies.

3:00:06

It is much more difficult and and requires much more maturity to make a movie

3:00:11

about forgiveness.

3:00:13

And this kid, Dallas Jenkins, I call him a kid, but he's not a kid.

3:00:16

That's an insult.

3:00:17

He's he's super great.

3:00:19

He he is making every single episode is effectively because it's the Gospels

3:00:26

about forgiveness.

3:00:28

And he has done this magnificent, unbelievable achievement.

3:00:32

And the show is huge now.

3:00:33

They've got like seven seasons.

3:00:35

They built a studio, you know, like outside of Dallas Fort Worth on a Salvation

3:00:39

Army property that they've built the sound stages and everything.

3:00:43

And it is.

3:00:44

I think and like and that's like you can get it anywhere.

3:00:49

You can watch it anywhere.

3:00:50

And they're making programming that should have been on HBO.

3:00:53

It should have been produced by HBO the way Rome was.

3:00:57

And instead, it's just it's coming out of the ether.

3:01:00

And it's almost like with the inattention given to, you know, most modern or

3:01:07

rather the the way that people are making things that they're focused on wrath

3:01:14

and revenge.

3:01:16

Like this other thing like the pen dragon cycle and the chosen have kind of

3:01:20

risen out of out of the vacuum that those other that the studios have and broadcasters

3:01:26

have kind of created because they're not no longer making that kind of product,

3:01:31

at least not as much.

3:01:32

And so I think this is actually one of the most exciting times in media and

3:01:38

television.

3:01:39

Yeah, I definitely think it's a very unusual time where the normal people that

3:01:45

are producing things don't have a complete monopoly on what people see.

3:01:51

Well, many of the times these alternative things have gotten much larger than

3:01:55

the mainstream thing.

3:01:56

I am I find it like almost impossible to get a movie going like I'm, you know,

3:02:00

I'm like an independent filmmaker.

3:02:02

I go out there and I usually I work on a script and then I figure out the

3:02:06

budgets and I figure out that and I go out and I hit the pavement.

3:02:09

And it's like really hard part, probably because I'm a flat earther kid.

3:02:12

I am not a flat earther.

3:02:14

I just like to provoke people.

3:02:16

But, you know, I go out there and I try to get this stuff made and it's like

3:02:21

almost impossible.

3:02:22

And then I built a technology company over the last year and basically making A.I.

3:02:30

movies.

3:02:31

And all of a sudden, boom, like that money gets thrown at it.

3:02:34

And all of a sudden, just by attaching the word A.I.

3:02:36

and that it's a technology based company, all of a sudden investors, you know,

3:02:42

came in and we're in production on three films now.

3:02:45

A.I. is not right now.

3:02:46

I know.

3:02:46

That's the crazy thing is that it was so easy for me to get that going and so

3:02:50

difficult for me to get a traditional movie going through the traditional route,

3:02:54

not like going to, you know, A24, blah, blah, blah, trying to like, you know,

3:02:57

hit the pavement.

3:02:58

Oh, I have to go to Europe to gather together financing and everything like

3:03:01

that.

3:03:02

No, just put A.I. in front of it.

3:03:04

And all of a sudden you're in production on three features and we're making a

3:03:07

Christmas movie, a family Christmas movie that will be in theaters this holiday

3:03:12

season.

3:03:13

We're making a faith based film for next Easter.

3:03:16

And then we're making a kind of big romantic war epic.

3:03:20

And like as classical movies and we have like a proprietary stack of technology

3:03:23

that we use for our process.

3:03:25

And I partnered with this company, Massive Studios AI, and formed my company,

3:03:31

which is General Cinema Dynamics.

3:03:34

And I'm based here in Texas now and or my company is.

3:03:39

And I'm slowly transitioning.

3:03:41

Nice.

3:03:43

And it's like it's actually kind of I think, you know, so many people are

3:03:47

against A.I.

3:03:48

like Guillermo and, you know, love him.

3:03:51

But he's like, fuck A.I., fuck A.I.

3:03:53

But all it is is visual effects.

3:03:54

And I have experience like with that Beowulf movie doing it.

3:03:57

And what used to be a million dollars a minute is now five thousand dollars a

3:04:00

minute.

3:04:01

And so to do it really, really well, like it looks kind of amazing, actually.

3:04:07

And so I think for independent cinema and for the future of film and television

3:04:11

production, these are super exciting times.

3:04:15

All right, Roger, we just burned through three hours plus.

3:04:18

Really?

3:04:18

Oh, my God.

3:04:19

Yeah.

3:04:19

It's already four o'clock.

3:04:20

I figured this out.

3:04:20

Just to share it with you.

3:04:21

All right.

3:04:22

So what I pulled up is this.

3:04:24

This is NASA, right?

3:04:25

This is proper NASA.

3:04:26

So this is a FAR TV.

3:04:28

They're pulling in multiple feeds.

3:04:29

There's three different boxes at the bottom.

3:04:31

As you can see, this one in the middle says offline.

3:04:33

So as I showed you also, I pulled up the NASA feed, which is this.

3:04:37

It says it's offline.

3:04:38

When that is offline, this channel adds a 3D model showing where the satellite

3:04:44

currently is so that you can still follow along.

3:04:47

Thirty minutes ago, it wasn't offline and it was showing a different feed.

3:04:50

And I wish I could have showed it to you then, but I didn't interrupt.

3:04:53

Got it.

3:04:54

There is a Flat Earth Reddit account asking this exact thing.

3:04:58

What is that?

3:05:00

And the people on the Flat Earth Reddit gave me the answer.

3:05:03

Yeah.

3:05:04

Those.

3:05:04

The crazies.

3:05:06

The crazies have come out to.

3:05:07

Mm-hmm.

3:05:09

Okay.

3:05:10

There you go.

3:05:11

So that was what that was.

3:05:12

Well, I'm glad we put that to.

3:05:14

So it just says the video description switched to a simulation with the ISS

3:05:17

above the Earth when the connection is lost, a.k.a. offline.

3:05:20

Yeah, I was going to point that out because you can see the stars in there and

3:05:22

you can't normally see the stars while you can see the Earth.

3:05:24

I'm glad we can be comforted by at least one thing that is secure and stable in

3:05:29

our understanding of reality.

3:05:31

Roger, that was very fun, though.

3:05:33

Thank you very much.

3:05:34

Let's do this again.

3:05:35

Really a pleasure.

3:05:35

It was a good time.

3:05:36

Really super pleasure.

3:05:37

Thank you, brother.

3:05:38

Appreciate you very much.

3:05:39

All right.

3:05:39

Bye, everybody.

3:05:40

Bye.