Hey, Hey, welcome everybody back to Everything is a bitch ag. I think this is episode eight. Yeah, everything, and it's it's chock full because man, there's so many topics to choose from, but you have the job of choosing the topics, which it is a There's just so many things every day that pop up. It's interesting because fame is a bitch kind of slows down in the midsummer because all the celebrities are away, they're on vacation, and you know, you have to kind of bring up old stories or
do some old scandals or family stuff. But right now, there's just so much other stuff going on in the world that I just get up in the morning and just stop reading for three hours, sort of peak. Everything is a bitch year. So, but what what's grabbing you in the on the gossip there's some bunch of stories out there, well Ben and j Lo. That's not going to die down. I don't think people really know what's going on playing games with us. He wears his ring, he doesn't wear his
ring. She goes away to Italy's and she sings a breakup song and she's talking. I don't know, it's just it's like a Taylor Swift move. Yeah, it's definitely from her playbook. I don't know what she's doing, but she's you know, look, you and I both agree she's not our type. But she's definitely a beautiful woman. Fifty whatever she is years old, She can move, she looks beautiful. I don't think any man could live with her. And Ben has tried down twice. But she loves attention,
whether it's good or bad, she loves it. And Ben Effleck doesn't want that. He's just more of a hermit type, if you can believe it. But I think they're playing with us. I think it's obvious that they're splitting up, that they've been apart, but I just think there's something in them that they're gonna get back. I think this is a Liz and Richard Burton Liz Taylor Richard Burton kind of thing, and they can't live with each other or without each other. That's what I gather from what I'm saying.
Well, but you would think that they would have, you know, had exhaustive conversation before they got back into this thing, given that it failed once before, about you know, her desire to be seen out in public and his desire to be you know, in the background more and you know, sort of negotiated themselves into a place that both were comfortable. But it doesn't you know what think about this? For them to come to this decision, whoever approached to I assume Ben approached her as if to say, this
isn't work it out. You have to understand that that feeling had happened in his heart many months before that. He just couldn't believe he was going to bring it up so early in their marriage, so he had to let time lapse to make it more believable. Now it's two years, okay, But I think this happened a year ago. In his heart. He probably said, what the hell did I get myself into? This is not what I thought it would be, and it's it's foolish. They've grown ups, they
should know better. They've been together for years. Writing love letter is back and forth throughout his marriage. How do you not know where things are gonna go? This is not about cheating, it's not about drinking, it's not about gambling. It's about two people saying no, it's not gonna work. But I think Ben is the one who put that bee in her bonnet and then she had to deal with it. But I think it's Liz and Dick. They'll come and go, even if they're a part, they'll sty'll get
together and have some fun now and then, I believe. I think it's an ever an, ever ending love story that just has its ups and downs, and we'll all be entertained by it. Hmm. Well, I don't know about his decision making. You know, look I look at him and go, uh, he's either really good or horrible in roles like I see, Yeah, worst Batman ever, Oh yeah, probably nipples, worst Jack Ryan ever. Yeah, you know, I mean you gotta Yeah, a
man has got to know his limitations. I mean, that guy is great in some movies and awful on others and just doesn't seem to know what to pick. So maybe it's the same with women for him. A good point. It's a good point, Hollywood. When you're a leading man like him or Damon, they came out of nowhere and they throw everything at you.
You want to be the next so and so, You want to be this guy, you want to be that guy, and you say yes to things maybe you should have said no to because you're blinded by the money, and well, has Damon ever made a bad pick? What was well? I didn't like I bought a zoo or I mean, there's a fews everybody's got call cute little movie was you can watch it with your kids. I get it. But yeah, Bet Damon is definitely smarter as a man. Look, he's got a great family, he's got the one wife he's been with
for years. He just he does what. He's very pragmatic and stoic and smart. And Dan is more of a wild card. Are those guys as close as they used to be? Are they still best friends? You know? Look, were we as close when you were married with kids and I was single, fucking around everywhere. No, it's just like minded people attract each other. They still love each other, Like I always looked up to you, but we were living two different lives. Ben is living in a
very different life than Matt Damon right now. So but they'll always be They'll always be tight. They made history with Goodwill Hunting, I mean, even though they didn't write all of it and actually turned in a pretty shitty script until Harvey Weinstein had some people come on and write and then doctor up the script. There was no love story in this script. There was a lot of shit you see that they didn't include. Yeah, yeah, taking Harvey. He's back in court. You see Harvey in court. I read the
story. Yeah, yeah, he looks bad. I mean, obviously for five years prison food, Rikers Islands, ninety percent sugar, he's going through hell. They're trying to get that. Well, you've still got to face charges in Los Angeles. So whatever happens with this overturned decision in New York. Now there are other women who want to step forward. I'm not really understanding this. What does this new women want to step forward? And and Sue, I don't care. I thought, so New York opened up the
Statute of Limitations for a year. That's you know how Trump at it up right, But but it closed So if it's outside of the Statute of Limitations, they can't bring anything new. So I don't know what's going on there. I really haven't. I mean, I know you knew him well, and so you've naturally followed it. I looked at it. I looked at it and thought, you know, probably half of these women are full of shit, and probably half of them are telling the truth. And you know,
there's I think it's close to eighty. I think it's this seventy telling the truth in thirty percent knew what they were getting into. That's what I feel like. Okay, I think the longer this goes on, I feel like there's more women who were put in the horrible predicaments. But the crazy thing is, no one who helped, no one who aided him get these to get these women in his hotel room, in his office at dinner,
all these little helpers he had, they're not getting in trouble. They knew exactly what was going on, as did many agents from CIA who set their clients to see him in a hotel. It's a very ugly web of people, but Harvey obviously got the brunt of it. Well, you know, once once somebody's caught, everybody runs for the hills. Right. We're seeing a little bit of that in Washington, d C. Right. Oh my god, what a crazy calamity. It's been sick, it's been crazy.
But people step down, don't stand. We're behind him. Kamala Harris is the new face of the Democrat. They don't know what they're doing. Well, we definitely let's save that because there's so much shit. There a leways talk about it in towards the end, but you know what, there's a there was a great story this weekend. I don't know if you do. You follow Formula One at all a bit. I'm not a race car guy.
But Adam Krola he loves it. And he got me to look at a few things and the documentaries here and there, and I do respect what they do. He need a documentary. He did a documentary too. Yeah, yeah, I forget the name of them. It's pretty good. He makes good documentaries. And he's a race he said. Look, I've been to his house. In his garage, he has all a bunch of Paul Newman's race cars. He bought them. I think Adam's cars are worth twenty
five million dollars, all the cars he bought. So he's fanatical about it. But I follow it to a degree. But I don't follow NASCAR, but I think Formula One is different. I was in Vegas whether he put down the track and it was an eyesare. They ripped up every street in Vegas to make it eight. They had to add eight inches of as fault because those tires burn up asphalt that much. In all the race. It was an eyesaw. It was insane, the traffic was ridiculous. But yeah,
I follow it to a degree. I had never taken an interest in it at all, and then somebody recommended this documentary series on Netflix to me. Yes, I don't know three or four. No, it's more than that, even five or six years ago. It's called Formula one Drive to
Survive, and it's really cool how they do it. They basically just follow a season, which is sort of like the Pro Golf Tour, where you're going from city to city, race to race, and you're you're looking at the drama occurring on each team and with each of the drivers in between each of the races, and it really draws you into it. I thought it was really welling. I like it. I just saw the Well, there's like four seasons. I think there's a lot of shows. I'm into a
few of them. I just watched a Lewis Hamilton one of his episodes today where he switched he went to Ferrari after Mercedes. Oh that's it, that's current, because that's that's happening right right now. I don't know if you've heard that thunder we just u I heard that, Yeah, the sky just cracked. Wow, here we're getting we're getting a big downpour right now. But uh yeah, no, it's it's it's really good. I haven't watched this season of it. I need to uh, I need to get on
that. But you brought up Lewis Hamilton, and he's a really interesting story because back when I first started watching it, he was the biggest name in Formula one and folks out there, I'm sure a lot of you don't watch this, but each of these drivers become very rich, very famous on this Formula one circuit. It is it brings out the I mean it is high,
high and stuff. These races take place in mostly beautiful places and the beautiful people come out to see them, and uh these this is a fully international sport, so these same drivers are followed all over the world and it's a big big it's a big deal. And so in twenty twenty one, he was the biggest name in the sport. He's British, black eyed, British, good looking guy. Yeah, really well spoken. I mean he's
a stud. He was he was the man, yeah, absolutely, but everything went bad for him at the end of that season in twenty twenty one, and it was a race in Abu Dhabi, Yeah, which I forget is Abu Dhabi in I'm so bad a city in the United Arab memorance it is. I think maybe I'm Dobby is as well. This is going on the fly or a. So I reached my phone. Okay, I think it's over there. It's kind of me. I think it is too,
but it wasn't sure. But but anyway, he was in this back and forth competition all season long with the guy who is now the king of the sport, this guy Max verst Stappin, who has becoming he's one like I don't know, eighty percent or more of the races the last few years. He's the biggest name in the sport today. But back in twenty twenty one, it was sort of you know, the what, not the end, but it was it was Hamilton and kind of the way down a little bit
and we're stapping on the way up. And it's also it's not just the drivers. The drivers are a meaningful part of this, but it's more important than the drivers are the cars. And the cars are sponsor by different companies and build their own race teams and for stapping races for Red Bull and at
the time Hamilton was racing for Mercedes. In fact, until just very very recently he has continued this is his last season racing for Mercedes, and he's, as you just said, he's going to move to Ferrari next year. But anyway, this race at the end of the twenty one season in Abu
Dhabi was a race for the title for the season. So at the end of the season, your accruing points as the season goes along based upon how you place some races, and going into that race, it was going to be a win the race and win the season long title thing between him and
Verstappen, and he had a large lead. This isn't going to sound like much unless you follow NASCAR, but he had a thirteen He had a thirteen second lead in this race in the later lapse of the race, which is I mean, that's huge in Formula One and a driver who was inconsequential in the race was way back in the pack, gets into an accident and just like they do in NASCAR and others, I don't know if they call it exactly the same thing, but basically they a yellow flag is waved indicating there's
been an accident. The drivers slow down, they have to stay in their position. There's a pace car that comes out that does all of this stuff. But some sort of decision made by the officiating and I don't really understand the sport well enough to know exactly what happened. But while that yellow flag was out following that accident, for Stappa was able to go into the pits get a brand new set of tires while Hamilton didn't. Yeah, and he
was able to come out for Stappen and get positioned right behind Hamilton. So when the accident happened, Hamilton's got a thirteen second lead. When they allowed them to start racing again, Verstapen is the car right behind him and he's got brand new tires, so he rips right by Hamilton, wins the race and gets crowned the champion. This is all at the end of twenty twenty one. I think Mercedes and Hamilton appealed and did all kinds of stuff to
try and get because it was a mistake that was made. And again I don't know the sport well enough to know exactly what the mistake was. But nine hundred and forty five days have elapsed Jesus since that race, and Hamilton had not won another race since then. So this is like the curse of the Bambino kind of stuff. For Formula One. He hadn't won another race. He had as you can imagine, is it the car, is it the driver? You know, lots of tention over that long period of time.
And he had committed to leave Mercedes at the end of this year. But he had been running a lot better this year than in the last year and a half, and Verstappen and Red Bull all of a sudden had their invincibility had worn off a little bit. He'd lost a couple of races recently, and so he wasn't you know, it wasn't a certainty he was going to win this past weekend's race, which incidentally was the British Grand Prix, which is basically the home race for Hamilton. He's from the area and was
you know, the major fan favorite anyway going into the weekend. And so like a fairy tale, after nine hundred and forty five days, Hamilton wins that race and it was made to the very end for him against for stapping, and he uh, and he pulled it out at the UH at the last minute in the in the last minute of the race. I don't know how many days have to go by in your life when you decide to hang
it up in between wins. I mean nine hundred days, three years, almost three years, right, how I mean I give all the credit in the world for for just keep keep it on, keep on keeping on. But there had to be moments there where I assume he thought I got a lot of money, I did great things, but it's a long time now, maybe I should walk away. Yeah, it's like you know, you and I've talked before about Willie Mays being in the nineteen seventy three mets and
hitting two eleven. Yeah. You but you know here, he's still a young guy. I know, he still make you still make a shitload of monch sure, even if you're not right. So the money is still coming in and everything else. But I think is the big motivation was, you know that he wanted to prove that he could come back, and he in the UH in the winner circle and the interviews immediately following the race. You
know, he said basically, you know it's uh uh. He said, this means so much to me. It's the adversity that we have gone through as a team and the adversity that I have personally experienced. This is the longest stint that I have not had a win, and the emotion that has accumulated over that time makes this the most special victory ever for me. So yeah, I mean, it's like you know when I when I did Rocky Balboa, they're they're just there. There are so many reasons why a boxer
or a driver race car driver will will step aside. They just they hear the voices, they see it. But Rocky Stallone said something that always resounded with me when he said to his Polly, his brother in law, I feel like there's still stuff in the basement, and I think every man can identify with that. I don't care how successful you are. Hamilton's worth three hundred million dollars. He wasn't on poor Street and for Staffing's worth what't eighty
or something like that. These guys are very wealthy, generational wealth. But still there's something in the basement that haunts Hamilton and he has to get out there and do it. And it's kind of sad, not for him because he was for that fantastic but for Willie Mays type, it comes a point where father time says, no, you can't run down a fly ball in set a field anymore. You're gonna fall in your face. Your head's gonna shake too much. But these men who are in this athletic endeavors, they
just feel like, I gotta do. I gotta get one more thing. I still have something in my chest, something in the basement. Those stories really resound in me. I don't know, I don't know where your basement is, but but you know, and then there's lebron where it's you know, in the league nineteen years But here's the deal. I'll play some more, but you got to draft my son, who doesn't belong in the NBA. It's actually funny. I forgot you and I went to see my son
play against Bronnie Gosh four years ago. Well he was in eighth be five years ago, five years ago, five years ago, and you could tell and I'm not comparing my son to Bronnie as an athlete. No, Bronny wasn't spectacular that day at all. No, he wasn't. But he could
jump out of the gym. You could see his athleticism versus you know, my kid who can shoot a ball from a long distance, but isn't going to scare you with his leaping ability and his speed, right, But but you know that he's and look, it reminds me of what's what's gone on with the mainstream media and the Biden administration. ESPN is to Lebron James as
the mainstream media is to the Biden administration. So yeah, nobody, they're all scared to say the Lakers just wasted a draft pick on Lebron's kid because Lebron told them to have to draft the kid. He's playing in that whatever they call it now, G League is any think what they call it? And you know, he had four points in twenty two minutes and shot twenty two from the field the other end. And so it'll be until Lebron is out of the game before we find out that Brownni never belonged in the game
and the media force's telling the truth about it. But anywaywhile you see Cooper Flagg, the incoming freshman at Duke, was playing with our national team and doing outrageous things on the court. I mean, he's not ready to be drafted, obviously, he's coming into Duke, But this kid is fantastic. He's gonna go high. But Bronni did not. We all know what happened. It was a big circus. The Lakers know we might have a contending team, but let's give the fans something. Let's sake lebron happy. It'll
be history. Since we haven't seen only saw Ken Griffy and Ken Griffy Junior playing baseball, this is the first time we'll see something like basketball. But Ken Griffy Jr. Was even better than was even better than his father, who was going to begin with this is this is a guy who couldn't start
at usc being being brought onto the onto the Lakers because of daddy. But anyway, congratulations to Lewis Hamilton. Sorry to do Formula one racing on everything as a bitch, folks, but it was memorable and definitely that docu series is uh is worth the watch. And we know where Abdabi is by the way, yes it's in the United Arab Emirates in the Persian golf. But
here's the thing. On top of Lewis Hamilton being a great race guard, drummer, quite a consonan, this guy was what the Coles Scherzinger from the Pussycat Dolls for seven years. She's a knockout. He was with Kendall Jenner, Rita Aura, Nicki Minaje and I'm forgetting an oh and and Shakira and Rihanna's doing pretty well. Yeah, that's something. That's the that's the whole infant. I don't know what there was one in there that Nicki min and
I don't know about Nicki Mina gving friends for a long time. They were seeing together. Look to me, when you're that rich and famous and handsome and you're seen together, you're fucking just that. That's what I That's what I think. Okay, Well, if he had all that kind of action, that might explain three years without a without agree that that might be better than her Shady's ability to put the car and UH in great condition. I don't know, ye could be tell me about Brittany being single as fuck?
What does that even mean? Oh? God, I hate the af that people. I hate it all. Look, the girl is sick. We're watching her mentally decline like we're watching Biden do the same thing. It's been said she was cooped up at a conservativeship. She got rid of the husband who was on the payroll with Daddy, he served this purpose. Now this new guy, not so new anymore, was working around her house. Of course she's gonna start messing around with a guy. He's an ex con.
These guys have hustles in their head like crazy. He sees her as a money making machine or he can take money from her, And of course, like other boyfriends in the past, he decides to have a car chase with a paparazzi at ninety miles an hour, and then when the paparazzi catches up, he lowers Britney's window, so the guy's got a perfect shot of Britney lying low in the seat. He did it on purpose. He's trying to make money with the paparazzi, and we all do this is gonna happen.
Even a few months ago that big fight at Chat Toldmarmont she heard her ankle was all swollen. Ambulance came and they tried to act like no, nothing happened. He's a bad dude and she just doesn't know how to pick them. And it further makes my point that she has no real true friends around her to help her. Have you ever seen a video with one of her girlfriends at her house, just shooting the shit, going to the pool. She's alone. It's really scary. So is there someone who should be taken
care of? Is there a family members who's well, we all got pissed off because the father and the mother got that conservative ship. They were painted as bad people. But as time goes on, you realize they knew what was best for her, because this is what she's like. I don't know if she's on medication or not, or she takes it occasionally, but this is somebody that's you know, has harmed herself repeatedly over the years. Her
kids are embarrassed by her, and they're like young men. Now, I look, I did Brittany to death on famous a bit because I feel like she's going to be Judy Garland one hundred years from now. People might get sick of it. But there's a lot of bad people around her, including that manager Lou Taylor, who has managed to get involved with the Kardashian family justin Bieber Puffy Combs. There's a lot of creepy people around Brittany, and Lou Taylor is the tippy top of that. Is she still involved, No,
not anymore? But she did enough damage and now she's moved on. Look, Justin Bieber's doing fine. You just got ten million dollars to sing at some Indian guy's wedding, you know, I mean these people the money they make to sing in India? How many songs? How many songs do you do for that? Probably probably a six song set. Can you imagine two hundred thousand a song? About that? No more ten million? Jesus, was that eight six hundred thousands? As it's almost two million of song.
If it's too it's ten million for six songs. This guy's they gotta be real. I mean he's got to bring it though. I mean, tho's got to be a really good So they're gonna be the best of the best or I don't even know what's six he would sing to make the guy happy. First of all, what man wants Justin Bieber his wedding, It's a whole story. What wants Justin Bieger desperately enough to get rich daddy to
pay ten million dollars? Can you imagine and listen this guy, I said in the past, he's depressed, he dresses like shit, he's got a beautiful wife. Was pregnant. He dresses like my ass. He's always depressed. You know why he goes and does these concerts and those on a tour and then he cancels it because he's looking out to the audience and it's no more of him being nineteen years old than seeing a bunch of hot eighteen,
nineteen, twenty twenty one year olds. Now he's singing teenagers don't like his music, but their moms do, so he's singing to forty year old women and that doesn't make a guy like him happy. That's why he's depressed about Tory. It's not about exhaustion, it's about I can't look in the faces of well he probably thinks they're old with him if they're only forty, but
the young daughters are gone, that crowd is gone. Well, he's just announced his twenty twenty five Indian wedding tour, which he's gonna he's gonna do weddings in two months and make sixty million dollars. So that don't want to be good. Unbelievable. All right, dude, I am very excited about this next segment. We are going to have our own We're going to be judges in our own little artificial intelligence beauty pageants. So I don't know if
you've paid attention to some of what's gone on here. I have a little bit because of a bunch of stories on one of my other shows we did about about AI. But there are a number of artificial personas that have been created that have large followings on Instagram and TikTok. So these fake women, and I'm sure there's a whole litany of fake men out there as well. But somebody had the brilliant idea to do an AI you know, a miss AI pageant that's great and well and typical of these things, right. It
was some freakin' wokester. And so the winner of that pageant is lifestyle influencer Kenza les Lee, who's formed with beauty Brains and AI magic, explained that despite not feeling real emotions like an actual human, she was genuinely pumped to top the AI charts. She beat roughly one hundred excuse me, she beat roughly fifteen hundred computer modified beauties for the title. She walks away with a twenty thousand dollars grand prize, which of course will actually go straight into the
hands of her creator, who is some tech tech exec in Morocco. Right, so, but this is the woman who won it is, you know, a Moroccan who's wearing what even call those things a a huge job kind of thing. Uhs like that, but it's the ones they wear in Morocco. I forget what I know that was at one point in time. But anyway, so you can't even really see her. She's got that thing wrapped on her head and it's, uh, you know, the panel of judges
was just politically correct group of judges and bubble. So we're throwing all them out. We're throwing the judges out, We're throwing this decision out. Kenzle Lee, congratulations and your Moroccan techie will get the twenty grand pretty shitty prize. Actually is a shitty prize. Okay, well you I think you have to explain. I'm not intelligent enough to understand fully understand AI. I even get to I can't even go past three d imaging making guns. I don't
even know how that happens. How what is going on with AI? I hear the voices, I see the women on the internet. I can pick them out pretty quick. But what is it? What are they doing? How do you make this? How do you do this? Well, I can't write code, but basically you're using computer language and what's known as machine learning. So computers get smarter and smarter, and they can model human behavior, they can model human voices, they can model things that you tell them,
just like you tell chat GPT. Write me a story about I know you wouldn't do this, but write me a story about Britney's breakup with blah blah blah blah blah. You can tell that kind of an artificial intelligence. Make me build me a blonde five foot eight with blue eyes. Hear the dimensions. Wow. And what has happened is these personas have been constructed and
then complete bullshit lives have been built around them. I mean they post multiple times a day from you know, all of these different scenes claiming to be doing all of these things they're not doing, and scores of young men that you know, are just looking for the next place to wax their weasel because I guess only fans gets expensive and and some of the porn is gross. Uh, they you know, they befriend these fakes. Creepy, so creepy, Okay, So even though it's a little creepy. We have five of
the other topies, aren't the exact five finals. I've chosen these five as I have. I have the I have the picture. You and I have the picture. And by the way, I posted on the Facebook uh Obsessed page the photo and told everybody that we were going to be doing this on the show. So I've already seen people coming in and picking who they think you are going to pick as cool as your winner. But I don't want to know your your winner. Tell me. Tell me first, who is
a runner up? Number four? For you? Number four, not last? Who comes in fourth? No? No, that's so there's these beauty pageants. There's always the winner and then the first runner up, second runner up there and so fourth runner up is the one in fifth place? Okay for me? For me, number two comes in fifth. I'll tell you what. She reminds me or looks very much like this Asian Ai girl that's
constantly following me on all different platforms and wants to be friends. And I know it's fake, but I just entertained myself by looking at her pictures. She's always eating sushi. You know, they make their pictures such grand, beautiful things. She's already yacht. She's here. She keeps popping up and I keep blocking her, deleting her, but she gets sent to me another way. So I don't like her. Look I get. I say, number two is the fourth runner up? God, dude, I blew I
had her number two for you. I had her number two for you, Asian, I've only had two. Body blew that one. She's pretty, but I just she reminds you that weirdough that keeps popping up on my platforms. Okay, I blew that one. I had number three as my fourth runner up. I had two as your fourth runner up as well. I had I had I had three as your third runner up. Okay, so you're you are Actually no, you're not. I mean I have I have number five. This, don't say word. Here's hell. I picked your
five. Okay, Number one is five, number two? I mean the second girl is number one? Girl? Stop tell me who you picked. My fifth choice was number was number two? Three? No, I said, two is your last choice. Okay, tell me how you picked mine? You picked number two is fifth? Who's what I was going for? Was I judging from the girls you've dated and your current beautiful wife? And
where you lived geographically down south for a number of years Dan University. I feel like you've gotten a taste of women down there that have a certain type of beauty. So I went as number two as your the last one, then three and four to one, five as the winner. Okay, that is that is incorrect. I have three as number five. I have five as number four. I thought the blonde was going to really sink it for
you. I have five as number as number four, I have two as number three, I have four as number two, and I have one as number one. One. Mmmm see, Okay, who did you pick for me? I know exactly who you're gonna pick first. You're gonna pick the black girl, the big the big boobs, the mixed girl with the big boobs is my number one pick? Right? No? Okay, good, she's not She's not okay. So I my order for you was was? Uh? Was was that girl last? Actually? Okay? What number is
she? She's number three? Cumber three came in. She came in second for me, really okay. Then I had number five as fourth for you. She's third, not bad? Okay. Then I had number one as third for you. She's fourth for me. Good? Then I had number two as second for you, she was last for me, and I had
number four as one for you. You went absolutely right number four, I went with right away, cent're looking brunette, you know, like that's not she's just screaming AJ to me. Yeah, yeah, she's she looks natural, doesn't look like she's AI. I see a girl there, and I say, okay, she's pretty. But the other ones are very sexual, and I just feel like they went overboard. But four looks the most natural.
Okay, So unless you're picking up the you're picking up your phone and looking at Facebook and this picture as AJ and I are having the conversation, you can't really put this into full context. So go look at it and listen. Listen back to this and you will see. But and I'll put my picks up on the page as well, so people know what so we do. So you picked you picked five, as like five is number one, One is number two, four coming in third, and then three and
two trail on the pan. Okay, well we both know each other well enough to where I got your number one and you got my number two. Yeah, and I actually we follow the AI that is number one, and because through again another another show I got introduced to her, and I'll send you I'll send you a link to her Instagram. And it's crazy. It's crazy where the world is going with this. I don't know what to warn my son about. First, there's drugs, there's alcohol, there's creepy people.
Now there's artificial intelligence women. It's just well and look, it's it's just going to get better and better and better. Right, So imagine, imagine you're number four and my number one, and now imagine that we're not looking at digital versions of them, but we are looking at manufactured versions of that crazy skin that feels real with all of that sort of stuff. And
that's not that far down the line. I mean, I remember you scrambling through all of your dad's old playboys, right, And you know, for me, my dad was such a straight arrow. You know, there were no playboys in the house. There were no I mean, the closest quality material I had, my mother wouldn't poasters on the fucking walls. I know. I did a little better than that, g I mean, I did have an s i uh ke description, so I could I could at least
look at the swimsuit issue. But I mean, that's that's the material I had kids in the next generation, you're just gonna have ais that move in with them, move in with Yeah. Well, look, I thought the world was okay. We're the world's on fire because I'm staying at a producer's house in Beverly Hills and he's got two real dolls. Really, they looked as real as it could back in the nineties, and their flesh felt a certain way. He convinced me I was gonna screw one. I never,
I can't. I didn't do that, but I did get manly took her out of my room because I'm like, hey, wait a minute, you left the brunette for me, and he took her away, and I felt a tinge of anger, like why is she gone? Which is weird. It plays tricks with your mind. But then we go to porn, where this was a big breakthrough where you're able like, the girl is having sex but looking at you kind of thing. You're just you're watching her. You
don't see the man. You just see her getting penetrated, but she's telling you it's you. That was creepy enough. Now this level of insanity, kids are going to explode. No dude, when they talk about AI becoming powerful enough to destroy the planet. Yeah, this is actually the AI they're talking about. Because if if number four was real and we're talking about seventeen year old AJ, let's just say you were born sixty years later, and so now we're in like the year twenty forty one. Okay, you got
her. You can program her to love the Yankees, to only speak when she's spoken to, to know how to actually bring back your mother's and your sister's recipes and cook them all for you and no one will reproduce. Ever, one of the biggest problems we have is we are well below in replacement rate. Yea, Well, think about how far below replacement rate we're going to be when a seventeen year old can just park number four in the closet until they get home. But hold on, hold on, how do you
get to do that? How do you get her? What has to happen? You buy her? You buy her? Then she's what she's an actual figure in your house. She's a robot, but a fleshy robot. Yes, she'sus. Christ, We're doomed. We are doomed. So I'm saying it's not They think it's that wars are going to start because the no, no, here's the war. This is this is the war. Men are
never going to leave their couches. Yeah, they're never going to Everything that's going on technically is already pulling men and women away from each other in really harmful ways. And we know where they were not at replacement rate and very few countries. I think Israel is one of the only countries in the earth that is above replacement rate right now for them. And and this is what's
this is what's coming. So what the heck is the birth rate going to be in twenty forty or when number four lives with your great great grandson or whatever. And every his little country is propagating like bananas, spitting out seven eight kids with more than one wife. I mean, forget about it. And we're doing we're doing. I don't know how well. I did read Lonicle today about this this this this woman, whatever her name is, and I think she's a mystic. She predicted the world's going to come to an
end, and she made some announcements that are pretty accurate. But the world coming to an end is not till five thousand or so, she said. So we got some time, but I don't know what it's going to resemble the next two thousand years, three thousand. He's gonna hold her accountable on that one. Well, she's dead, but they already her predictions. Ye. At first she said the world's gonna end in July. I think I think the twelfth June twelfth. That didn't work, so they found another one
of her predictions. But she did predict a lot Ukraine. You know, she she did some good things. I'm gonna talk about her on tomorrow's famous bit. Babo Vanga is her name? Okay? Did she have Florida underwater by nineteen ninety four? Get the rest of that? Everybody does. That's yeah, the roll on the water. But Obama buys a house on the fucking water and uh no, no, but no rich person would buy a house on the water if they had inside intel that were sinking, That's the
way I see it. But would they buy me? They buy one block in was that it? Okay? One? Good for that that other house bat the ocean that they are now waterfront, But well you were, your house on Long Island would have been destroyed right of the Great South Bay. Your backyard went into a beach. I remember, and you had that pier where the boat was docked. The boats were backed. But I always found it fascinating that your yard went from grass to a beach to the great South
Bay. That was such a beautiful backyard. That was gorgeous. But I'm going I'm going to shock you. Now what there's still a beach. Oh they they kept it good. No, I mean, I mean climate change didn't take the beach away. Oh it's still is it's still there. What do you know? It's good? Good, that's not let's not get into that scan. It'll uh, it's like reliving COVID again. So our sons are gonna are gonna they're probably already snapping off to AI girls right now.
Whether they know it or not, I don't know. But five six, eight years from now, Jesus, that's an eternity. Anything can happen with these women. And it's so funny you hear all these people. I know why my sons don't come out of their room as I came out of my room at that age. And so you have all these people go, well, it's the you know, it's the phone and the texting. No no, no, no, no, it's the reason they're buying lotion by the fucking gallon. There you go, Okay, gallon of lotion in my entire
life, and son can go through it in a month. Right, all of Jurgen should last you two and a half years, not a week and a half. Dude, I don't go. I won't go. I won't go in their rooms. No, I listen, I've been living with my wife. Doesn't I don't. Yeah, didn't she just walk in on them? She doesn't even care, She just walks in. I could never do that to my son. I still yell his name before I touched the doorknob.
No, my wife would be mortified if she if she walked in and one of them was whacking it. No, No, she will not. She will make noise to make sure that she is, that her presence is felt. But I mean, yeah, she goes in there and cleans. She does their fucking sheets. Oh, she finds everything. The towels that
stand up straight if you put them against the wall. And then and then it'll be it'll be some sort of commentary that you know that I'm I'm drawn into and I have to share some of the guiltfulce this is my offspring of like every their male on planet Earth, offspring isn't whacking it. You know, it's worse. It's worse now because everybody's scared to have a girlfriend, they're scared to talk to girls. They're all still afraid of you know, of me too. Kind of stuff that happens at that age, right.
So of course, so there's you know, the schools don't have at least my kids maybe had like one year, I mean dances. I remember we had one of those. This is going to sound like a snooty place, but folks, I promise you it wasn't the Babbylon Yacht Club. Dance Yeah I should dance, Yeah, I mean it was even one was called by
a place too that we used to go to. I can't think of the leading now, but it was a place on Monte Carva on the left side, uh by Bayway maybe the Bayway. So we grew up having dances that you went stag for the most part, and then you know, you got the courage up at some point or a group just got together and started dancing, and that's you know, that's a lot of the ways. You know, I remember, you know, I danced in the eighties. Well,
after high school, I went to college. I became into the new wave music, punk rock, and I went to the clubs and you had to dance. To get a girl, you have to be on the dance floor and scope her out. Hopefully you move her friend that the way you're dancing with her. Now you get her phone number. She writes it on a lipstick on a napkin. By the time you get home, the last digit is invisible, so you spent all day Sunday trying to find that last digit.
What's her number? And then you get her. You get the I mean, it was such a process to get a girlfriend. Nowadays kids can get them really easy. But the flip side is what kind of girl is she going to be? Did you go too far? Did you move in on her too quickly? Are you suspect about maybe maybe she thinks she was treated unfairly by you. These are things we didn't go through in our time.
All Yeah, I don't know that they they get them. It's easier to pair up with someone to have sex, yeah, But having real relationships with people and meeting in sort of an organic way and having a relationship build like that, that doesn't that really doesn't doesn't happen, No, doesn't. And the clubs that you have some rhythm I could, Yeah, I have all the the rhythm of the tin Man in the Wizard of Oz. Right,
So to me, like a dance floor is the scariest place. Scary for me too, it was, But you have to the specie has to survive. You got to get out there and do it. Look at Chico would go with me. He would never step foot on a dance floor. He would get still bored. He'd go out to the car and sleep in the car. Well, I'm dancing at a club in Levittown trying to get a girl to notice me. It was, I mean, it was great to come home with a number or two that felt like you won a championship
and then to actually meet that girl and fantastic. But they don't do one strategy. Here's my wedding. My wedding strategy of okay is, first of all, you never never ever go out on the dance floor until it's crowded. So it has to be it has to be crowded. I mean, once it's once it's crowded, there's always a perimeter that forms, which is what people that are sitting in the tables generally see as those people who are
on the perimeter dancing on the perimeter. So you take you go around the semi circle and you enter back, and so now you're actually kind of you're in front of the band, and so you can do this combination of your you're there cheering the band off and semi dancing. Yeah, that's that's my strategy. Good, that's good. You're not more serious, but you just watch the band. Hey is this great, great party? Great fun? Yeah, that work, and you're cramped enough that no one can really isolate
the movies you're making and see how bad they are. So that's that's mine. That's a good move. I just copied adamant I just danced like adamant uh from some of the video videos. They just look. There was a certain step we did back then. It wasn't hard. The go Gos did it. It was like an easy everybody's like a mutual Okay, that's the move you got And yeah, like the spring the Springsteen dancing, I mean everybody can do that. That's that. Yeah, mine was a little modified,
but that's where it began with. And then girl look, girls like guys who have rhythm, no girl will ever tell you, Oh, I hate them when guys danced. Girls love a dancer, they love Travolta, they love Mark Wahlborg because he's got rhythm. Rhythm is important to a woman. So I tried to find it in me almost lonely nights had a ball.
But these kids down there, I used to get my palms, used to sweat when I walk into school and find out it was square dancing day and gin and I'm like, oh my god, I gotta pick a girl. That was awful to just have to pick a girl at twelve years old. So we did it. I picked I. Do you remember all the shit did doll and all that? I remember? Everybody? Yeah, I did it. I mean it was petrifying, but I remember, But I don't remember having to pair up. I think I think I ended up pairing
up once with Teresa Smith. And she was like four inches tall, so tall, she's so tall, but she's great, but she's very cool. Yeah she was great. Yeah, but you could get you could end up on the wrong end of things. It's like, I think, did I tell you the story recently? Or was I telling somebody else's story? But I had a girl asked me to the seventh grade dance at Beach Street. I said no, and she kicked the shit out of me. Rob do you remember who was the girl? You remember, Robin Hyland? Yeah,
I do remember her? Dude, she what does she do? She asked me to go to the dance with her. I was already going to the dance. O my god, this something or other. So I said, I'm sorry. I probably wasn't this polite, but I said, you know, I'm sorry. No, I'm already going. No, you're a wise asspect, then you must have said something. I knew she could kicked my ass, so I was, no, I'm already going, and she caught me. I mean, she just freaking My kids loved telling that story.
That's great. I never believe it. I mean, I remember gonna take I was gonna take Dorina Orlando to the prompt. I set that up months ahead of time. We had a great summer together, and I said, you're my promate, Okay, I'll go. And as he got closer to the prom she and I weren't dating. Then I stowt to fall from Patty Klaw and Land to Buren and I'm like, this is awkward. I gotta take lived of the prom. I can't take Doreen. And I changed on
her and I saw her face just dropt. I did. I did because I was I thought to day lending a beer and now I had a girlfriend. I wish I took Doreen, but I took Linda. But Doreen. Then here's how life works. Doesn't have a date. Suddenly Rob rushed and asked her the prom. She goes to the prom. They've been married ever since. They've got a shitload of kids and grandkids. So everything worked out. That's your story. She probably cries. She probably cries every night.
You should have had a clause in your you know when you asked her, Hey, and you know, unless opt out, unless you know, I should get serious with someone, in which case I'll have to out opt out of this deal. I really feel bad about that, But it worked out for her. I'm I'm glad it did. Okay, I want to get serious for a few minutes, you and I both and I think your audience
knows this. For the most part, that we worked together along with John Ziggler, who did ninety eight percent of the of the work, and Liza Bibe on a series called With the Benefit of Hindsight, which is actually the true story of the Penn State Joe Paterno Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal. Oh yeah, and you know that it was a tremendous undertaking that really I jumped in on and I funded at considerable cost because I thought this story has
to come out. People have to learn the truth about what happened here. And because this is such an incredible injustice. This man doesn't belong in jail. We've got to get him out of jail. We've got to get the truth out there. John had invested eight years of his life into learning the truth in this story, and so we created this series called With the Benefit
of Hindsight. You can find it on any of the podcast platforms. Caution you that it is a meaningful investment if you choose to go listen to it. I don't mean financially, I mean of your time, because we set out to prove a negative and when someone's been convicted on forty five counts of child sex abuse, you've got to take those counts literally, one at a time and refute all of them before you can declare the man innocent. They do that. We do all of that and more in what took sixty hours
worth of audio. Let me tell you before you go further, that was what I was just coming to you about starting a podcast with you together. And you're working on this with the benefit of hindsight. And I thought Jerry Santusky was guilty like everybody else did. And you hammered away at me and gave me all the facts. Each story was like an hour long and of all these different kids and parents, and I came away not feeling knowing that
he was innocent. And you guys did a bang up job because you proved the point solidly many many times over. Well thank you. But you know, going into it, we really had two goals. One was, you know, convince a production company, convince a Netflix somebody like that to to do a docu series with us, and it's going to have to tell the story that way. And we failed to a long story behind all of that. And then two, we failed to generate enough momentum to stimulate public outcry
over the case. I mean, there are a lot of people who listened to the series. We actually won a couple of awards with the series. We were giving great reviews on the series, but it didn't touch enough people to create any kind of enough momentum to change the public discourse or the conventional wisdom about the story. And so, you know, the the case as I sit here today, you know, still occupies my thoughts on a daily
basis. I think about Sandusky, I think about the stories on a daily basis, and I still to this day work with John Zigler on a daily basis. We do a series called The Death of Journalism, and so we're constantly referencing the Penn State scandal within a lot of the episodes that that we do. And that's because it's I mean, it represents probably the biggest legal
injustice of all time, or at least at least one of them. You know, you have you have four guys who went to prison as well as you know, Joe Paterna would have gone to prison if he had died. He died two months after the the whole thing came out. And yeah, I mean, he didn't know he had cancer. He found out he had cancer right after the story broke. Uh it was late stage cancer, but it certainly he had no fight in him once once all that happened. But
but you know, like I said, we had two objectives. We failed in those objectives, and it's been, you know, one of the more frustrating disappointments of of my adult life, of my career, and certainly for John, who You know, when you decide to take on a story like that as a journalist, you risk it. You risk it all because it's it's considered third rail. It's such a toxic story. How could you take the side of that child abuser? And you know it's it's hurt John's career
significantly. He's gotten death threats, Yeah, all kinds of things over the over the years. And so listen, you did a whopper of a job. And unfortunately the timing when this podcast came out, we were in that knee too cloud which kind of transferred people's thoughts into all different types of men and sexual impropriety. So I don't think people wanted to hear about, Hey, this guy didn't fuck kids. It was a tough time to sell it. But like I always tell you, you wait some time, and I'm
telling you they're gonna bite on it. It's not going to go away. It's yours forever. They'll take it. Well, I have a kernel of hope that you are right about that. But the big reason I think today you might be right about that versus a month ago, right, is because people are going to be telling stories moving forward about how the media tricked the
public and a number of contexts. Obviously we know the most pervasive one, which is everything involving the Biden administration and who knew what and when and the media pretending playing dumb now and pretending they didn't know all along. The Penn State case. I think will get back, will get maybe another chance for the story to be told, because of what everyone has learned about the media in the years since, and especially in recent days. But about a year
ago, I heard about this guy by the name of Frank Parlato. I'd never heard of him before, but he's an investigative journalist. He's in upstate New York. He's by like by Niagara Falls or something. But he publishes this blog called the Frank Report. And I know who he is. Well, I knew you would know who he is because he's the guy who gets credited with uncovering the Nexium scandal. Yeah, right, that's why I know.
Next, right, right, So he was a journalist from that area for years, and then a sort of in zigleresque fashion, he becomes obsessed with that case and does all of the digging and exposes you know what, what happened there. And so Parlato about a year ago, got interested in this case. He listened to our series with the benefit of hindsight, he read this book called The Most Hated Man in America by Mark Pendergrast, which
is mostly aligned with our podcast series. There's a guy, believe it or not, at a UC Berkeley, a professor by the name of Frederick Kruz, who's written intensively on this topic, totally aligned with us and a number of others. But so he immersed himself in all of that, and he was able to do something that none of us had been able to do previously, and that is get the attention of a major media outlet to give coverage to this story. And so The Daily Mail became interested in the story and
has now printed two different stories about the case. The most recent one was late last week and they actually conducted, together with Parlato, the first prison interview with Sandusky since Ziggler snuck a pen with a microphone into back in twenty fourteen and was able to interview Ziggas. So it had been a decade since I was able to interview Sandusky, in a decade since Sandusky had been had
been interviewed. But one of the big things that came out of that interview that never came out at trial, and we spent a portion of one of our episodes, our late episodes, covering it, and we only spent a portion of time covering it because we had we had evidence, but we we didn't have a lot of interviews with people that were knowledgeable of that evidence and could really comment on it. We had doctor's reports, but we didn't have
interviews with the doctors commenting on those reports. And so what came out in the interview was that Sandusky has had a lifelong condition, a very serious lifelong condition that resulted in ultra low t Yeah, I mean testosterone levels that are off the chart on the low side basically begin with when you get older. But then he had a he had an actual illness. He he had no discernible testicular matter. That's a quote from one of the doctor's reports. So
he basically had almost no testicle. So his physical appearance would have been significantly dramatically different than the normal male appearance. Right, Well, Sandusky number one is a tremendous faith, and so he never believed that that his God would allow him to be convicted. Number one. Number two, he also knew all the stories were lies and thought, in particular, there were a couple of people that weren't going to be able to go through with it, and
that this was going to blow up and he'd never be convicted. And his faith in God, his faith in that the truth would come out, and his overall faith in humanity put him in a position where he was so embarrassed about his medical condition that he didn't want it coming out, so he held back, even from his own attorney. He eventually gave the records to his attorney, Joe Amondola, and of course, even as lame an attorney as Amondola was, he wanted to use the information at trial, but Sandusky didn't
want him to because he was embarrassed by it. Vanity. So, so what comes out in the story last week is all the medical reports. So they print the actual They published the actual medical reports in the Daily Mail. It gets picked up by a number of other of other papers, and uh, they have committed to doing additional stories and staying involved with Parlato now who's published a ton of stuff. His blog is called the Frank Report. If
you go to it, you'll see it's totally different than we've done. Everything we've done long form with you know, going through painstaking detail in each episode, whatever the topic is in that episode, what what Frank does iss and sends out a heavy volume of articles pertaining to one particular piece of the puzzle
here. This piece is a critical piece, especially when you consider there are there are quote unquote victims in this case that claimed that they were forced to perform oral sex on Sandusky one hundred times and come on, never, never, not a single one of them ever mentioned any abnormality with the guard to Sandusky. They didn't say he abused them at all at first, No,
none of them said. In fact, there was never a contemporaneous complaint, and the complaint, the two complaints that turned this into a case came from the mothers of boys, not the boys themselves, and both of the boys
had told those mothers that Sandusky had never touched them. Both of those mothers saw a potential payday in all of this, and went down the road because of that, and so eventually those kids would get aligned with personal injury attorneys, who would be aligned with therapists who would give them repressed memory therapy. And you know, some may actually have come to believe. Oh yeah, I'd say there are two that might have actually come to believe that Sandusky's abuse
and the rest were just out and outliers, out out for paydays. But this particular angle of things, the fact, I mean, here we are, this guy is being accused of being one of the most prolific serial abuser, serial rapists in history. Yet his doctor's reports show he couldn't have an
orgasm, So so what was he doing? No? Exactly exactly. And you know, unfortunately, the quote unquote victims, which they're not all loved them, but their parents, their mothers and lawyers saw an opportunity not to sue a solo man like Jerry Sanewski, but to sue a very very rich university in Penn State, absolutely, which is which is a huge part of there's so much of this case that's misunderstood because people assume, well, they
must be guilty, because why would Penn State pay all of this money to victims if they weren't guilty. Why would Penn State fire the winning his coach in college football history, and Joe Paterno and this president who was admired in
Graham Spaniard. Well, it's it's a complicated story, but it very much becomes in Penn State's interest for this story to be true, because the Penn State Board of Trustees makes a bunch of decisions in the first three days of this scandal erupting where based solely on lies told at a press conference by the
Attorney General and the media's coverage of those lawes. They go and they fire the president and and their you know, head coach, and now they better be guilty because if they're not, it's it's going to get a lot uglier for the board of Trustees, which by the way, included the governor of the state who was the attorney general at the time the investigation started into Sandusky, so he had a huge conflict of interest and a reason to get the
board to go along with him. But anyway, we're getting out of the lane on it a little bit. I just the big story here is that the story of Sandusky's sexual health, his hypogonadism. I think is the official diagnosis of it is. It's pretty hard to think a guy who suffered from this and he definitively suffered through this in a documented fashion during a time period that overlaps with the overwhelming majority of the accusations. There are a couple of
accusations that come before he was. There are medical reports, but the doctors are considerant and saying, well, if he was in this condition in two thousand and four, there's no way in nineteen ninety eight he wasn't at least this far along. And there's no there's no prior history. There's nothing, nothing from his twenties, there's nothing from his thirties, there's nothing from his
forties. All this stuff is this guy in his fifties and sixties. Yeah, and and and his he matches none of the normal traits that you see in these people. He had no pornography, He didn't own any pornography. Police never found any sort of of pornography. These boys were all heterosexual. Sandusky, there's no record ever of him being anything other than ed orca. The only other thing you could probably say is asexual to a degree, because
he and Dottie just couldn't. He was her first, she was his first. Yeah, they didn't know a lot about uh oh, and sex drives up. They were probably married. How long were they married? There's still by the way, which is another thing that never happens. Okay, yeah, sense of you two, You are not still married thirteen years after you go to prison and your wife doesn't still drive up days a week, four hours to see you if you're freaking guilty? Did she was she vocal enough
during the trial, did she maybe? Could she have said anything along the lines of you know, I guess they talked about it, but she could have been a big help by saying, you know, we don't have sexyness. He has that sexy years because of this condition, she was a terrible She was a terrible witness, And a big part of why she was a terrible witness is because she is such a devout Christians. Devout. Yeah, she did literally with her husband's life on the line. She didn't want to
say anything bad about any of his accusers. Yeah, yeah, she didn't want to do it. You know, so she couldn't answer question why are they lying? You'd have to ask them why they're I don't do that kind of thing. Look, We've lived long enough to see so many past indiscretions or crimes come back again as TV shows, as series movies. I was just looking at the Son of Sam murders today. They actually began July twenty
ninth of nineteen seventy six. All these things come back, and Jerry Sandusky's situation is such a part of the fabric of American crime or just horrible stories. It's too juicy that they be writers and people and network heads who come up the ranks and go, why were not touching this? This is such an arc. This is such a crazy story. And the flip side is he's innocent. Let's at least present it. There's no question someone's gonna pick that up and you'll make your money. I know it. I've been in
this business too long. Eventually, Look, it took forrest up thirty years for people that think it was a good enough script to be made. Yeah, I mean it happens all the time, every day. It happens. So I think you're just in that. You're in that, you're in that structure of things that are just too soon to bite on. But things like this Frank Parlatto, Daily Mail, those are big steps that bring it close to the forefront of people's minds and you'll see something get done soon enough.
Well, look, I think I think, particularly with what's going on right now, the case is really interesting to look at and sort of compare to what's happening right now, because you know, in the case of Penn State, you know, there were four people who went to prison, three of them they were short prison stints. They're very honorable people. They've made the most of their lives, they've continued to be successful. And there's really one
person whose life was ruined by that entire scandal. Paterno's reputation was ruined, but he was dead two months later. It's Sandusky. So it's an eighty year old guy sitting in prison thirteen years later. Where if the truth came out, if the truth were understood in you know, a reversal, a new trial and he's found innocent, that would destroy a governor's reputation and bring a former governor and bring possible charges. It would destroy a judge's reputation,
bring charges. It would destroy the reputations of numerous states attorneys and the ag and bringing charges there. It would destroy the credibility of the Penn State Board is comprised of many of the wealthiest alumni in the state. Right, that would bring expensive lawsuits and possible charges there. It would it would result in a possible actions against the institutions that were that the institutions would take action Penn
State. The second the second Mile Jerry's charity that were destroyed, right, their reputations were damaged by ESPN and c double A CNN. Although, so when you you got one guy in prison, he's eighty now many more years he's got right, And and then there's this whole laundry list of if the if the truth became under good there's this whole huge roster of people, and there are hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars worth of lawsuits to
be filed and collected if the truth. So what has protected and prevented the truth from exposure all of these years is that everybody there in the state is joined at the hip in the same law. So it's prosecutors, it's media, it's the people in government, etc. Well, now look at what we're talking about right now with the Biden administration. It's the same thing. You have all of these groups, you can draw the parallelsa back to Penn
State. You got the media, you got the administration. You've got a lot of people in powerful positions in Washington and Hockey State and Hollywood. You've got people all over the place. And that's why you know this thing it never would have gotten a life of its own if data, if they'd kept it hidden, and they'd have been able somehow to win the election at some point, maybe months, maybe over a year later, but at some point
there would have been a very very honorable retirement. I've been diagnosed. Ah bah, thank you for all of your service. You're a hero to America. Joe Biden and incomes Kamala and no one and no one would have known. I mean we all would have known, but no one could have proved because nobody in that cabal, nobody in that alignment hiding the truth would have broken line and nobody would have broken ranks to tell it. And then and
I have to give it to Trump on this. As much as I criticized Trump, as many issues as I have with Trump, I said, and I know a lot of other people said that he was crazy for accepting the terms of that debate, because I just I just felt like it was a trap and that all Biden had to do with the way those rules were laid out is come out and be you know, semi conscious for ninety minutes, and you know it would be over with. But I think Trump was right.
I think that the offer of the debate and the terms associated with it were so one sided that they expected Trump to say, if you I'm not doing that, that's bullshit. It's you know, so serving it up. And then having him say no, I won't do it would have given them the ability to say, see, we tried to have a debate with Trump, and he's afraid to debate Joe Biden. You know, but smart or lucky, I don't know. I'm smart, I'll tell you. I had
several listeners tell me this is ridiculous. Trump accepts these demands CNN, it's a home game for Biden, And I said, look, I always put politics as a bit many of my episodes, I'd put in street fighting terms. And I said, look, man, when you know you kick somebody's ass and the whole world is watching, all you tell them is anytime, any place, anywhere, I'll beat you in your backyard with the lights out, whatever, you want to do, I'll show up and I'll kill you.
That's the way a real strong man, tough man, bully, whatever you want to call it acts. If Trump got acquiesced and got Ah didn't acquies and got concerned about some of those details, he would be looked upon as a pussy. Trump's a tough guy. He doesn't gamble, but he takes very calculated risks, and that was a risk. I think he knew along with this guy talks Dmury hangs himself. I don't have to interrupt him. The guy's proven that, just to show that he hanged himself with enough
rope, let him go. And I don't. I still don't think there'll be a second debate in September, even though Biden says there will be. I don't. I don't think there will. There is absolutely zero reason for Trump would. It is absolutely zero reason for Trump too. Right. But look if if if you're right, and like I said, I don't know, really smart or really lucky, but you have to look at the other
side of it for a second too. And even if you think you know Trump, and if you serve up all these one sided rules, you you think he's going to give you the finger and say no, I won't do it. There's still the risk he's still Trump, he's rogue. He might say yes. And so you still have to believe enough that the way that you are manipulating the rules you're going to your candidate's going to be able to
survive the night. You have to believe that or you can't make that dare because it's because you can't trust that Trump's going to do the thing you would do, which is say no. He might he might accept it. And so it's handicapping. What would you I mean, we do it all the time, but we had our kids were young and will so I'll spot your ten points, I'll spot your five points. I'll play it twenty one. That's all this was. It was a debate that had an imaginary handicap all
and that most of the America didn't understand. But Trump knew he was entering that debate as a favorite. Accepting the terms made him even a bigger favorite. Most people thought he was an underdog. I knew he was the safe bet because he knew who he knows his enemy. Look, Trump is a lot of things, narcissistic, bombastic, liar. I get it. I know him well, but one thing he's good at is warfare. I'm telling you, this guy will get in your fucking head and you can't get him
out. He lives rent free. You see how many people can't stand him. If you have an altercation with him, like I did, you never forget it. He just destroys you from the inside out. Biden is no I mean, he's an easy target. President or not. Trump made the right call and now he's in the driver's seat certainly looks that way. Democrats are running all over the place like chickens went out of head, trying to convince us Kamala is the face of democracy now the new party leader. It's
all bullshit. There are pins and needles. They're hoping, well, you tell me, most of them are hoping Joe backs out. Michael Moore, everybody we know who's pro Biden is begging him to stop. And yet this fool with the ego of the pride and the wife and the crackhead son and in his family urging him to go on. It really is well, so I have another I have a different take on that. But before before we go there, I just want to there there were there's a very short list
of people. You just mentioned two of them that are on it, but there's Trump's not on the list. There's a very short list of people who
actually know what Joe Biden's condition is. And those people made that calculated gamble, and those people had the ability if they knew how it was going to turn out, if their knowledge of his condition was that that it would go close to that badly, could have pulled some kind of medical could have you know, could have pulled a cord, a parachute and semi gracefully gotten him
out of it. But they didn't do that, and so the people who knew or know him and his condition the best thought that they could still put him out on the stage and get away with it, which tells me that they thought that whatever the whatever the magic potion is, whatever the combination of drugs and whatever cocktail they were giving him that night, was going to be enough to get him through it. And obviously it wasn't. And then what
happened before he even got off stage. The damn that has held all of this, I mean all of this together, and when you think about what that damn is, I mean, it's a Russia hoax, which was based on an oppo research project initiated by the Hill Larry Clinton campaign. The weaponization of a virus in order to cripple opponents' chances of re election. The establishment of new COVID voting rules that resulted in one hundred and fifty eight million people
voting in an election, twenty plus million more than it ever voted. The abuses of power like Ohsha, the mandate vaccinations, preventing millions of people from making their own choice if they wanted to hold on to their jobs. The false claims the vaccine would stop the spread, the cover up of information relating to vaccine side effects. The censorship of opposing opinions across social media platforms,
all those doctors whose opinions were dismissed. The dismissal and suppression of information related to the gain of function research, the Muhan lab, the whole lab leak theory, the whole bullshit about fifty one intelligence community experts saying it's you know. Has all the classic signs of Russian disinformation. The weaponization of the DOJ
to target political opponents. The enabling an illegal alien invasion, allowing terrorists and drug dealers to pass freely through the border, causing me to think about the amount of death and mass destruction, allowing election politics to impact a foreign war against home terrorists, covering up the fact that the President of the United States is sick and has been sick for a long time, and therefore obfuscating an
entire nation's understanding of who is running the country and how decisions are being making. All of that. The damn broke that night. The damn completely fucking broke that night, And so from that we're where we are now. And look, you tell me, But in the world I live in, everything's open to negotiation, and I think that there are things the bidens are demanding. And I think that Hunter is in the middle of this as deeply as
he's in the middle of this. Not because anyone thought it would be a good look for Hunter to be in the middle of this, right, but because Hunter has a mutual assured destruction box that not only includes his father, but includes Obama and includes other people that were He's in the middle of this saying you can't do it. Obviously my opinion and not the opinion that anyone else has shared with me. This is not where Ziggler is it. This
is me. But I think that this this attempt to get solidarity with some of the media and uh and a number of people and in Congress and to point to you know, democracy and that the votes are already cast and I'm already the candidate and you're not pulling me out of the race. To meet all of that is negotiation, is negotiating tactics and what what do they want? What have we seen from them? Well? Number one money? Number one money they compared to the normal, if you will, president, They
don't have crazy money in that family. They didn't start getting real money until he started sending his son on the world tour. And so you know, you got Wilmington, Delaware and rehoved beach and you know that's about So it's money, and it's freedom. Uh, it's freedom from prosecution. It's yeah, it's being it's probably more than pardoned. They probably need to be pardoned and then indemnified against it. I mean, they need a free pass on
everything. So if you could say to him and to the entire family, you you'll never be convicted of anything. Nobody can come after you. And here's a way that we can funnel through all these various wease in which we can had money in islands and other countries and everything else. We can funnel you fifty one hundred million. Yeah, that I could see it, and I got loose you. I don't think and I think Trump contrary with people believe. I think he would pardon them both because he's he's going to be
bigger at that moment and want America to prosper. He's what I want to put this behind them. He's not going to try to jail these people. I think he'll do it and an in true Trumps style, he'll still talk down about them during speeches and television appearances, but it'd be looked upon as a good guy for doing it. He could use I don't I don't disagree with you, but that has nothing to do that. That's that's what happens after Trump wins. This is this is none of them now, none of
them. They're gonna be like the freaking night at the Bridge of Death Right and whatever he is, where the arms and the legs are cut off. Torso left the Democratic Party is going to be there with just a fucking Torso saying I'll bite your caps off until until they will admit defeat here, and so uh, forget about what Trump will do. This is about what can they get away with? Is there a way to get away with all of that and not have a future administration have the ability to come And I don't
know enough to know whether that actually can be done. It can be done with Joe, because if Joe stepped down and Kamalie came in and Kamala pardoned him, I mean it's it's done and he's pardoned, right, that doesn't help Hunter. No, I don't know if there's any path to pardoning Hunter. That doesn't that you just there's zero chance of you winning an election after your party. Yeah, yeah, of course. I look those are good. That's good points. It's a good scenario. I don't doubt that that's
probably happening. As Joe Biden puts up this front to say I'm running, I'm tell him to go against me, I'll beat the ball. He's got a lot of bluster, a big ego, and a lot of pride, which I said on the Last Big Show. But if I could just toot my horn, this is why people have to listen to famous a bitch or politics is a bitch because I made these announcements years ago. I told people from day one the second that election was lost. In twenty and twenty Trump
is coming back. When people didn't dig he would and he will win. I said, Biden's not going to make it till the ticket, till till election day. But having seen him act recently, I think he has too much pride and his wife is behind him too much. And if what you're saying is accurate, then I'm all for that. Then he gracefully exits with some big package of money. Fine, But I've also called these things. Look I called doctor Faucio phony Italian four years ago. I called Chris Cuomo
and Andrew Pomo big fucking phonies. They're gonna lose their jobs. I said this years ago. I'm not surprised by any of this. I'm just amazed that a large portion of the public didn't see this coming. And I'm really aggravated, having been a part of the fourth Estate. If she still can call of that journalism to watch what they've done and how they purposely lied to
what end. I don't know. No one was getting paid just to have Bui into the White House and just to have more legals crashing the water and inflation going up. What are they getting out of it? That's the biggest story. What did the media get from this? How could you hate Trump that much that you're able to just lie about this decrepit. I'm sorry. I don't want to be mean. I'm compassionate. He's over the hill. It's done. You cannot keep propping him up. The media should be ashamed
of themselves. And I have a great time calling about as do you and John with your podcast about the death of journalism. It really is, and it's not a quick death. It's a slow, agonizing death. And I think it happened way before and before me too. This was coming the laws. I got out of newsrooms. Well I didn't choose to get out, but well, yes I did after the daily dose. I could have worked in other newsrooms, but I didn't like to climbate. I didn't like what
was happening, and I just figured I'm an outsider. They don't like me in these rooms anymore. So I figured I had to do something on my own and be a voice on my own. And thankfully you and I got together and made this happen. But I still have all those instincts, and people have laughed at me in the past about what I predict and what's going to come true. Fuck I said, I said Justice Spilllet was full of shit the second story broke. I'm just I have street sense. I see
how this is going. I do agree with you that Biden has cooking up some kind of plan and the people around him, and I think since he really has Obama on his side, that these kind of intricate plans can be done and get him out of the sticky situation with whatever pride he has left and avoid any kind of serious legal implications. So I think you're right. Well, dude, you've always had strong street sense. I mean it's you
either kind of are born with that, or you're or you're not. And I think what's happened here is with fragmentation, the media really became therapists. I mean, they have a tribe that only wants to hear certain kinds of stories. They give them therapy every day by feeding them only those kinds of stories and only the kind of happy ending on those stories that they want. So those people become more and more and more ignorant over time to what's actually
happening. And by the way, Fox is as guilty as any of the other ones. And because because Fox is actually complicit in all of this, Fox plays the role of acting like they are the dissenter and they are challenging the existing administration. But they go to about the fifty yard line. Why when they could go to the ten right, they purposely only go to the fifty because guess who owns Fox and guess what guess he comes from. So they're all in this entire thing together. But the damn, the damn broke
and it's over. What we talked about in twenty seventeen when we first got together is the reality today that there are that there are alternative forms of distribution and relationships are from consumer directly to a single voice, and people are forming opinions based upon seeking out the variety of people they want to hear from whose opinion they respect, and a lot of people are getting or gathering that from a diverse slate of voices so that they can be as informed as they want
to be. But the media committed suicide where the business has gone and since fragmentation and creating basically their own UH therapy units and UH and this is now it's just laughable. Everybody who's playing the role of whoever that guy from CBS was that was giving uh KEYJP a hard time. Dude, where you been for five freaking yeas? Big shot? Now you're a knight in shining arm right now you want to ask questions? And now they want to pin people
down. They want to protect their their their what do you call it? They want to they want to make sure people know, hey, I'm I've always had a hint that this was happening. Now I'm going to speak up. They want to protect their careers. They're they're scrambling to go back at that, like we always had a feeling this would happen when five years ago, six years ago, doctor Michael Savage. I love his show. I haven't heard it in a while. Savage, because Savage has studied medicine and
so many things. He's so smart, he said. Seven years ago, he said, Joe Biden has the gate of a man suffering from Parkinson's. I've been around these people. My parents had it. I know the walk he has it. No one paid attention. People just all the Savage is crazy. No, he's a very learned man who's giving you the truth seven years ago. I love his show. In fact, that's why I wanted a podcast because on nine to eleven, I'm driving across country and my friend
put the radio on. I never heard of Michael Savage, and I heard him and I felt like, oh my god. First it was very patriotic. This was nine as twelve and I'm listening to this guy speak, and I just said, Fuck, that's what I have to do. I have to talk directly to people. I can't have it watered down by two or three editors and two or three lawyers. I can't stay in the newsroom anymore where I write the description of a criminal and say he's black and have an
editor go, why is that important? Why is it important? It's fucking important he's black. No, we can't say that. That's when I started to get really pissed off about the way journalists was headed, and I wanted nothing to do with it, but except my own. Man, Well, people are on stupid. People are smart. You can't treat them like they're stupid. I think if Domaklain has passed away, right, Yeah, am
I think he did? Yeah? I think he would be singing about the day the media died instead of the Data music died if he were around right now. But look, dude, we've covered We've gone from Formula one to the world of gossip, to an ai beauty contest to trying to save the world, so that everything that is everything is a bitch and much of what we covered is is pretty bitchy. So yeah, great, dude, Well
next time you'll probably be back in Cali. We'll figure it out. Well, enjoy the rest of the stay in Chicago, and folks, thanks for listening. If you like the show, please share it with your friends and help us grow this thing. We're having fun with it all right. By next time, Thanks
