¶ Steaming In December
three Jewish guys, and Jelton, which was an art team from Vienna. Also, if you go to their board, they were also run by, majorly Jewish people. I don't know what that means, but I'm just saying what I see. And they had these weird installations that they were doing where they were making balconies on the sides of the buildings of the towers. And they even went so far as to remove windows with like, you know, a little suction cup tools, which is extremely illegal to do,
what they did in secret, and they wrote about it later. And these art teams were hanging out in there. And they had all these boxes that they have pictures of them in there. The boxes say BB-18 and BB-88, which somebody recognizes model numbers for fuses, potential explosive material. So they had access to all of this territory. And by the way, we're talking about, we're talking about the towers being destroyed. They could have been destroyed primarily by one or all of these
three things. Floor to floor explosives, like in a classic controlled demolition. And this is to sort of sell it as the pancake collapse, the falling in its own footprint, which was the official explanation that the buildings just kind of gave way in collapse in their own footprint. That was brought about by floor to floor explosives. You have then the more second half show type of deals with the micronoops that might have been underground. And then you have the possible
directed energy weapons, which pulverized and aerosolized everything. And if you watch the towers collapse, you'll see that they crumble away into dust. The entire buildings, they just evaporate into thin air, which is impossible to have been done with just one airplane. The thing collapse, it collapse, but the whole thing just poof finished. And this is a point that I'm always like to drop it and dad brought it to my intention. But using the term ground zero to describe a location
that was outside of like a nuclear testing grounds. It was a first. And the way they describe, they some media outlets, photos, the way the cars have just been melted. Just it does kind of point to some nuclear capabilities, I guess. And some sort of chemicals or something where the heat kept on going. And you can see the still is molten. It's not just softening and bending and collapsing. It's literally pouring out in
a flood of white hot liquid steel. And as service says, ground zero was still steaming in December. I mean, that zone was hot for a long time. And then they swept it all up and got rid of it. Not a scrap. And the 9-11 commission didn't test for thermite famously, infamously. And the whole thing was pushed aside. But somebody, a scientist, I forget exactly who but somebody actually made a full study and a full academic publishing that showed proof that there was thermite
in the rebel of that building. Strangely enough, gelatin and e-teams, both of those names, seem to reference explosives in some way. Gelatin, nitroglycerin. And then with e-teams, explosive teams. And their art, the installation they were talking about was called B-things, the B-thing project in which they removed windows and they tried to construct a little
faux balcony on the side, which went away. And the only thing that's left of it is a notebook, a little book that they wrote of all the scribblings and notes they had for the project. This is called the B-thing and it's sold on Amazon for, guess how much this little book is selling for? Why don't you go ahead and tell them, I just read the number here. $1,500. That's $1,500. Yeah, caching. It's weird little book being sold on Amazon by text Rubina Wits
for $1,500 American Dollars. I have some images from that book that are in the show notes, zoososcorder.substech.com episode 169. Really creepy notes and drawings. They have a little drawing of one of the towers with little people jumping out. It appears that little people are jumping out. And there's little scribblings all over the place. This is things that say, amazing outside, depressing inside. Bill with Wonder astound. Last chance for a parachute. They have an airplane
overhead. It says airplane food. Hold to escape shame. Satellite phone talk with Mama. Suicidal height. A maze definition to surprise or astonish greatly to fill with Wonder astound. And this is all over drawings of the towers. It's very, very weird, very bizarre. And they're selling that for $1,500. So it kind of leads me to believe that it's just a sick joke by the elites. Yeah. I don't even want to attempt to touch on the exuberant amount of
occultic imagery behind it too. Definitely. Two towers, the obelisk. What's the two of ones I think is a very indicative one of the two towers, which is part of the... It represents a passageway into the next realm. Part of... I think this one comes from Hireside Chats, part of the building structure of the actual World Trade Center. It's built with infrastructure that looks strikingly like Poseidon's Trident. So you're kind of destroying
that that Neptune figure. You also have a comparison to the pillars of... Was it a Boaz and Jakeem, which are the two pillars in front of the Temple of Solomon. And that is a universal symbol in all of the so-called secret schools, especially free masonry. You'll see the two pillars all the time in free masonry. You'll see it in tarot. So it is. It's a very occultish thing. And by going through the two pillars, you are exiting the normal plan and entering into
the real plan. There are other works of art by Jelton that just go to show that they're actually just a shitty, weird art collective that's probably a front for Aletus. They have a project here where they made an entire installation, a giant installation of just giant poops, giant shits. They literally just shit all over an art studio and called it art. And got paid hundreds of thousands. It's stunning, man. What do you want from a moment?
Incredible. Wow. Truly artistic genius is being witnessed here. They also build a giant pink rabbit and they place it on a mountainside in Italy. That must be nice. Have the money to do that. That must be really nice. And that could be considered PO symbolism. That could fall into pizza gate territory. The big pink bunny lying prostrate on the ground there. Absolutely sprawled. Yeah, he's sprawling. He's real sprawling.
Yeah, there's a soul article here that you can check out. That is in the show notes. And let's see, who wrote that article? That was someone named Mike. This header would just load. It's Mike King's real news and history. There's a little more information on that and you can delve into that. But unfortunately, I must press forward because we have more to talk about. We also got some images of these artists and some images of the projects, some images of the pages from that book in the
show notes. And of course, some of the picture of the old passports. Saudi Arabian passports that somehow survived all of the chaos and destruction. Steel was pouring out in molten liquid hot pools and rivers. But these passports were just fine. And they found them lying there on the street. How convenient. How wonderful is that? Yeah, man. I don't know what we would have been able to do. Had we not found these? Yeah. I mean, that's real. I'm glad that the CIA gets billions every year to
do that kind of top notch investigative business. Hong Kong mother fuckers. Hong Kong mother fucker. So all in all, I just wanted to say happy 9-11 everybody. And keep asking questions, keep doing it. I've been to the to the towers, not to the towers, but I've been to the new tower twice now to pay my respects on the day. I went in 2015 and again in 2019. And when I went to the site, there are people
out there handing out pamphlets. There are people, they're quote unquote, truthers crawling all over that place trying to enlighten people to the inconsistencies of 9-11. But for the most part, people don't want to accept that there might be fishy business. And they don't want to be ridiculed for entertaining the thought. And I think that's exactly what Bill Cooper was talking about. It's exactly what Bill Cooper predicted. So good for him. And by the way, Bill Cooper was killed in his
drive way less than a year after that was aired. Death by cop. Death by IRS, I guess. Oh, well, based revenue agents, they love to get you. It's classic. Many such cases. Even the Joker doesn't mess with the IRS. That's why he burned all that money. I don't want to fucking move. I want to be taxes on that. Oh, yeah. So happy 9-11, everybody. Aside from that, aside from 9-11, to get a little more topical, I have, unless you have any parting thoughts in 9-11,
of course. No, I mean, it's a, I'll probably end up touching back on something a little later. In the episode. So aside from 9-11, there's this guy's been in the news a lot lately. This Larry
¶ Barry's Jam
Sinclair character, an alleged lover of former president Barack Obama. He's back in the news once more with a widely viewed Tucker Carlson interview. And as we said before, Mr. Sinclair is not a new character. He's been around for a long time. Much has been said and written about him. But there are other people from Obama's past that have gone out on the record, bravely, in my opinion, as long as they're legit. And I think that this one that I'm showing is fairly legit. I don't really
have much of a reason to question it as of yet. But of course, if you have any additional information, you can email me at lavishabahandeskeems.com. But the other people that have been interviewed don't get nearly as much attention as Larry Sinclair. And that, to me, is suspect. If somebody's being buried, then that's a good sign that they're probably talking this. If you can corroborate their information. This is one Mia Pope. Mia Pope, who was interviewed by Jeff Rents in 2017.
She grew up on a Wahoo, Hawaii, and was in acquaintance of young Barack Obama, who was then known as Barry Sotero or Satero. And the Sotero, Satero, last name comes from his adopted stepfather, who was an Indonesian oil man and a very, very wealthy guy who married his mother. And he was raised rich, essentially, or at least his stepfather was rich. As it is, as a kid, you don't really have wealth unless they really give it onto you, bestow it onto you. But this guy wanted for not.
And she knew him through his formative years. And she kind of describes him as this charming but kind of mooching character, a manipulator, and says that he was openly homosexual and that he was an intense drug user, and that he was also a pathological liar. So that further ado, I'll just get into the first clip here. Validating many things we've been talking about. Second hand, and anecdotally, for years and years, about the imposter-in-chief, the man occupying
the Oval Office. Who is he? Who was he? And for the first time, someone who actually went to high school with this guy has stepped forward to tell her story of what it was like to be around Barry Sotero, now Barack Hussein Obama. And what he was like for real, not as the fictional stories of his young years were laid out to tell us. Her name is Mia Pope. She is a remarkably courageous woman. She is a Christian. I thought I was wanting that you mentioned that she's a Christian.
It's kind of sad how that sort of leads you to have a presuppositions about the whole thing. But you mentioned she's a Christian, and she goes on and she introduces herself. And I'm very grateful for that, Mia. Thank you for being here. Well, thanks, Chip, for having me on. Yeah, I'm happy to give the story. I think we as Americans, we need to get some clarity about some things. I'm thrilled to be able to clear up what I am able
to clear up. One thing just to stipulate that I did not attend Punahau with Barry Sotero, I was a girl in the neighborhood in 77, 78, part of 79, and I only ran across him during the summertime when it would be out of school and I would be out of school. So just to be specific about that, because I'm hoping that other people from Punahau and in the neighborhood will pop up and substantiate some of this. So she gives a time and a place, and she opens it up to anybody
from the area, any local people to call in or to communicate with them. I'm sure they came swarming in. Oh yeah, you're lining up. Wrap around the block. They don't have blocks in Hawaii, they have lanias. Just kidding, they have blocks. We're talking about Honolulu. It's basically a fucking mall. So he talks about the school. The school is something that I had never paid attention to or thought of, but his primary school is a very prestigious school with quite a lengthy history.
And the Wikipedia page does acknowledge and confirm that he went there. So I don't want them to be like, well, wait a minute, she didn't go to Punahau. Well, when I meant to say, and I should have been more specific, was you went to school at the same time in the same neighborhood and knew him that way, and that's fine. And maybe somebody from Punahau will step forward. First of all, let's talk just for fun about Punahau. He entered Punahau
under very unusual circumstances, according to tradition. Did he not? Yeah, that's right. The school is over a hundred years old. It's an old missionary school. And it's one of very few in the country. I'd say a handful of preparatory type academies in the country that's not only extremely expensive, but the admissions process is quite selective.
And you might see some of these types of schools on the east coast, and those familiar with that, would maybe understand the incredible hoops that you have to jump through to get into these schools. But one of the characteristics of Punahau, of which I'm aware of, is that they really
will only take you from kindergarten. And there's a whole rationale behind that in very so toralous case from what, if we could leave anything, but he was supposedly 10 years old, so that would put him at about the fifth grade, or maybe 11 years old, in the sixth grade. They wouldn't want a student coming in at that age, simply because a child at age would bring other influences. They're experiences, and that sort of thing. And if you have a rogue kid and
they're, you know, can kind of infect the other kid. So there's like a, they have this kind of a philosophy where they really kind of prefer to broom you from kindergarten on. So there's a waiting list to get into that school. There's no shortage of students. So if you figure that each one of those classes is full, so for Barry to have just walled into Punahau like that, and I'm just giving my testimony and those who know Punahau, and I, you know,
certainly know a lot of people there. I've even had a couple of boyfriends that have come from Punahau. It's really an unheard of thing. And so, you know, I'm just saying, I, you know, I all bet a dollar that it has never happened before, and it has never happened since. Now that's my testimony. Well, I would think you're quite right. I do know people who have gone there myself over the years,
and they've described a similar profile. Punahau. In 1795, King Kameha Meha, who unified Hawaii, gifted the land of Ka Punahau, who he conquered it in battle, and then he gave it about 225 acres of land to one of his chiefs. And the land passed for generations through the hands of this family, the chief's family, until it ended up with the chief's granddaughter, whose name was Liliha. Liliha and her husband gave Ka Punahau to Reverend Hiram Bingham.
Reverend Hiram Bingham, who was one of the first Protestant missionaries in Hawaii. This is around the Civil War. The Queen was a strong supporter of the mission. She herself wanted to be baptized. She had a number of her family baptized. So the school was held in a high esteem. They built a stone wall there, and the stone wall is still there to this day. And the Punahau school was originally a school, it was a missionary school, of course,
but it was a Jesuit education type of thing. And all the big, big schools, they're always Jesuit schools. It was the first school west of the Rocky Mountains in East of Asia with classes exclusively in English only. The first class was held in July of 1842 and it had 15 students. Over time, it became quite prestigious and a lot of people went there. There's a list of alumni, an extensive list that you can find that I've included in the show notes, but I've provided
an abridged list here. So of the people that have graduated from this little school in Honolulu, there are at least 32 generals of the army, the Air Force, and the Marines who have graduated from here, including Major General Ross T. Dwyer of Korean Vietnam, Brigadier General Albert Tuttle of World War I, World War II, who was a Supreme Court Chief Justice later in life, and Brigadier General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, who was a Civil War hero at Gettysburg, and he founded Hampton
University, which is one of the oldest historically black colleges in the United States, as well as 32 generals in all. At least 16 admirals of the United States Navy, including rear admiral Alma M. Grocky, who was one of the first female US admirals. At least 22 Olympians earning a total of 13 medals, including four gold. There have been alumni from this school on every US Olympic team since 1968. There have been it, sorry, I guess it pays that, you know, only accept kids at kindergarten age.
This is an elitist thing. This is a school for the wealthiest of the wealthy to attend. I continue. 17 presidential appointees have graduated, including William Richard Castle Jr, who was the Dean of Harvard and Assistant Secretary of State in the late 19th century. At least 26 professional athletes that play in either the NFL or the MLB.
At least five senators, five congressmen and five lieutenant governors of Hawaii, including Senator Brian Schatz, Hawaiian prince, Kuhio Kana Haloay, the only royally born US congressman in history, who was a US congressman who was actually descended from the Hawaiian royal family. We have Steve Case, who was a co-founder of AOL, and he was a one-time chairman of Time Warner.
He's one of the major Hawaii landowners, Alah, you know, Oprah. And he is the head of the Case Foundation, which is very similar to the Clinton Foundation, and his wife Jean is also on that and also on the Board of National Geographic. And I have included in the show notes a picture of the Case family with the Clintons and with Barbara Bush, as they're getting endorsements. Look at that big group of friends. Yeah, they're all happy. Happy friends.
We have who else are graduated from their peer? Omed Yar, the co-founder of eBay, a billionaire philanthropist. We have Buster Krab, the original Flash Gordon in Tarzan, from 30s Hollywood. He graduated from there. John W. Gardner, the architect of Medicare, and longtime Stan Fird Professor, graduated from there. Michelle Y, one of the most famous golf players in the world, team golf
phenomenon, and youngest to ever qualify for the LPGA, graduated from there. And Small World, she actually married Johnny West, who is the director of basketball operations for the Golden State Warriors. And he's also the son of Jerry West, who's a legendary player and literally the logo of the NBA. So we're talking high, high, high, high places here. A couple other people, Emily Chang, who is an executive producer of Bloomberg News. Son Yet Sen graduated from there. He was a Maoist Chinese
revolutionary. He was the first president of the Republic of China following the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty in 1911. And he's considered the father of the nation of Taiwan. And he's revered in Maoist China as well. So he's one of those rare figures that gets street cred in both Taiwan and in Communist China. On top of that, you also have the grandson of the founder here on Bingham the third, who was the first guy who, quote unquote, discovered Machu Picchu.
That's it. That's all that. No, that's not it. Actually, it's a very small selection of the people that I've crashed. I can tell. Yeah. And Obama is certainly a man of the people seen his fellow alumni here. Oh, yeah, he's, you know, raised by a single working class mom, you know, I didn't get it. I just got sucked into here and all these people listed out. I was looking at a Brigadier General Albert Tunnel. And he was part of the Sphinx Head Society, quoted as the
oldest senior honor society at Cornell. Funny enough, New York Times referred to Sphinx Head as quote, a secret senior society of the nature of Skollam bones. They know how to get stuff done. Oh, man. I like it. It also says he was a Republican in Georgia and he was among the judges that were known as the fifth circuit for four judges of the fifth circuit, who in the late 1950s, were known for a series of crucial decisions in advancing civil and political rights of African
Americans, very instrumental in civil rights. So a lot of people by battles he fought in. Yeah, I know. A lot of the time with the generals, they, the bulk of their promotions came during the war, but a lot of them exited the war as colonels. And then they became Brigadier generals later through peacetime promotions. So that is a little dossier on the school, which I just found very interesting. I found this, this Puneho school, an interesting character in the story of Obama. It's an interesting
clue into who he is and his true upbringing. And he sells himself and his book sells himself as coming from a middle class, a low middle class place. And it's bullshit. It's a lie. And they continue on with this. It's very expensive, too. And these are 1970s dollars. What was it? What did it cost a month ago? Yeah, it was, I mean, late at like, last time I heard a figure on Puneho within the middle 90s and we over, of about $900 for kindergarten at that time.
That's right. Yeah. A month, folks. A month. Just a good time. Yeah, but this is on like 94 that I recall because I had my, once or I had my nieces coming to live with me in Hawaii. And so I thought I might try to see if I could do some because they were that age, four and five years old. Right. So I was pricing things. So that was the latest figure that I have. But remembering back in the day, I think it was something like, you know, as much as $6 or $700 a month for even
some of these dollars. That's a lot of money. You can multiply that by three. I'm sure by now. Sorry. Yeah. Not cheap. That cheap. Not cheap. That cheap. She continues on and talks about him personally. He loaded around the monk stuff. There was a, there was over 10 of us and less than 20 of us, you know, interacting from, you know, throughout. I didn't see Barry every single day, but I certainly still saw a lot of them. So he was in your little tear group. You had a little tear group.
And he was in that group. Okay. Yeah. He was, he was more I'd say on the periphery. Barry had a type of personality where he might have some points since for a while, but he seemed to just either make that person mad at them burn them off or he was, he just like today, you see that, that usery type of personality. He was either, you know, bum and money, bum and cigarette. Oh, he's a taker.
Something off of you. He would take her. He's a taker. And so what would happen is he would wear out that emotional friendly, and then, you know, the reservoir of affection would easily dry up with him. So he would kind of float, you know, float around a bit. And so I would say that Barry really wasn't a beloved member of our peer group. And another thing is even us kids, and we were naive kids, basically, right? Like, you know, knuckleheads, like all, you know, most teenagers. And even we could
tell about his pathological lying. And he would just, you know, he'd just hire you out. A taker, I say, oh my. I think the one thing, and we should add this into the notes as well. The one thing that really looking at your collage of photos here. The one thing that you have a collage, yeah, the one photo, I think that really sells it for me is actually the image of his signature. Are you familiar with this? What Obama signature looks like? No, why don't you pop it in
the chat? We can all see. I will find it. That's right. Service rate is a fucking mooch, all suck, no spit. He's a spitter and a quitter. Spitter and a quitter. Let me try and find a good copy of this while if you want to pull up. Yeah. If I want to keep going. Yeah. Or okay. Well, yeah. So they describe him as an exhausting person to be around. Generally not well liked. He would go from from group to group, and he would kind of wear people out, take what he could, and then move on
to the next thing. And then of course they, oh, here you go. You're going to write. Ah, so what about the signature raises the alarms for you? It looks like a penis. Damn, you're right. It doesn't look like a penis. That looks like a dick. That looks like a ball. The set of balls shaft, dick, dick head, and then come. Oh, don't be a mooch, Gimpy. Oh, man, that can't, didn't even know it was coming. Sure did. Sure did. I bet you're Barack knows his way around a Gimper too. Most likely. Shut up.
Shut up. All right, Gimpy. You had your moment, Gimpy. Back into the box, Gimpy. Speaking of Gimps. Okay, so he'd come on with his charm as flashy smile. I guess most of you were smoking a little bit of weed back then. Oh, yeah. I've never done cocaine in my life, but I definitely smoke and inhaled Pocololo in the 70s. And I even held it in for a second or two before exhaling. My goodness. Yeah, I know. You definitely don't waste that stuff. But somehow I wound up staying out of
hardcore drugs seeing myself. And I don't know miracle why that was the case. But it was all around me. And there were certainly people around me that did hardest. Now let's talk about Barry's sexual orientation then. I understand that you and your peer group knew full well that even then he was at least bisexual if not fully homosexual. How did you how did you assay that? And what did your friends think of that in your group?
Okay, you're looking at 77, 78, 79. This is for a day with a raging concept. It was not really, was like somewhat avant garde perhaps to be gay. There was a kind of cool. It was kind of cool. It was kind of cool. If you think, you know, I refer to the studio 54 mentality type crowd. But yeah, it was cool. Remember AIDS is the thing that put the wet blanket on the gate. Sure did. And that hadn't happened yet. Now it started in the 76, 77 in the hepatitis B vaccine programming.
Yeah. That was yeah. And we really didn't see the AIDS on the scene till 80 or 81. That's right. As far as you know, the diagnosable type in the mystery of so forth. Mm hmm. So he first of all, they bring up AIDS and Jeff real quick ties it to the hepatitis B vaccine, which I think is hilarious. And mind you, this interview is in 2017. This is pre-COVID. So he's kind of on the level about that, which I find fascinating.
But yeah, she explains that Obama's cocaine use was, you know, fueled and supplemented by his gay lifestyle, which I know gay guys live in San Francisco. And I can tell you that the biggest co-heads I know are gay guys living in San Francisco. Those guys are nuts. And it's totally a thing. It's a gay lifestyle thing. She says it was really kind of an open secret that he was pretty open about it that gay was being cool in a sort of studio 54 off on guard David Bowie kind of way.
And this is pre-AIDS. So yeah, the natural continuation of free love. Yeah, this is the free love, sex and love movement in its in its prime. And then he throws a little hep B vaccine in there, which is great. So she talks about that about him being openly gay. And then talks about his drug use. But and then remember that the crack, I'm excuse me, yeah, the crack wasn't invented yet. Or at least it wasn't in the island.
No, people were snorting cocaine, but they weren't cooking it and smoking it as crack. That just didn't happen. Didn't happen at that time, right? But there was a thing going on, it was called free-based thing. And what they would do is cocaine was in the powder form. And so I guess obviously it's cut with something. And so it was a more intense high when they would take some baking soda and a little water
and heat it up. And then the baking soda would appease to whatever the thing was cut with, you know, like lactose or whatever the heck they're cutting the thing with. So it would give you like flakes of the actual pure cocaine. That's like you could separate the cut with them from the real cocaine. Little chunks. And then they stick that in the pipe and smoke it. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And that's what Barry seemed to like to do. I'm not saying he never started. He may very well have. But I'm just saying.
Did you guys did you guys see him do this? Yeah, you know, I'll tell you what I did see. But I recall very lips used to get really dark. I mean like three or four or five shades darker than the rest of his face. Now there's a physiological reason for that. The cocaine residue restricts the blood flow to the tissue. So when a person of color does that, the lips get kind of purplish. Yeah. Kind of purplish, right. And so I remember that the Barry's kind of convenient like that.
He wears a sign for you when he's hitting the pie part. So I remember we could always look at him and go, ah, there he is. And the fact that because there are times when his lips will be a relative similar color to the rest of his face. Mm-hmm. And then when he's hitting the old pipe, his lips get really dark. So she says that he's not smoking crack, but the way that she describes it, it's basically crack. Yeah, just free base in it.
Yeah. And the joke I always heard was that that Barry didn't smoke crack. He literally smoked cigarettes of cocaine, which is psychotic. Well, there's a great anecdote with Steve O, doing that with Mike Tyson in some bathroom and Hollywood hills and a party. Smoking coke? Yeah. Fingered roll all the tobacco out of a smoke and just started packing it full of powder. And twisted it up and fucking... Sounds fucking awful, dude. Oh, man. Looks like it's snowing in this bowl. Oh my god. Ashie snow.
Good lord. So that's not much about psycho this guy was, but it kind of, well, yeah, allegedly in Minecraft. And it's a status symbol cocaine at this time. I mean, cocaine is not cheap in the late 70s. We're talking about Pablo Escobar cocaine. We're talking about pure Colombian shit, especially coming into Hawaii. And, you know, I'm not going to say how I know this, but I can tell you that the cocaine in Hawaii is a lot better than cocaine on the mainland.
There's some sort of connection going on there that I'm not aware of, but some reason those islands they hit the good stuff. I'm sure you read that on the internet somewhere. I read it somewhere. Yeah, someone told me once I think a friend of a friend. Hell yeah. And it's just what they do out there. The elite, the rich people out there in Hawaii. They go nuts for coke. And then you have the gay thing again.
And, you know, what's the more tried true tested method of getting into politics than to sleep with older men? It is effective. They've been doing it since Athens. Yeah. You know what I mean? I mean, it's one of the oldest practices ever. Because I, you know, people who want to be politicians, people who want to run the fucking world, probably like fucking a lot. They tend to. They tend to be into that. You know, they have a thing. They have a power thing, you know.
Everything's about sex except sex. Sex is about power. And there's a real deep seated freak side. Yeah. These super powerful, super stressed out responsible people. A lot of them, I know they fetishize losing that power. That's why you get CEOs who pay women to, you know, hook them up in collars and whip them. You know, they're into dumb shit. They're into dumb shit because they have the power all day long. And women are the same way. People like that, that opposite.
Like to have that sexual release. And then they'll turn around and tell you that there's too many people on this planet. And they should fix that. Yeah. And that like gay people aren't allowed to marry, you know, or something. Just like, inane like that. Like after getting blown by three teenage white boys, they come out and go, you know, these guys, they shouldn't be able to buy cakes. Yeah. So she starts talking about his relationship with older men around the island.
Okay. So we have no question about drug use. None. No, and then, I mean, he really was pre-opened because remember it was like a status symbol. I got it. If you were to accept, it meant you had money, you had cash. But we knew because of this bragging that he was actually getting with these other gay guys, homosexual men. And that's how he was obtaining the cocaine. Remember, he's broke like we are. He's from and changed to buy cigarettes or got it. Got it. Figures.
Yeah. And yeah, he's got this coke. Okay. So you've got the coke. Right. Yeah. What were there other young gays in your group beside barrier? Or is he pretty much it? I'll tell you, you know how these circles, you know, you have the people you usually hang out with the most. I'd say there was 10, you know, more than 10, less than 20 of us. And yes, there were some young gay guys, which I got a lot beautifully with, you know, as a female, right? Non-strending kind of thing, you know.
Sure. And I, you know, I was always like friends with the fat girls and the gay guys and that sort of thing, which, you know, whatever. But there was, there was some gay, yeah, there was very part of it. Did they hang out? They're mentally. Did they hang out together the gays, bury in the others? Yeah, I mostly, I saw Barry Totoro get out of cars with older guys. That's where I'm going next. I found him comforting with older gay men. There was a place on Coo-Hio Avenue.
It's spelled K-U-H-I-O Coo-H-O Avenue. And it was located near where hamburger marries is. So if any local people are listening and not would be in Waikiki, they're used to be a place. Now, I, at 14, 15, and 16, I still look like a baby. So you would have carted me in media. I never could get into this place. I don't remember what it's called. It made me some people from Waikiki, from, you know, jog my memory of what this place was called. But anyway, Barry, he's already like 16, 17.
And he would dress up in his little, you know, fronky, little, g-stringy looking. You've seen the pictures of him and drag, haven't you? Yeah. So he'd actually dress it. Okay, he'd dress like that and he'd go to this place and interface with these guys. And they were grown man. Grown-ass man. I'll suck your dick so good. You'd be throwing rocks at the women. Yep. That was Barry's jam. That was Barry's jam. Oh man. It's god damn. And Pins not working again.
I'm trying to write down all these great show titles. I'm just getting on up on not being able to write. Fucking piece of shit. Fucking post it notes. Mother fucker. So good old Barry Sotaro, Obama, you know, he's, he's having the time of his life growing up. Now, is the drag photo separate from the illuminati sort of occultic? Costume. The demon photo where he's wearing the horns and shit. Yeah, he was a little older right during that one. Yeah, that was, that was older.
I don't know exactly what drag pictures they're talking about here. I have some pictures of Barry when he's young. But nothing of him wearing drag or anything. But he does wear that one bit of drag in the photo that you're referencing. He's got the the Bohemian Grove fucking eyes wide shut, outfit on. Yeah, the big head dress. Big head dress, big horns look super satiny, super weird. It's like, okay, yeah, that's what normal people do. Normal people do that all the time. Man with people.
Truly a man of the people. That's, I think, all bring today. There's a little bit that she brings up, which I may bring on another episode where she kind of talks a little bit more about his pretending to be an international student and how a lot of them thought that he was from Kenya. Not necessarily that he was African or Kenan in the sense that he had an accent or anything. But she kind of alludes to the fact that he would come and go.
And even though he was living primarily on in Hawaii, he would travel all the time. And as we said before, his stepfather was an Indonesian oil tycoon and was also funding death squads doing all kinds of gnarly shit. So he kind of was an international guy. He was running all over the place. He's going Africa. He's going Hawaii. He's going to Indonesia. He's going all over the place. And so that's kind of a thing. He used that as a way as a status thing. It's like to be cool.
An international man of mystery. Exactly. Well traveled. A well-traveled man. And if you can say anything about Obama, but that's true. He's extremely well-traveled. So that's all I really have to say about Obama. I will say one parting thing in related news. In the world of gay politics, it turns out that a member of Hungary, Hungary's anti-LGBTQ government, resigns after fleeing a 20-plus man gay orgy. Well, first, isn't gay politics kind of redundant? Yes. Okay. You're correct.
You're correct. And then member, I'm going to read this headline again. Member of Hungary's anti-LGBTQ, IA plus government resigns after fleeing a legit gay sex party. That is correct. A top-ranking official in Hungary's ultra-conservative government has stepped down after being caught fleeing a massive gay sex party. He announced his resignation on Sunday. He's a married man. And he admits that he was attending what he called a, quote-unquote, private party in Brussels last Friday night.
Despite the Belgian capital is now being locked down right now for coronavirus, wow. Who knew? And that's kind of another one of the funny controversies here. Not only was he caught being super-duper gay, but he was not social distancing. Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness. At least 20 naked men, including several diplomats, were discovered at a gathering above a gay bar in central Brussels, according to a Belgian newspaper, describing it as an orgy.
The man in question 59 was injured trying to jump from a first floor window, was he? According to the public prosecutor's office. But he was apprehended by authorities who also found, guess what, in his backpack, cocaine. I was going to say condoms, but... Um. And why not both? Why not both? Ooh. Why don't we trust some of that? Cuckoo. Cuckoo, yeah. Cuckoo, cuckoo, cuckoo. Cuckoo. Cuckoo. This is crack cocaine. Cuckoo, cuckoo, yeah. All right, all right.
None of this music, none of this game music. All right, none of that. It's too silly. Too silly. Yeah. It's far too silly. Very, very serious. Public radio here. Yeah, this is serious. We're the public radio now. Okay. This is the news. The world of news. Uh, yeah. So he was like, I'm sorry I broke the rules of assembly. I'm sorry I didn't social distance. That was irresponsible. On my part, you know. He denied using any narcotics.
Uh, he said I'll take a drug test right now, which if anyone's done cocaine, that's a very neat trick to do, because cocaine doesn't really stay in your system very long. Four to eight hours if it really wants to hang out. Yeah. A long, 48 hours if you had a fucking eight-ball bender. If you're doing drugs, you're doing drugs. You're doing a bender. If you're doing a couple of bumps, that shits out of your system in 24 hours. It's swear to God. Uh, so I hear from him.
If you were a Hoovervack, maybe 48 hours. If you're like trying to kill yourself with cocaine, 48 hours, yeah. If you're Chevy Chase, 72. 72. Yeah. 72. If you're robbing Williams, ah, sorry, you're gonna fail. Yeah. So. I think it's still fine in the system. Oh, he says, oh, he found, they found X-A-C. Police said X-A-C-Pill is found. He says, it's not mine. I don't know who put that there. Yeah. I don't know who put that there. Are you a lawyer? I don't, I don't know. It's not mine.
Never seen before. This is not even my bag. These aren't my pants. It's right. That's not my beautiful house. This is not my beautiful wife. He was a founding member of this political party that had a key role in drafting Hungary's controversial 2012 Constitution, which defined marriage as the union of a man and a woman. This guy was instrumental in outlawing gay marriage in the country of Hungary.
And here he is, breaking his leg, trying to flee from the gay origin that had literally dozens of men involved. Why not just a human being? Go gay. So, uh, okay. Ah! So, uh, okay, use. You want to like do a line off my like, dick or something? Like, yeah, like, uh, and that's how it begins. It's how politics happens. That's so constituted. I could absolutely, I could absolutely guarantee you that those exact words were uttered in ancient Athens. That's right. Except it wasn't cocaine.
It was like, I don't know, ether gas or something. You know, stuff not for chunks. I'm going to helicopter my dick at the toxic fumes of Delphi, and then you're going to fucking, you know what I mean? Like, that's how society was built. That's how Western civilization was born to. Yeah, and in those memes, they still carry through to today. It's no different than the clips that you were playing from Bill Cooper. That's right. Nothing has changed. Nothing ever changes.
Nothing ever changes and nothing ever happens. Can't say my bell hard enough. Politics quite literally is fake and gay. I love it, man. Let's uh, how about we transition the fuck out of here and get into some
¶ Scream-Mails
screen mails. That work for you? That works for me. Yeah, you can give us a call. We still got plenty of time. You can call us at 612-263-799-9. And uh, let's see what... Oh, you know what? Next level. Just laugh about it, man. Just laugh about it. It's all you can do. Just laugh about it someday. What are you laughing? I was driving the life's vehicle to work. And uh, here in noise in the car is kind of pulling the side and whatnot. But which I should have realized right away.
But it was waiting to... Anyway, get over the side of the free wind, realize like my tires just shredded sort of thing. And uh, so whatever reason it leaked air or something like that. And uh, just didn't realize it. And so the car just realized, oh, I got a nice thin line of paint to keep me safe between those. Oh, oh, cars on the freeway. So I... Oh, I'm really doing that on the real quick. It doesn't take too long. And uh, it gets to work and whatnot.
And then I get off work and I'm on my way to go get the tire repaired. I already called in, made sure they have the right wheel and all that... or the right tire and all that jazz. And then there's this kind of one intersection that's kind of like round about ish. Sort of deal. But I was soft because there's cars coming... or because there's busy. And uh, the big ol' like... big ol' huge pickup with a Fissure Wheel in the back... or with a Fissure Wheel trailer attached to it.
It's the back of me and I'm just like, ah! So I mean it's all good. The exchange information. Yeah, a little like, you know, scratch if that on as a... on the bumper and uh... but car got impacted not so drivable. But still, half the deal, half the deal, half the deal. And so I go get the wheel replaced and there was three that still have more to you, whatever on it and the tread was fine and whatnot. And then called insurance companies and report everything. But yeah, just like one of those...
Oh, all that happened. So... Yeah. I don't know. Lesson is... cars are support. Direction just get off right away. And uh, yeah. And... Stay alert. So, love you guys. Stay dangerous. And... Buh-bye! Your car. Here's some automobile karma there to you, Comrade. Yeah. Yeah, best of luck to you, man. Cars are such... Bullshit. Shit when they break down, man. The worst. That out. That is uh... Definitely uh...
There's uh... a family meme that uh... that has been cursed by... just bullshit car problems. It's the worst for ever. It's crippling. And it's such a money sink. There's no bigger waste of money than non-stop cars use. So... Yeah. The karma to you. The karma at Chris Rouse. Thank you for calling as always. Very kind of you. Very kind of you. Yes, we appreciate that. And um... I think uh... we should just go ahead and get into some intermission.
Because I... I really gotta go use the uh... little podcasters room if you know what I mean. Little powder station. Yeah, you go ahead. You do that. Yeah. Powder station. Yeah. Yeah. You know what I mean? You see what I did there? Incredible. Yeah, yeah. I get a fun intermission here for for tonight. I'm sure you do. I'm sure you do. You're the music man. It's uh... These are all tracks from a BTS alumni. We got three more albums from Malachi hosted over music. Behind the schemes.com. And um...
Yeah, we got some $2 holla. We got a mix he did. I've played it several times on the show. And then one of his newer tracks, politics be damned. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. That's good stuff man. Good stuff. Topical, topical. It's uh... the most topical. Really. So uh...
¶ Tax Collector - $2 Holla (Intermission)
Hope y'all enjoy. All right, yeah, we'll be right back for a second, second half for sure. Morning ladies!
Well, I been running tonight just passed like eight and got my mind were living here the cane you think you turn the chatter and laugh and sigh turmit around the straight back and the fuse arrows to the chin understand I'm spinning the sleepy-and-c車 ridden with a power run behind out of my way at the testing Пред, Janai, ass wheel Stellen, and the cold oh yeah I'm asking the lady that can see me I said I'd never more as a bad guy guess I should have known if this guy can't change
he didn't care about the weather the truth or rain she said go warm go to church got none of the time it just got to work here you little bitty slap at me and said pick up that shovel and hold and take I said oh well I been running tonight just passed like eight and got my middle to the middle and my head's beginning to get turned I'll be in M&T turmit around the straight back and the fuse arrows to the chin understand I'm spinning the sleepy-and-c車 ridden
with a power run behind out of my way at the testing place Janai, ass wheel Stellen oh oh oh oh the fourth challenge is to take back our streets from crime gangs and drugs and we have actually been making progress on this count as a nation because of what local law enforcement officials are doing because of what citizens and neighborhood patrols are doing we're making some progress much of it is related to the initiative called community policing
because we have finally gotten more police officers on the street that was one of the goals that the president had when he pushed the crime bill that was passed in 1994 he promised a hundred thousand police we're moving in that direction but we can see it already makes a difference because if we have more police interacting with people having them on the streets we can prevent crimes we can prevent petty crimes from turning into something worse
but we also have to have an organized effort against gangs just as in a previous generation we had an organized effort against the mob we need to take these people on they are often connected to big drug cartels they are not just games of kids anymore they are often the kinds of kids that are called super predators no conscience no empathy we can talk about why they ended up that way but first we have to bring them to heal and the president has asked the FBI
to launch a very concerted effort against gangs everywhere in addition to that he has appointed a new drugs are you probably saw him Tuesday night he's one of the most distinguished active military generals that we have in our country he's already proven that he knows how to interdict drugs because of his command of the South American activity on behalf of the United States but General McCaffrey will make a big difference and I believe it is now
time for all of us to know what we can do individually to be part of this anti-crime anti-gang anti-drug effort I'm standing here with a brother
¶ Song 0 - Mike Epting (Intermission)
who was on drugs you can you can eat it and get energized I mean that's just a very powerful I'm standing here with a brother who was on drugs for 30 years oh so I'm standing here with a brother who was on drugs for 30 years oh so so so you'll see many many people that you like just reason one more testimony here you can eat it and get energized you can eat it and get energized I have to get a state for my state for my I have to get a state for my I'm standing here with a brother
who was on drugs for 30 years I know you can come on and touch you you can eat it and get energized I'm standing here with a brother so you'll see many many people that you'd like treat it one more testimony here you can't treat it one more time so you'll see many people that you'd like just reason one more testimony here he's right with you one night on college so you'll see many many miracles you'll see just reason one more testimony here you can't treat it one night on two of the
well this is more than a brother so we're in a trance for 30 years so we're in a trance for 30 years we're in a trance for 30 years who was on drugs for 30 years I honestly can't do this I'm a person who needs your I'm a person who got kidnapped me who cares about me I'm just in love with all of you I feel like I know you want me All of you are in every kind of oh one you need to know vivo I'm standing here with the brothers on drugs for over 30 years.
When it came to politics, what did you learn from him? Well I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I didn't, I wasn't all that interested in politics, but at age 18 my day was running for the US Senator in Texas and I was interested in him. I got on the campaign trail with him and liked it. Turns out I like people a lot and campaigning with him was awesome. It was fun, it was kind of free spirited in a way. So I learned politics is exciting and fun.
I learned that policy matters more than politics by watching my dad. I learned that sometimes a vote to vote your conscious is not going to be politically acceptable like his vote on open housing, but if you defend your policy and stay strong for your policy, people respect ultimately, respect leadership as opposed to followership. So I learned a lot from him.
¶ Politics Be Damned - Mike Epting (Intermission)
I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. I learned that politics is an exciting way of life for starters. We now return to the I Love's The News. Starting.
Ooberry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry, burry. And love it, love it, love it, love it. You just got to love seeing all of the split kit chapters lining up damn near perfectly.
¶ Freaks of Hazard
In the gutter isn't again to the chat, you can see the magic all yourself. Yeah, thank you so much, Cotton Gen for getting this set up and steaming beef or coating up the split kit. It is allowing us to play all of this music, redirect the wallets as the stream is going. We can do chapters all live. So much fun. It's too much fun. It's wonderful and it's amazing. Thanks always to Cotton Gen, Cotton Gen is a patron saint around here. And Stephen B is a hard work in fella. Thank you.
Thank you guys. Value magic. Magic value. And this is the part of the show where we like to take a moment and thank everybody that comes in week after week to help us produce the damn thing. And yes, I concur with the green room. We have shit Twitch doesn't have. This is so true. Including people listening to everything you do all the time monitoring you. Well, for us, because we're literally recording and broadcasting, but you could be exempt from that.
And we did have one PayPal donation come through from... I don't want to fuck it up. It's coming in from Bass and Jay. Bass and Jay, Bass and Jay. That's why I was trying not to say. I just instinctively want to go straight to the base, but it's Bass and Jay. Sent in $10 via the PayPal. Well, thank you very kindly, Bass and Jay. It's very generous of you. Relatively newcomer. We're glad to have you. I thought I'd pop into the chat a little earlier ago. But thank you again.
And we also had Make Care Was in coming in with four new pieces of chapter art before it's tonight's episode. Hell yeah. Time, talent and treasure. It's talent right there, baby. Every one of them is 9-11 themes. As it should be. Some of them look straight out of an ad agency. Yeah. Like you would find this on the on the front page of Alaska Air dot com or something. No doubt. And we'll censor that because we don't get a time from Alaska. That's yes.
Yes. And then Mary Kate Ultra actually sent in some images of a children's book that I'll be reading through here a little later tonight. So thank you very much for that. Thank you. Mary Kate Ultra is in. Yes. She's great. Is this true? It's very true. And I think that takes us actually straight to the booster grams if I'm not mistaken.
¶ Live Is Lit
All right. Well, thank you very much to everybody at the PayPal who produced with art and everything like that. Yeah. We got booster grams, which are little micro transactions of Bitcoin, not an entire Bitcoin. Just little chunks of Bitcoin up to a million. And there was quite a few that came in via boost a grand ball. Because since we've been hosting a lot of music, Adam picked up a couple of songs. One was from Rusty Gate and one was death of rock and roll for last week's booster gram ball.
So that was pretty exciting. We had Dave Jones coming in with his Van Halen boost 5150 through cast thematics saying rock isn't dead. And then 100. No, not. Then we had two 100s at boost through Kerrio Caster for a girl like me by Rusty Gate. Very awesome. 666 from Owen one through fountain for he was boosting through the black cat music podcast. They played the pulling rank song from death of rock and roll. And Owen one said death of rock and roll boost. All right. Thank you.
This one's coming in from DJ V for V podcast. That's the dirty Jersey horse show 1701 from sewer CD. Say in nice music. Oh shit. Dirty Jersey whore played tempest. Love us forever. Nice. That's 33,300 and 33 sets from the succubus of the scheme firms herself. Delorean. Dame Delorean. Oh, excuse me. Oh, I'm going to give myself one of those. There you go. A little self-flagolation goes a long way. She said quote, this is my favorite DJ, Rela six after thrashing for her very first time.
B4TS is going to be getting a lot of replays in the wolf den. Ow. Ew. Ew. I saw that one come in. I took a screenshot so I could keep it forever. I should print that out and like tape it up at the battle station. You know what I mean? Frame it. Frame it. Frame it. Frame it. Frame it. Like JFK, baby. Ainslie Costello. She did that cherry on top song and Daydreamer and a couple of other ones. She sent in 2100 sets through Fountain, Booston before the schemes for August 21.
She said thank you for pointing lightning-enabled music. Hashtag Daydreamer. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. 1500 sets from Fountain for Death of Rock and Rolls from user 670272285607272 saying indeed. Thank you for that. 1000 sets for Girl Like Me through Fountain, Mr. Graham Ball, user K underscore S, underscore Pike 97, say a nice Brian. I think maybe he was trying to boost Sir Brian with an eye.
Perhaps. 306 coming through the value for value podcast. It's just chiring down. Holy shit. So much is coming in from so many different places. 306 for actually, I forgot to mention this, legit bat had myself Cretched from OBDM and Cercer Seats that are on this past Thursday. We did a quick little hour and a half show talking about kind of afterlife stuff, scrying shadow people, diorea streaks on an airplane. Of course, of course. I'll have to pull that episode and get it added to the notes.
We got 306 for that live episode from Servo saying yay. 6000 sets from an anonymous for that live episode as well. And then 306 from Servo again saying even more yay. Even more. Thank you Servo. What? 500 sets from Sir Dan the Man through Fountain. He was boosted in last weeks before the schemes. The song was time to go time to grow up and get real jobs by manifestation of an apparition. And Dan said, Sir Dan said great first two tracks looking forward to hearing the rest. Hell yeah, hell yeah.
Every week we're going to do it. I boosted. I was showing somebody the power of podcast in 2.0 during the stained gig this past Saturday. I actually got a couple of dudes I got to send some emails out to if you know what I mean. I think I do. I think I do. And then we had 11 from Beaglass through Fountain for the Lightning Thrasher's podcast, which is another music enabled show. Long hard nights take from the death of rock and roll and Beaglass said loved it.
I will look for some rockers for you. You sent in a test, test boost 333 for last week's episode through Fountain. I did. And then bullie see 333 for Victoria for Goso from last weeks before the schemes. She was also following it up with a 1 2 3 4 through Fountain for the new message, which was a song from last week. And she said the last goes the new message dirt T riff. If you go back and listen to that song, it is very dirty. And then we have tonight's stuff.
9 1111 sets from Mary Kate Ultra saying on this day in 1941 construction began on the Pentagon. What a fateful day that was. Fucking Pentagon. Thank you Mary Kate Ultra. Then we had 1 2 3 4 from bullie see through Fountain saying I want your cigarette. I will gladly share. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, but I'm gonna say. Then she sent in another 1 2 3 4 through Fountain saying Victoria's Mercury and RetroGade. Thank you for introducing me to her music. Yeah, she's got a lot of good stuff on there.
There's another one I've been. I keep pulling it off of the playlist. But there's another one called I think no moon that I've really been enjoying. Clip custodian was boosted in stormtrooper during the pre show for 5,000 sets and he followed it up with another 5,000 sets for they ride by Iro. Say and jamming. And then bully Steve was boosted in willow brown 1 2 3 4. We had 4 20 come in from K R through podverse boost in the live episode.
And I'm seeing quite a few from Cercer Seats that are coming in here. All of these are through the podcast index dot org. And each one of them is 306. The first one he says in the second one he says I. And he says G G E T A R. And then finally 198 sets D E D. Whatever. Some sort of code. I don't know what it means. Who knows who knows send it down to forensics get a analysis on it. We got the boys out of the crime lab working on it. Thank you so much for the good boy. Who that? Clip custodian.
Neil John. That is true. Oh, yeah. He was boosted through Kirokaster for tonight's live episode. Then we got 4 20 from K R through podverse for tonight's live episode. Thank you. And just a few more here. 9,111 sets again for Mary K. It's written for Mary K. It's she said jet fuel is faking gay. We're doing games. We're doing games again this Sunday at 7 p.m. Eastern. Cosmine.com slash hyper or forward slash hyper space out. Which spitting facts and spitting facts.
If you ever get a chance to swing on by on Sunday, you can check it out. Can confirm it is very much a good time. It's blessed. I've missed the last two weeks and sucks. Oh, my goodness. Clip custodian comes in with 100,000 sets. Oh, through Kirokaster. I'm going to f***. Wow. Wow. Wow. Give it to me. That was coming through Kirokaster. It's over 9,000. By a lot. What a bit actually. And he said put this towards your financial success. I think he's referencing our tarot card tonight.
Yeah, big King of Pentacles energy. Kingpan action. Kingpence. Nice. Kingpence of boost mountain. That's what they call him in high school. That's what we call him now. Thank you very much, Clip custodian. It's super general. So you. Yeah. And those stats aren't just coming to us. It's coming to dudes like Bemroves and Cotton gin and servo. All sorts of people that just really facilitate in the best way possible. That's right. Spits for all.
Speaking of which, servo 88, 88, he wanted to get a little gimp action. He said, don't be a mooch. Don't be a mooch, yo, Bammer. Mm-hmm. Can you get any other gimp, you shut the fuck up? He's getting a little, uh, he's getting a little, uh, little gimp. He's getting a little, uh, little gimp. Something's going to need to get the extra tight clamps. Mm-hmm. Yeah, it cranks. Mm-hmm. Tension, torque. Uh, we had 16,969 stats from Sir Spencer through...
CurioCaster saying lavish your clips tonight have been Fire Emoji. Fire Emoji. Fire Emoji. Uh, oh geez, thanks. Thanks a lot. Hell yeah. Hell yeah. Just really nice, thank you. Fire, fire, fire, fire, fire, fire. Speaking of Fire Emoji, Spencer posted a picture of a Lorian on the way out. Oh my. Running around town. I... I haven't seen this. Oh it's there. Have you heard of this? Have you seen this? It's out there. It's out there. I will have to go back and look. Mm-hmm. Mmm. Ah! Ah wow. Oh boy.
I really... Ah wow. Too many twinkies. Ha ha. Slime and twinkies over here die, wow. Too many twinkies. Ha ha. Ah. Ah. I guess I'm just going to have to go ahead and do a whole hot dog stand again. I don't know if you're doing P.E. or if you're doing the Martian. Maybe it's it's... Oh, I don't know. I'll have to blow up your entire planet. I'll have to blow up your anus. And no, not the planet. Your actual physical anus. Yeah, yeah. You're anus.
Uh... Judas says Barry Sotaro loves twinkies and he's right. That's offensive. Is it? Oh, sorry. Oh goodness, let's see here. I think the last booster we had was for 6,911 Sats from Sir Spencer yet again. Through Caryocaster and he said was going to record a gift of a 69 slash 11 for you for the holiday. But Lorian couldn't find a twin tower in time. Hey, we've all been there. We've all been there. And he's in a link to Urban Dictionary for a 69 11.
When a man is horizontal on his back while a woman is riding him cowboy and another woman is sitting on his face. The word derives its name from the hybrid of the 69 and the twin towers that are on top of the mail. Max, the mail is the ground and the two towers are women. I can't wait to see how jet fuel melts those steel beams if you know what I mean. Yeah, yeah, I'm thinking I'd like to be ground zero all the same. Stand by for a second.
Goodness, and he finishes with love you guys keep D scheming in the schemers. Those schemers are right. Hell yeah, man. I should also think Spencer for helping me get hella pad updated. Because now what actually show me all of the stream stats a satz that have been coming in and I'm not going I don't know what the tallies per say, but I'm seeing people like K R coming in chat F bullies, steed, a Chris, you know anonymous john's BRT be glass.
Joel W remaking Eden Dale junior Nick Joel W Dave Jones Bitcoin rocks Rob BTC all sorts of people Leon Jeff tire chat F against her lurch a lot bullies, steed, Franco. It's it's a substantial list Gilligan. There are billions and seeing curry in there too. Coleman, comic wow. It's a new dead to musical revolution. So thank you everybody if you want to participate in that capacity only need is a nude podcast app you can find over at delete Spotify dot today or nude podcast apps dot com.
Indeed indeed indeed. Um yeah, I think that puts us at.
¶ Scream-Mails
Scream house now take a drill water here in a second. Buck or some stronger maybe. I only have cream to liquor. Well, what did you have to creamer? Let me rephrase that. Didn't have to cream the liquor enough. I'm seeing we had a couple of text messages come in. I will get those sent over here to in two shakes of a stick. Some of them are memes actually all of them are memes coming in from the text line because you can always text that number six one two two six three seven nine nine.
And you should start seeing those right now populate the green room chat. I'm seeing them here. Yeah, so we had to the first two that I dropped. I came in with no message from a texture. When you're chilling in the world trade center and you suddenly get airplane Wi-Fi. Hmm. Kind of sus. That was an expecting a call today. Oh, that was a yeah that refers to by the way that the picture that's in the show notes that drawing from the artist and one of them says satellite phone talk with mama.
There you go. Just just calling back to that. I think that was all of the pictures. The texture did add along with the Michael Myers with the large bosom. Texture said have a nice week gentlemen. Well, thank you. Thank you. We had some pretty saucy pictures come from this phone numbers and we we'd like to thank them. Sorry, I had to cough there for a second. Okay, we got a handful of voices. Mr. Ed Mr. Ed. Thank you very much. Here we go. Yeah. Yeah. Hey, thank you last time.
Thank you to lavish for making good on playing that screen mail I had from a few weeks back. I appreciate that brother. That screen I just had was brought to you by a buddy of mine got married on Labor Day weekend and it was a such a fucking blast. I mean, I think I think this is what happened. It feels like it was just a great weekend and I still am like high and it's great. And by the way, I am the widest honky you've ever seen.
I mean, a soul team will take a look at me and say, my God, can you get any fucking picnic in you? You've got the impression. All that being said, after reception, they played Mr. Brightside, which is like the very typical white people wedding song. And then all the small things I blanked on 82. And I just lost my mind for both of them because I played them back back. I grew up with both the songs.
And during all the small things on the dance floor, all of a sudden I was just dancing having a blast and I look around. And a bunch of people just form the circle around me. And like, so if a white ass honky cracker, such as myself, can be dancing so hard and so well, that a bunch of other people just form a circle like, let's just watch what those guys doing because they're tearing their shit up. You know what? You can do anything out there to all you fine people on the NA stream.
So, take a chance, take a risk and dance like there's no God damn tomorrow because you know what? We could all die in a nuclear war in about 30 seconds, but I personally feel alright. So, have a good show guys. And um, I'm just Chris for Battle State Dangerous and I'm sorry, Chris, for it, but like that, I love that line and I'm stealing the shit out of it because it's perfect. Yeah. So, what's all how fun and time has? Um...
Hmm, I like it in the transcript at the end, it says, so what's up? Have fun? Question mark? Yeah, that's awesome. I'm going to get a badass wedding. I also just can't, I'm off a high off of badass wedding too. It's funny, a great wedding will set you for offer a couple days. A shitty wedding will kill you. We'll take days off of your life, weeks off of your life. But a good one will rattle you the fuck up. Yo, win! I can't say I've ever been to a shitty wedding.
That's a great attitude to have, Booberry. And as far as just, kind of thinking on one of the things that Angry Leopardcon had to drop there, you know, they really hated when you just stay positive and realize that it could just be over like that. And why live in a position where that's the only thing you can focus on?
You can't, you can't do it. You know, we have a show we talk about some pretty dark topics and we acknowledge some very inconvenient truths that paint the world perhaps as an unforgiving cold cruel place, which it is. But at the same time, there's so much love and light and there's so much goodness to get out of this world that, that to deny yourself that it's no form of intelligence.
It's no form of wisdom to completely bog yourself down in the bullshit and you can get bogged down in the bullshit because, you know, it should suck. But at the same time, you carve out those little moments, you carve out those little things for yourself and it makes everything worth it. It really does. And part of that, you know, getting ran a train on by the propaganda department, it's this concept that we're just going to slam so much news into your face day after day after day.
You're going to be spinning your spinning encircle chasing your tail, just trying to keep up with it all. It's a demoralization tactic as far as I can say. It's exactly what it is. It's designed to crush you and to crush your spirit. The news and all of that is not designed to inform you. It's designed to deconstruct you into a quivering, fearful pile of spittle. Yep, with nothing left. True story, but just reacting, reacting all the time.
And if you live in that fear and if you live in that weakness, then yeah, you're going to be much easier manipulated. Somebody who's having a great time and is having fun is going to be much harder to manipulate, I think. Who are you? Get out of here. You know, she's story, man. Yeah. I'm glad everybody's having a good time. Good weddings are fun, man. And it's a great snapshot, you know.
It's a great snapshot of all the people that you know and you're there together. You're doing it. You're fucking living. There's so few things now where every where a huge amount of people go out together and do something. Like sports could be considered that. But there's no public square really anymore where people physically go outside and gather. Why do you have to worry about that when you just go to X. Let's go to X dot cam.
That's right. Just tell you we didn't folks. They do you X dot cam. And I think we'll leave the last couple of scream else that we got for the end of the show. All right, just go ahead and back to 911.
¶ That Goat Saved My Car
911. God, that's awful. Mary Kate Ultrasent in some images of a book called Reading Mastery 2 Storybook number one rainbow edition. This is the book that famously was being read aloud by George Bush, president during 911. You can see. There's a video of him with actually fun bit of trivia. The very first gift that I ever saw in action was in a podcast in 2.0 app is because of Cercer Seatsitter taking some show art that I did for him.
That was of George Bush reading this book and being told the news and just watching him like process the information there. We're not processing. This is true. But that imagery is very close to my heart. So it's cool that Mary Kate Ultrasent sent in pictures of the book that he was reading. And funny enough, the story was called the pet goat and I'd like to read it here for you. Yes, please. Interesting. Have you ever heard this read it before? No, I've not heard it or seen it.
Well, this is some good stuff, some good stuff. And just wondering, can I, you might if I start a fire? Oh, you may. You may get started fire. Ooh, nice and toasty. Yeah, I learned my lesson from last week. Yeah, my eyebrows are still growing back, so thank you. I have no more eyebrows to lose though, so. You were going to do it, it'd be now. But yeah, thank you. The pet goat. A girl got a pet goat. She liked to go running with her pet goat. She played with her, with her goat in her house.
She played with the goat in her yard. But the goat did some things that made the girls dad mad. The goat ate things. He ate cans and he ate canes. He ate pans and he ate panes. He even ate capes and caps. One day her dad said, that goat must go. He eats too many things. The girl said, dead. If you let the goat stay with us, I will see that he stops eating all those things. Her dad said, we will try it. So the goat stayed and the girl made him stop eating cans and canes and capes and caps.
But one day, a car robber came to the girl's house. He saw a big red car near the house and said, I will steal that car. He ran to the car and started to open the door. The girl and the goat were playing in the backyard. They did not see the car robber. More to come. The goat stops the robber. A girl had a pet goat. Her dad had a red car. A car robber was going to steal her dad's car. The girl and her goat were playing in the backyard. Just then the goat stopped playing. He saw the robber.
He bent his head down and started to run for the robber. The robber was bending over the seat of the car. The goat hit him with his sharp horns. The car robber went flying. The girl's dad ran out of the house. He grabbed the robber. You were trying to steal my car, he yelled. The girl said, but my goat stopped him. Yes, her dad said. That goat saved my car. The car robber said, something hit me when I was trying to steal that car. The girl said, my goat hits you.
The girl hugged the goat. Her dad said, that goat can stay with us. And he can eat all the cans and canes and caps and capes he wants. The girl smiled. Her goat smiled. Her dad smiled. But the car robber did not smile. He said, I am soared. The end. Oh, Jesus. It was terrible. God. It was an awful story. I don't know. I could get a dissertation on why that's so bad. Doesn't have any rhythm, it doesn't have any. And why is there grand theft auto in a kid's play?
In a kid's thing. We do a robber car and shit. What are we doing here? What is this? I'm sad. I tried to steal your car. I am so. Instead I got ass rammed. I don't know, man. It's bizarre stuff. So this is actually the book that he was reading when the towers hit. When the planes hit the towers. Private browsing coming in with a skiving review of zero out of five stars. Yep. And that's from an oh, oh, that's from an accredited professional people.
She went to school for this. Okay. Zero out of five stars. Four real. I'm going to give it a zero out of five stars zero out of six stars. Yeah, man. I am. I'm not sure what to make of that. It's just very unusual. Very odd. I'm curious where junior was during reading it. It's probably reading the robber was bending over the seat of the car. That's that's the exact line he was looking at. Sad. Sad. Reading. I actually think it's reading mastery to see if maybe I can find something on this book.
Secret Angleman and Elaine C. Bruner took two people to write that yikes out. Oh, you can there's a Barnes. Oh, wow. Barnes and oval dot com. Not an ad. But it actually hasn't listed. Let's see how much it's. Oh, does it have autograph copies from George Bush? That would be such a great racket. $1,17.75 for that book. I think. Wow. Written by Zieg Angleman, ZIG Angleman.
And produced by McGraw Hill. Wow. Who could have thought? McGraw Hill. Oh, you're talking about Jislane Maxwell Robert Maxwell's. Dr. Laikey. Um, yeah. Daddy Laikey. Wow. The fucking book that George Bush was reading when 9-11 happened was published. But Jislane Maxwell's dad. It's company. Very small world. Is that or am I in my reaching? It's a very big time public publication house.
I'm more so trying to figure out what's going on with the imagery in the front of this of this edition that Barnes and nobles is showing. What's up with that? Yo. Oh, you know what I'm saying? The shapes. Yeah. I think that's the layout of 9-11. That's the layout of the twin towers there. Oh, I'm seeing that's a swastika embedded in that. It's not embedded in it. That's there. That's a swastika for sure. Can you say problematic? Can you say children?
Jesus. Here's another one. Discover books.com. It's got it listed for $999. Wow. Oh, wow. A lot of expensive books in this episode today. Yeah, no doubt. Hmm. I'm going to add this to my thrift store dives. I'm trying to find an old bookstore. It could be fun. Always. Dude, if I saw this in a bookstore, I would lose my shit. Excuse me. Do you have the pet goat? Right this way, sir.
About the author he was born November 26, 1931 Chicago, Illinois. After graduating with class honors and philosophy from the U of Illinois in 55, he spent time in a variety of occupations from working in exploratory oil to being a science editor. While working as a marketing director in the early 60s, Engleman became interested with how children learn, this interest began with examining how much exposure was required for a young child to learn a motto or an advertising theme.
And what effects reinforcing presentations would have on learning rates? Wow. Spooky. Just a casual interest, I suppose. A casual, a moral, a passing interest. You know, one day I just decided that's what I wanted to do. Yeah, I can't think of anybody else had been trying it. You know what the hey. The pet goat has an own his own little chapter on his Wikipedia page. The pet goat reading exercise from 95 children's workbook reading mastery storybook one.
Game detention on 9.11. There you go. And 64 he left his job in advertising. It became a research associate at the Institute for research on exceptional children at the University of Illinois. Leaving marketing in 64 like madman era marketing times. That's what it kind of reads like. Yeah. This guy went from pounding cigarettes and drinking scotch to hanging out with kids. And pounding cigarettes and drinking scotch. Yeah.
They're the same picture. Yeah. That much to remember my whole job really. No doubt. Well, thank you, Mary Kate Olcher for that very much appreciated. That was a fun little dive. I've never had the pleasure of reading that story before and I hope I never have to again. Yeah. I hope that for you as well. I've never heard of either. That's wonderful. Well, she had good idea. Good idea. Marvelous simply incredible. Um, geez. I got something that's not 9.11 related now. And that's fine too.
¶ Elemental Existence
I know man. I'm going to take you through a journey or on a journey through another reality TV show. Hmm. You seem to be a fan. You know, I like coming back to him because it's. It's just a it's a fascinating topic in this one actually comes out of Japan, which you know that you're going to be set up for some wild shit here. Oh yeah, Japan always brings the good juice. This one's called Susanoo.
Denpah. Showing in since and then push on it. A Japanese reality TV show that aired from January 11th, 1998 to September 29th, 2002 on the Nampon TV network. The title stands for do not proceed crazy youth. Denpah literally means radio waves, but colloquially also refers to crazy people in reference to instances of mentally insane people claiming to be controlled by radio waves. Hmm. Interesting regional colloquialism. Yeah, I got some clips on that a little later.
This show is known for the extreme situations that participants were placed in and it was controversial due to the sadistic challenges and rule changes made by the producers if they felt the contestants were doing too good. The show also received criticism, believe it or not for some of the show segments. And I got to listed here, but if you check the Wikipedia, there's a handful of other additions of the show laid out that you can check out. One of them was Denpah. Showing in techie, Mujinto.
The shot to I probably shoot to desert island escape to comedians were put on a desert island with no food nor clue about where they were and were only told that their ordeal would finish if they built a raft and reach Tokyo. After they're escaped from the desert island, which took them four months, they were given a swan shaped petal, oh, not actually sure what that is, petal, oh. And we're told to reach Tokyo with it and then go with the same petal, oh, from India to Indonesia.
Okay, and a petal is one of those like petal watercraft looks like a bicycle and a pontoon had a baby a petal boat, petal boat, a petal boat. The other one was a petal petal. Denpah shown in vertical Africa, Europe, continental hitchhike, just a short little jaunt. Rolls right after time. A comedian named Takashi, Edo and a radio DJ from Hong Kong named say, Si tu yan? Hitchhiked from the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa to Nordcap in Norway.
The two contestants were forbidden to use their travel money and thus face starvation dehydration and harsh weather conditions. At one point in the challenge, Edo collapsed in the Sahara Desert and was airlifted to a local hospital for treatment. God. So this is all, these are all branches under the same general show promise. The Denpah shown in. Yep. Just accurate. And it ran for about three years and it continued on on the web after the show went defunct.
They kind of rebought brought it back as a webcast. But there's a specific one that I've pulled clips for for tonight. And let me be sure in the right spot. This one was called Denpah shown in Tekki Kinsho, Sakatsu or Denpah shown in's prize life. And it featured an inspiring comedian by the name of Tomoyaki Hamatsu aka not Subi, which stands for Eggplant, which allegedly was because of his elongated face. It was said to look like an eggplant, but I'm questioning that at the very least.
But he could be a penis joke. Well, just to polite to say anything about it, Japanese cultures. So I'm going to I'm going to need you to take that card and just tuck it back into your hand there for a second. You'll need it. You need it. Okay, it's going to hurt, but yeah. So not Subi was eager to use the show as a kind of launch board to propel himself into his career being a comedian.
He was unsure at the time if the show was even going to air because the premise here is he would sign up to do this game show. He would be recorded and the producers may or may not use the footage at a later time. And I've actually got some clips from this American life, which is a radio show. The interview I think was in the mid-auts. And they actually interview and it's Subi here, which I thought was pretty interesting. So we'll be taking a dive through these.
This first clip is going to lay out all the things that he had to do. It's kind of the rules of the contest that sweepstakes life, if you will. The segment is called sweepstakes life. It starts the way a lot of these shows do with a bunch of people at an audition. One guy beats out everyone else. He's 22 years old, a comedian just starting out in his career. His name is Nassabi. Nassabi means eggplant in Japanese. An nickname he got because he is a long face.
The producers tell him they have a unique idea for a show, something they've never tried before. And may or may not air, but if it does, he'll be the star. He'll be famous. The producers blindfold him, put him in a car and take him to a small apartment. Then they tell him to take his clothes off. That wipes the grand office face. It wasn't just my personal shame or issues about nudity per se. My dad is a cop.
When I first announced that for my career choice was going to be comedy, he was not thrilled. We had to go through some things to get him around to the idea. He said, you know, the one thing that I must never do in public is strip. Oh no! So there I was. And then this guilt towards that I was breaking the promise to my father is publicly as possible. So yeah, I showed up to the apartment that he was going to be living in and he was told to take all of his clothes off. It happens a lot.
Yeah, totally normal. Totally normal thing to for someone to ask you. Standard procedure at any audition really. Before we go any further, I did find I think it's the whole collected series. They're in that section of the show notes. If anybody wants to go by and check these out, there is subtitles, thankfully. That's pretty wild. I'm not going to lie. So he's standing there naked in this very sparsely populated room. There's not really much outside of some furniture in the like.
When you know what game shows, the point is you're supposed to win. So what do you have to do to win? He strips. He grabs a pillow, holds it over his groin and looks around the room. There's no chair in the room. No bed. Just a coffee table. And magazines. Tons of magazines. The producers tell them that from now on, if he wants food, clothes, he will have to win them by entering speed stakes in those magazines. They give him postcards to send in for prize drawings.
He'll be freed from the apartment after he wins 1 million yen, or $10,000 worth of prizes. Until then, he isn't allowed any outside contact with the world. He can't cause family, he can't talk to friends. And oh, they tell him, don't forget to put tapes in this little camera here every two hours and record yourself. We'll come pick up the tapes once a day. Then they say, all right, later. Duces. All right, later. We're going to go get a cheeseburger.
So yeah, this guy has to enter into sweepstakes, found in magazines, and win 1 million yen. A.K. $10,000 American Dollars, which seems like a lot of money. It seems like it'll take a long time to do that. And it's $10,000 in prizes. The monetary value of that. It's not like, oh, I'm going to enter into a bunch of sweepstakes. I'm just trying to get cash in. It's the actual value amount of set items.
Okay. Okay. But this meant that everything that he needed had to come in from these mail order sweepstakes. And that included his food. Oh, God. Oh, yeah. You can imagine his joy when he received a bag of rice in the mail. Oh, I'm sorry. I had that challenge run all the way down. He says he signed no contract. But he didn't have anything better to do. So he sat down and wrote. And soon was entering two to three hundred contests a day. And while he waited for prizes to arrive, he had no food.
Nusselby got frighteningly thin very quickly. You could see the sharp angles of his collarbones. So this is a good word for it. The staff got together and would give me basically a very simple little bread each day. So I had bread and water essentially for the first two weeks. But then as soon as I, as the results started to come in, then that stopped and everything shifted over entirely to the things that I could win for three sweepstakes. After two weeks, he finally won some sugary drinks.
A few days after that, he won a bag of rice. When the postman dropped it off, it was like Christmas. Nusselby danced like a madman. Hey! It's done! I'm ready. It's done! Were you trying to be a good performer and be funny when you were doing that or was it just really genuine joy? At the same time, it was really genuine joy. Initially, I was there as a performer and I wanted to be a comedian.
But somewhere in the middle, you know, the whole business of staying alive became my full-time occupation. So I think what you saw, if you saw any dancing, it was really just a human being expressing great joy. So he danced for this package of rice. But then he stopped short. He realized he didn't own a pot to cook the rice in.
But after a couple days of failed attempts, he figured out that if he put some rice in an empty drink container and left it near his single gas burner, it eventually turned into a kind of porridge. That's right. He would also have to win pots and pans and dishware. I was going to ask because, yeah, sure, he gets the rice, but now he needs pots. He needs water. He needs a working gas stove or a working stove. The stove was provided, I think it had one burner on it, and he got water as well.
Water was provided. Yeah, because that was thinking. I mean, if this guy didn't have water, he'd be dead in like 48 hours, 72 hours, or something, I think. And they would not be fun. Right. It would not be a fun dehydration. It does not find a way to go. Okay. So he makes this porridge. The classic rice delicacy. And he does eat on that for a while after he runs out.
I don't think it's included in the clips that I pulled, but in the interview, he goes on to talk about how he kept winning a bunch of dog food in the mail that he was sustaining himself off of. So he really began to appreciate the rice whenever, you know, he could get his hands on it. Mm-hmm. Question, do you still have that eggplant cart handy? Oh, yeah, I do. It's right here in my hand, you see. Okay, you're going to need to play it for this clip.
Back then, there was a kind of sweepstakes mania in Japan. The country was in the middle of a terrible recession, and someone wondered whether one could subsist entirely on their winnings. And so when sweepstakes life debuted, almost immediately after Nasebe was first shot in the room, it was an instant hit. Nasebe had no idea. He didn't even know he was on TV. He believed what the producers had told him, that he'd record some video tapes and maybe someday it would end up on the air.
On television, Nasebe's groin was hidden by a purple cartoon eggplant that floated around as he moved. Everything he did was accentuated with ridiculous, boring, boring sound effects, and puffy rainbow letters floated above his head. I didn't know. He said something. I didn't know. He said something. But these effects popped up just as often when Nasebe was despondent.
The show took every chance to poke fun at him, whether he was muttering to himself, dancing around, or doing terrible headstands. You know, the dumb stuff you do when you think no one's watching. Except, people were. For context, in the US, Game of Thrones usually has around 9 million viewers. Nasebe had 16 million. In a country less than half the size of ours. People thought Nasebe was the funniest comedy act they'd ever seen.
And I have to admit, as a viewer, once in a while when Nasebe got something really awesome in the mail, I couldn't help it. I laughed too. Even though I knew how much he was suffering, I couldn't help it. Oh no, wow, oh god. You know, I think this girl thinks that she is just incapable of evil. Yeah, I mean, she does, I did pull it there. She does go on to talk about how she was really disturbed by the audience. That was heavily into it. I mean, 16 million people.
That's not a small chunk of meat there, man. That's insane. That's insane popularity compared to their experience of the game of Thrones at its peak, which by the way, I spent millions and millions of dollars making that show. This show that they're making here is probably the cheapest show ever made ever. Oh yeah, especially when you can send them really small items like stuffed animals or maybe action figures. Who's talking about people who listen to the show or people who watch the show?
Some things in the actual producers. No, he was not allowed in any contact. There was a couple of times when like, or one specific time that's a delivery driver showed up on account of the wrong address. And, you know, he was denied. He didn't have any money to pay him. And he wasn't going to open the door because he didn't have any clothes. So that's the one instance where he could have had outside contact.
But at the same time, this show is the biggest show in Japan or one of the biggest shows in Japan. And I'm just wondering if out of those 60 million people that watch the show if anyone tried to find them or send them stuff. That was, there was instances of that. I think they had to relocate a handful of times on accounts of the location getting scooped out by people. Uh-huh. No. All right. This next clip will get into some of the friends he, uh, not too be made along the way.
One hundred of prizes, but many of them were useless to him. Spice girls tickets, for example, or a TV with no cable or a bicycle. He's been away for clothes, but never won anything he could wear. He was naked the entire time he was in that room for the entire show. And as the weeks went by, then months, he started to look less and less sane. He grew a beard, his hair was wild, and he started talking differently, slower. He'd make really creepy faces into the camera.
At one point, he won some toys and he started talking to them. He took a stuffed seal for a walk around the apartment. An action figure became his sensei, and he got life advice from it. If right now you are sitting there thinking, how in God's good name is this possible? Why was this allowed? In prison meant solitary confinement, starvation. Watching, I thought, this is a reality TV show. It's a psychological experiment made public. Plus, boom, boiings, of course. Scusey! A little boiing boy.
Yeah, it's like somewhere there's a Japanese boob area out there just packing with clips and gifts thrown on top of this guy. Boop, boop, boop, boop. Lighting them up like a Christmas tree. I guess at one point they had implemented a joystick controller that they could use to pilot the eggplant around with. Oh, huh. But doesn't that show the goods? Well, they would use the joystick to track the eggplant over eggplant. Oh, okay. So this guy's losing his mind as he rightfully should.
It's a solitary confinement like this for months on end. It's very damaging to a person. Well, you know, lucky for him, he was able to succeed in his goal in winning that a million yen in prizes. And this is the my follow up clip next round. Right. No, there is no longer a good idea. And producers later asked me so why the interviewer did ask him, you know, why, why did you not leave or why did you not try to escape? And this is part of his response here at the beginning. Why didn't you escape?
I was naked. So I would have had to go outside naked and seek help. I don't think that that's what kept me in there. The only thing I really have to say is that I said I'd do it and I do what I say. That was it. The only reason? I kept asking him, but wait, really? Why? The conversation is very important. It's a phrase, Yamato Damashi, the Japanese spirit, which is just to stick through.
You endure things, you know, when you're given something, whether it's easier, whether it's hard, you just really do, you know, you're obliged to follow it through. I think there's something that I can do. Nasuki did finally win $10,000 worth of prizes. It took him almost an entire year, but at last he'd completed the challenge. When he reached his goal, producers didn't tell him anything about it. Instead, they snuck into his apartment in the middle of the night.
Put a blindfold on him, took him out to a car, gave him clothes. Nasuki seemed to think this was a good thing. He was laughing, gay-gling. But when he took the blindfold off, he found out he'd been taken to Korea. Oh, oops. Oh, by the way. Round two. Now, how do you think this is going to go for him? If you were an educated man taking a guess, how do you think this is going to go? I think that they're going to, I don't know, try and get them to not try.
They're going to get them to do something else in Korea now. Because the show is so successful, and these producers are like, well, we can't just let our golden goose walk. We've got to keep it going. Season two. Oh, my. How astute. When I got off on the other side in Korea, I took off the mask and they said, congratulations. You've achieved your $10,000. This is your reward. You get to have a trip in Korea.
So I got to do a little sightseeing that day, and I thought, wow, you know, that was a long thing. Boy, what I've been through. But then when they, at the end of the day, they took me back to my room, and there was the exact same room set up in the exact same way. They'd recreated his little apartment, complete with the magazines, the stuff seal, the postcards, exactly how he'd left it, except in Korea. And they told him, great.
Now all you have to do is start over and win your airfare back home. Wow. Somebody just had pulled the floor out from under me, and I just fell. I didn't know that humans could be that cruel. Okay. Taking them over borders. When you take them, they basically kidnapped him, and they transported them over state lines or over country lines. If they're international kidnappers now. And he was blindfolded. Yeah. Blindfolded? I don't know how long that flight is from Japan to Korea.
I mean, I imagine it's too long, but it'll be a couple hours. And I think the really wild part is it actually came down to negotiations if you can believe it. And that's what he did. He negotiated with the producers and ended up folding and decided that he was going to participate. Because he didn't have any clothes again. And he had no way to get back home. So this was his only chance to escape was by playing through it. So I think it was 13 months for the first run.
And let's see if it tells us how long he was in for Korea. Remember, Nassmi didn't even know he was being broadcast. The producers told him that it was an experiment, but they didn't know if he'd ever make it on air. So he's blown away when they tell him about the TV. You're lying to him about that. Hold on. Shit. Okay. I got mixed. We'll do this thing every once in a while where it just gives me the metadata and not the actual name of the god damn clips, which is unfortunate.
So let me just take a second here and try to get caught up to where I am. Japan does not recognize abduction by a family member as a crime. Japan remains the only group of seven nation to abstain from signing the hog convention. Abduction, including parents, face up to abductors, face three years in prison, $250,000. Japan does not recognize it.
Japan doesn't didn't sign on does not agree to international child abduction and renders the US power list to extradite Japanese citizens charged of violating US courts. Best of the rules. Let me think we've played this. Let me check it. Yeah, I told you when I got off on the other side in Korea. Okay, that was a little. Let me just play.
Okay. So I actually have something to share with you lavish if you would if you would hear me when you click into this link, it's going to take you to part two of this series like in chapter. And I was thinking because it's all in Japanese and it's I don't really there's no way to like, you know, play it and have it make sense. I was wondering if maybe you would narrate the big reveal as they pull them out of the apartment into Korea blindfolded and they move them on sets.
Sure can I can do that for you. I'm just noticing the staff all the production staff they're all wearing an eggplant t-shirt. Oh, yeah, man. And you'll you'll want to go to one hour 10 minutes and 34 seconds. 110 34. And I'm actually going to get it cute up here. So he's blindfolded. He's got a little pillow over his crotch. I can do the audio at least maybe two. Turn it down there for a second. Not knowing the goal situation he's taken out of his room.
Nisubi is being taken to the goal arena in Japan. There Matsumo and Chiyano along with a thousand audience members waited for Nisubi's return. This is Nisubi's waiting room. It's like a little box on the stage. Firstly, please watch this. Nisubi will be wearing headphones and an eye mask accompanied by the producers that will be leading him through to the big birthday present. He'll be brought here. He'll be put in this waiting room. It's a big gift wrapped box.
Then he'll take off the headphones and eye mask. And then the countdown will begin. And he doesn't know about us or anything here so please be very quiet. 4, 3, 2, 1. And when Zero is reached, the box will fall away. And it will reveal him. Okay, he's here. Nisubi's here. You get big eggplants everywhere. Coming through, he's got a tux on, suit on. He's wearing headphones and an eye mask. You know, there's nothing about the situation.
They put him in the box with a thousand people watching the waiting room. Nisubi takes off the eye mask and does something that surprises everyone. He gets undressed. Oh yeah, just like that. Which I do by my pants should be okay to take him off. And now he's fully naked. After this, naked festival's greatest highlight will be shown. Oh, and the countdown begins. 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, zero. And the box drops. Laugh, laugh, laugh, laugh. Everybody's laughing. Such joy. And there he is.
There's a live audience there. The place is packed out. And the box springs open and there he is. Somebody threw something out of my thing. Nisubi, congratulations for reaching your goal, buddy. And they shoot confetti cannons. And the look on his face, he looks terrified. He doesn't know what the hell's going on. But that's naked. He looks so confused. I imagine not seeing, we can pause it there. Wow. The whole skin around. He's just naked and confused.
He's sitting there, everybody's applauding him. Yeah, a servo just like a fresh monkey in a zoo. Everybody's just laughing and clapping. Laughing and clapping, baby. This guy looks like he's been tortured in Guantanamo Bay. His fingers are stretched out, he's shocked. Frozen. Oh yeah, and he's fucking shocked. It's seeing himself on the big monitor. Yeah. And the hosts are like, oh, we don't even know what to say. Congratulations, Nisubi. Can I come in? Please excuse us. Terrible.
It's really disturbing stuff. No doubt, man. You got to really mean to take it that far. Like, jury duty guy can get fucked as far as I'm concerned. Yeah, this is next level shit. This clip follows the same thing. Yeah, this is next level shit. This clip follows up with what happened there at the reveal. Remember, Nisubi didn't even know he was being broadcast. The producers told him that it was an experiment. But they didn't know if he'd ever make it on air.
So he's blown away when they tell him about the TV show. That a secret camera in his apartment once even broadcast a 24 hour live stream of his actions. They tell him his diaries were published and are best sellers. Clips from him enjoying a specific brand of ramen, turned into commercials and endorsement deals. He was on the cover of magazines. Then they play a bunch of clips from the show. Nisubi blinks. He says, did I do that? That was me.
And so I sat there, realizing that this new sort of life was, you know, I was no longer just a nobody. The entire nation had been watching me for 15 months. You know, honestly, I thought, you know, what the hell? What is my country coming to be? I mean, I was, you know, very happy that, you know, my journey was not for nothing. But it's still weird. Unsurprisingly, Nisubi left the show with some scars. He had a lot of trouble holding the conversation for six months.
He felt sweaty and uncomfortable in clothes for a year. And his role didn't help his comedy career like he'd hoped. He was mostly offered roles that required him to be goofy and naked. He's a delist celebrity now and has the dwindling bank account to match. Oh, that's so sad. Japan's so disturbing. I mean, a lot of places are, but Japan is a special blend of disturbing, where it's like light and happy-go-lucky, so brutal, cold. Yeah. Oh, yeah, man.
I've got his, he's got an active Twitter page, excuse me, ex-page. I've got that listed in the description. Still Twitter.com. Still Twitter. He's got a website, you know, smiling at all the pics. Just to be typecasts in that capacity, though, is brutal. Yeah, I mean, he's, it's like the ex-factor Jackass of Japan. This guy's probably only hired to be naked and starving for his life. Yeah. Well, I suppose Shirley loved to hear something from the producers side. Shirley.
Oh, let's see what they have to say. I was in trolled by their struggle. I was thrilled by their personal school struggle. So I was watching them succeed. I have no regrets about anything I do with that show. Natsubi said that you apologize to him when you guys talked. Is that correct or no? Well, I put him through a lot. I'm not, if you say that you have a sports team and you have a coach who runs his players through very difficult maneuvers.
At the end of the day, he may pat him on the back and say, you know, sorry for putting you through such a rough struggle. It wasn't me expressing that I shouldn't have done the project. Sachiya has a lot of lofty ideas of what the show is trying to accomplish. And when he talks about them, you do get the sense that it was in fact intended to be a sort of psychological experiment. The whole project was trying to reach at some very elemental, simple humanity.
Natsubi had been sort of brought to a state where he was such an elemental part of his existence. He danced without realizing he had ever danced. And he danced on a regular basis. The modern individual is sort of shackled like convention and expectation and all these other things that we wear from day to day. And I wanted to see them drop some of that to see this simple humanity and then to see actual gratefulness. It's weird to think about.
But the fact of the matter is, what Sachiya is saying is true. Denpashonen did really capture humanity in a rare way. What you don't ever really see, even on the craziest of American reality TV shows. Manufacturing miracles over here, baby. You didn't even know you could dance, did you? We brought this man's tap and shoes to the forefront. You're welcome, buddy. We did this for you. Yeah. Oh, Japan. Oh, yeah. Pan-Japan-Japan-Japan. You know, it's screams just so much of TI.
I've talked to people that very much have said, I believe them. They feel like they're being the subject of a twitch stream of all things. I'm very performative. Gangstalking. Yeah. Oh, yeah, man. And here it is for 16 million people like it's nothing. And he's naked the whole time. I mean, you can't get more symbolically vulnerable than being just actually stark ass naked. Yep. And, you know, most people aren't serspenser. They can't just be naked all the time. That many people are cool.
Right. Um, I guess to kind of wrap this up, it... I'd like to explain to you through these two clips and some other just light material that I got. What exactly DEMPA stands for? And the correlation is just utterly fascinating, if you ask me. Um, this is a short clip on the history of DEMPA. The word DEMPA is Japanese for electromagnetic waves, also known as radio waves or RF signals.
And it's colloquially used stems from the idea that people's consciousnesses are subtly or not so subtly affected and distorted by the soup of electromagnetic radiation that we find ourselves submerged in. As we live in a world surrounded by cell towers, satellite spot beams, Wi-Fi access points, and ambient emissions from ubiquitous smart devices that form the rapidly expanding internet of things.
The term DEMPA first gained traction in the 90s, as a reference to the Fukugawa Street killings of 1981. A high-profile murder case where an unhinged 29-year-old man carried out a stabbing spree in broad daylight. His official defense at trial was under the plea of insanity, predicated on the notion that years of being bombarded and tormented by electromagnetic radiation had driven him to carry out these horrific crimes out of madness.
Because of this incident, the term DEMPA surfaced as a way to refer to individuals who operate on an entirely different wavelength than the rest of humanity, writ large, preferring the solitude of their own concocted fantasies over the harshness of reality. In the most generous of interpretations, strange, off-beat individuals who marched to the idiosyncratic beat of their own drum.
In the most derogatory of interpretations, which is the more commonly fielded one, societal outcasts and misfits whose inability and or refusal to conform with reality and their flippant disregard for the social morays is perceived by others to be the result of an unsubstantiated persecution complex. The term DEMPA thus tends to carry a negative connotation arising from its checkered origin, and it shares some commonality with the label Otaku, which touts a similar pejorative social stigma.
I'm curious which side of the political aisle this definition applies to more. Originally, it is, and this is coming from a translation of a Wikipedia page that was in Japanese, so it's a little, it just sounds a little off. In recent years, conspiracy such as quote eaves dropping devices installed in the room, thoughts being manipulated wirelessly being watched through the internet, and being controlled by having a microchip slash RFID implanted in the head of being introduced.
Originally, it was referred to people who complained of voices, thoughts, instructions, and interference coming from someone inside their head via radio waves. But it is also tied to the Otaku subculture, which I was not familiar with Otaku's, but not this specific subset. And this second clip will just kind of wrap up on DEMPA. So now that we've covered the history and broad use of DEMPA, what does the term mean in the context of, for instance, DEMPA game?
The word to best sum up the DEMPA aesthetic is surreal, but it's more nuanced than that as its surrealism tends to manifest in its uniquely protracted scenes of bleak everyday mundanity, punctuated by out of left-field bursts of Kafka-esque terror, increasing in both severity and regularity as the story progresses, resulting in a slow and unrelenting descent from vaguely-discording normality into sheer apocalyptic madness.
DEMPA also maintains a keen focus on vivid visceral character introspection, with the medium of visual novels particularly well-suited to being able to empathize with, and lose yourself in, the terrifyingly incoherent and delusional headspace of someone dangerously close to losing their tenuous grip on reality.
Accordingly, DEMPA themes tend to revolve around a starkly grim and sobering stance on humanity, showcasing the ease with which the human mind, at its most despondent and desperate, can be molded by the preachings of cults, by conspiracy theories, or by the false promises petaled by the most charismatic of ideologues, transforming it into something malignant that is capable of carrying out frightening atrocities, all the name of regaining some semblance of control and meaning over its seemingly orphan existence.
Super cheerful stuff. Yeah, slow light reading. Yeah, there's a whole series of... I was kind of talking to a cold acid about it briefly. It's not light novels per se. Did it end up being more so? Oh shoot. I don't want to misquote them. Because the guy in the video got some stuff incorrect, I suppose, when laying out different types of DEMPA games. What did cold acid say? Should have saved it.
There was two that I had linked to that I got from this video. One of the games is called Ground Control to Psychoelectric Girl. I'm there for the title. Second one was a wonderful everyday. He said the first is in the VN to begin with light novels or just regular novels that are shorter and have illustrated pages in them. So there's at least the first one was a light novel. Sounds like there's some fairly hardcore stuff in there.
Just based off of the content warnings that the guy was kind of discussing in the video. But it's just another interesting brush to add to the toolkit when looking at consumer scene culture, I guess. The DEMPA. I like the local colloquialism. Colloquialisms are always interesting though. Great moniker of culture and what people value. The Japanese seem like the exact kind of people that would come up with this term being harassed or possessed by radio waves or electronic interference.
Yep. Oh yeah, man. So that pretty much wraps me on that. Like I said, if you want to go and check out the videos, I got them saved right there in the show notes. For your viewing pleasure. And I think it's time to do a couple of screen-mails and get the hell out of here.
¶ Scream-Mails
Which boom, make sure I don't forget my marker. And here we go. Happy 9-11 day. We're calling on 7-11 day. Which is also a National Hugger Hand Day. So I don't know if you guys hugged your hand on yesterday. Today, whatever. Have you want to do that? Anyway, screen or tea. So I think I already left a vocal mail about, yeah, I did.
Left a vocal mail about my last tire blowing and then get a rear-ended. Well then she's out yesterday in her car and gone for a couple of hours and comes back running some air. Hershey's doing some stuff comes back. Car's not there. Glyph. Car's done. Oh fuck. Yeah. Yeah. Awful. Yeah, because of the weekend. But she just found out or they found the car this morning and got towed to wherever.
So we haven't actually seen what it looks like. They just said it was not. It wasn't drivable, but they didn't have a key. Something they couldn't drive it anyway. So don't know. Oh my god. Yeah. And then just called and her officer just called her and said that a juvenile had stolen it. And so it's just out even how that works as far as are we don't even know how that works as far as I may not have like coming in.
Somebody with an adult with insurance and stuff like that to kind of like chase if you will. It's probably didn't turn over and whatnot faster. So it's all up in there. But man. Yeah. So it's been pretty. So just like. But I just focused and were able to borrow a car. Yeah. Are we able to get borrow a car from mother and law? So that they just had so any who it's been fun. So all right. Well, the gas and the finish line behind the scenes from light from last week is on still behind.
So that could be another screen. But yeah. So slowly but surely catching up. So all right. We'll appreciate the guys love you guys. That anger is saying to you know. Well, they're not you're in the car or you're out of the car or you're still on the car and going for a joy ride. I think you've already. Wow. Good color. Man Christopher Bells. I'm so sorry man. That's absolutely terrible. We sympathize with you greatly over here. Never fun. Get your car stolen.
Here's some fucking Scott Adams karma out to that car jacker. Fuck you. You stupid cut. That's right. You need a goat on his ass. That's kind of spooky. With the goat and the dad and then Christopher comrade Christopher battles here. It's a little too spooky. No, man. How many fucking plants are in a retro great retro grade right now? It's terrible. That really is. But it looks like we have one more from Christopher battles here.
Oh, I dare. I will give a scream. But first. Hello, lavish. Hello, very much man of the aluminum ladder. Hello. A frame. You guys are doing sure doing great. Yeah. Got to hear about the guar performance because I think I mentioned it on on mass. But still behind. Still behind. Yeah, I did. Still behind on the on the podcast and then today was a weird day too. So got more behind. Man, what's with these having days off and weekends and vacations and weird schedule?
Don't they know what man's got to listen to his podcast? Anyway, there's plenty of the screaming about. I mean, on all mean in my last dude, but there's still a moment of. I think I already left a vocal mail about it. But yeah, so the wife car got. Yeah, I think I did. So why's car got stolen? This is the song and continue. Then find out yesterday and fact. Now found it. But I had to get to the place. I guess some youth had stolen it and.
So there's all that. Then we went to go look at it earlier today and it's yet definitely. It be totaled. We just rough is obviously been trying to we don't know how much we're going to get for it yet and then try to figure out logistics and. Are we going to get a get a car that's in good condition and we don't want to backtrack and stuff and want not. And yeah, yeah, yeah, so it's still a lot of just like. Stop. Yeah, but yeah, so.
Lot of annoyances and just juggling things and figuring out rides and. Bowing car and all that sort of stuff and then. How I'm talking about together, you know. Doing work and then you're looking for work and then just be. Yeah, anyway, screen screen. But yeah, let me right now talk it and go for a little run in the end of it. And you know, do the other stuff and just keep on planning to move it ahead. Yes, that's what you got to do.
Unless you're feeling the car, then you just move ahead and then crash into something. All right, well. It's that time. So I'll let me guys say dangerous. Say hi, you're. But said, and you know, whether or not it's all going crazy or it's not. You know, no matter how you're feeling, just give that little hearty. Yeah, brutal nice. Man, that was three. It calls straight to the pipe. We got we got an act in three plays there. Earth, a plan three X. Excuse me.
My mind's turning into mush and servo has correctly put it forth through gal. I figured this out and he's got a list there in the chat. Seven out of nine planets are in retrograde. Including Uranus. It's still funny. The most vulnerable of all. You don't want to get caught behind Uranus. Oh, Chris, I hope I hope y'all can get that rectified here real soon. I'm not too much of a boon on y'all. Yeah. Me too. And that much love to you and your whole family for such a pain in the ass debacle.
No doubt. We do have one last one, but that won't stop you from calling us up during any time of the week. 612263-799. Yes, so why would you bore stories not as good as that one? What? His Ouija story isn't as good as that one apparently. You just showed us that. Cool story, bro. Why would you bore stories not as good as that one? You never know. Noted. You never know. Huh? I said you won't know until you dry. Oh, I thought you said you won't know until I dry.
Implying that I like to get wet dog. I know you like to get wet dog. Oh, Sir Seats there. We want to know what your Ouija story, your Luigi story is. Nope. Oh shit. We're coming up on five hours, man.
¶ Why Not - Fletcher and Blaney (Fin)
Bugs. We're a couple party animals. No doubt. Oh, I know this tin. This is a value for value tin. You know it. Why not? This is that Fletcher 12 string riff. It's good stuff, man. Yes. Perfectly. Play out track. We'll be back next week. We got Phil Owens of Skating X Fane calling in. We're going to do an interview with him for the first part of the show. Nice. Yeah. I'm looking forward to that. I might try and hit him up and see if he's got a song or three.
Maybe he'd like to play around with you. I never know. Mm-hmm. He might hit us up with a hot exclusive fingers crossed. Yeah, that's right. A nice demand said. We're live every single Monday night. Here on the No Agenda Stream and our own Stream the Scala Show. You can find our website at BTS.LOL. You can check us out in the green room, hashtag greenroom, and IRC.zero-node.net. And you can just generally drop in and say hello. It's a value production.
We don't have commercials or ads or anything like that. No reads. It's all producers supported and you are a producer just by listening to the show. You're a producer. And if you'd like to continue in your journey as a producer and find us on our website, you can just talk to us, give us an idea or art or something like that. We'll take it all. And you can always call us, 612-263-7999. The easiest way to produce, just let us know how you're doing.
Maybe give us a scream if you're having a rough day. Yeah, we're over it. Mk.spook.social if you want to complain the Fediverse. And lots of people have been dropping shirts that they've been ordering from the Mk. You just over it, find the schemes.predeless.com for BTS.shop. For the short week. We do. We get some beautiful shirts. We got jackets. Winter is coming. Don't get caught without your BTS Zippo Poodie. Shit, I'm coming. Yeah, that's right.
You need something to spill all your whiskey and cigarette ash on. So go ahead and get a BTS Zippo Poodie today. No doubt. And you really just made it click. That is what I am. A walking collection device for cigarette ash. I've been blueberry. Not many of the Minneapolis. And I have been described as a spilled beer. My name is lavish. I am suddenly the succubus of this game. Those gamers are right. Value magic. Incredible. That's right. This value baby. It's mandated to come.
Yeah. Okay. That's cool. This is like a WWF Smackdown. Daddy like it. Oh man. Yeah. Daddy like it. I'm feeling very staying. Sanity's going good right now. It's fine. Hey. We like to stay. Hey. Hey. I am the succubus. Hey. Hey. Hey. Hey. Well, trade center fell down because I got high.
