You're listening to Comedy Central coming to you from New York City, the only city in American It's The Daily Show and Youth Green Barrows, the Missing Senator Chris Murphy, and Earthquake Can Mossy. This He's the Daily Show with Forever Nobody come to the Day Show, travel tapisode can tuning in coming out of posing this This is correct, This is great. Take a seat, everybody, take a seat. How funk? Thanks for us? Can I just say Happy
Pride Month? Everybody? Welcome to it? You know what that means for the rest of June, all crimes are legal for gay people. Yeah, I studied, I studied. All right, We've got a really great show for you tonight. We'll be talking about the Battle to steal Ukraine. We're gonna be talking about the battle to steal the next election and the battle to steal Star Wars back from Black People.
Plus Senator Chris Murphy is joining us from Hartford, Connecticut to tell us which Republicans are finally getting on board with gun control. So let's do this, people, Let's jump straight into today's headlines. Okay, let's kick things off with the ongoing Russian war with Ukraine. Or, as the Russian media says, there is no war, but we're also winning it. Ever since Vladimir Putin decided to aggressively crash on his neighboring country's couch, Ukraine has been asking America for bigger
and better weapons to help them defend themselves. Now, usually when you ask America to send you weapons, they'll send them quicker than a restaurant pre cooks the food in the morning and then just reheats it when you order it at night. But because America and the rest of the world is terrified of starching World War three, rightfully, so they've had to find ways to support Ukraine without being accused of attacking Russia. And so just today President
Biden announced this. This morning, President Biden has announced the US will send another seven million dollars worth of weapons defense systems to the Ukrainian military. And among the newly provided weaponry is the multiple Launched Rockets system, which is a highly capable long range system. This has been the subject of debate inside the Biden administration for weeks now whether or not to provide Ukraine with these more advanced,
longer range weapons systems. Concerns within the administration that Russia might view this as a provocative step, giving Ukraine the ability to strike within Russian territory. That's why the United States actually sought assurances and secure those assurances from Ukraine that they would not use these these rocket systems to strike Russians targets on Russian territory. Yeah, that's right. Biden made Ukraine promise that they will only use the rockets
in Ukrainian territory, they will not use them in Russia. Yeah, so he's basically giving them advanced rockets like a dad gives his teenager credit card. It's like, not, remember what I told you? This is only for gas groceries and the strip club. No taxbooks this time. I don't want to see that charge again. But this is major help. Though. Seven hundred million dollars, that's a ton of rockets. Well maybe it's like ten rockets. I never know with military equipment, Like, no,
you never know how much anything costs. You know. It's like when someone tells me they spent a hundred dollars at Saphora. I have no idea if that's like one face cream or enough I gletter for a whole season of euphoria. I don't know how much it is. And look, I get that America is trying to find the balance between helping Ukraine and triggering its own war with Russia. But still this is putting Ukraine in a tough spot
because who knows how easy these missiles also use. You know, don't want us to be in World War three just because some Ukrainian soldier entered the distance in kilometers when it was supposed to be in miles. You know what I'm saying. It's like, oh, at one point six. But I will say this is good for Ukraine to defend themselves, and this is good for Russia to know they conscious push other countries around. And you know who this is
most exciting for American missiles. Yeah, what a different experience this is going to be for them. I'm so excited. Oh, I'm so excited to be coming overseas for the first time. And the best part is I've been invited. Wow. Because my dad went to Iraq but he wasn't invited, and my grandfather he went to Vietnam and boy did they not want him there. But look at me, I got invited to Ukraine. I'm a mith. I'll go to Ukraine.
They invite at me. I'm a good miss outlete, my family lay my new one man showed Missile in Ukraine will be debuting next week, you guys conjoining I sat, All right, let's move on. Disney released a new Star Wars show on their streaming platform, Disney Plus, which I've heard is good but not as good as Paramount Plus. Now, this Star Wars show is not the one about the Mandalorian, and it's not the one about Boulba fat. No, this one is about Obi Wan Kenobi, the Galaxy's most powerful hobo.
And anyone can see where this is going. All right, just like show off the show on Disney. You see what they're doing now, you get it. Their plan is to release a show about every character in Star Wars. It's genius, like a ton of money. Personally, I can't wait for the job of the hot sitcom. What I know, she broke your heart, job, but you've gotta start dating again, Dude, Changing her up and putting it in a goldmikini doesn't
count as a date. Silly. That shows also premiering next week anyway, The All We Want Kenobi show is introducing a lot of new characters to the Star Wars franchise, but there is one character in particular who isn't getting the warmest welcome from the fans. This morning, Obi Wan Knobi himself putting his force behind co star Moses Ingram, where after social media users launched racist attacks against her
after her debut in the Jedi Knights new series. She brings so much to the series, She brings so much to the franchise, and it just sickened me to my stomach to hear that this has been happening. We stand with Moses, We love Moses, and if you're sending her bullying messages, you're no Star Wars fan in my mind. Moses, sharing she had received hundreds of racist messages following the series premiere. There's nothing anybody can do to stop this hate.
I think the thing that bothers me is that like sort of this feeling that I've had inside of myself, which no one has told me, but this feeling of like I just gotta shut up and take it. And I'm not built like that. Neither should you be. No one should have to just shut up and take racism. I agree with that, especially Install Wars guys, Like, what
is this? What is this you racist. Installed Like from the very beginning, this has been a series when no one thinks twice if Harrison Ford is best friends with a giant dog bear, or if a brother and sister want to smash, no one complains about that they're not getting death threats. I'm so tired of fans attacking black people in Star Wars when there are so many other racism species they could begging to big it's it against
think about it. You could hate everyone going to rant about the creepy twilex, you know, or the greedy jawas. There's so many more opportunities for racism than just black people. Mix it up, brought in your horizons, you know, or is the e woke saying, you know, I gotta think bigger where it is. Just get out there and you know, it's really great that even McGregor made a video supporting his co star. But I think Star Wars needs to come back even harder at the racist really make them suffer.
You should give Princess Leiah and your black boyfriend. Yeah, that's right, it's gonna be a dope scene. It's gonna come back in and be like a Yo, Laiah, I got the plans for the death stop we don't tonight. All right, Finally, let's talk about families. You know, one of the best parts about having a family is that you have people to blame in therapy for why you haven't succeeded in life. And and also you have people who will continue your lineage deep into the plastic bag
global warming apocalypse. Now, there are a few cultures who take family more serious lee than Indian people, but as this next story shows, some of them might be taking it a little too seriously. Pilots take a quick peek at what's trending right now. An unusual lawsuit in India, parents are suing their only son for not giving them a grandchild. Sadiv and Sadaya Passad say that they've done their part. They paid for their son's pilot training, a
lavish wedding and even a honeymoon. And they say that they've waited six years for a grandchild and now they have filed a lawsuit saying that if their son and daughter in law don't give them a grandchild within a year, they owe the parents fifty million rupees, which is equivalent to six hundred and seventy five thousand dollars. Damn, damn, this is wild. They're suing their son for not giving
them a grandchild. Being parents is so weird. You spend the first eighteen years doing everything you can to stop your kids from having sex, and then as soon as they grow up, you turned into fret bros. You know, you gotta get laid, dude, and don't use a condom either. That ships for losers. Just do it. Do it now. As weird as it is, part of me sees where these parents are coming from, though, I mean, the only reason you have kids is so that you can get grandchildren. Yeah,
let's be honest. Nobody wants to be a parent, you know, it's just what you have to do to become a grandparents. The name is in it. It's grand it's better. And also grandkids and grandparents on the same page. Of course, grandparents want to be grandparents. You know, they're the same thing. They both loved telling long and pointless stories. They have so many of the same life experiences, and she's like, hey, Grandpa, I walked it into park and I saw a puppy
and I popped it in my pants. Like wow, same here, kid. Oh but look, if these parents really want grandkids. I don't know if the lawsuits it's really gonna help make that happen, especially with like a year You've given them a year you're in as every time now their son has sex, he's thinking about his parents. They did this, not me, And that lawsuit is definitely going to help his dirty talk. Can you imagine this poor Indian guys gonna be in his bedroom He's just like, do you
like that? Dude? Like that? You're like the way I'm trying to avoid paying six seventy five dollars to my parents. This is a fifty million rupee pump right here? Fifty million rupee? How would you do that? All right, that's here for the headlines. But before we go, let's check in on traffic without very own Royal Jr. Everybody, why are you doing? What's going on? What is happening in the traffic? Man? You know, I'm like a pigeon at the bakery, just trying to get his bread up. It
is what it is. A quick look at the roads now, as you can see the northbound seven seventy starting to clear up. We had a little bit of a disruption a little bit earlier. Tractor trail over turn some ONQUI you actual you're doing the traffic. Yeah. Yeah, they're going to therapy, man, And I think it like she told me to be a vessel of positivity to people within
my circle and the karma would be reciprocal. So you know, I've come out here before and we go back and forth and you never want to do I say, do the traveling. Then you're like not, like then you want to talk about like the things I'm talking about. But this is great. You're doing that now. Yeah, therapy, Yeah this man, look at this is growth. Really glad you're not jumping in. Let's what's the traffic about Ukraine? Real quick? Let me just say something, just just real quick about Ukraine.
This is the rush of thing. Like I know, we're sending Ukraine the weapons and we're sending money. But the issue, brow is that that ain't what the Russians respect. We gotta get their respect. We gotta get the respect of the Russians and the only thing some people own to respect crazy, so you'll be crazy. It ain't enough just to send him a rocket. The United States got to go over there and just buck a couple of shots
in the air just to let them. Know what we could do if we wanted to just just a cup to shoot a couple of rockets and business in the air, and then they'd be like, all right, they're crazy, let's leave. Because that's that's that's how you handle stuff in the streets. Man. You put your tin toes on the ground, and that's what you do in the streets. I'm sorry, what what streets are these that you're talking about? Like North Korea? Like North Korea? Right, what don't do that we be
does anybody ran up in North Korea? And nobody ran up in North Korea? Nobody is every two three months North Korea they shoot a rocket up in the air for no reason. That's what you got to do, dog, that's the streets, man. It's like boys in the hood. Did you ever see boys in the hood. It's that's what the Russian Ukraine. That's what the United States got to be. We gotta be like ice like you remember
boys in the Hood. Ricky got bumped into by the game bangers, and the game banger is getting ready to beat up Ricky, and the ice cube stepped up like we got a problem, Holk, We got a problem, milk. That's what America would be a missile, would be a missile right here on. You got a problem with you gonna do? And then Russia be like, all right, let's go on back and drink some vodka. That's how everything. That's a that's a novel way to solve, all right.
So so so what's happening in the traffic their them? Kids should counter sue their parents. They get, but they should count. How are you gonna sue me for not having a kid. I should be able if you can sue me for not having a kid, I should be able to sue you for having a kid. I didn't consent to being conceived, therefore I want some money. I just don't think that's right. And then that behavior from their parents anyway, that comes from parents who ain't scared
of their kids. You're you're at a certain point your parents supposed to be scary. Yeah, yeah, you're stronger, you're faster. Your parents can't be behaving like that. That's the hapey. The time I go back to Alabama, I go home visit my mama. I turned home one of the murder forensic shows where they killed their parents, and then I just look at them just to let her know I got some ideas up along. I'm gonna scold me into having a child. You're gonna scold me into having a child.
Scolding don't work. Everybody knows the scolding don't work. It's liking boys in the hood. You can see boys in the hood with dope boys. Mama scolding him. She said, don't you go to that store and go stealing some stuff from what dope boy? Do end up dead? Two weeks after Rickett? We we have the time left, we even we we don't we don't we have the time and then I mean we basically watched the Boys in the Hood. But you know what, I'm glad. I'm glad
you've been going to therapy. That's been helping, right, would you know everybody thank you thinking do I appreciate all? Right? When we come back, sending the christ Murphy's joinning off for the show. You don't want to mix clip. Welcome up to the Danny Shart. My first guest is Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut. He represented Newtown when the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre occurred a decade ago, and following the devastating school shooting in Uvaldi Texas. He begged his
colleagues to act. Why do you go through all the hassle of getting this job, of putting yourself in a position of authority If your answer is that as this slaughter increases, as our kids run for their lives, we do nothing, What are we doing? Why are you here if not to solve a problem as existential as this? Joining us live now from Hartford, Connecticut, Please welcome Senda christ Murphy's in the day, Sandra Murphy. It it must feel at some point like you you are, you know,
going up against an immovable force. It must feel at some point like you're engaging in a conversation that seems to go around and around in circles. But it seems like in and around this time there is some movement. There are some Republicans who have said, you know what, maybe there is something we should be doing, even if it is not the perfect solution. Let's let's jump straight into that and talk about what you've seen in terms of a bypasses and move to change what gun safety
should be in America. Well, Trevor, thanks for having me on. And it does feel, um often like deja vu repeating itself. Um ten years I've been at this, um, the American public has made up their mind. There's nothing in this country that's as popular as changing the gun laws to make our kids safer. Of Americans support things like making sure that everybody has to go through a background check before they buy a gun, but we run up against this brick wall, which is the power of the gun
industry in the gun lobby. But you're right, it does feel different this time. UM. I just got off the phone off a zoom call with about uh ten or twelve Republicans and Democrats that are trying to pass something that will save lives, not do everything, but try to
break this log jam. And I think it's because of the very unique, cataclysmic nature of this last mass shooting, but also because over the last ten years, you know, we've built an anti gun violence movement that is powerful, that has just as many members and just as much money as the n R and the gun lobby has, and that has started to have an impact. So I
don't know whether this is going to succeed. I've been, you know, Charlie Brown kicking a football that gets pulled out from under me over and over again enough times to know that maybe this won't turn out differently, but um, I owe it to the families in Texas, the families in my state, in Sandy Hook, to give it a try. What seems to be the hold up? What are some of the internal conversations that you're having, you know, without
betraying anybody's us, what are the sticking points? Because if if so many Americans, if such a large percentage is in support of many of these common sense measures, why then do their representatives not seem able to put those things into effect? Well right now, this is a problem
only inside the Republican Party. Every single Democrat in the Senate would support things like expanded background checks, and and the reason that there's a problem in the Republican Party is that, um, to win a Republican primary today, a lot of my colleagues think that you need the endorsement of the gun lobby, not not just because of the money that comes from groups like the n r A, but because, um, you know, associating yourself with the gun industry has become kind of a proxy for a broader
set of conservative values. And so we've got to solve that problem for Republicans. We've got to find another way for them to demonstrate how conservative they are without having to do the bidding of a of an industry that
is supported by only ten percent of their constituents. But that's starting to change because now a lot of Republicans are starting to see if they vote for things, um, you know, like restrictions on assault weapons, they actually we rewarded by larger numbers of their constituents than ever before that support these things. So I think the political calculations of some of my colleagues are beginning to change, but
it's slow. You know, for decades they were told you can never ever beat the gun lobby in an election. That's not true anymore, but it takes a little while for that lesson to be learned. Let's talk about some of the concrete steps then you're looking to take. You know, every mass shooting in America is followed very promptly by people saying, this wouldn't be solved by that solution. This solution wouldn't solve that problem, and it becomes a chicken
and the egg scenario that never seems to end. What are some of the concrete measures that you can take now to change some of the gun laws in America to make the country safer at least, if not perfect. Yeah, and I think it's really important to remember that there's a mass slaughter in this country every single day. I get it, there's good reason why this country has more attention after UM a catastrophe like Evaldi, But there's a hundred and ten twenty people every single day who died
from guns. And in fact, since you've Aaldi, there's been eighteen mass shootings in the United States. Now it was four people, ten people, twelve people, not enough to get the headlines, but there's a crisis every single day. What are we talking about? Red flag laws? These are the laws that allow you to take guns away temporarily from kids like this guy. And you've Aldi, who is showing signs of doing something disastrous. We're talking about strengthening our
background check system. We're not gonna get all the way to universal background checks, but making sure that more gun sales come with these background checks. UM. We're talking about UM money for community anti violence initiatives, trying to wrap services around at risk kids, especially in our cities UM where poverty also often leads to violence. UM that could make a big impact as well. So it's not everything.
I want, but it would be the most significant set of gun reforms in really thirty years, and we're closer than ever to getting it done. There are many, UM people who voted for Democrats who I think would sometimes look enviously at what Republicans are able to do despite despite you know, their setbacks. You know, we've seen what Mitch McConnell has been able to do with the Supreme Court. We've seen what Republicans have been able to do with
abortion and restricting it around the country. UM, do do you ever consider these options? Do you ever think to yourself, oh, man, we should also be looking at ways to use the tools and the mechanisms that are present to us in America to get something done, or or is there a reason that you don't take that approach? Well, right now, we have a majority in the House the Senate that support expanding background checks to every gun snale, which would
probably save the most lives. We were president, who will sign that bill. The problem is the rules of the Senate right now require you to get sixty votes, not fifty votes, in order to pass a bill like that. So for the American people, it's frustrating, right because they did their job, they put majorities in the House, the Senate, President of the White House to support where they support expanded protections when it comes to our nation's kids in
the safety of our communities. But the rules of the Senate stand in the way now. When Mitch McConnell wanted to get conservatives on the Supreme Court to outlaw abortion, he changed the rules of the Senate. But right now we are a few votes shy in the Democratic Caucus of changing the rules now that we're in charge. So yes, I don't think we should deliberately adopt the policies of
Mitch McConnell. But I do think that when we have power, um, you know, when the voters have given us power, we should listen to them, um, and do what the majority of Americans want us to do. Well, I'm sure most Americans would hope, in fact, Old that you're not Charlie Brown. This time the bull doesn't get taken away and something actually gets done. Thank you so much for taking the time to join us, and we hope to see you again. Thanks, We'll be right back. Welcome back to the Jay Show.
My next guest tonight. As an award winning bestselling author, They're here to talk about their new novel You Made a Full of Death with Your Beauty, and their memoir Dear Center On which will be available soon in paperback. Please welcome our Quirkermazy, our quirk here Emazy, Welcome to the Daily Show. Thank you for having me. I feel like I've met you before. It's so weird. We have like this energy between us. It's it's there's something about it. Um,
I shouldn't just welcome you the dish. I should also say congratulations on being not just one of the most prolific rights is, but one of the most celebrated for lific rights. As you have written four books in how many years? Now? Seven books in four years? Actually, all right, she I was counting four because I knew in the panic,
how many in the pandemic alone in the pandemic. About in the pandemic, it was four because I remember going like, I've like looked at everyone who worked in the pandemic and how much work they did, And it was four books just in the pandemic. Right. Everyone else is like we're making bread, and You're like, I'm gonna make best selling books. Um, I would love to know how you switched so seamlessly between genres because you you aren't celebrated
in one. You know, people love your poetry, people have fallen in love with your memoir. And then now you've switched into the world of novels, which everyone was shocked by because they were like, why, why would you do this? It's trash romance novels. Yes, people like no romances trash, And now you've written and people like, maybe maybe it's not trash, maybe it's a I'd love to know how you switched so seamlessly. I think it's because I'm a
reader of every genre. So I started reading romance novels when I was a kid growing up in Nigeria, and it would smuggle them to school because they were banned for being vulgar and inappropriate. And they were like the Harlequin, the Mills and Boons, romance like Fabio under Cover. When you were a friend of those, yes, I mean I was okay, and I really got into them as a kid. I think there's something in there about like being young
and exploring your own sexuality. Um. And then I came to the States when I was sixteen for college, and I discovered paranormal romance and I was like, Oh, my goodness, shape shifter, this that's hilarious. And then I took a break from it. But I came back around, like in the last couple of years, and I found like the romance that was being written now was so different from what I grew up on, and it had like so much representation in it, and it had so much hope
in it. You know, you could read these love stories about people that society considers deviants, whether it's just because you're black, or you're queer, or you're new divergence or you're in a wheelchair, and they get happily ever after this, and I was like, there's a little magic in that, like a little magic of hope. I think that's what people love about your work is that it has shifted the ideas of what is quote unquote the norm and
just told stories through multiple different lenses. You know. I'll start with with your memoir. The style that you wrote it in is really interesting because it's a series of letters to people and it takes us through a journey of of of your life. Why did you choose to do it in that way? Why didn't you choose to address the book to the reader and rather let us in on a world where we almost become voyers of
your relationships. Well, so the secret is I hate writing essays because you have to be like so serious about them and you have to do research and things like that. And I just wanted to write a book that felt like the conversations I have with my friends. I think like, these are the spaces in which you're really honest because it's intimate, because you're speaking without a filter, you're not worried about you know how some random reader is going
to take it, and it strips down that artifice. It's straight down that wall. It's a different kind of vulnerability.
And also in writing and letters, it's like a citational practice for me, I think in terms of community, like all the ideas I have, the stories I tell, I tell them with my friends, I tell them with other people, and so to write the letters, it was a way of showing the world like, these are the people I think with, even if it's not people that I know personally, people who I engage with their work, These are the
people I'm thinking with. These are the people I'm building worlds with, and I wanted them to be recognized as well. It's it's a beautiful journey. And then to switch from, you know, from one style of book to the other. You made a full of death with your Beauty has has just gotten everybody buzzing. And Michael B. Jordan is going to be making the film version of the book, the film adaptation. You're going to be an executive producer
on it. Yes, it's a really beautiful story. Before we get into that, I'd love to know why you chose not to write the screenplay, because you are a writer, why why not do that part of it as well? I have too many books to write now, you know what I mean? I mean, I guess, But also I think for black people working in Hollywood, like in film
and TV, it's a different style of writing. Like I was executive producer on in developments for my first book, Freshwater, and we were working with exts and we're in development for like three years, and I was like, oh, this is very different from writing books because in books, you can do whatever you want and no one's going to stop you. Your editor can say, well I want you to change, and so you can be like no and nothing happens. But in TV um you kind of have
to listen to the people who are giving you. Yeah, they don't play that game. It's not going to work. Yeah. I wanted to hand it over to people who actually do work in that field and kind of know how to collaborate a little bit better. Okay, so they'd like the conduit between yourself and the TV. Okay, I get that. The story is a really beautiful, painful look at not
just love. Because you know, when I heard it was going to be a romance models like, well, this is going to be interesting, and it's it's more than like a romance model in the way novel, in the way we think of it. It's a it's a story about grief. Really, you know, we we followed the story of Faie in the book, who's a woman who's lost her partner and she's she's in this world where it's she's grief. What is the point of life? Almost is what we're experiencing
in the book. And then we see her fall in love with somebody. I won't spoil all of it, but that person is tied through her through grief. I'd love to know how that became a theme for a romance novel. You wouldn't think that death and grief would be something that you'd want to put in a book about love. It's snuck in, you know. Initially I was like, this is going to be a fluffy book. It's just going to be messy, hot girl summer. And then I met the character and she was like, I have depths that
you can only dream of. And when I started writing it, it felt it felt fitting because I think there's so much grief in the world we're living in now. There's so much of it, and so many people are trying to figure out this question of how do I keep living throughout it? In some ways it feels sacrilegious almost, it feels wrong. It feels like Survivors gives su Like there's so many people who are suffering and you're here having a hot girl summer, and how do you balance
all of that? Um So in the book, I wanted to write about this woman who's exploring that and figuring it out, because at some point we do have to find a way to live. And so she's like chasing life. She's chasing joy and she's chasing happiness, and she's making a lot of messy choices along the way. But I think that's that's part and parcel of it, you know,
with grief, the world doesn't stop. And that's something I wrote about, like in my memoir It's it seems wrong the way that one world can stop when you lose someone and the rest of the world just keeps going like it doesn't It doesn't matter that your world just stopped, and at some point you have to figure out how to blend back into it. Yeah, how you get back
into the highway of life that's just moving along. The main character in the book is also an artist, and I feel like that was inspired a little bit by by your world, because I know you are. I mean, an artist almost doesn't describe it because you you you like everything. You know, it's video arts and it's pictures, and it's it's it's it's every But her style of art is very particular because she works with you know, and I've seen some of the images. It's it's blood,
you know, which feels very morbid. I wanted to know how you got into art that involves like portraits of people with there's a lot of blood in the image, but it's not sad somehow, what what what is the message you're trying to convey and what connected you to that oft form. You know, for me, it's always something spiritual.
Like one of the things I tried to do, and that was why I also wrote the memoir to where I wrote it is to figure out how to move spirit first in a world that's always asking you to translate it into something that's more legible to you know, the mainstream or to the lay person. And I find that with blood, there's something so visceral about it where you can't you can't mask it. You look at it and it's exactly what it appears to be. It's jarring in that sense, and it's such a big part of rituals,
especially for indigenous like African faith traditions. It's such a big part of rituals. So with my work, a lot of times what I'm doing is I'm career eating these self portraits. I'm recreating rituals. I'm trying to find a way to like connect back to all these ways of being like before we were colonized and you know, our
whole cultures were stripped from right. It really is an interesting journey and it's it's fun to see you playing with that in the book and the journey that she's on and you know, going into the Caribbean, and I'll tell you all about you guys are just gonna have to read. But I don't want to tell you the the book because I see you guys now like tell us more, Tre, I'm not gonna tell you anymore. Thank you for joining
me on the show. Congratulations on yet another critically acclaimed book, and I hope to see you again on the show. Thank you, thank you so much. Thanks us. You made a full of death with your vieutis of oogal Now and the center on will be available in paperback on June seven. We're gonna say a quick preaco be right back after this. Thank yous all. But that's our shopic to It's fun before we go. Before we go, please
consider donating to Every Town for Gun Safety. There are movements of parents, students, survivors, educator as, gun owners, and concerned citizens who are fighting to end gun violence and build safer communities. Research shows that common sense public safety policies can reduce gun violence and save lives. Every Town works with local, federal, and state governments to enact and implement these policies, So if you can, please donate and
help them at the link below until tomorrow. Stay safe out there, and remember, if you're desperate to have grandkids, don't sue your children. Just go to a playground and take one. There's hundreds day. What's the Daily Show weeknights at eleven ten Central on Comedy Central. In stream full episodes anytime on Paramount Plus. This has been a Comedy Central podcast