Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season to seventy four, episode two of The Daily Like Guys Stay production of I Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into America's shared consciousness. It's Tuesday, February seventh, twenty three. My name is Jack O'Brien, A K A p o U M P er Man p o U M P er Man p l U m P earth Man. Hey, you look at my legs. You might like them because
they're such big, strong legs. That is courtesy of Lex Louvie Little Finally m E T H O D Man reference there because that that was performed at the Grammys a couple of nights ago, of course, modified to talk about my plump, juicy legs, the the thing that I most enjoyed dragging about these days. You've got great legs, thanks man. That means a lot. Hey, bro, those legs are his legs are sick. Wow. The name plumpers can't was created by Blake Wexler. Hell, He's gonna burn in
hell for having created that way. That well that that boys, you're hearing very special guest co host one of the EPs on this very network, King of sting that bitch on Twitch. It's DJ Daniel good Man. What is up zeitgang? How is everybody dealing? It's your boy, d J Daniel a k A. Mr Steel your Ariel. We are back in the building. We're here to have some fun, do a little do a little podcasting. Jack. How you doing? I'm doing all right. I'm a little steal your Ariel.
It's the Rocket League thing. Sure, sure all the heads will know. Yeah, of course the heads will know. That's what we're here for. Here for the heads. Well, Daniel, we are thrilled to be joined once again by one of the funniest writers and comedians out here doing it. You've seen her on TV stages across America. She's written for Netflix's History of Swear Words, a local periodical called The New York Or have you heard of it. She's at the point in her life when she's deeply calmed
by miniatures. Welcome back to the show, The hilarious, the talented Maggie Man. Cheer for myself as exactly. That's right, that's what I Instead of having self esteem, I like to just say the word sometimes self esteem and figure some sometime it might catch on. But how are you doing, Maggie. You do have miniatures behind you, so does that mean you're I'm pretty good. I'm doing all right. Yeah. This is a just like the best place in the house to record. So it's nice to be able to see
the reflection of any house behind me. Yeah, it's a great many house. Thank you. Any any new developments in the world of the miniatures that are happening in your in your household? Um, let's see, this house is pretty much done. So I'm starting up a cafe, my Yeah, my dolls are going to have a cafe pretty soon. Amazing.
And I'm thinking about there's like a lot of not custom but like newer I guess custom kind of dolls coming out, like the inspiring women and stuff, and I'm kind of thinking of getting them and unboxing them and putting them into the new things, and which is not what you're supposed to be doing. Those are like stuff that you put in a little case, yeah, just in case you know, something goes awry and you need to
sell it. But right next to your beanie babies. Yeah, I'm just gonna take them out and you know, spread of loose with all the dolls. Yeah, I love it. There you go. Is all the ministry stuff handcrafted or how how much of that is made versus acquired? So see the dolls and the stuff that comes with them is all made. And I also got like super into these mini brands that are the you know, tiny little brand name things. But there's a lot of stuff that
I make on my own. Like I don't know if you can see the bathroom down here, that is so cool. The toilet back there is a glade plug in that I repurpose. Amazing. That is really cool. I love that it looks like a fancy toilet. Oh. Also, a glade plug in toilet would probably be a successful product. Yeah that sounds huge. Electrocute a couple of people, but otherwise I feel like that would work really well. Yeah, Like, don't you want to toilet the smellst like mountain breeze
or whatever. Yes, yes, I do. All right, Maggie, We're gonna get to know you a little bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a couple of things we're talking about. We're gonna talk about police in competence and true crime. We're going to talk about the Supreme Court incompetence and being just too old for very basic security precautions. They're like, we don't know what
the heck happened with all these document leaks. We just leave our sensitive documents in a bag in the hallway for real. That's like it's called a burn bag. And like some of them actually do the thing and like shread the stuff in the burn bag, and some of them just leave it in the hallway because they're old, old people who just they're not built for it. That we we're gonna talk about. Might we might talk about Hogwarts legacy or he might have heard us talk about
that yesterday on the trending episode. Oh did you already? Oh dang, oh man you would? Oh? Daniel cut that We time travel, sir, We time travel on this show. We record the trending after the thing. Justin please cut that embarrassing miss by me? What are you talking about? So foolish? It stays? Super producer Justin has Dart decreed that it stays, and I'm gonna second that. Please tweet
at me. I'm embarrassed. And c is changing their policy to charge more for seats that aren't shitty, which is cool, Yeah, awesome, well, we'll talk about that plenty more. But first, Maggie, we do like to ask Eric guests, what is something from your search history other than the inspiring women dolls, which I feel like I already talked about. I was searching for work from home gigs. I'm looking for another side gig, and I would like to do that from home. There
you go. I don't want to be leaving my house putting on pants, you know nothing. I just want to be home. I'll take care of whatever data entry or whatnot you'll need to do and close my laptop and be done with it at the end of the day. That my life could use that kind of structure, you know. I love that for you, and I love that for the inspiring women dolls as well. I'm going to take them out of their boxes just to be working data and free jobs. That's right. What are inspiring women dolls
like part of a brand? Like is it Barbie? Is it an American? It's Mattel And so they have like a Bessie Coleman, who is the first black woman to have a pilot license fly plane, then Madam C. J. Walker, who was the first black woman millionaire, nice ruining all of our edges, but she she got that money, So I'm not mad at of my edges will never be the same, but I'm not mad out of for it. What is something you think is overrated? Uh? Honestly, restaurants? Okay,
I never left. I never went back after the pandemic because I'm naturally a germ poe and I never felt really comfortable about, you know, people just handling my food. I've worked in restaurants, I've seen I didn't seeing some ship right, And I worked at a restaurant recently and just stuff that I washed when I cook, they weren't washing when they cooked. So I was just like, I don't understand why. And I mean, I'm a good cook. I'm not gonna sit here and you know glad y'all
say that I'm not. I'm a good cook. So I just don't like to. I I just don't want to be out there subjecting myself to you know, who knows what y'all have out here that you didn't wash off and that you didn't clean, and you know, to have the meal not be as good as I know I could probably do at home. Yeah, that's not everyone. Wolves gang Cock probably rock my ship, but I mean the rest of y'all. P g I Friday, don't try it with me. Yeah, I will say. I went to a
will not name the spice. I'm not trying to drag them, but I wouldn't got k barbecue at a point that felt safe during the pandemic, and I just got a glimpse into the kitchen and where I was like, that doesn't look right. I'm not okay with this. Yeah, and me things that it has something to do with a little Pando slide, if you will. Yeah, just being understaffed the yeah, yeah, just people trying to like make do with way less or trying to undersell or or rather
like under pay their their overworked staff. It's just like this is too much. I don't vibe with us at all. When I gets to that point when it's like, oh well it's good enough, that's that's when I'm out, because like good enough is not you know good. I feel the only person I've talked to who like worked at a restaurant and just got a whole new appreciation for how good restaurant food is. Like I loved the restaurants I eta. I was like, you give me more of
these fries. They are so good. I think it was also I like worked at a time when I was like young and very hungry all the time, and so I was just like working around this food that looked delicious and just like wanting to eat it off of the customers plates the entire times around. It was just so I just came worked at an Italian restaurant in Kentucky, so like, this is not gonna be lixing in Kentucky,
this is not gonna be your finest dining establishment. I came away from that ship like I started as a dishwasher, I was a bus boy. I came away from that just being like, man, Italian food is so fucking good. Like that was my That was my takeaway. Maybe I wasn't paying close enough attention or just don't have a proper appreciation for how hard germs are going to kill me one day. But you're like, oh, man, can I have a bide of that lasagn rito? Yeah? That looks
good wrapped. I didn't know. WEDN, Kentucky has an interesting relationship to Italian food because they also have like the only fast food Italian restaurant that I'm aware, like drive through Italian restaurants called Frizzoli's. Yeah, they have like baked z D. Like the pasta is always through, Yeah, drive through baked z D, drive from pizza. Like it's just treated as yet another fast food establishment down there. It's
just another thing they could do. Yeah, yeah, that's that's sitting in the rack for like thirteen hours all day, just sitting under a heat land Like, yeah, you want the big z D. It's actually good. I mean it's not. It's not good, but it's better than you would expect. I think wildly low expectations for my food, you know. I like, I like to say, you have a wide palette. How about that wide talent that goes up and down the ladder of quality. I think that's a good way
to be. I support that as a matter of fact, Jack, I'm turning the story around. Good for you until you try to there we go. I'm with that. I'm with that. And when I lived there in the nineties there there was like a competitor fast food Italian chain, So I assume this was like something that was happening nationwide. But everyone else is like, you know, what, what the are you talking about? No one's gonna like eat pasta out
of a drive through. That's so so strange. Hey, hey, let they who has not eaten taco about cast the first exactly? Okay, it's all none of it's convenient. Come on, come on, we've all been there. It was like your reader, that's really funny. That genius. Honestly, I'm worried that that Instagram is going to hear that and be like, you know, we need to incept that into some Italian restaurants. Brain. Some pizza yellow just woke up in a hot sweat? Did you guess with stuffed shells? Ever as a kid
the pasta shells? Sure? Yeah, I made him. I made him like a month ago. Okay, oh nice? Yeah, what were we stuffed with? What we're talking about with, Let's see, was a seafood situation so I could crab and shrimp beautiful? Okay, yeah, beautiful, it's always could never never. I think I was caught just having a sense memory of having stuffed shells from Frizzoli's and being like, this is not good. I think they think they were wise enough to not add, to not take the shell side of it to a seafood
component of what is being stuffed in there. They were just like ricotta, friend will find in these, No they don't. You can't do that the next day, you know, no, absolutely not. I've done that stuff shells with with just like ricotta and parmesan sitting in a whole bed of tomato sauce and it's like you eat them once and you're like that was way too much cheese. And then they sit in the freezer for like a month and you're like, you know what, I'm never going to eat
these again. Okay, they might as was too much sauce too. It's just like, yeah, the way the way I've seen them prepared, it's just in a vat of sauce that you need some free breadsticks, which Frizzoli's will give you. So stop that. Shut up just saying Meg, what if something you think is underrated? Underrated? I think is venmoing your black friends and cohorts on black events, on holidays and celebrations. That ship is lit and it's tight, and it never gets old, never gets sold. It always getting
a Venmo. It's like, sorry for my ancestors, I'd never get tired of that. Not enough. It's always fun, it's always good. I remember once was it Black History Month or was it Juneteenth? It was something and I like jokingly was like, I will absolve you from your white guilt for today, and by people sent me Venmo's and I was just like, okay, my ch ow, you're one of the good ones. And it was you know, I got some the next day too, and I wasn't like this is over. I was like, no, this is tight.
Just happened. You know. Black History months should be the time that you should be Venmo and your black friends out of nowhere because who doesn't like to get a Venmo out of nowhere? But you on a subscription service where you can venmo me daily, daily subscription. Follow your heart, I mean all your heart. Get the patre going support and support should be constant. Let's be real. Month, it's
not quite exactly the white guilt patriot. I know you felt insolved last month, but this is what have you done this? Thank you? Thank you? All right, Maggie Mays Venmo will be in the foot notes prominently displayed top foot top. All right, we're gonna take a quick break and we'll be back to talk about some news. And
we're back. And so I had a connection. I was reading about police in Ohio shooting and killing a twenty year old who was cleaning his dead grandmother's apartment out and a neighbor like saw him and his parents in the grandma's apartment and called the cops, which don't do that. What do you think you're preventing? The police then claimed that this kid ran from them or this man ran from them, started using as minivan as a weapon. They released the body cam video on Friday, because that's the
day they dropped incriminating video. Now, I guess, but now they're like saying, we did nothing wrong. Like the video is like very shaky and dark and it's impossible to tell what's happening. But that's the only kind of video that cause for It's like, we will release the video. It's like you can't even see anything, So congrats on doing your job, I suppose. But police are like under a national spotlight and just can't stop shooting people to
death for no good reason. And I don't know if it's because the national spotlight is not critical enough or it felt like the national media coverage of Tyree Nichols was like, all right, well they've been arrested, so we're good here and not, you know, the criminal justice system is a fucking crime against humanity and needs to be
dismantled immediately. But so in that I heard an ad for a true crime podcast that it was just quote after quote of victim family members being like, they told us she'd be home and not to worry about it. The police completely dropped this lead. The police forgot to interrogate the most important witness. And it occurred to me,
like that is all that true crime really is. Like I've heard a lot of people speculate about why true crime, I'm is suddenly very popular, and I never really connected it to the rising awareness of just wide ranging police incompetence, just like deep and thorough and wide ranging police in competence.
Like Serial Is the story of the police completely fucking up that investigation up and Vanished was a massive hit true crime podcast, and it's the story of like the police sucking up that investigation to degree that I suspected they were involved in the killing and covering something up, like after the first season, and then like because there was pressure put on them to solve the crime because they were kind of implicated, they solved it, and it
was just like something I'm related. But that's how incompetent they were, is that they appeared to be like hiding something, And I just I wonder if that is why true crime is seeing this massive surgeon popularity at this time when we're also starting to get just more and more or evidence that the police tend the police tend to fall between completely incompetent, like we've talked about last week, how they solve two percent of violent crimes that fall
to them and themselves racist and like violent predators, and so like true crime just tells stories that are more accurate two lived experience, which is that I don't know, I think movies and TV shows really still have this idea of a safety net and that like you have to outsmart the police. Like the standard is the police are going to like catch the criminal or investigate it, and it's just not it's not the case, and it doesn't like it probably resonates with people less and less
as we get just more and more evidence. M Well, I feel like we live in a heavily d i y culture, right and seeing that these crimes are not getting solved, and then knowing that the people who we have tasked to solve these crimes they're not doing it, or that their wholesale fucking up or whatnot. That leaves a whole new opportunity for people to go d I y their own crime, which is pretty much sereal, like you put whatever crime you want on your Pinterest, like
I solve this. Like if the police can't do it, and this person with a podcast can do it, what's to stop you know, Amy and miss Skogan from saying, well, I could do that too, Like anybody who watches like What's going on or watches what's unfolding, you know, our authorities are nept and you know, I've got a microphone and internet connection, Like anyone feels like they can solve
a crime, right truly. And I think there's also like the belief that, like, and anyone can be the victim of a crime because like I don't know, crime and becoming a victim is just a reality. And it's like it's almost I feel when I listen to a true crime thing, it's like more, Oh, the world really is you versus the criminal, because the police are not uneffective like they're they're certainly a wild card that can be introduced,
but they're not actually doing an effective job. Of solving the crime, they're just solving it if attention gets drawn
to it. That's a that's a really frustrating part about the about the how much more technology and how much more money we put into policing and just like honestly like warfare and surveillance and all of that in general, is that like I would not hope, but would think that we'd be more in a minority minority report side of things at this point, where like we're not predicting crimes, but the fact that we need to so desperately chase people down and inflict violence on them when you can
probably and again not really not really like an advertisement for police, but the fact that you can probably find people after the fact and approach them in a more like safe and structured manner, And like, you know, we're so surveilled that like, why do we have to resort to the only the most violent ways to apprehend quote unquote criminals when what is happening could just be like looked at maybe twelve hours later and then figured out and been like, oh, maybe we didn't need to actually
like chase this person down with a car and like cause a ten car pile up because we were on like a police chase or something like that. Like it is just so surprising that we have not thought to work smarter and simply or like shoot more people. That's
the that's the result of this. Yeah, I don't know, it's I feel like I would not be surprised if there was some agreement between local news, police and like advertisers that like you have to get into one chase that like last two hours every every couple of months in Los Angeles, because that is like still a stop
everything everybody turns on the TV much what's happening. I think that falls into the category of like would would be shocked but not surprised, Like the fact that the fact that you see cops out there looking for speeding tickets starting on like the twenty every month. Like everything has a quota. There has to be x amount of thing. And it used to be because you know, we need money for a certain thing, or it's still that, but it's just now it's like, well, that quota also applies
to how much news coverage certain things get. If we're not covering the police enough, then the public don't think blah blah blah blah blah and it's like this is deeply sad and deeply disturbing, but not surprising. But it's also in those situations where like during the whole to fund the police thing, we had so many different ideas of who could take their play, like don't like call in mental health people, calling these people, call these people
instead of the police. So those like high speed chases and stuff like who are you going to call for that? Right, that's a good question. So that's the kind of thing that you have to show to show that the police are necessary, because who's gonna You're gonna call a mental health professional into start yelling stuff over a bull Horn's
not gonna work. So there's a couple cities, yeah, I believe Dayton, Ohio another place where I lived, and uh Milwaukee, Wisconsin have both experiment with just not chasing, just not getting into police chases because people kept getting hit by
police cars. And just like you said, like, yeah, we're just trusting that they'll be able to track the person down later or that it's not worth it too, because when you engaged in a police chase, like you're putting so many people's lives at risk, like so much, so much so, all right, the Supreme Court. There's a there's a mystery that it's like, I don't know, an investigation that's happening into the leak of the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade overturning, which is the one thing about that decision
that no one gives a funk about. That I know that I can't imagine anyone giving a funk about. But Supreme Court martial, which is Supreme Court Martial is like a great NBA nickname somebody needs to come up with. But it's also an official name, an official title that someone named Gayl Curly has and Supreme Court Martial. Gayl Curly came up empty and couldn't figure out how the draft opinion leaked, which made people be like wait, wait,
why why? How? How how could you like these are super locked down documents, like how would you not super how would you not know who leaked it? Like how could you not chase it down? And I think part of me has the conspiracy theory that you know it it was one of the conservative justices leaking it in order to you know, rip the band aid off and get people, give people, and I idea that it was coming,
which I think it did. End up rather than being like one giant day of like fury where everything was like culminating and it came at came as a surprised. There was this day where it was like this might probably definitely is going to happen, but it was like deferred. So I do think, I don't know. So one theory would be that they're just not doing a good job of chasing it down because the white conservative men and women who you know do that job, get away with
whatever the funk they want to. But they're also saying that the information, like the security around documents and just everything at the Supreme Court is about what you would expect it to be if you just took a selection of a bunch of other like sixty to eighty year olds, and we're like, here, keep keep close lock on these, and like, you know, I guarantee at least one Supreme Court justice has all their passwords written on a little index cards like that's taped to the side of their
desktop computer in their office. You know. Yeah, but a number of Supreme Court justices just use personal email accounts for sensitive transmissions instead of secure servers because they're old as hell and like that. It was literally described as slow to adopt new technology. I'll tell you what happened.
One of these Supreme Court justices called their grandkid or something because they got locked out of something and they had all of that information up on their computer and they were like, what ro Versus Waite is gonna what do you read it? Yeah? Exactly, Yeah, that is to think dumb mistake on someone's part. And then someone saw it and someone was like, I'll I'll leak this. I'll
leaking good. Yeah, we'll leak it real good. I think this is more and more a reason why there needs to be an each cap on all political jobs, because if you don't know how to work technology at this point, you are not to be trusted with the nation's secrets or major important decisions or any of that. Ship. If you can't remember or no way to remember your email password you got, you gotta go. That's no good. That's no good anymore. We can't have that. We simply cannot
have that. Just putting just putting something in the trash folder on your laptop isn't going to cut it. Grandpa, you have to empty recycled bin, right, how it's actually gone? Well, let's in there. No, no, it's not. I don't believe it recycling. You need to take it out of your here, don't. I've been looking for the trash band. So the justices use these things called burn bags, which contains sensitive documents that are supposed to be destroyed, but their use of
that has no standard protocol. So some of them make sure that they're taken away to be shredded, while others just leave them lying open in a hallway for anyone to take. Not just a bag of sensitive documents that are like labeled sensitive, like you don't put them in the burn bag in lane kiss there unless they're sensitive, and they just put them in the whole life. That's how every burn book got caught in junior high. Someone
didn't wait to hand it off to someone. They just put this little spiral notebook that said burn book right on the front right, and someone came along and just confiscated it. Do we not see mean girls? Did not see mean girls? Come on, learn from our media. Please. That's too old, too old to see it. I don't know about the Lindsay Low classic. Thank you, three generations too old to have seen it. You're right, you're right,
they know nothing, but Russian Wieners come on. They also like their VPN access that allows them to print documents from any computer and then don't know what that is to track copies, So like they there's just no, it's not a question of like how did this one thing leak? It's like how is everything not leaking? Basically what what
this report revealed? It's it's shocking. Also, why why do they have sensitive I think all their stuff needs to leak, Like the Supreme Court, like what, I want to know what you'll do it in the day today because honestly,
I don't know what my taxes are going to. It really feels like every Supreme Court interaction is just like some sort of hearing about something that we see a five minute clip of on c Span like the next day, and it's like, so you guys meet for five minutes once a month, and like that's the whole job, because that's what it feels like, that's what it sounds like.
I'm very with you on that one. Meg. Yeah, And the fact that they're even like doing this investigation is so wild that they're just like, well, how did they find out what we're doing in our important meetings? It's like that's weird. The thing that you're doing. Yeah, the thing that you're doing that is going to affect the health care and ability to live of half of the population. You're you're gonna be mad, You're you're gonna go with
the who told you that response? How dare you? How dare you walk through my privacy like that file that under file that under need to know frankly, yeah, exactly. All right, let's take a quick break. We'll be right back, and we're back. And so movies are back or they're not, depending on like which article that you're you're reading. But AMC Theaters is on the verge of becoming a monopoly there.
You know, they're by they're using their big year where like everybody else went out of business and they were the only theater that had the scale to really stay in business and do well. They're using that to possibly by like arc Light Cinemas if they haven't done that already, I think they're planning to, and like that. There's just not Cineplex, I think is the other one that is
on its way out. So there they just have massive scale now, and that means what we've learned from other things like Ticketmaster when when a company becomes a monopoly, they stopped giving a ship about what their consumers want, and that means policies like this one we just learned about. MC theaters just announced that there will be charging more
money for seats that don't suck. This is such bullshit. Yeah, well, Nicole Kimman doesn't monel out for free, Okay, she's yeah, that's and where else are you gonna get to see a movie except for any other movie theater. There's like nothing they do that's better other than I guess the m C like Guests or the m C Monthly Past. Some people really ride for the Nicole Kidman thing. We're all pretending to enjoy it, like ironically, but it's not good.
And yeah, but it's also three minutes at the beginning of a movie. It's not all of a sudden like, well, I go to AMC theaters to see this thing that I've watched on YouTube ten times already and it has been parodied on SNL. I'm not going for that. That's just like a little cherry on top for my getting to go. Yes, Nicole, thank you, I'm okay. If you have a phone, if you have a full volume phone conversation during that part of the movie. You just wanna I think we can start being rude to m C
and Nicole Kidman. It's it's the Nicole Kidman. It's my favorite. Okay, but I'll see you after the movie, right, Okay, Okay, I gotta don't if it's bootleg movies, just of that part. Yeah, that's what I'm downloading on the pirate bay. They're rolling out. The program they're rolling out is called site Line. They're doing it in New York, Chicago, and Kansas City. It's so fucking bullshit. It feels like the like the three cities that existed in like the eighteen hundreds. Those really
the three America's hot, Damn Kansas City. I'm going to Kansas City but to eat a t bone steak. But it will be expanded to all domestic MC locations by the end of the year, and it's gonna have so we're we're talking three different seat pricing choices only after four pm and not on Tuesdays, So don't worry, all
you Tuesday movie movie goers. No no word on how the full moon affects things, but standard site Line the seats that are the most common in auditorium and value siteline basically the front row, like the ones that are like you, you can't watch it, you can't really watch the movie without thinking about what you're doing and be like, I think his jaw just looks really big because that part of the screen is so much closer to me
than the top. And but then there's preferred site line, which means seats in the middle where you can see
everything almost like you're sitting at home watching it on TV. Well, the thing that they're trying to compete with, Jackie said the magic word also in my humble opinion, like there is a price that you pay comfort wise by choosing a seat with a better site line, because movies these days sometimes it's packed theater and wherever you're sitting is like you're sitting next to somebody, but you are choosing to be close to another person who may or may
not respect your personal space, may or may not be very noisily chewing on something or like unwrapping their bag for five minutes in the middle of us watching Avatar. Person who sat next to me during Avatar. But like, you are paying a price by being in one of those better site line seats any way. So the fact that you used to pay more to maybe have less comfort when you're watching the movie just because supposedly your siteline is going to be better to a huge thirty
ft screen is bunkers. To me, that is complete ludus ludicrous, Ludacy's ludicrous anyway, ludicrosity, ludicrosity, thank you, thank you. The wild part to me is that they're just openly admitting some of these seats are gonna sucky. We are charging you fourteen dollars for a seat that might suck asked. That's and honestly, if it doesn't take off, and if people are like, na, we're not gonna this and they can't sell out this, they're gonna make those seats suck more. Yeah.
The the fact that they've named the program site line, which is like the thing that that just means like I have a unobstructed line of sight, like the most basic thing that you could ask for in any you know, consuming of an event or a piece of media us line And they're like, yeah, that's we're taking it real bare bones here. We will give you a line of sight maybe if you if you pay maybe. Yeah. Ridiculous, Yeah,
preferred site line the ship. All of a sudden, you're gonna be like, why does every single seat in the front row now also have a pole in front of it? Exactly? Why? Why was this necessary? Why don't have to look around already? Shitty seat that y'all sold me exactly the sombrero row and then discounted behind the sobrero row. Yeah, that's really funny. Maggie as always such a pleasure having you on the dailies, like guyst where can people find you? Follow you all
that good stuff. I'm on all the socials under Maggie May haa ha, but may has spelled m a y e Yeah. Yeah. And is there a tweet work of media that have been enjoying um. I was reminded of this in a tweet Jenna Friedman's show Soft Focus. Someone posted a a tweet where she just and she does this to every idiot on her page. She just will barbecue them with their own words, and like it's just a big You know, some people out there are scared
they don't even know what they're scared of. And some people are out there are hateful and scared, and they're not even using logic as their Northern Star. They're just out there spread and all kind of hand so she just like, very calmly and very logically, you know, unwraps it for them that they're kind of also the problem and their heads just explode. It's it's the best, right, soft focus, Jennifer Focus. There we go, great, DJ Danie Goodman. Where to find you? Is there a work of media
you've been enjoying? Always? Baby? Um, My name is DJ Daniel. You can find me on Twitter, Instagram, Twitch, TikTok, regrettably at DJ Underscore Daniel d a n L. Look, we gotta make this micro content somehow and put it out so Lord knows. I will be posting it on the Chinese spyware that is TikTok for everybody to view one time and then never comment on or interact with further. And I do have a piece of content that I like from podcast Legend Danishwartz. Chris Martin. Is it the
same one? The same one? Yeah? It is a picture of Chris Martin from the Granny Grammys, and it says Chris Martin looks like a toddler named writer at a preschool that cost fifty dollars a year and it's him. He's wearing a sweater with a very looks just like a very really it's a child's drawing of the planet Earth of Moon, and he's wearing just way too big of a beanie for his enlarged you know baby cranium that is just way too big and um, he just
looks like a very small, sweet little child. Yes, who, yeah, who has delicate sensibilities. Delicate goes to the delicate baby's kid because he goes to the best school school where they I think like Waldorf School. The toys like aren't allowed to have colors. Have you there's one of the schools where the toys are wooden and not allowed to have colors. A year to work, Yeah, exactly. Yeah. The
dirt in our fields, that's the yeah horrible. Julia Claire at oh Julia Tweets tweeted an image that I'm pretty sure is a real meme from Turning Point USA, and it's an angry you know gen z millennial slash you know young man who's making a face like he smelled something bad or something that worries mad and and not a great actor, and he's saying, my rent went up again. We need to raise taxes on those greedy capitalist landlords.
And then there's a pretty girl down in the second half of the meme and she's saying, maybe if you let them keep more of their money, they could afford to let you keep more of yours, and Julia clar Folks I am laughing. Just a very interesting point of view, perspective on how capitalism works, that you just need to let the rich people keep more of their money that will make them less greedy and more nice to you.
A real person tweet that, yeah, yeah. Turning Point USA is like a it's a movement that's like funded by the Cokes, Like they to this kid, Charlie Kirk out of obscurity and we're like, here is a young person who seems to actually like believe conservative things. We will fund his career to the tune of like millions of dollars a year. And shore do they do a work from home option? You really might want to look at it.
But the Turning Point USA is like there his institution where it's like we mimify all the sick like edge lord right wing takes that other people aren't willing to do, and yeah, it's bad. It's just bad. World. It's very bad. Yeah, I'm gonna go rage. Look this up Turning Point USA. Yeah, all those like Daily Wire and like all those, all
those right wing places are funded by billionaires. Like they they are not in and of themselves profitable, and they're not funded by people who are like one day they will be profitable. They're funded by people for the same reasons that like the government and Dictatorship's fun propaganda because they want to get the content of those ideas out there, and there's no other way for them to do it
other than to create propaganda on their own behalf. Anyways, you can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page and a website, Daily zeitgeist dot com, where we post our episodes and our footnotes. We link off the information that we talked about in today's episode, as well as well as Maggie's Venmo as well as a song that we think you might enjoy. Uh. Superproducer Daniel,
do you have a storm that you would like to recommend? Uh? Yeah, I could pop one off real fast. So there is an artist named John Casey who I've been digging a whole lot. You just in an edit of a song called Yum by another artist named Handy. This on Spotify wherever you listen to music, search of Yum. Why you m the John Casey Edit John Casey spelled j O N S face c A s e y. John Casey.
Absolutely incredible artist, fantastic beats. It's also one of those songs that it's It's like the build up sounds heavier than it is, but then you get to the chorus, the drop, whatever you want to call it, and you are just grooving. So I hope you enjoyed Yum, the John Casey at it. I love their brands, Yum brands, the Yeah, some of our greatest you know, okay, if Ce Pizza Hut, Taco Belt. The habit. I didn't know that they don't have the habit, but now they Hamburger habit.
That changes everything. We're actually gonna have to re record this episode that wasn't ready for that one. Yeah, alright, Well, The Daily Zey guys the production by Heart Radio. For more podcast for my heart Radio, visit the i Heart Radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to your favorite shows, that it is going to do it for us this morning, back this afternoon to tell you what is trending, and we will talk to y'all then By M M M