Oh. That's boring you. I'm just a little bored here. Hello. Happy Friday. And welcome to Unrelenting number 58 January 27, 2023. I am Darren O'Neil, the author of Truly Above the Montreal Never. Truly I was in Montreal. What do right. I mean we're moving you from Minneapolis to Jeff. We're sending you over a border. It was the safest border we could think of. Hmm. What is going on this morning? We hear there is breaking news. And what if whatever you were doing where you were forgetting?
Oh, yeah, really breaking hands. It's like the fourth or fifth day of it, but it's the whole Eliza blue. Who is Eliza Bliss? The slow motion deconstruction happening. So Eliza Blue up until a week ago, was making the rounds on a lot of the YouTube talk shows as a trafficking advocate, she claims the responsibility for getting trafficking off of YouTube. She's a friend of Elon Musk's apparently, and she's this like, How do I describe her?
She's a a 40 year old chick that has an Annie Lennox haircut. That would a haircut. With blue dyed hair. Okay. Not attractive at all, then. No, but but, you know, her whole story is sort of not clear. But she claims that she was trafficked when she was younger and that she's been working in advocating for people involved in sex trafficking for, I don't know, ten years, whatever. But I definitely got a weird vibe from her, like something to that right right there.
And it's very typical for a lot of these folks to not want to talk about any details like traffic. I can't really talk about it. Right, Because this is how when the details come out, that's when you get caught telling a yarn. Mm hmm. That's usually the way it is, because people and even if they think they're really good liars, it's hard to remember the stories you've told. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. And there's a guy USA soccer vibe says Net, and it's like a megan Rapinoe kind of thing.
The short hair doesn't work. It really. And it doesn't work on most. She look it up, just type in laser blue. She's very popular in the internet right now, so you'll get photos right away. I don't want to do that. Yeah, well, so, uh, there's a guy on Twitter that. There's a get. A whole series. Yeah, they did a whole series of posts, uh, kind of disproving her past.
If the were and finding all kinds of images and videos and whatnot on the Internet about her basically showing that she was an opportunist damn girl and was kind of a stalker for a couple of bands. Ooh, nice. And all kinds of other things. I mean, none of this has any real importance at all. It's just it's it's Internet drama. But what happened is that it seemed like several people that I watched ended up getting banned off Twitter by talking about her. Half were calling her out on the crap.
Uh huh. Uh huh. Well, this is what goes on in the world now is that if you tell the truth, y'all going to get banned. Yeah, you will get banned. And Britney venting through. I've posted on Jenna Social a few times who is a really interesting, fun troll. She's done some really fun throwing stuff. She was the first one that kind of of the bigger YouTubers that picked up on this from Twitter and then posted a link there, a photo I guess from a video this this chick was in and then got banned.
And then Jeremy from the quartering who everybody I think probably knows did that a lot of in support of Britney saying why did Britney get banned for this and then he got banned off Twitter and of course now there's this whole conspiracy theory about how she's fucking Elon Musk right now. And that's why, like anybody that doesn't like her just gets an automatic ban from Twitter and there's all kinds of drama stuff happening.
Well, the original guy that sprang this story, that kind of put the Twitter thread together, somebody I know. So I actually had him answer Jean speaks yesterday. Oh, is you're going to get canceled now from everything. And anything I mean. I don't let me hit disconnect now will do well to take you right off the show. Yes you can they. Live deplatformed right here. So that up cesari up I posted already so if you wanna hear the latest surging speaks. I don't. Interviewing defend Joe I. Don't.
Um yeah you know it's interesting that my co-host was at least a little supportive but. I think I suggest everybody else go listen. Um. But I'm not sure that viewership. I know I want to break some news here. People on the Internet lie. You know, that's not a proven fact. Why is that still a surprise to people? Mm hmm. Mm hmm. I don't get it. Well, she's. No, I mean, I mean, it's one thing to just post shit and lie, right? But it's another thing to go on multiple shows. Oh, yeah. Filmcast.
Including it won't be mad or shows. That's it. If you climb the ladder, you get the audience. But we've had many stories of how many. It seems like there have been a bunch of white people who were claiming to be black over the last few years. One that Rachel Doe's all right. Would running that now something like the NC or or. ACP chapter out in Washington state. You know claiming to be something that they're not and it's. Yeah that was 15 years ago but yeah.
Well people do have claim I mean this goes even further back when I was. Working on this. Doing well there's the Pocahontas, but it goes down the line too. There was Internet drama, 20 years, whatever it was ago when I was running the fan club for the Country Artist and somebody on the message. Board with. Claimed that they had cancer and then that they had died. Yeah, and I'm like watching the iPads test that was like, Oh, this was our friend and them.
Like, I think I put it together that it was the same person. I think people are sick, man. They go out there and they want to play the part. They want either sympathy and attention, which is I think probably sounds a lot like this woman wants a lot of attention going out there. And it seems like she's generally been a little psycho ish, maybe some radical diagnosis. We don't do that here, but there is the tendencies that can be observed by anyone that are a little off or a lot off, you say.
But what is a lot off now? Because she's from your neck of the woods. She's a Chicago wind. Well, then they're definitely off. There's a lot of people off in this area. Mm hmm. My wife works at the village hall here now, I think I mentioned that. Yeah, She's like, first thing the other day, there's a phone call from a woman that's like, how can you. How can you let Walgreens and CVS keep doing business now that they're abortion centers? It's like, wait, because.
Because they have a pharmacy, I guess, and they're providing. Right. Whatever drugs. It's like, Well, but then that would be all pharmacies, right? I mean, there are other pharmacies in town. Well, but. People are. Weird. I don't think there's any any I mean, maybe there are, but I don't believe there's any state laws against the morning after pills.
No. Which is exactly the response this woman got was they are operating under the law of the land and that's why they're still allowed to do business here. But people are wack. Oh, I just got a breaking news alert. Another Lucky Charms unveils new Ukrainian flag marshmallows in their cereal. You see, there's been a lot of this stuff floating around and most of it is lies. But that sounds like it could be true. I would say most of it is true, but it sounds like it could be life.
Yes, It's a very weird world we live in. And now I don't like getting text messages on my watch. I don't know. I do. That's the word. This one just came up when I just read right on my watch. It's like I'm watching you. So I saw that and I'm like, No comment about that. Yeah, I'm. About to watch that. This my watch just popped up a message. Exactly right. It's very distracting. Exactly. You wonder why people today have no attention span.
Although we kept a pretty big audience, Our show ran after no agenda yesterday. And the mighty no agenda stream. Yeah, kind of like we tried to do it once, live and then get into the band. We Yes, we've been insta mad and it's sad. I mean, it's it was an open slot. I don't understand what the problem was, but apparently the powers that be didn't like it. We kept 160 like 170 until the very end of the show, which is hard because we bloviate. So it's a two hour show.
Where you bloviate. I just talk. No, you bloviate. Trust me. I've heard searching speaks there longer than my show is. So even though you talk slower. You do, you get off. So I let the guest stock way more than me on that show. Well, what about when you don't have any guests? Those are rare that have I obviously, when I don't have a guest and I'm talking, then it's just me. But those are come out maybe once every month, month and a half.
There was a thing I saw the other day, like the fastest and slowest talking portions of the United States. And like the slowest talking town was Peoria, Illinois, which White Sox Cleveland Indians legend Jim told me. I mean, it just a mountain man of a guy. But I've always thought he talked very slow and deliberate. Now I understand why. Because you're from Peoria. You speak slowly. And there was the fastest down south. It could have had better. SHAPIRO Mm hmm.
Yeah, that game, that is where the fastest talking started. It emanates from there, and it just slows down as you get further away from the bureau. Yes, I was. Yeah. Which I think is in L.A., I believe. Where is he originally from? I don't have no idea. He's an L.A. boy. That would make sense. But all this drama stuff and all of this where there's fringe people pretending to be something else, it's like, why is anybody surprised and why do they care?
I it it's I think it's an escapism from reality, which is much worse, which is we're about to get there. Are we? I think so. Wait, can't I buy something on Amazon yet to protect me from the angry Russian prepper site? Is that up yet? I mean, it's been a long time. We're in the right time. I probably should actually post the length of it.
Yeah. Then we we got our first product up there and like I said, this product is really to test the company's manufacturing capabilities and I think they're pretty good. I should probably give a link to people. Yes. Yeah. So how would you want me to just send you a blanket and you can stick it into, you know, not sure. And what I don't think you ever told anybody exactly what the product is. So it's yeah, I can do that. It is a mylar poncho. Or a pod shell Is your face on it?
That would be awesome. That would be awesome. But no, that costs extra. Well, yeah, there is no face. The poncho I just. Ordered a bunch of posters from Costco to see these the last day that they're. Afraid. Their children service. Yeah. Who do they sell it to? Shutterfly. Shutterfly. Yeah. Yeah. They've been buying everybody, which I. You know, Shutterfly is a total scam. Is that now if you're a Costco member, you get 51% off on every order on Shutterfly. Mm. That's a pretty good discount.
Yeah, it is it. Which also tells you they've uploaded the price nicely before giving you the discount. Yeah. It's been years since I had ordered posters from them and I wanted some new ones and I'm like, well what should I make? And I'm like, well, of course a bunch of Taylor Swift posters, and then we'll see if they actually make. Them or now that could be copyrighted material. You're not allowed to. You like to click that. I own the copyright. I'm like, Oh yeah, sure.
Well, that's not true, though. It is. That really. This once you I clicked it. Uh huh. I mean, it's up to them to figure it out. I mean, I had one of those companies that makes canvases, uh, refuse to print the couple of my photos. Of your own artwork. That I shot. Yes. Yeah, they. They happen to be nudes, but so. Well, that was it. On the basis that they didn't do erotica
or is because I thought it was somebody else's work. No. And basically didn't do erotica, which is bullshit because they previously had printed nudes. Those bastards. So they just decided selectively that the print, the few of which motivated me to say, well, fuck them. And then I found a local place here in Austin that did the same kind of printing for more money. Of course, they use them for a little while. Spent a thousand bucks on prints and then said, Well, fuck this shit.
And I went and bought my own printer. Oh, do you have a large format printer? I used to. Oh. How are they? The upkeep. I hear they're a bitch. And although I'm sure technology has gotten better. So it's it's like a lot of commercial products. They're not at all hard to upkeep If you're using me every day. Right. But if you go to them like and use them once every six months, yeah.
Then you're fucked because the you know how you need to occasionally swap out couches and the smaller size inkjets because they get clogged if you don't use them. Right. Well these, these the, the printheads themselves and there's two printheads that each do six they're now four colors, each is an eight color printer. Uh, each printhead is like 650 bucks. Damn, the ink cartridges are 130 bucks five times eight. So the printer itself was five grand.
So in the grand scheme of things, it was not that much more expensive than what I was spending to print stuff and I was selling the art. So it's not like I wasn't making money at it, right? So if you're going in, turn it around, you need it. I was like, Okay, fine, I'll do it. And then I got it. And this is a great company. I had no problems with.
There's a company that sells precut framing kits and I ended up doing the whole packaging so I would shoot the photos, print them on canvas, frame them, and then some nice. Yeah, it was actually enjoyable. I don't like framing. To me it was not hard work. It was pretty straightforward stuff and that it kind of every each, each one he did improved a little bit. Yes. Well, it's not hard, but. No, now doesn't take a genius to. Frame.
And the hardest thing is getting the glass to the right size for any custom, you know. Oh, that's this is why you don't do glass. Exactly. Yeah. They're all was the phrase they're museum prints or something like that. Basically, it's where you wrap the canvas around the frame. Nice. So it's you don't see the frame at all. The frame is behind victims. So that's why I figured we'll see. This is our last day. I figured I'd order a bunch of crap. Yeah, I might as well. And that we could get one.
Of laser blue. Right. I don't think I would want that. Although if we made that, if we made post, we should have made posters of us, and then we could, like, sell them as targets for the rain. Well, that would be a hilarious thing to do actually. Although I don't think we need like $10 luster prints for that. We probably that we could probably get a little cheaper.
I know if it's any cheaper to do in a decent size I mean that's the thing is it depends on the size is that the price does not scale linearly with the size. Drew Sure that's the the paper by the way, for that printer, I think I covered the ink. Or the rolls. Maybe the the paper was $150 a roll. But that was that'll do a few posters, you know, it's not. Oh, yeah. So the it was 48 inches wide. No, 36. It was 36 inches wide. So I would typically either print 36 by 20 force. Right.
Or 36 by 48. Nice. So there was a version of that printer that was 14 inches, but the extra foot in width added like 3000 bucks to the customer. Oh yeah. Which is why I'm sure Costco was always maxed out at 20 by 30 prints because they only go 20 wide. Yeah. Yeah. It's whatever the narrower or they do have a photo printer and they always do two prints at a time. That could work. They'll like to be. But yeah, I mean this was the commercial one the same exact one the print shops would use.
If you bring your stuff to a print shop. It probably was excellent and on paper it was even better. I just, I just didn't want to deal with paper because paper is a lot more finicky. There's a lot more stuff that can go wrong on a print because of the textured surface of canvas. Yeah, a. Little more forgiving. And the special coatings they've got that kind of absorbs the ink and keeps the, you know, inside there. So it's not on top of the paper. It's like bleeding into the canvas.
It was just easier to work with. And there was a little more unusual because there's a lot fewer places that that sell prints than regular paper prints. The more, you know. And this all came from talking about putting your face on a poncho. Yeah. Yeah. So the ponchos, So those are available. We'll have a link to it. I just lowered the price on them to move them fast. So there you go. Waiting, waiting and not, not, you know, getting them right away.
I put them up about a month ago, but they're moving kind of slow. So I'm like, okay, well, we did this to test the company. I don't need to make really any money on them. I just need to get my money back. So I just dropped the price of them. Are they so low because you haven't told anybody they exist yet? I mean, that could be, but see, this is the problem is. Let me talk to your marketing department. Let me just. That's exactly who I was going to blame.
And I'm like, dude, I have a partner in this business. He is literally a marketing guy. So I've kind of done my job. I wrote the check to get these done and come up to him to do the marketing. But I mean, look, it wouldn't hurt for people that listen to this again. So let me describe I'm thinking horrible job of selling these. Like, yeah, we're let me just find the reason for these the reason to buy it. I know, right? The reason to buy this isn't just to help Dean.
Bravely to be fair, it's maybe this phone. It did it. Well, kind of. But here I think everybody should have one of these in their glove box. Because what it is, it's I don't know about you, but like, I've had a thermal blanket in my car's spare tire. Well, pretty much my whole life in every car I've ever had, because it's, you know, it's part of the first aid slash emergency kit.
You should have the problem with thermal blankets is because they're so damn thin and small format, which is super convenient, they're also very flimsy, which means the slightest wind will move it around, which means from a practical thing, you have to hold the thing around yourself at all times. You can't just kind of cover yourself up the way you could with a heavy blanket. It'll stay there. The the thin Mylar thermal blankets. The solar blankets. They're also called.
They will blow away at the slightest wind. So it basically takes up one hand, leaving you in just one hand to actually do things if your car broke down or whatever, using it for. And this is the cool aspect of the poncho is it's basically that, but it has seams on both sides and it has a hood which keeps your head warmer, unlike the, again, thermal blanket generally don't wrap that around your head.
This is like an evolution of the thermal blanket into a poncho, which gives you both your hands to be free. And you know, it's just more useful. It's orange on the outside and shiny silver on the inside facing you. There are a lot of these on Amazon. There are, yes. There's a ton of competition, which is also why a lot of companies make these and why it's a good product to test how well a company actually manufactures.
And it was not this is not an original invention and I think I talked about it my my actual concept for the the radiation suit. But here you can now that you know this is you can see why this is the product I'm testing it with is the radiation suit is going to have a layer that is mylar and the whole. Yeah. So you are now the poncho guy. I guess. Yeah. And call me the poncho salesman. You could have a few with them at any meet up. Yeah, he'll have a few in his pocket.
Yeah. Yeah. Like $100 donation gets you on. The 100. You could probably you could probably lower that a little bit. Well they're sold for a lot less now is there. I think the current price am is, it's a three pack you get in a little packet and I want to say they're at 15 bucks. A bargain at any price. Yeah. And the the just like a solar thermal blanket. I will tell you once you unwrap it and put it on, you will never shrink it back down to the same size that it was when you get it so.
On them, you really don't want to use them more than once. You could totally use them more than once, but you'll never shrink it back down to that same size. It's just a fair warning. So my my recommendation for anybody and this is where I've got my car is just I checked the three back room into my glove box. That way, whether I have multiple passengers in the car or whether it's just me, there's going to be one on there.
And then when they run out of them, I'll just chuck another packet in there. But they're also waterproof. But the main thing is just if you're in, you know, like North north of where I'm at, where it's 65 degrees here. Yeah, but you're not, you. Don't really need a thermal blanket. Yes. Yeah. But if you're in any northern places these are super useful for staying warm. You could put them under clothes or overflows either way. But even like in the middle of summer, you just put it inside out.
You have the shiny, reflective side on the outside, and they will keep a very substantial amount of sunlight from warming you up. Let's see, next week, up Monday, it's going to be 13 degrees here for a high. So I could use one. Damn. All right, Go ahead and order one, man. You'll get it by then. What's the brand name? What you want? I mean, because there's this. There are like 8000. Oh, yeah? Yeah. I'll provide the link, obviously.
Yeah. There are a bunch of different companies that that have them on there right now. So Yukon Trading Company is our, our company name. Wow. That sounds pretty like legit. That's, that's like I said, my partner is marketing dude. So there should be some things that are good about it. It's like it sounds like this company would have been around for like multiple decades. That was literally the point. Yeah. Exactly. So you're starting off with a like a first.
Well, that hello sales that was marketing. Hello. Yes. Welcome to the dude. Yeah. That's why you're just making an assumption you're lying to yourself. I get it. Yeah. We're just, you know, my established of our backing firm. Sure. I mean, yeah, there are a couple of guys in the outback. That's the outback up in the UK. You know, we trade things. We trade things in the Yukon. Yukon Supply Company. Well, of course, honestly. I would have. Probably I would have.
Forgotten to mention it again if you didn't remind me. Yes. Well, and also like the main image on Amazon is the package. It's like, no, everybody else is the as the items. You could see what it is. Yeah. I probably need to change that. It's good point. Yeah. Any other suggestions? I'm quite open to it. Just I've never sold shit on Amazon. This has been a learning experience for me. But I mean, where else can you get three ponchos for 1169? Free shipping, free returns. Okay, do that.
Everybody buy 100 of these. That. And that. Will be adequate. Don't do that, man. You know how returns work on Amazon? Yeah. You get screwed. Yeah, you get screwed because what happens in the return is Amazon doesn't pay the seller because it was returned. Neither do they provide the item back. Right. But they do. Then they out item into Amazon bundles of returns which you can buy. You know, usually there's about 20, 30, 50 products in each bundle on. Their buy a pallet. Yeah. You buy it. Yeah.
You buy large boxes that have a bunch of returned items. So if you start returning a bunch of them that that's just stealing money. That's the opposite of what I would like that would like money. Given the point. You want to make money on this I thought you were going to do I need to break even? Dude, I need to break even. And at the price they're at, it's pretty damn close to breaking them right now.
Nice. All, all I had I, I did a like the perfect job of getting these manufactured because my thought was these are going to be frickin dirty. So I want to get them out to Amazon ASAP. So I paid for air shipping for these from China. Yeah, from China. Yeah. These were airship to China overnight. So the COVID 19 on these is fresh. Oh, totally. Get it now get your directly from I mean I think we need to get some reviews on this It'd be great. Yes. Good good. I forgot about those.
That's a good point. Yes. Reviews would be awesome. So. So instead of making donations to this show or any other shows, buy some buy like a pack of these and leave a great review talking about how it fits conveniently into your glove box. Like, I think that would be a hilarious review. Don't talk about weight. It's useful for talk about how it fits perfectly in your glove box. That way I'll know that it was a review of somebody that was listening to the podcast.
Yet if you do a video of yourself wearing this, be sure to let us know where that is. Yeah. Or a video of you putting it in your glove box. Literally, that's the usage video as you take the packet, you put it in your glove box. That would be funny. And so. I like the. Funny text. Yes. Mm hmm. Net net is like what is surging pimping. Go to Amazon Search for Yukon Supply Emergency solar thermal blanket It's blaze orange is Glenn Beck may come after you for. Calling Yeah. And that.
Was that was one of the things that I think all our products moving forward are going to be blaze orange we kind of decided that's a good color just do is blaze orange for everything. Fits over backpack to protect both you and your Yeah so. This thing just for the size of the thing it's not just over me but over me wearing a. Backpack. And if it fits over you wearing a backpack, it will fit over anybody. Anybody, literally. I mean, you can put a small family underneath this thing.
But this is see, okay. This is also the review. I want that. I want like six people. My my small family size. Yeah, exactly. That would be awesome. Oh, yeah, Yeah. Oh, it's down to 11 bucks. So 116. It's. Holy shit. I might be losing money now. 1169 for a three pack. So this is something you need. Definitely a loss. Okay. Yeah. Go for it by these things. And don't return them. I think my past was like four bucks per unit, so 12. I'm losing. I'm losing. Now. Who? I'm losing $0.31.
Is this like an automatic thing? A family? Yes. It's not. Yes, it is. Absolutely. Amazon will adjust prices. How far they have to keep as low as they want. Really? Yep. Yep. I like that. They will go as low as they want. And the way that they adjust prices is based on the speed of purchases. But clearly not many people have bought this because they've dropped the price. Great. A bit. Like down. Down? Yeah. And so if a few people are buying these, then the price may start going back up. Let me.
Yeah. The price I said was 15 bucks and then you know they have like they tell you ahead of time obviously that they will adjust prices if they feel like it. You know, it doesn't even come up on Campbell Campbell Campbell yet. So I'm assuming that means you haven't sold enough. And what what's the Campbell Campbell. Never been to Campbell Campbell Campbell Dotcom. No. Oh, my goodness. It's the best thing you could ever go to.
If you shop on Amazon, you give it the link to any Amazon product and it will show you the price history over like the last year plus. Really? Now, that sounds useful. Yes. So if you want to know what your ordering is at the high end or the low end or it's the best price you've ever seen. Amazon used to just do that. They used to tell you that information years ago. Not anymore. No, they don't anymore, for sure. And notice that you cannot get those in urban camo. It's only blaze orange.
Yeah, Yeah. I mean, there are other people selling it in Urban Campbell that you can get. So if you just want to get one get you know get it in whatever you want, but if you want to get one of them, support me, or at least only make me lose 31. So I am the. Item you buy loses money. See, this is a sale. That's true. Yeah. Yeah there are right now CSB just ordered 1000 of them. Every one I order. That's almost like Frank said that. Oh, my. God. It's still my drink.
Jesus Christ. If I was a Russian bastard. Yeah, yeah, I mean, yeah, it could end up selling a thousand of these. So there's 3000 for sale. That was the order. So there's probably like 2900 left. But free delivery on Sunday. So within 48 hours I can get delivery. That means that warehouse not far from you. Yeah. But we've got a lot of them here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But it's, yeah, I'm pretty sure they were, they were four bucks apiece, so. Yeah. Let's see. Hopefully I won't lose too much.
Because that's always the best venture you can get to do. I mean, again, I wasn't really optimizing to make money on this. I was testing the manufacturer. It is not to say I want to lose money survival. I do like the I will say I liked the company logo. Yeah. Don't. The box design was not an easy thing. I mean, we hired somebody to do it, but it looks like a real box, you know? Well, is it actually a box? Because I don't know. I wouldn't be. There. It comes in the box, but it's a Wait, wait.
All of. This and a. Box. Well, you. Buried the lead. You get the box. Do you get the box? So I think the box was a mistake, to be honest, because the. Box had like an envelope. Is needed for retail sales. Right. So this is basically ready for retail. Don't really need a box on Amazon because as you say, the first picture is a box. And it's like, why the fuck am I looking at a box? I don't care what the box looks like.
So yeah, it's probably kind of a skip the box, just put it in the plastic bag or something and then, you know, save like $0.50 or something. So if you're looking for the ultimate Valentine's Day gift for your lover. Then don't buy this doll. But if you if you get a spare 1169, you want to support me not losing too much money, but you want to make me lose a little bit. By all means, buy this thing. Yeah, if you want to have Jean lose a little money, the troll room wants the link.
I'll give them the link here. Yeah, give me the link. You got it. This is probably way too long of a link, but that's. Why I love that they put it on. 1169. 69 did. Huh? It is 100% mylar. I feel with the ability safety orange for emergency situations to make a rescue easier. Yeah. Huh. Yeah. Not written by a Chinese person. Although, no, I just liked it. It protects my gear. It does that. I mean, the fact that this is really big and, you know, I'm not a skinny guy. Y'all know that.
And then it's big enough, literally, for me to put it on while I'm wearing a backpack. Dug it up, wants to know if there's a non Bezos option. Yes. You have to be in Austin and find Jean. He will have them in his pocket. If there's a non Bezos option. I mean, I don't want to get in the habit of this. I could probably send you one. But the problem is my shipping costs way more than Amazon shipping. So yeah, because Amazon has got people there just they throw it in a car. Yeah, exactly.
They're they're, they kind of they can't compete with even the shipping this to Amazon so it's a box of how many of these. I think it's a box of like 80 of these that they come in to ship to Amazon that costs me 15 bucks to ship it to Amazon using Amazon. Right. So that's how much Amazon charges me to ship them the product. Well they're nice. If I shipped it myself, FedEx would charge me 65 bucks or U.P.S., FedEx, they're both in the same price range. It'd be about 65 bucks.
So it's literally $50 cheaper to use Amazon's own people than to ship it because a box of of like 60 of these is £50. And it's interesting that they then take this product that you provide to one location and they just set the ball around all of their warehouses. So boom. Yeah. Now they only do that for a little while because if these actually start selling a decent, then they will tell me that I need to ship each box to a separate warehouse. That would make sense.
But my question is for their folks that because yours obviously ships from Amazon for all of these companies that ship direct, what kind of a nightmare is that? So I have my buddy that well guy company that you sent us and that I have found that yes, technically that makes wallets that are sold on Amazon.
He got after a couple of years of shipping his product to Amazon, he got set up as a direct shipper and what happened was he had to have a the Amazon approved the equipment basically to create labels and he had to show to like they actually sent a human being over to look at it to show a that he have everything necessary to package these properly. And check up on how well you're going to ship. Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if that's a random thing or they used for everybody, but you can sign up as a self shipper, but you have to jump through their extra hoops to qualify to do that. It makes sense for larger operations where you have an actual warehouse yourself and then you're still using like, uh, you know, you're getting pretty good deals on the shipping. But if you're doing what I'm doing, which is just trying to do as little as possible yourself. Yes. Than just shipping it over to Amazon.
Makes sense. So Amazon takes actually, I'm losing a lot more than $0.31 because Amazon will take about 33% of this. You know, just place my order, man. I'm getting them on Sunday. Yeah. Good deal. I'll do a review. All right. Perfect. You are you. I think you've done a couple. You might know how to do reviews on Amazon. eBay. It may be the most entertaining video review Amazon will ever see. I think I'm looking forward to seeing it. That's. That's going to be fun.
I am not related to this company. You can supply company at all. You're not. They are very good sellers of this particular product. And I look good in orange. Yeah. And if you can do a computerized voice, sort of your own voice that you better. Give it better a little air so maybe I can borrow one of your like these script things and they can just.
That's right. That's right. You know there's a there's the much services both from I think Microsoft has their Cortana available and Google's got their voices that are very good. And this is what you always hear and these sort of what I referred to as Chinese videos, I don't know if they're actually Chinese or Indian or whatever. But if somebody don't speak English or don't know. Somebody that does not speak English and or at least they have a very thick accent, English, they don't want to talk.
And the videos are generally made up of stock video and stock images. And there might be a video on Elon Musk's a new success. And then you click and I'm thinking then something interesting and it's basically a bunch of videos and shots of musk at various locations with no sound of musk talking, just the video portion. And then you have what I know is a computer generated voice, but it sounds really good. It's just I I've heard enough of these things to know what a computer generated voice is.
It's it's not even that it's mispronouncing things. It's just the style of video. And I swear to God, they must offer classes like in China or India and how you can make money off YouTube. And you do I doing a video a day? Yeah. Pimp this stuff out. Uh huh. It's you don't have. To have anything you can find. All these videos, all the photos. Just pull them off Google, pull them off YouTube and then just edit them into something and then stick the computer generated voice on there.
And even if you're making $0.25 a video. More than we're making. You know that there is more and we're making them three. I'm fucking losing money on these damn blankets. Net net says part of the review should be the owner is not carrying water for Putin at all. No, it's better. I think that gave me an idea, though. It's like this is a great poncho. If I ever need to carry water for a Russian dictator, I would definitely wear this to carry that water because if it splashed, not going to get wet.
Not going to get wet. Now, these are waterproof as well as thermal, that is. And they're high visibility in case you go hunting. For the other one to. The other bit is where you live in Chicago. Yeah. Now we're hunting in Chicago. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Exactly. Yeah. So and that's another benefit of the blazer and not just for, like, your car gets stuck in the middle of a snowstorm and you want to be visible, which is useful.
But also, if you are going hunting, putting one of these in your backpack would also be useful in case the weather starts getting climate. I'll always be prepared. Mm. For all of your needs, go to the Yukon Supply Company. That's right. And Amazon. The old if you want seen to lose money with every sale. Pretty much. That will but it was a proof of concept.
Yeah. Yeah. I wasn't even so much proof of companies the concept as just the business so once the the full design is done of the actual radiation suit, then we'll be getting that manufactured probably. I don't I hesitate to give a timeline given how long they've taken on these damn thing. Well, sometime this year, sometimes this year, preferably before the new supply. May well see. Otherwise they're less useful. I know it would be my like to get a shipment coming into Amazon just as we get new.
Will your picture be on the radiation suits and will you include like some? Do you think there's a benefit to having my picture on the air? Because it's going to cost me money. I mean, I'll do it if you think it's a benefit. I think it's a selling point that way. People know that the quality is in the item. The qualities in the item. Yeah, well, that's true. I mean, why you buy polo shirts. With the I mean. Or some. Yeah, but we were going to have the Yukon logo on the radiation suits.
But I guess you think my face would be better than the logo than they do that. I mean, does Yukon scream radiation? No, but your face kind of screams radiation. I don't know about that. Yeah. All right. Are we done with the outbreak? It was that Will do. I have to charge you for this, then? Well, no. You're going to give me money because I'm losing money. And every order. This was just entertaining people.
And I think finding how the Amazon system works for anybody that wants to get involved in this, you've scared them off, I think, by this. I hope so. I hope so, yeah. Amazon is not where you make money by selling product. Amazon is where you can build a name for a company by selling products, but you definitely will not make it. And I've worked with multiple Amazon sellers consulting them because I'm an expert and it's the same story for pretty much everybody.
The only way you make money is when you have a unique product that literally nobody else has, right? And that typically will last between one and three months before guaranteed it's knocked off. And for the super successful products, like somebody starts selling something and they sell a million of them in the first month or $1,000,000 worth in the first month. Yeah, like the those little sponges that look like the sun. There you go.
Amazon will just knock them off themselves and start selling it directly. Oh, yeah. So. Oh, yeah. I mean, there's that everything. I mean, there's so much of this stuff and you know, I have no company or brand loyalty to things. I mean, that's everything from the, like Swiffer type mops. My mom needed those and she's like, you order some of those and like, Oh, wait, there's an Amazon brand that's like half the price.
And we have yet to try one of the Amazon brands of whatever and go, Wow, this is crap. They're actually making good stuff that competes with the name brands. It's not bad. I just bought a like a doggy water bowl for my snake on Amazon and for an Amazon brand thing. They make decent stuff. I mean, you could hate on them for a whole bunch of reasons, but it's the same kind of a concept that we have in the digital world. With Google, it's like it's a monopoly. There's no question.
Yeah, it's it's no different than going to a grocery store and buying the grocery store branded product, which. They want you to do. I mean, we shop a lot of Myer and their brands are actually really good most of the time. Again, there's no exceptions, but why would I buy their brand if it's a third of the price? Me No, and I shop at H-E-B and that's the same thing. I like a lot of the H-E-B branded products are actually super good.
They're not that no worse and sometimes the better than the the big national brands. Things are changing in the way people buy. And I guess Amazon's not really a monopoly because there is still Walmart. Yeah, I mean it's funny because I don't really order at Walmart unless I'm physically next to a Walmart store and I want to pop in and get something quick. But Walmart technically is still bigger than Amazon. It's close, but yeah, I think they were still last year.
Or if not, it was the first year that it was overtaken. I'm pretty sure they weren't overtaken. Let me. I'll do a quick check, but which one? I know Sam's Club, which is their version of Costco, which has been around longer. I think at least around here, maybe not nationwide, just. Costco was before Sam's Club. I think Sam's Club was a response to Costco and Costco started in the 1960s in San Diego. Damn. Okay. It's been around a while. Just not in this area. Yeah, but I saw a Sam's Club.
They're opening up a bunch in May this year. So they're still building. They're still expanding. Yeah. And I think, Sam, like I've been to, I mostly have used Costco over the years, but I've been to Sam's Club a number of times, and it's super similar. There's not a whole lot. They just kind of like Costco. The target. Yeah, Sam's Club, the Walmart. A little bit more refined. It has that impression, but I don't know if the food is any better. I mean, it's probably the exact same shop. Probably.
But they have the little cafeteria where you can get a hot dog. Yeah, I always used to get the pizza because is what, like two bucks a slice there. Some super cheap. It was pretty cheap and they had although I think they got rid of one of the flair. I think it's only cheese and like everything now rather than just pepperoni and it's like no I want just pepperoni. I don't want everything. Or maybe they don't. Yeah, I want everything except the pepperoni. I don't want pepperoni.
We can totally do pizza together because we're just I don't eat pepperoni. They can split it in half. It's been a long time. Yeah. Walmart is still ahead by, uh, by 30 billion. It's a pretty big lead. I mean, not huge when you're. Amazon's 121 billion. Walmart is 1.51 billion for sales. Hey, I would take either one of those. Mm. So here's the other question. Why aren't you selling your ponchos at the Walmart site to where you can. Sam's thought about it. Probably should. Yeah.
You at your Walmart people, man. You know, maybe I should, like, consult with you next time I decide to make the product. I haven't thought of a lot of these things because I don't Like I said, I've never sell anything at Amazon. I've never done really product this stuff. I've always just done consulting and business stuff. Yeah, no, back then I've. Thought about it because I had ideas for a few things.
I mean, just easy stuff to make like the weight that you put on your turntable to keep your record flat. And, you know, allegedly this helps keep errant vibrations down and all that. And I have a buddy that has a bunch of different businesses, and it's always at one point he had a plastics business. He has a his main business is Coatings, which is kind of like electro coatings. And he does work for like Gillette and Kimber Firearms and all this other kind of stuff.
But they've got the, what do you call them, the CMC mills, where you can take anything and just throw the stuff in. I'm like, Well, this would be easy because mainly what you just want is like a cool looking device because a record way would be dirt cheap and it's like, well, you can take whatever metal you make that out of and then he can coat it with whatever cool look that you want. Mm mm. On top of it.
But it's like I've always thought the whole way of trying to sell this stuff would just be way more hassle than the money that would come back. Well, you definitely figure out a niche for selling used tickets and shit like that. It's crazy. Yeah, that's gone up and down, but it's like you just have to figure out what's going to be the thing. And yeah, you know, especially with the collectible market, that is anybody's guess.
Well, and the, the obvious thing here too is you have to be serious about this stuff. Like you can't just dabble in it because like I said, even kidding aside, I am definitely going to be losing money on every single one sold because the the, the costs all add up. Like you don't really seem to go, oh, it's 50 stands for this and $0.12 for that and $0.30 for this. Right. But you get to the point where you're like, oh, hold on. Oh man. That's like, what am I making now? It's upside down.
Yeah, exactly. So it is. It is. And obviously, the resistance is going to be way more expensive because that's a custom product. Yes. Where you want to sell something that not everybody else has. Because if everybody else has it then it is price, which right now you may be like the cheapest poncho out there. So people may make start to that. Probably because I think when I put it at 15 bucks, that was like $0.50 under than everybody else and I didn't realize it dropped this low. So yeah.
Forget your now you have no ability to set a bottom line or anything that. I just know. Because otherwise they don't sell and then I can. I can pull them. But yeah Amazon basically you set a price. They'll keep a price for a week or so and then they'll watch how fast they're selling. And if they're not selling at a rate that Amazon determines they should meet, then they will start dropping the price on your behalf.
Now, I'm just surprised that you haven't sent these to your favorite Onlyfans girls or your Instagram and be like when you wear this boy, I'll give you money. Oh yeah, right, right. Well, that that costs a lot of money. No, I have sent that out to a number of people. I Need someone else to add them. I but I have to buy what your buddy, your buddy here and unrelentingly. Well, you know, he's a poor man. You know, he's a queer podcaster. He doesn't have money to buy these things.
I'm waiting for my free Apple Watch in my free iPad mini or whatnot. Huh? Uh huh. That iPad Mini, the the Mini Mac, whatever they call it now. Mac Mini. Yeah. I was thinking of buying one of the new ones. Yeah. The the Mac two with the M2 pro chip. It's like, okay, so for like. I've got Yeah, I've got the M1 and I mean there the M1 would just be even faster. Uh huh. Well, the new one actually allows you to run three monitors without having anything else.
So I could just plug that baby right out of my wisdom. Mm hmm. And use the same three monitor system that I'm using now. And then I'm assuming I'd be able to easily just switch back and forth with a switch between the windows and the. Yeah, I mean, back in the old days, we had a physical switch. I think you could probably just do it all through software these days. And the, the Mac minis are so damn small. They are. Yeah. They've always been the right form factor.
I mean I, I think Apple sold way more of the, the, you know, the computers that built in to the monitor type. Yes. Oh yeah. Which I think people are finally getting tired of because you realize you're very. You know the monitor last longer than the computer or the computer you will want to upgrade way before you want to upgrade the monitor. But I've always just got Mac Mini because to me I've got monitors and the monitors are better and bigger than the what Apple sells.
So why would I, why would I want their monitor and computer all in one does make that. Well yeah. And the Mac mini now they're comparing the horsepower under the hood to the MacBook pros. So it's like. Mm. Well I don't really use laptops because I don't leave the house much. Right? So it's not like I need to do rendering on the road. But what like video and stuff? It looks like these things fly for taking your videos and, and rendering them in the software of your choice. Yeah, yeah yeah.
No that's true. So as far as the Apple Watch, you know, the one I got is, I think one generation older than the one that you bought. Uh, but since you bought one, or we could raffle mine off. Ooh, uh, to. Poncho. It's up to somebody that's a listener. Who bought a orange poncho from. Yeah, there you go. Do enter this. I mean. My an orange badge. I guess that's an interesting way of doing it, cause it's basically like, well, it used to be a, you know, 400 and then some dollar watch.
Now it's probably worth like 250, but still, if you buy a poncho. Yeah. It's 11 bucks for a chance to get a, you know, at least a 250 probably higher dollar Apple Watch that the. Is that it was a. Current generation Yeah yeah it's a see. They're up to the eight the what are the six is selling for. Yeah I have done you. Used on eBay. Yeah. Where everything's a scam. Well unless would be to buy tickets for a million bucks. Yeah exactly. That's not a scam. Not at all. Obviously that's.
Not if you're selling. It about 135. Bucks for it. Really? That's it. Okay, well, 135. Yeah. I would have assumed they stole more than that, but I don't know. Does everybody need new? I want new. I want new, new. They have new. They have the new stuff. You can get new for 400. And I've noticed again that it's finicky if you're an extended mobile if you want one of the it's not they've changed the name but it's the smaller form factor size apple phone. But it's a current Apple phone.
They're giving those away for free again. Okay. As long as you bring in a new number and remember, you can get a new number just by going to Google Voice and porting it out. They said you can't. I thought you couldn't get a Google voice number anymore. I hope they stopped giving out new numbers. Now they're still there. You just have to jump through more hoops to be able to verify that you're a real person. Somebody told me that that they stop giving out numbers now. They're still there.
They only get one every week or what? No, but it wasn't that long ago that I got one for the when my wife started the new job, she got another phone which again, pre from expanded mobile so added a work phone free and I grabbed it and that's. All you needed to do was just give them an existing number and then give you a free. If you don't have an existing number, you have to pay like 700 bucks for the phone. But that's insane. Yes. And you have to keep it on your account for two years.
Otherwise they'll charge you. But after two years, you can just go sell that phone. So these are brand new phones you can buy. Which is the how much is the the monthly on the phone? It's zero for me because I have a I just pay by the data. So I only pay for one gig of data a month because nobody in my family uses data. Sure, you can have like up to ten phones on the account so it doesn't add $1 to the bill. But I mean, it really you just by having another number. Yes.
You give that number tax penalty, they ship you a brand new phone and your bill hasn't changed. Yes, that's fucked up. Well, here. No, that's actually not true, because when I added the last phone, there was a promotion that lowered my Internet bill by 30 bucks a month for the next two years. Jesus Christ. So they. Paid. You 30 bucks a month to get a new phone? Yes. Oh, my God. I know. It's like, okay. I'm like, Are you sure? Because I had to ask the guy like, a few times, like, really?
This is, you know, so. So my bills are not going to go up. I'm going to have another phone, I'm going to have another and my Internet's going to go down. All right, cool. Well, how much you paying for the Internet for the family Bill for now. Once this has all been adjusted for two years, I'm paying $50 a month for gig. Uh, fuck you and Sheila. Thank you very much. Uh huh, uh huh. And and how many phones do you have? Um. Currently this year, my mom, my dad, me and my wife. My wife has an extra.
I have an extra. So six or seven. Six or seven phones, 50 bucks? No, no. See, that's the Internet's 50 bucks. Then the phone, I think, costs about 35 or something bucks a month. Per phone or. Total. No, total. That's fucked up. Yeah. Jesus Christ did that. It's just nobody's making money there. No. Well, that's why I like it. I'm like. That's insane. My latest billing cycle from expanded to December 18th to January 17th, my bill was $30.20 for the six phones altogether. Jesus Christ, I know.
Why would anybody want to pay now? If you need to be out and about in, you need to be using cellular data. You will have to have a much more expensive plan. But sure. But I mean, you're basically you've got a bunch of burner phones. Yes. And you could just keep adding them, uh, as long as you don't data, you can do as much calling and as much texting as you want. Yeah. You just can't use data.
Really? Yes. And around here, there are finicky hotspots like everywhere we seem to go far, which means you still don't have to use the mobile data, huh? It's a great deal. That is shocking. I don't know what the scam is because we used to pay like 130 bucks a month for the. Yeah, that's what I seem to be. Yeah. Yeah. That all came down because we kept adding phones and it's like, Oh, keep giving me a discount.
I mean, maybe I would like to hear the point where they would pay me to keep using the Internet. They're like, Wow, that's a great customer. He's got like eight phones. We love customers like this. Yeah. Huh? Like nobody checks how much you actually pay. There has to be something about the amount of numbers they have. This has to be like in the old days where magazines wanted subscribers so they could sell them to an advertiser.
Right? Right, right, right. Yeah. There's got to be some reason they really want you to keep bringing in the new numbers. Obviously, they think they're taking business from another company, but they know it's coming from Google Voice. It's not like it's a surprise that they can check where the number is coming from and they do accept. The Google voice says, Oh, you're bringing in an existing number in. So really, there's no reason not to get like a new phone every two years. The only downside?
Well, bear with me because it's not really a downside. I was going to say the only downside is you have to keep getting a new phone number. You're right. But the downside, that's an upside as far as I'm concerned, gets rid of all the. But if you really want to keep your old number, you could just swap the SIM cards. Right? So, I mean, it's like, okay, you could just you could take that.
Yeah. And I've done that before where you order the phone with a new number, then you just put in your old sim, huh? We do need a kiosk in the mall that is absolutely. I would love to see Jean work in the mall. See, Brooklyn. Did, like. Want to buy some ponchos? Come on. Mm hmm. But, yeah, if you. Would sell in the mall. I mean, people don't really go to malls, but back in the day. Oh, yeah, Back in the day. You know.
I could see you walk in these things outside of a Vikings game or something, you know? Yeah, Yeah. Totally different looking horns, huh? Exactly. Uh, add Zachary, It's the entrepreneurial spirit. But for people that have extended Internet, if they have expanded t mobile, I don't know how many they're in around the country now. Mm. But if you can get it and you have their internet and again, if you don't need the mobile data. Mm hmm.
Then you can get a great deal on the price of what these things are. At first I believe it was limited to like four or five phones and I think they that which is okay, I'll just keep taking new phones and adding them. We're like running a sweatshop here. We have so many phone numbers. And the beautiful thing is you could tie them all into like one Google voice number anyway. Mm hmm.
Well, yeah, I mean, I think Google Voice is I think it's a if they haven't sunsetted that, I think they're not far from doing it because they clearly did do much with that service once they rolled it out. The interface still looks like it's 15 years old. Oh yeah. I mean, the nice thing is, though, it's easy to to use that and add it into a podcasting setup.
So if we ever ran into somebody who didn't know how to plug a microphone and or something like that, and you really had to get an interview, yeah, you could do it over the old phone system. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's wild. Oh, that's cool. So we talked about me losing money, and you're getting hard. Hell, a deal. Yes. I like how the deal, um, that you're going to send Adam some free poncho so we can talk about it. I know we. Got to do that because I told him I would, and I just forgot.
You sending in some to JC as well. I'm going to send him some ponchos. Oh, yeah, I got to send some to him as well. And I ordered mom the. Your your mama poncho. No, not the poncho. No, she doesn't need the poncho. But I always order her some of. The things that need to be in case something. To me. Maybe. You never know. You're having it in the car is probably not a bad idea. Especially if you have to travel when it's 13 degrees out. But she likes wine.
And her favorite baseball player was Tom Seaver, and he has a winery, even though he's dead now. But this is I thought it was interesting. Just no way. Know, kind of following how the weather and stuff affects these wineries because it was like the most limited last year. They had two different bottlings that you could order three bottles and then you could ask for more. This year it was like you could get one bottle of each and then ask for more if possible.
But they're like, this is the smallest yield they've ever had because of, I'm guessing, the weather. I don't remember if that was. Was the fire year the really bad one like two years ago, three years ago. But it's interesting to see how they have. A fire every year. Well, it's sometimes they're worse than others in California. Yeah, but it's a really good wine, too. So I would never buy it for myself. It's like 150 bucks a bottle right from the winery. But it's good.
It's a nice cab, Sav and a beautiful California. But when they're trying to burn the place down, it's. I guess it means less wine for you wines up. Oh, not for you. For the. World. Oh, for the world. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. It's supply and demand, though. So I was kind of surprised they didn't raise the price. It's kind of like if you're the only guy selling ponchos, you could sell them for more. Uh, yeah, Yeah. No, that's true. But again, like you didn't. That wasn't the goal.
You didn't really go was didn't take the whole thing out. No, I did. I just. I was assuming it'd be more than I wouldn't be losing money. I'm. I was hoping I would be. That's all freaking out. So this podcast started too. I was like, I'm really hoping I'm not going to lose money. And then look, I'm like, Wow, there's bills for this. Wow. Damn it. There are bills. That's true. Well, dude, I mean, only three bucks. Just to pay for one. And. Well, not. Yeah, I mean, it doesn't both.
Yeah, theoretically. Is it Right. Yeah. Like if they could, if one was successful. I mean, if you don't know that you everybody listening, you could be a guest on surging Speaks. The rate is $150 an hour. So it's less than that. Oh, you've lowered that now. I did 50 bucks an. Oh, but isn't there a minimum of like 3 hours? It ends up being about 3 hours. Yeah. You go. Yeah, but you but it depends on how, how much, how many questions they have.
I mean like the interview yesterday with the go was only like an hour and a half of 90 minutes. Well, that's short for a surg. It is short for surgery. Hello. My solo shows with no guest are typically one hour. Because you can only stand talking to yourself for that long. Well, I get the message across and in an hour. You're more succinct. Boom, You're hitting it. Yeah. I mean, I think like, kind of like your show is only half an hour.
Exactly. So I usually the solo shows, usually about 45 minutes. They can go down to a half hour, usually not much less than that. And if you want I mean, I don't know if Ben Rose is listening, but I have a dental appointment on Wednesday, so maybe if you want to be part of a grumpy old Ben's with them Rose on Wednesday afternoon. Wednesday afternoon. I think that would work for me. I mean, you should reach out to him and be like, Hey, we can. We can get the band back together. Yeah, exactly.
Well, I'm at the end to Dante's getting 3-D. Whatever they do of your mouth, you. Did you hear Adam Rogan? No, I have downloaded it, but I haven't watched it yet. So he was talking about his teeth ordeal. Oh, yeah, it is. It's an ordeal. When? How many did he have extracted? Like, double digits. 12, Huh. But the bigger issue apparently, was that his upper jawbone was weakened and so they couldn't just stick the metal plates in there.
They have to get his bone regrown, which they usually do with implanting some cadaver bone. Oh, fun. I know, right? I don't think he knows that. And he doesn't. Listen to the show. Then he doesn't. Don't worry about it. Uh, but once they they have that in there, it takes usually about six months to Fuze with your bone.
And then I don't know if people have seen bones, by the way, if anyone's interested, it's it's kind of cool actually if you look at the structure of bones under a super high magnification microscope, they they don't look like a solid object. They look like a spiderweb. Yeah, well, they are. I mean, that's there's, there's gaps. There's lots of gaps. Absolutely. And so you're it's it's in fact, teeth.
I saw recently under a high magnification microscope and tooth enamel also does not at all look solid. It is what it looks like and this is probably not the best way to describe it, but it's kind of the way they describe it is imagine if you got a really large toothpaste packet and it had a really small hole where the toothpaste comes out and then you were squeezing and it could be, you know, it doesn't have to be toothpaste, but something that you squeeze out of a tube through a small hole.
Right. And then you did that and your goal was to just make a tooth shape by constantly moving the nozzle while the stuff is coming out in little strands and just make it. It's like spaghetti. So very much like 3-D printing something. It is exactly like 3D printing.
So the the structure of teeth is like 3D printing because what happens apparently is the cells that we have a very limited supply of since we only get two sets of teeth in their lifetime, unlike a lot of other animals, these cells are effectively doing that. They're 3D printing the tooth. And as they're doing that, the tooth moves further and closer to actually being in the right place. And by the time they get done, 3D printing the tooth is when it pushes out first teeth. And you know what?
You're about eight, eight years old. Nine years old, thereabouts, uh, six years old. Don't even remember. And then it just replaces those and puts on your permanent teeth. But yeah, they're, they're not at all like I always kind of wondered, how does the body create something? The shape of a tooth? It just does. It's a 3D printer. That's what it does. Our bodies have its own 3D Bryner. Our bodies are basically robots where we have bio robotics, essentially our body.
There are there are mechanisms inside of us for everything that happens that can be done externally through either physical or chemical means and with fricking the A.I. advancing the way it does. Have you been paying attention to this stuff lately? Oh, yeah. It's it's like it does everything now. It's painting pictures, it and very good quality ones. It is. In fact, you can sell now a I images, an Adobe stock really like.
Yeah yeah they've they've changed their terms and now that artwork that's now they have some restrictions on them but artwork created with the eye can now be sold on Adobe stock images. But like you said, with how easy it is to go into an AI and get it to write you some text, this is where these YouTube videos are going to be. If they're not already, somebody is going to go in and just keep pumping out videos with a I created text and then text to speech.
Yeah. It is going to be in full trading news, no doubt about it. People Are going to use it to write news story. Yeah, there were a few things I'm curious about how well it works because some people have tapped into the chat GPT for fiction writing that they've put systems together where you can not write the whole book, although it probably would. You can do brainstorming with it and put in information and it'll respond and then you can put it the order you want.
So it seems like it's a very interesting as long as you don't take the whole human aspect out of this, if you're using it to help create a template that seems like it would be a very cool idea. But it's going to get to the point. I mean, we know that certain things have a particular way of doing things, meaning most music we watched a few different, you know, over the Christmas season, a few different just schlocky Christmas movies. And it's like this is like the same story over and over again.
You're just changing the setting and the names and the description of the characters. But overall, it would be very easy to. Believe that an artificial intelligence, you could be like, Hey, take this Hallmark movie it write 100 more. Yeah, totally. And soon it'll be able to create that video too. You won't need actors or actresses. It'll just be able to create something we can watch.
But I thought that was interesting that it is now being kind of refined to be able to do some very specific things that you wouldn't have normally thought of a computer being able to do a lot of White. I thought of it for many years, yes. But I mean, we may be here now. It may be available to you, which is, you know, James Patterson already writes like a thousand books a year. He could probably do 10,000 now, it really if you could make even 20 bucks a book,
you're making money when you could put out 10,000 of them. Mm. I'd like the I'd like the ponchos, the physical products. Now we all want to be an intellectual property now, because I've wondered how well this would do. I know there was somebody that was writing No Agenda Adventures. I was considering trying my hand at that. I'm like, That may pay better than podcasting. How many be how many people would buy one? If I can get 10,000.
What if you made a podcast where it's read out by an A I. To the podcast, reading the book or the. Book? Yeah, Yeah. So turn it into a serial podcast. True We could do that. Being Brian Brushwood did pretty well with his. I don't think he used the I. Don't know he did. Yeah. But I mean even taking the taking that content. Yeah. So stealing content and I mean borrowing of writing. For. Fair use. Fair use content and. Writing content, that's. What I meant too. And then how do you write fiction?
Really? Really. Yes, I believe so. Of the promote your books on Amazon. By all means. Like that's again when you're a non. Stephen King. I always wondered like what would sell as an author that nobody knows how many copies would sell. I mean, I think you could write the greatest book in the world and it would just sit there and nobody would buy it. Sure. Yeah, totally. I think of that all the time. You mean because your books don't sell. Exactly. The greatest books out there?
Yeah. But yeah, I just thought that would be an interesting thing to to try because we know we would at least get mentioned. I know again that we know there's about a million people that listen to no agenda. And I'm sure at least 2% of the. 25 of them don't. Write it. At least 25 donate. Would they buy a book, though? I don't know. I don't know. But I mean, the podcasts certainly aren't paying off lately, thanks to Uncle Joey and the economy. Yeah, I'm guessing. I mean, look at no agenda.
They've been on single donation breaks for quite a few shows now and all the other shows around seem to have taken a taken a hit because, you know, the economy sucks, which is why today, I mean, we are still a value for value podcast, even though you tell people do not donate. Well, I'm just trying to make sure that people save their money out to go buy a pint. Jojo Yes, See, and that case, lady? Get over it. Came in with $10.80, which is just about the cost of a packet of ponchos.
Amongst. The mob watches. Thinks I'm talking to it. Stop. And it's like everything I say is being. Oh, yeah, yeah. You need to disable the mic from the watch. I think so. But it was also like instantaneously transcribing what I was saying, and that is freakin impressive for a device like this. It has to do real time as it's listening to the audio transcription on a watch. They talk about sci fi, but a lady get over it.
Could have bought one of those beautiful poncho sets but instead came in with $10.80. I know she wants to get to the point to get the steak dinner here in Iraq, and she's one of just a couple of people that are in that level. Get to that point and we'll have to do that once weather gets a little nicer. Get out. See some folk. Oh, yeah. In fact, I'm talking about doing a meet up with a little boy. Yeah, Yeah. So I'm watching him planet.
So I have no idea what it is when he figures out when it's going to be. Another marketing problem. Well, it's not. I just I don't want to be the guy doing the that I'm not really good at, you know. I mean that Why are you doing this show? I'm kicking ass on this show. The one's not so much, but thank you. Lady Gaga over. It. It's just certain aspects of it. So, yeah, thanks for the donation. That's always appreciated. You know, you don't have to do it.
Unrelenting that show your support keeps this podcast viable. Yeah, it helps offset. So realistically like I know my cost I'm doing the shows that I'm producing is about 50 bucks a month and you know, which is what, 300 bucks a year coming out of my pocket. I think your costs may be just a smidge lower because you're hosting on a not a paid hosting service. Where it's not a podcast, but it is a paid host. Okay, But either either way, I mean, it's certainly not free.
We're not running on a one of those like, Hey, give us your podcast, we'll put it up for free and we own it. Whereas I would some what we're spending now is maybe around for the for the hosting, maybe around 20 bucks a month just the hosting aspect of it. Oh, that's not really all that different. I think I paid 24 bucks a month. I've got or. You have a bunch of them on there. Yeah. Yeah. So you got to break them by shows. And that's for, that's for all of them.
So they're all combined into one hosting. But then we have the Adobe that we pay for every year, which is like 150 bucks B it's cheap because it's the, the, the teacher pricing at Adobe. So I think I buy that maybe like 20 bucks a month as well. So that's another, you know, 240 So right there we're running around 500 or so.
Yeah. Then there's the P.O. box, which is now like 150 bucks a year and like really for the small box, I mean, I remember when it was like 40, 50, 60, but now the stuff is getting greedy now. But beyond that, that is pretty much it. Adobe and then, you know, just having machines to record on and and microphones to sound good and all that and of course a mo to the ad the price of the mo to in there and all that. So there is costs that are involved. It is not free, it is not horrible.
I mean it's not like it's 20,000 a year or to run a podcast or anything. Sure. Is it a real show or is PA Joe, for example, wanted to know. See your spine? What's the sheer spine? So I don't know. It's a Frank Zappa quote, though. Is it? That's what Diggy guru said. I don't know. I don't recall that in a in Friends was music that I heard. But I'm sure it's it's a real thing. It is a real poncho that you can touch and feel and it will keep you warm on those cold schirach nights.
Yeah. Or you could just move to Texas and not by by Poncho. That's their. Choice. Either help Jean or move to Jean's house. Yeah, she's got a bunch of tiny homes on his property now. He's renting those out, too. Oh, man, I wish I did that now. But there are. There's definitely the the the prices on property here in Austin. Just crazy. Well, they're talking about Austin. There's one of the cities they're like, that's about to crash. That's really just those two anyway.
Yeah. So sell quickly and get out. Yeah, it's. I've been threatening to get out for two years now. Did they. Nobody's running you out of town yet. Mm. Yeah. Well it's just the, the, the whole concept of packing and moving is just so depressing that every time I to move, I kind of think, Yep, I really need this. And then I think of the process involved, and. Then every time you do it, it gets worse.
Well, except when I got divorced and it was actually fairly frickin easy because the wife took all the stuff. Well, yeah. So you're. If you're traveling lightly. Yeah. Yeah. I was like, I didn't have any furniture at all. And so the move was very, very quick. And, and the other thing I did is I gave all my books to the, the, the bookstores that, you know, take this book. Yeah. They'll give you like $0.30 for every they. Give you by the pound.
And I just said I'm like it would have been about for a box of maybe 25, 30 books, it would have been like $0.12 a pound or $0.15 a pound or something. So I would have been a few couple bucks. You're in better shape burning it. I'm no, I would never do that. But I just don't like I don't I don't want to wait for you to weigh this. I'm just going to leave it here. You can. Yeah. Yeah. It's like at that price, there's no difference. I'm not going to get anything from.
And don't watch your spare change. I think I got 14 boxes of books, but I do read around there. Hopefully somebody enjoyed them because most of those books were only read once. I rarely ever reread books, but I used to have a fairly sizable collection of science fiction books and just a lot of, you know, history and philosophy books, so maybe no one's ever read them. It's possible they.
Just they just went into some manufacturing deal where they cut the books out and let you put guns and say, Right. You got to make the gun safe. That's a great idea for old books. If you got some old books, it's not that hard to do. You just need some adhesive and some of my time and well, yeah, a blade of some sort. Uh, what's his face? Who's the guy that doesn't for no agenda? The no agenda book guy. I forget the.
Yeah, I forget the guy's name, But yeah, maybe I should have, like, reached out to him and shipped them 14 cases of books. That was really bummed that our buddy Jeff had no agenda. T just croaked. He did. Yeah. I know that. Died suddenly. Adam talked about it on the show yesterday. Wow. Yeah, I haven't listened to the show. It was. Like, wow. These I got. I got some shit from Adam to a symptom, a link to an audio clip of the once guitar thing.
And that clip was inside of a clip or inside of a video that unrelenting and unreal. I think one might think. Oh, yes, yeah. Central to this show is really what if you want to start pissing Adam off and start clipping this show and sending it to up? Yeah, So. Well, it was. It was What the hell is that show called now? Carpe Diem with Clayton Morris and his wife? I don't know. Uh. Damn, damn. See, Brooklyn did send us a boost. A 3333 saying Shark Tank, Here we come.
I guess that was about the poncho shark. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Well Anyway, is that the. Whatever the hell. Clint Morse's thing is, you. Sent him a clip. I sent him a clip, and he said, No, we didn't play this clip, but we did a bunch of better job deconstructing. And I like, Yeah, he really doesn't like Clayton. I think. I think the pool boy.
He was I don't know if you like I don't think he likes the team either much, but but Clayton I guess he's worked with his wife previously or something and like he thinks that they ran away from the US for doing some shady business deals, like defrauding people or something. I don't know. I mean, I just. Maybe I just. I'm used to working with people that they've done shady stuff so I don't really care. You're like, that's pretty much par for the course. I'm like, Yeah, I just.
And there's also a battle plan from DG. Guru just says, You just need to get married again and then divorced. The bitch will take all your. Stuff then move. Yes, that's a great idea. I like that. Makes the move a lot easier. Well, you can bring in a nice Ukrainian girl too first and then. Oh, they're hard to come by now. Really. There's a. Yeah, they've gone. They're all they're, they've already all been trafficked. You mean they found husbands. That's why I said right. Yeah. Tomato, tomato.
Yeah. Pretty much. I always liked that little saying tomato, tomato, but it really doesn't work in text format. Does it smell the same way? Right. Well, because it's the same thing you. Get redacted. That's the show. I was thinking. Play in the redacted. Redacted. So yeah, if you want to piss off Adam, send them a clip from Redacted. Guys. You'll definitely be pissed off about. It, but only send him that clip while you're wearing your Yukon trading company orange ponchos.
I should have just hired you to promote these things. That would have been easier. Yeah. I a lot cheaper. Do you? Every YouTuber should have one of these on. Wah wah recording. Yes, I think it would be. You're right. It's just. Just think of like, an orange grimace. That's what you look like when you're wearing it. That would be awesome. Uh huh. Well, feel free to take a photo of the. Show is redacted. I'm pretty close. Yeah. Redacted as the show and I. I don't know.
Clayton was on Fox for many years. He's like 12 years or something. I, I like watching him. I think he's got a fun sense of humor. He's joking around with his wife and. Uh, but clearly, there are some people that he rubs the wrong way. Adam is one of them. What if I get that? I get that now. I guess the Paul Pelosi video's out. Was there anything good program? Now that the video's out, was there anything interesting in the Hammer?
Paul Pelosi I mean this all this stuff takes so long for this stuff to come out and they were trying to hide this body cam footage for some reason which means that the story obviously wasn't being told accurately. And of course there was the the black reporter from the local was at the NBC affiliate that wasn't on the air that for like a half hour or so, like 30 days after, because his report said something that, you know, questioned how this whole thing went down.
Yeah, Nancy and Paul have made a lot of money on stocks, though. Don't they, that have a millions, if not hundreds of millions in stocks. And in fact, I think there's a fund that just purely tracked and bought and sold the same stuff that she did. And their return is much, much better than the average. That's genius. So that's the way you pick your stocks, as do Nancy Paul, of buying this. If the people that are allowed to do insider trading legally. Yes. Why would you not follow that?
They would have to be stupid in order to lose money. And when they buy, Pelosi has to buy, then you have to disclose that because being a public figure, it all best. Oh, excuse me. That's boring, Eugene. I'm just a little bored with today's conversation. It's. It's the trade off, right? So you get to do insider trading, but you have to publicize it. So it's not insider. It is now. Oh, everything's fine. Well, it's still insider because you don't buy.
She's not going to share the secret information that she has that nobody else does. Right. But you can see all you know is the actions that she's taking or whoever is doing it for her behalf. Yeah. Make sense. And you're you're supposed to believe that she's not giving this information to anybody else who is doing things. But it's not just her. I mean, it's literally anybody in Congress, of course, can do insider trading. Which is why they should be barred from doing all this kind of stuff.
But then it all goes down the line of. The single simplest thing that I've been saying literally for 40 years. It's still true right now. That needs to happen. Is term limits. Oh, yeah. Term limits. Fix everything. They drain the swamp through a mechanical mechanism that nobody can avoid. And then you put them in through a meat grinder. Well, they put you through one, but yeah. But Ted Cruz just put a bill out, right, For term limits. It's never going to pass. It's never going to pass.
Oh, everything that the the relatively few actual conservatives in Congress, which is about 20 in the House and about eight in the Senate, what any of these people do right now is purely by virtue signaling because they know nothing is going to actually change, Nothing will pass, nothing go through, nothing will get signed.
But they're still doing these things to get ready for the next election cycle to say, hey, look at all the stuff that I tried to do that I couldn't do because of the bad people. It makes sense. That's politics. I don't mind somebody. I got into an argument or thought maybe it was even you that like there's virtuous signaling on both sides of the aisle. Like it's not limited to just Democrats doing virtue signaling that phrase doesn't mean something tied to a progressive cause.
Virtue signaling is simply doing something purely for the the praise that it's going to generate from your affinity group. But it has to be virtuous. I mean, you can't virtue signal about being a horrible racist. Well, that depends, because. I mean, depends who. You're if you're if you're a skinhead in prison and you're part of the the you know, the Nazi guys, whatever they call, I don't even know what the hell they claim. But you stop the Klan. There's no plan. Prison.
No, there's a name for them. There's. There's they've got the white, white something. I know somebody you know who's been in prison and can tell us and chat among people. Let us know what it's. Yeah. Which is white power or something like that. Like if you want a virtue signal to those guys saying, hey, check out I'm this awesome stuff by bashing in minorities, that's virtue signaling. I guess it all depends on. All the audience groupies.
Yes, it's it is doing something for that designated audience to say, yeah, fuck yeah. And so, I mean it's okay know Ted Cruz is doing but it's not really a big plus. You know it's a question of whether it's really a part of the Republican platform, meaning if they do get into power, will they actually pass that? I think it's more they. Can't get into power. They can't because the Republican Party is been demolished. From the Democrat Party, really, to be honest, but in a different way.
But the reality shows you. Yeah, right. If they actually pass these if their party got into power, don't be like, well, they can't. That's irrelevant Now, if they really believe in this and it's not really virtue signaling, it is signaling that this is our platform. If you elect us, here's what you're going to get, which we talked about the fact that the Democrats very recently under Obama had the president, they had the House, they had the Senate, but they didn't pass abortion.
They didn't they didn't totally define that. It's like, well, why that now? You know, and a lot of people look at all of this stuff and be like, well, you're never going to do well, you know, But if they really will pass, a law that goes into term limits, if the Republicans get control of the House, the Senate and the presidency, which I understand, hard to believe that's going to happen. But if they did, would they pass that law? If yes, then I don't think it's necessarily that.
I guess at that point that's not virtue signal, because it has to only be virtue signaling. If there's nothing backing it up. Right. Or is. It? Yeah, virtue signaling is something you do where your goal is to impress a group of people, not to actually do the thing you're doing. Exactly. Yeah. You got to put your money where your mouth is. By some I mean, like if you're, if you're doing good stuff,
then it also happens to impress a group of people that's not virtuous. And it's also doing virtue signaling. It's pandering. Yeah, that's exactly right. I think pandering is the sin of virtue, signaling. The firmament, the cinema, the. Film of them. Cinnamon. Cinnamon. I love a little cinnamon. But a little cinnamon in the morning. Yeah. Gets you up every time. Hey, is that a stripper? What's the other big story that's going on that's just been making rounds that we didn't talk about.
Cinnamon in the morning? Is that I'm just thinking. Of Stedman, and I'm trying to think that there is a huge story out right now that I was just thinking of and I just spaced it out. The WHO is World Health Organization urges stockpiling radiation meds. That's the headline. In there then that. The I Stole Hillary because I like O'Reilly's coverage a lot for most things but he is totally. Oh, the fighter wing. Sorry the the Russian stuff. Yes. Yeah.
Yeah. And it's I think it's probably people around them reassuring him that he's on the right side. Yeah. The fight because even Trump came out yesterday and said this war needs and it's really easy to do and I would have been that it would have been huge. And I don't think he's referring to launching nukes. But maybe. No, I don't think you never know. You never know. It's possible. But yeah, the stuff that came out, Pfizer or from Project Veritas, you see that?
I have not. Oh, you got to see that. So they record Project Veritas is, just killing it, man. So they had another one of their gay dates set up and managed to snag themselves. The head of he's like a VP of Pfizer R&D or money and recorded him talking about how Pfizer, like a great business model, is to make sure that your vaccines are always needed is to start modifying the COVID DNA and coming up with new variants. And then the guy that's the guy he's on a date with as well.
You know, doesn't that kind of sound like like, what's the thing that Fauci said we don't do in a function? In a function, Yeah, that is as well. No, it's I mean, kind of but it's not really because it's really just sort of, you know, enhancing a viral mutation through a controlled. He basically gave the definition of that. And then instead of using the actual word of DNA function. And so all this makes.
Sense if you're a drug company that's trying to get out in front of something and you know virus will mutate, you're like, Hey, if we could mutated faster than it would, naturally we could be ahead. Exactly. Which also is exactly where biological weapon laboratories do literally a thing, right? They're literally run by the same Germans. I mean, sorry, Pfizer people. It's the same concept. And it's so transparently all this was reported and then the guy was confronted and just lost his shit.
He running around screaming like an ape out of the hands of the the main dude with burritos. I mean, it's just like, holy shit, this guy is not dealing very well at all with the inevitable job loss and never having job in the industry again because he just spilled the beans that they've been trying to cover up for, well, forever. But here's the thing. I've never just like Tim Paul, I'm not a big Project Veritas fan. Mm. I am.
Because you do realize where we started this episode today was just watching people on the Internet and in the real world like. Yeah. So you're out in this guy's trying. No matter what Project Veritas thing you happen to be talking about subject matter, does it really change? The subject matter changes the concept, does it, and you're out with somebody and they're trying to impress this person. They're telling you. What you're doing is literally the talking points of the guy that got caught.
He's like, Oh, I was lying. I was just trying to impress a date. Are you impressing a date by talking about how you're company is doing something illegal? Well, that's not impressing without blinking. It's illegally like, Hey, let me tell you something you don't know. Everybody knows something they don't know, which is why they listen to so many podcast so good. Could it be true? Yes. But I also understand where you're going with this kind of stuff that.
Oh, let me tell you, like it depends how well it's literally what 60. Minutes used to do back when we were young. Right. But it's like I don't necessarily believe that everything anybody says is the truth. Now, it's possible to catch somebody. They may tell the truth, but you still have to be able to prove it. But I could also add with editing that there is certain ways to get this is how all of, you know, fake facts. So this guy is.
This is why so many attractive Russian women probably worked throughout the Cold War, sleeping with American lawyers to get the information because guys will tell how much of that was true. Well, yeah, you know, it's all true. If they show an interest, well, that you might give us stories. Any woman who's hot enough for you be interested in You can. That's right. You're like, Here's a simple factor, guys. If she's way too hot for you. Uh huh. Avoider. Yeah. Don't avoid it.
Just keep your mouth shut. Right? Don't say anything. Loose lips, Big ships. Uh huh, totally. But I see this is why I don't buy half of this stuff. Like, Oh my God, this has to be true. Because this idiot said, No, I don't because I don't have to edit it. You know how somebody was prompted for something like, hey, well, they. They could have been prompted, but the guy's job is literally in charge of that. So. Okay, well, maybe he lied, but, you know, so not a good look. I would agree.
But this the Project Veritas stuff gets very tiring. Oh, no, no, I love it. I think it's great. I think it does. And I think you really to just kind of, you know, understand one, that people lie. You want to understand. You want to get all the data that you can. And that was, you know, there are going to be cases, as I said, our buddy Jeff from No Agenda Tea died suddenly, was not vaccinated at all. Now, we've all heard the stories that all the vaccines are what's doing this?
The vaccines are what? So this is like, well, now we have somebody that wasn't vaccinated. You have to start looking. Well, I don't know the fact that we don't know if he was vaccinated or not. We don't know if anybody was. But according to his family, he was not. Mm hmm. Yeah. Now, I've told his family it's possible. But again, this is everybody lies and don't believe anything is necessarily the truth, just like pointing to.
Well, you know, once the vaccines came out, all of these deaths started. It's like, well, you know, what else happened with all these vaccines came out. People left the house for the first time in like six months. Yeah. So, I mean, you have to take all of the factors into consideration and that is rarely what people do. It may be true. I mean, that when I look at this is like, well, it seems like it's a it's a decent possibility. Well, I don't know, man. Scott Adams admitted he was wrong.
So that those are some the cases that were done like the science is in. A cart science, says. Catena says he was wrong. Science is in. I wish more countries would admit that they're wrong, but you know, it is what it is. I'll take one. And yeah, the books are closed. It's done where we were right? Do not question anything. With no press and everything, we talk about the question absolutely everything I am. And that's what I like to do. But most people don't. Most people don't. They?
To point to one thing and be like, well, it's obviously this. And quite often then yeah, you have a blind spot and you miss something. It's the same with the hockey stick, I don't think. Look, I don't. Care what's causing the deaths. I'm just happy that those of us that are pure bloods don't have to deal with it. See, now, if you drop dead during the show, then that would just add to a whole new level. Then You don't know if I was secretly vaccinated. Yes, exactly.
That's the beauty of everything, is it's all lies, It's all deception visually. This is why unrelenting is indeed so unrelenting. I mean, that that is kind of like the crowd that we have in the social that listen to us. Oh, yeah, they're. Around the stream. Oh, they're nuts. And like, these are people that tend to mistrust. And for that reason, I'm one of those people. I, I tend to mistrust things as well. For very good reason. Yeah, but beware. I'm also usually right.
But that's it. You got to be. Where are your blind spots, though? Yeah. No, that's that's absolutely right. And I think it's important. This is this is, by the way, why I did the interview with, that 20 year old and then the 28 year old to. See the point of view. Yeah. You can't be stuck in the same bubble all the time. But it's very interesting because the 20 year old, I think if you tried to tell him he was wrong about half the stuff that I believe he was wrong about.
And you say that they would be like, Nope, you're an 80 year old trader. I had an hour and a half long conversation with him yesterday that was not recorded, not about death. Why would you waste that kind of content. To Now we've been talking every. Week and you're like, I'm just trying to figure this kid out. So I'm not really I'm just trying to convert him. Is he does he eat meat? Does he get laid to drink?
I don't know if he gets laid a whole lot, but he does eat meat is kind of a tall, lanky dude. You know, those those usually don't get a whole lot of it. I did just fine, man. Well, what you claim. So yeah, he's like six, five or six, six or upset. I'm telling you that I heard arrhythmias probably in his future because he's too tall. Well, yeah, probably. I'll. I'll make sure to give him the good news. Yeah. The doctors in there, if you're.
If you're big or not, as far as weight, just like being tall, that's. He's like a lot of basketball players have arrhythmias. Well, I mean, clearly, humans were not intended to be that tall. I know. Kind of a genetic defect. There, huh? But see, that's all you are. The smarter you tend to be, too. Which is completely false. If you actually look at I do. Know. My. Height, he'll he'll back me up on this one. If you're 65 or over, you're probably a genius. The creative genius, too.
Only a non genius would say that. So, you know, take it with a grain of sand there. A grain of sand in it. A grain of salt. Well, you do, you. If do it well again if you weren't dating much that's what you do. Yeah. So I think he has dated and stuff but I just, I don't know that whole generation that like dating is a different concept for the lost generation. It's more like it is totally a lost generation. I tell them, Think you guys are fucked, Your whole generation's fucked.
And in how will their children fare? That is, they won't have children. That's the beauty of it. Well, what do you care? I don't know, Dad. You don't have children. You'll be dead. I'll be dead. Maybe, but I'll be either way. How much? How much are you spending a month in getting, like, cryogenic blood re infused? I do have a supply of my blood stored. So that is. That's true. Is it all wrapped up in the ponchos now to keep it cool? Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
That's a great use for the guys just there. You can wrap it around your blood. Yeah. And a bunch of new uses for these things. Well, I'm getting getting stem cell extractions done when you're young. So that you have available when you're old. Yeah. These are all useful things. Any new uses of those ponchos? Please let us know what you're doing with them. Totally. Yeah. I mean, I would love to. I would like I'd love to sell them.
But beyond that, if, if the people are creative, man, I want to see that shit is. That's awesome. Yes. Fill up no agenda social or YouTube with these videos. Mm hmm. And make sure to have the Yukon box in the frame. Yeah, that would be useful. Only trust Yukon. And I'm all for a totally tongue in cheek type reviews. Like, I think those would be hilarious too, where you're. You're pointing out the benefits that are clearly not right. Yes, exactly. And then at the end of the video, go icon Yukon.
Yeah. Nice that you just come up with that. Yeah. Yeah. Wow. I'm just trying to get you at these things, so I. Appreciate a man that I definitely appreciate because I do need to sell like 3000 of these. So move them and then get your new products up there. Yeah, yeah. And there's, there's some more ironing out. I think we will use the same company for production. So at least that part of it is done. But there's definitely some more stuff to iron on the design to make it fully workable.
And if you go directly to third Jean for $33, he will send you an autographed poncho. You know, I hate to say, but that probably is not far from the actual price after shipping, because I think shipping one of these for me is going to be at least ten bucks. There you go. So, you know. What you can always do? I do have yeah, I do have a bathroom sitting here for at home for, you know, friends and family and stuff.
So if somebody truly doesn't want to buy one from Amazon but would like to support, you can probably just pay pal me a donation to the podcast and say, here's my address for the poncho and I'll you on. And but. But I think I mean I hate to be a you know a dick about it, but I think that is kind of the price point. It's got to be like over 30 bucks. That we could support.
Sir Jean speaks and then Jean can get himself some of those the envelopes, the bubble envelopes or the boxes or a from the post office. They give you a flat rate. It is probably about still ten. That's why I. Think flat rates are like six bucks now, aren't they More. And I don't think this would fit in a flat, right? Well, if I put it in a flat rate envelope, it would get squished. Yeah, but that's if you'd have to get out of the box. It's too thick to put it into the flat rate book. Oh, man.
I'll see how this looks. So I will have them on Sunday, man. Yeah, that's awesome. I mean, that's one thing Amazon's awesome as fast delivery. They will throw that into some they'll. Have some low page worker driving around on Sunday. Yes and the last like delivered like that it was just like somebody in an SUV. So it's like how does this job work? That's literally a contractor guy getting paid like $0.50 on a delivery. They're like, go to Uber eats or something.
Yeah, they're doing Uber eats at the same exact time as they're doing Amazon delivery for you. My poncho smells like fries. That would be okay if it starts smelling like Chinese takeout. Maybe not so much. Wow. Little cream of gay. Young gay. Wow. I was definitely not going there, but holy shit. Yeah. I tell you, this show is better than Seinfeld. It is comedy gold. But it. But it's just like Seinfeld, though.
