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075: Ponchoaire

Jul 03, 20231 hr 59 minEp. 75
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On this Unrelenting episode we talk about NASCAR, rain, air-conditioning, Russia, and a whole lot more. Thanks for listening. Subscribe and tell a friend! EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS:Dale from Down UnderSir Truck DriverKevin SeifertPhiferCSB – https://CSB.lolTHANK YOU! JOIN GENE’S VIDEOGAME / CULT: BUY GENE’S SPACESHIPS: https://star-hangar.com/shop/Origin-Used-VehiclesGENE’S PONCHO ON AMAZON: https://amazon.com/gp/product/B0BN6ZR75B CHECK OUT THESE OTHER SHOWS: SIR GENE …

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Transcript

If one of us is telling you you're. Hello and welcome to episode number 75 of Unreal Renting. We have not yet relented. I'm Darren is Jean. And was it Raymond? Where you said what now? 25 more to go. Is that. That's it. We hit the 100 and we're done. Well, you know, that was the best one. That was it. That we could actually stand each other for a good episode. Like, no doubt. What's the over what's the under her? It will have memories. We have at least one fan there.

People that are still on no agenda social like oh a grumpy old Benz came back and it's like yeah like 13 months ago now, huh? I guess we're not good at marketing any of these shows. And by we you're referring to you. Well, I mean, I wouldn't expect you to market grumpy old Benz, but this one maybe. I mean, you're on the marketing team here. We the tweets on Twitter, we reach. Yeah, that is going that is giving it 110% right there. It's giving it 100 people that.

Well, that's true because yeah, they had a very slow start. I mean, of course, you haven't been kicked off Twitter yet, but that will happen. Oh, maybe. I don't know. I'm I'm slow posting there, dude. It's probably one day you're much less chance to get knocked off then. Ironically, I can I can actually post a lot more because I'm a paid person. Everybody who's not paid is really bitching right now. You're you heard about the.

Yeah. Limiting it's a very weird concept I get can only read 600 tweets. Yeah I get limiting people's posting ability. I don't know if I understand limiting the reading. I mean I understand though I'm I'm the right there with them man. I I'm I'm a big believer in blocking people. Well it's the data scraping bit that if there's getting Ellen all butthurt I believe that Ellen's like, you know what? I got this big thing I paid billions of dollars for. There's a lot of data that people want.

Well, pay if you want to scrape it, don't tell you. Make it all for free. Which I'm always intrigued when you run. I mean, most things still don't limit when you hit on them. Meaning, you know, you go to a website and if they have a bunch of audio or video or whatever it is, most of the time, if you have a way to scrape all of that data, the website doesn't care. It'll just let you do it at whatever speed it can. It doesn't go, Huh?

Let's say you've downloaded 18 hours of video in the last 20 minutes. That seems exactly. That seems a little weird, but Ellen's going, Hey, wait a minute. We need to limit this at the very least. But I think that's a big negative for actual you because there's there's a limit you could put on it that would make a little bit more sense. And because it's like, how long does it take somebody to read 600 posts, like 5 seconds on Twitter, know a little more,

And it's like, what counts? Are you writing? If I just if you're actually reading it, if you're not a computer scanning the shit, if you're actually reading it, you're not going to read more than one post the second. So 600 in and what is the ten minute in 10 minutes. Yeah. And that's what they said it's giving you. Right, Right. 2 minutes a day for free. But that's, that's a lot of I mean that's an intense 10 minutes. That's work. Yeah. That's a little bit bizarre. That's all I'll say.

I don't know. I think this is exactly what should have happened. These right on the right track. And I think it's going to do two things. One, it'll probably double the number of people that pay. It is going to encourage paid people who are like, I need to because there are some people that are like and my favorite. Before we go, go ahead. But my favorite was people like, but I use it for business. It's like, well then pay asshole. Yeah, exactly.

You have no nothing to bitch about in that regard. If you use it for business, you can afford the eight bucks a month. Yeah. Yeah. And or actually the business. I think it's 50. But the other thing it's going to do is going to cut down on stupid crap, just junk post. Well, it's not going to stop people who are paid from posting whatever they want. No, but you realize that there's not. It's like 5% paid, 95% free. It comes on there.

So what you're saying, a lot of people are going to think twice about who they're subscribing to? No, they're going to stop using Twitter, which is what we want, which is what Ellen wanted from the beginning. I want. Oh, yeah. Does he ever something to bring everybody over to once this all crashes and burns or what is the end game putting money in. This is it. It's talked about it. It's ex scam. But I thought twitter was now ecommerce that going to be something totally different soon.

Twitter is the the exact com beta and it's got very little of the features yet everybody will have to pay. Yeah I think free counts will be for like 30 days which isn't a horrible idea. Yeah. Although it's done. Excuse me. And the, the, the bad side of this will be depending on how they allow people to pay with you for somebody to use a credit card and have their actual name, well, then that's a different thing. I don't mind paying. I don't like the We must identify everybody.

They're going to start requiring a photo of your driver's license, which is going to knock down the amount of people using it by about while everybody. No, not at all. You think this will actually encourage. So do you think this will actually weed through all of the scammers, all of the bots, and just leave real people? It'll it'll get rid of an awful lot of the bad and the awful lot of the people that have nothing good to say because they're using aliases. Absolutely.

I think that this is look, this is the typical scenario that I say. This is somebody who ran bulletin boards in the eighties. Oh, yeah. This this shit has not changed because people's personalities have not. We all think, oh, it's great to have anonymity and not have to have anything traceable back to you. Here's the problem with that. There's a certain percentage of the population. It's not a small percentage, it's not like 1%. It's a significant percentage of the population.

Given the unbound ability to not be tied back to your actual person, they revert into complete asshole. Look at any chat in any video game. Right. Right. Well, any any chat at all. Yeah, but if you want to take conversations on Twitter seriously, as some small percentage of Twitter users do, because they're there for news and communication. And that's the group that pays and that's the group that Ellen wants to fuck. Then it's not people that are just posting.

And I think for a long time, the problem with Twitter is it's been to large groups, one liberal elites who've had checkmarks and to should pollsters, and then everybody else is a smaller group below that. And this is why everybody said, Ellen, we overpaid for it because you're buying something with a bunch of free accounts, with checkmarks and a bunch of shit posters. Why would you pay money for that?

So I think his goal is to change it from that to more of like, you know, I use signal all the time with most of my friends, the communications through signal with me and with people that are acquaintances that are not really friends. Yes. And they're there's no reason that Twitter wouldn't want to be replacing signal and they'd like to replace people. Well, especially the people, because there's more money and money. You know, that's more money in money.

But if you become the de facto platform that's used, it's really what with Facebook, I think have for a long time as people get on Facebook just to look up friends and other people and then ended up getting stuck on there because that's where most of the communication is happening through.

And as somebody that is always not been well, I mean, if I had a Facebook account, but I've never used it, it's if people looked at you funny when you said, Oh, I'm not on Facebook, you can't send me through Facebook, like, well, why not? So that's what Musk wants to get. Twitter, too, is that sort of ubiquitous if you're an actual human being and not should poster anonymous, then you will be able to communicate through Twitter. Now in the ultimate troll room available, a troll room today.

Oh, uh, cotton Gin wants to know should the no agenda folks then start charging for I.R.S. access. And I would say, as with any of this, the IAC chat at most given times. I mean, right now it's 117 or something logged in during. Yeah, but it's 110 of those are shut posters though. Well but the there's a bar on what can be handled. Well I mean you can answer the question better because I'm a perma banned from there so I can't even use IAC but choose somebody who is IAC should be able to answer.

Would you paid bucks a month to be able to log in there? And I think the answer is no. I would you pay eight bucks a month to log in to no gender social? I think some people would know what you do. So what percentage of people well, let me phrase it this way of the people that follow us, what percentage do you think would still be on there? I would say maybe 20 to 30%. I'd say six. Wow. I'd say which is generous, because the typical answer is five.

Well, I think in this case, most people enjoy being a part of that community and understand that there are no ads and that the guy that's running it is not making money. I think everybody understands that when you go to free Twitter, free Facebook or whatever, you're being inundated by ads or you have to use massive ad blocking and then if you use massive ad blocking, it's more and more common to get blocking stuff. Huh? Well, there's you get that pop up that tells you that.

And well, please disable your ad blocker and then some won't let you do anything on the site unless you do that. And I think the people that understand go, okay, I'll, I'll pay a fair price for it. I mean for the people that use it daily, I think asking for five bucks a month or so would not be out of the question. You know, I think if it was like 20, 30, 40 bucks a month, everybody's gone. But I think if you I here's what I think. There's so few things, right?

One is a lot of the people that use knowledge and the social are people that donate to the show no agenda. And I think a lot of them would be pissed off if they would see it as double dipping if they're donating to a show that they know it's not a show running it. That's the difference. But it's based around the show and I don't think most people know it's not the show running.

I think that that's just a few of us know that it's actually a volunteer project completely unrelated to the show, other than the name. It's mentioned a lot by The Godfather, but I agree, most people do not pick up on everything. And if you're not completely paying attention, you're like, I don't know. I keep he keeps talking about this Aaron or guy. I don't know what he does while you're talking. So she mentions that nobody knows what they do. Like searching.

He's always like this third team, this guy he knows. And people are like, What the hell is he do? Yeah, exactly. Well, the void zero. The Magic Man in the Netherlands. Yeah, Yeah. And some kind of rock. But there's something earlier I like. I've never heard of these people. I don't know who they are. I don't know where they live. But that's anonymity is good. See? Yeah, It's good for not making money. Absolutely. Yes. It's the. Well, that's the way.

Except for our buddy Dale. He came in again today. I'm we're kind of just doing the show for Dale in Australia at this point. The rest of you are just guests listening to a private podcast for one person. Yes, your guests of Dale. So I mean, Ball, you can go through and make sure it's okay with him, but it'll be interesting. I mean, I think that I think something had to be done with the Twitters to make it usable.

I'm not sure I keep seeing the limit for people that are paying for how much they can post getting as far as like how long the messages can be that keeps getting longer. And I think that is the exact wrong way to go because this isn't meant to be a show for the first sentence. It only shows the first sentence until you click on it. I guess that kind of makes it Well, then you have to get really good at SEO to give that first. Yes, yes, yes, yes indeed.

Because otherwise it's like, why would I claim that what's going to happen is every Twitter message will look like a YouTube short because the first sentence will always be this person figured out how to solve the biggest problem in the world, right? Then that's how to get that. To open up the Twitter post. It says nothing about what's actually in there. As you click on these show me more. It's like I learned how to get people to click that thing.

You just click and you say, I just did it to you. There is a guy that does these videos on YouTube about how movies get sold to studios. I wish I could remember the actual brand of his YouTube channel, but it's it's basically a one man thing. So he plays both parts. You know, he's talking to himself in there, but it's basically a Hollywood person like selling pitching a movie to a Hollywood exact. And he does this for all the currently released movies.

And of course, it's super funny because he you know, he highlights all of the the problems with the movie in the pitch. I normally I would say, well, somebody the problem with that but nobody knows what you're talking about as nobody knows what the hell I'm talking about now. Well, often people do, but it's Ryan something Tyler, which I remember is then it'll come to me or I'll look it up from the other.

Our buddy Larry, that normally I do a show with on Mondays, we're doing a monday show because we didn't, we weren't here on Friday. Yeah, yeah. He at one point we go, he sold a treatment to CBS. I don't know if it was made or if he just sold it to him, but, you know, either way, you get paid. Whether that's a good thing. Yeah, whether they make it or not. Did he get paid? I believe so. And he's published books.

I mean, he's the most powerful and popular and successful is probably the word I'm looking for podcaster so well that nobody can hear because he's below hearing range. Definitely there. He got the hell out of comical before. And yeah that's why we were good good I'm yeah that's why I think No I don't think he he may be stopping in Texas but he's not residing in Texas.

Yeah he is not everybody else's come to Texas and, but for Friday we had the guy here doing the work and that by Saturday was finished the new air conditioners working So now it could be cool for the rest of the summer. Well, that's that was the issue. Yes. And he originally told me, well, I'll come out on like Friday afternoon to do the mainly the hooking of the unhooking of the current unit. Okay. And then they were going to come and put the new unit in on Saturday.

And then when I talked to him on Thursday night, he's like, Yeah, I'll come out tomorrow. I'm like, okay, what time in the afternoon? He's like, Well, I was thinking like between ten and 12. I'm like, Okay, okay. Do you not have said, How about you come out a different time? Well, he's a friend and doing it for a good price and oh yeah. Oh, okay. So using nonunion non contract labor, he is retired, correct? He is nonunion, Correct.

Oh, which is also very helpful when we want to hear if somebody might show up at your house, you meet union member. I know you're in Chicago. Yeah well, we're I'm ready. Well, you know, we're not in Crook County, so we're okay every time It's convenient. You're not instigating everything just outside. Oh, I'm in Chicago. Just outside of Iraq. Oh, my God. Did they get some rain? I'm telling you, Mother Nature, obviously not in NASCAR in Chicago, because the rain was biblical.

Really? Yes. Oh, it cut both races short, which, you know, they can race in the rain, but they won't race when they're standing water. Yeah, but they were standing water in the shade, though. This is the first time in my life. And granted, there's a lot of times I'm just not paying attention. But this is the first time that I ever remember hearing that two of the expressways going in and out of Chicago were closed due to flooding. Mm hmm.

That's I guess you got to either you weren't getting downtown or if you were already downtown, you weren't getting out because they shut the express. That was like over three inches of rain in a day or something that came down. They had to change the flow of the Chicago River rather than going into Lake Michigan. They, like, divert it somehow.

There is some crazy stuff going on and I don't even know NASCAR is going to have to be given some refunds for the Saturday race because, oh, you know, baseball is like, you know, one of those things where they not no refunds. I don't know. Because here's the thing. Like when baseball you got your ticket, that tells you that it's a an official game. You know, once they hit, what, five and a half innings? Well, NASCAR thing is always bad and they're an official race if they hit 50%.

So if you hit 50% of the advertised distance and then there's weather and they can't finish yet, oh, it has to at least be 50% to be an official race. They did not hit 50% on the Saturday race. Oh, somebody's going to lose their job over this. But a lot of people in Chicago, it was it was an entertaining race. Otherwise, although they only ran 75% of the race on Sunday because of a late start, which the weather was going to make this not an issue anyway.

But with that said, their start time off the bat, the scheduled start time was like for a 4 p.m.. And I'm like, that's a little late for them. When you're when you're race in darkness, that's a little bit late. So how long they go, how many hours they went until it got dark. They went into a little after eight. They went 75 laps out of the 100 they were supposed to run. And the the main race yesterday and a Kiwi one shame Van Desert, the big name manager, pretty big.

Everybody knows good old shady vendors. I'm sorry, Chain Van Ginzberg in. I want to be. I mean, we use a key without a name. I mean, maybe from down under. He may be a fan. This guy is a big bargain. How Van Gisbergen? They call him the Gibbs. Which I'm like, okay, that's very close to Jim's, but in in Kiwi land, I guess that's cool. And this is the first time in 60 years that somebody's running in their very first NASCAR Cup series race won their very first race.

It's the first time in 60 years this guy gets he's the only guy that that knew how to drive and what pavement. Yeah well because that's what is you know he's a super car racer so he is very used to running in the rain and. Yeah. And the hell's a supercar. It's, it's, I guess it's a car that's super. I mean the big it's an enclosed stock car but with the big wing on the back. Oh right, right, right. So it's not NASCAR at all but it's more popular in the get it up here.

They're they're a little more civilized than than the NASCAR folk as well. You imagine doing the Formula One in the rain. No, that's oh, I forget the driver's name, but 3 seconds after a start, every car has crashed. Like I just crashed this in practice this week. And, like, went airborne before the car started flipping. It's like those guys are crazy. They are, you know, their tires are totally bald, Like they're meant to stick to the pavement, though. Yeah, well, that's wasn't working rain.

That's what the NASCAR one normally does. That's why it's a very interesting thing, because everybody started on the rain tires. And then the question was, when do you go to the slicks? Because the slicks are a lot faster. But if the slicks if you go through a puddle, I mean, you might have a problem, you'd be sideways. Yeah. Yeah. So it'll be interesting to see how much money, if anything, this brought in for the city of Chicago.

There were a lot of people that were angered about this, including somebody that ran a bookstore, like right off the, uh, the track layout shutting down. Yeah. Yeah, that, you know, they didn't have to shut down, but all we were worried for our customers, and I guess the building they're in, they're like, Well, this is the original glass in the window from like the 1800s or 19. It was like over a hundred years old or something.

And they were worried that the, you know, the vibrations from these cars going by might, which I think would be hilarious. I mean, NASCAR would pay that would foot the bill. It would never get your original glass back. But I just think that would have been great for a commercial is these cars zooming down Michigan Avenue and watching the windows blowing out that the at the street level. I mean, the lawyers do it anyway, So why?

Well, there's a limited amount of time for this anyway, because before, too long the cars won't be making much noise because they're all be electric. Right. Instead of the big, impressive engine noise you hear. Oh, was that a mosquito? No, no, it was a car. Yeah. The sound is one of the more amazing things of these stock cars. And the speeds are pretty impressive, too. But it's the noise those things make. And of course, the noise flow. Don't you want to do a Tesla racing series?

Well, I think that mechanic boy said be fun to watch. I think that a here's what would be interesting about that is there's a a nonlinear graph that represents the relationship between distance and speed. Right. Is you're working off a battery. Correct. And so the question is going to be the people that will win the race will have to find the right speed, which is not the maximum speed that your car goes. That balances being faster than other people while still being able to finish the race.

Right. Because if you can go 100 miles an hour and I think 100 miles, total race distance would have to be about right, because otherwise the cars would be going way too slow. If you want to get 300 miles, you're going to be going like 60. I think it'd be great if they went like three miles an hour. And this was riveting television. No, that no, but it'd be like 60 to go, you know, 300. So to go 100, you could go 110. So 110, 120 miles an hour for a hundred miles.

So it'd be a nice quick, like two hour, hour and a half, maybe even brought death. But some of the cars that will go faster at the beginning will run out of juice. Now, how exciting. I think they'll actually be way more exciting than watching normal after watching cars that have been leading the race all of a sudden run out of electricity. Well, this is already kind of what happens on road courses because they play that game of fuel mileage and that happens quite a bit.

You know, I mean, and there's and there's nothing which will fuck up the whole the whole entirety of the field's day. Then a restart when somebody runs out of fuel in the middle of the pack, if you're going around a big round track like Indianapolis, it's not that hard to calculate how much fuel is left and when you need to pit in the the data that they're getting from these cars is amazing. Now, everything. Yeah, absolutely.

There was only one time where they went into a blind corner, which all of them pretty much were on the Chicago street course where somebody spun out. And then, you know, of course it's like a funnel. And the funnel got clogged. Then every car coming in and hitting the corner like everybody stopped. Hmm. And of course, the fans enjoyed that part.

I don't know if the driver I mean, it was one of those things if you looked at it as an outlier, it's only one race out of the year and it's the only one that they've ever run as a sport, and it'll probably be the one everybody all drivers complain about. So that'll never happen again. It's going to go one way or the other. There was a lot of that leading up to it afterwards. The drivers seemed to have mellowed and like we enjoyed the whole experience overall in that it wasn't as bad.

I think a lot of people thought there was going to be no chances to pass at all, that it was going to be horrible racing and maybe the rain helped, that maybe the the conditions made it. So these guys, the amount of cars that went head on into a tire barrier, got stuck, were pulled out and then continued on, was amazing. I'm like, Dad, I wish I had that for the expressway. Right? It just rammed my car into a barrier and be like, Oh, I'm fine, just pull me out. I'll go on my way. No damage.

You had a full frame in your car. You probably good. Drew. These tires are a little bit more sturdy than the ones you're driving down the street. Well, our cars are meant to absorb, impact and deform. Well, so are these because they're traveling at such a high rate. But these the impacts weren't enough to do it.

So that's the I guess, the beauty of it, the tire barriers, that's something that have been around in racing for years and years and years and you rarely only see it now on street courses. You really don't even see it on the road courses. It's and it does so much less damage because it's like a big bumper, you know, it's like, you know, hit bottom. Yeah. Mm hmm. I guess it makes it a little bit rubber. Uh huh.

And that was great because the first time the tires were hit, the amount of water that went flying up in the air, because these things were obviously getting filled up so rare. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like now that's pretty cool. That's a cool effect. If you could do that every day. Something that you enjoyed the bumper car action. Uh huh. I mean, that's really what you had to look at going into this race was it's going to be an oddity. Let's see what happens.

I know some people were upset that and, you know, an outlier came in and won the race. I thought it was perfection, really, for the guy to come in from another racing series and just be like, I'll show you how to do it. Mm hmm. Because it wasn't even close. And they were showing him in. He was doing the old school thing where the NASCAR drivers with these new cars, you don't even have to use the clutch when you shift. This guy was still using both feet.

He'll tow one and use it moving both feet around like he was dancing. The man, he flew past everybody. I mean, I think he was like 18th when the last restart was in the race and he just drove past everybody because he was that good. I think there's a certainly an ease that comes with not having clutch, but the clutch does more than just simply allow you to change gear. It actually lets you change the engine revs without changing the. Yeah, which can make it easier for the car to handle it.

Make it well. You can place more you can get if you know what you're doing right, you can put more power into the car than you should be able to really in a given time. So you're you can use the clutch to not pressing it all the way down, but just slightly easing the clutch, rev the engine, drop the clutch and give the car a boost out of a turn that you would be unable to do if you were running an automatic transmission. Right. And I think there's a big bit that's like cable work.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And I see this as somebody, you know, I am driving a car with a manual transmission. Well, actually, I did have one about ten years ago, 12 years ago, when I moved to us, they had a car with manual transmission, but that was a that was, as Adam Cole called my job car and a Fiat 500 convertible. And that that was a manual transmission. And you never ran that into a tire barrier? Oh, amazingly, no. I don't know if I ever read faster than 65 miles an hour.

Oh, it was one of those was a little scary to get it up higher. No, it just had a one liter engine. No. So it just looked good. But I most people would disagree with that statement. Is that why you got rid of. I just thought it was beautiful. I just I really thought it was a very good old car. I remember seeing those in Italy when I was a kid. And it's just a it's a really it was a nostalgic purchase, as most cars are for most people. Jean, are they? No, no. That one was. That one was.

But then I you know, a few years later, I got the a similar looking car, which is the the 500 E which was the full electric. Yeah. Which was the same body style but no engine motor. And a lot of people are confused that we're doing this show today. They got Larry's traveling so they always know this and they were confused about this. You're like, this is it's Monday morning. We're always no good for your memory. Serves you wrong. It's the Mandela effect. Uh huh.

It is the definitely the Mandela effect. But this is what I mean. This is the negative part. People are going to start saying we don't do two shows a week, right? Like, since they're like, of course we do it when we always do shows, we mean it's hard to just even get everything. Yeah. And yet we still barely get donations. I know it's one of those things. I don't get it. I don't get it. Well, maybe the second Monday works better.

I think. I think having the the set time is a big detriment for podcasters having that. Oh, we got to do it at this time. On this day. Absolutely. I agree. I'd like to be a little more fluid, a little more like, hey, when the when the mood hits, you do it. Yeah. That's why I haven't done 13 Speaks in three months. Well, see, the mood has not hit, you know, it will at some point. And that's why I'm still paying for the those thing. But you know, you got to keep the old shows up there.

Yeah. Yeah. You got to do that. I mean, podcasting is one of those interesting things. I was thinking about this the other day because most people treat in there are outliers that will go back and try to catch up from the beginning. But for most people a podcast is like talk radio, meaning if the show is more than like two days old, they're like, Yeah, why would I listen to that?

Yeah, but for other things, you know, if you start writing and you start pumping out fiction books, well, you could be like ten books in. And that's okay. Because if somebody discovers you're writing ten books, then they're going to be like, Oh, what else has this guy done? And they're probably gonna go back and read the other books. Well, and ironically, this podcast, you can go back to any point in time because that really any topic that's not really timely, there are no topics.

We will never mention anything going on in the world at all. Well, if we do it, you know, it could be still going on six months later or a year later or five years later. I mean, like the Ukrainian debacle. Yeah. Was that funny how that whole thing just got wrapped up in a nice bow and people forgot about it? Nobody talks about it seems still like it's still going on. Mm. Okay. What's the. Oh I found that the, the video I was talking about called pitch meeting She-Hulk.

Yeah. Well that's one of them. I just sent you a sample, but so he does these pitch meetings, which is like pitching movies that are out in theaters. There's probably a thousand of these now that he's done and it's it's a comedic view of how that movie was pitched to the studio really highlighting all the deficiencies first. Well, of course, when you pitch it, you don't mention the bad stuff. That's why this is a comedy. But it's comedy because the bad stuff is brought up as pluses.

Oh, as a benefits, right? So it's like, hey, we we do not talk about anything on this show. Mm hmm. It's like that's a selling point. That is a selling point. Yeah. But I have to ask you, we really we didn't talk about the I never know what you want to call it. The Russian rebellion. What happened with nothing. Right. But it's the story that's being told is like, Oh, my God, this is signaling the end of Putin's power. Yeah, his top oligarchs are turning against him.

So it's been bitching about not getting money in a timely fashion for months. Oh, what's this about something you pay? Yeah, Like, for a long time, he's been bitching about this and, well, you could say, well, he's looked out for his men. They mostly look now for his own wallet. Um, and I think that finally he was bitching enough wildly now that my sex said, hey, you know, we've got a billion that is earmarked for, uh, for somebody else.

And Ukraine on the other side of the conflict from you guys. But if you were to say, I don't know, say decide to make a big show of switching sides who maybe you can have that billion dollars. This was a billion because I heard the number billion brought up a lot. And so I don't think that's just random number. I think that there was an actual offer for $1,000,000,000 for him to flip. And, you know, he's a mercenary. Of course he's come to that and way to do things for money.

Since when I know, right? Uh huh. And my understanding is that so he took the money, went ha had no thanks. Well no he didn't get around but but that there was there's conversations with Russia and basically they said look here's the deal. This is not making us look particularly good. So you're done. You are not going to be working for us anymore. However, we'll we'll let you leave Russia and never come back and keep your life. And so essentially that's what happened.

So he's in in Belarus, though, which is still a country that is happy to be helping. Yeah, they speak Russian right there. They're on Vlad side. Yeah. Yeah. They've got their own dictator out there. So the Boghosian guy, he shouldn't be looking over his shoulder. This was all just and I've heard a lot of people say that he probably has less than a year left. He'll have cancer or something, you know, something natural that happens to him within the year.

He will have an accident, he will exit major access. Exactly. But yeah, it seemed like it was a it was definitely one of these things that, depending on which side you're on, you can say, well, we were playing 40 chess. Yes, but we were playing five D chess. No, but we were playing 60 chess. Yeah. Everyone's going to pretend like they were doing all of this on purpose and that the end result was exactly what they expected and what they wanted.

I think realistically, pagos is just kind of get fed up with what's happening. There was, you know, his his mercenaries are made up predominantly of prisoners from prison and where they're usually coming from. Yes. Well, sometimes the gulag, but that's not really a thing these days.

So they're they're essentially conditionally release prisoners and they're not particularly liked by the regular army, as you can imagine, cause you can't trust people that have ended up in prison and so there was some disdain for them from the regular army. And, you know, one of the things you got to do as a mercenary is you got to have good PR, good marketing. So you got to really kind of inflate all your victories and minimize all your defeats to make yourself look good.

Well, yeah, if you want to get the big bucks because you're constantly selling yourself as a mercenary, unlike the regular army, which could do stupid shit and then, oh, so why did these mercenaries just turn to Ukraine and be like, Hey, how much? Or don't they? Well, first of all, the mercenaries are still Russian. They don't I mean, you know, you'll do any, you'll do a lot for money, but you won't do that. Well, that's a good sign. But I mean. Well if I won't, I'll do it.

I'll do anything for them. Yeah, I guess you got your pants there entirely to take both you and made his voice like that. I've got to get the. I think the. The best meat loaf is in Rocky Horror. I mean, I thought the best meat loaf was at a little Amish place in Sarasota, but, I mean, I guess to each his own. Yeah. Yeah, I guess that's like the training or something. And when you go to an amateur restaurant, you know what I was thinking? Rocky Horror Picture Show. But.

Oh, right. By Amish restaurants. Why not? I think I saw the Rocky Horror Picture Show once and was like, You're kidding. I think you know, once. Yeah, I've never seen Idiocracy. There's a list of things. Jesus Christ. Well, Rocky Horror Picture Show is not something you watch on video. It's something that you experience in the theater full of crazy people. Yeah. That are usually drunk or high. Not even just crazy. It's not really necessary.

I saw it when they originally came out in the little theater and thought, This is crazy. How does this movie even get made? You put the money up for this and then watch it as it turned into this like weekly, right, Your picture show performance thing where people watch the movie so many times that they learn the lyrics. Yeah, that was me with the Blues Brothers when I was ten. Right. Well, you want to see that movie over and over? Yeah. So.

And then then when it came out on video. Oh, one of the greatest movies ever made. Yeah. And you said someday I'll move to Chicago. You know, I didn't quite me see the now, now I think someday you'll move to Joliet. Yeah. They finally close that place down. Uh huh. I mean, JOLIET'S still not a great place, but, you know, it's probably better than Chirac right now. The probably. Yeah, it's just down the road here, but I can be in Joliet in, like, 15 minutes. Yeah, cool.

We should do a remote from Joliet Prison or jail. Yeah, I know. They. They do events there, like, once a year. There is like at the Morris fest or something there. So you can, you can do stuff at the prison. Really cool. Do you like it? I stay there though. Do you have any of the rooms left that I can convert a prison to a hotel? There would be Hitler. That would be awesome. I mean, who would shift in this room? Come on. I know, right?

And then people are paying 200 bucks a night to stay there, right? For the crappiest bug infested mattresses. And then you could have, like, the cafeteria where you can get really crappy food. You could trade cigarets have you didn't have bug infested. That's not going to pass the health care. True. You just have to have like fake. It can look bad, but it can't actually be bad. Yeah. This is the secret, right there.

That's what they were. Yeah. All hotels are like this is selling the to sell the experience though. Uh huh uh huh chains actually they could come out to jeans Gulag for only $2,000 a night. We will give you authentic gulag experience. Authentic experience? Yes. Where you going to be? Shoveling snow for 8 hours a day, but you get a free poncho with the put the searching logo on it. And there's still for sale on Amazon. Get your poncho or I'm completely broke. Yeah. Why? They're not very odd.

Exactly. You know, people don't realize they need them. I mean, I've got them, but I've never used it, you know? But the point is, you should have it in your car glove bag. Everybody should have one. Probably a couple of them in the in the end, at least at least a couple in each car just in case. And if you're a a hunter or a nature walker type, you should definitely have one in your backpack. Yeah. You do not want to get accidentally shot. Well, shot.

Yeah, but I mean, in case, you know, it gets colder than what you're dressed for and you need that additional layer of warmth and then you need a reflective surface to have people go, What the hell is that thing reflecting over there? Oh, maybe it's the person that broke their leg. Maybe we should shoot first and ask questions later. Usually how a hunting goes, huh? Well, if you're with deer Hunter here coming right at us, looks like a deer. Uh huh. Do you watch the video of the deer?

I think I've posted an image in social of a guy handling deer with a camera. Yeah, A lot of people use GoPros and their guns now, and he sees this. This, though. And it's clearly like a year old and still starts walking up to him, comes up, smells the gun, and then comes up the dude and then he's petting it. It's like what they're trying to do, just ruin the whole hunting experience for the guy. Yes. It's like we're nice, furry, little, sweet creatures. Come on. Huh? Uh huh.

It's like, Oh, look, I'm a cute, though. I'm just going to, uh. My name's Bambi, by the way. I'm just going to walk over here. Hey, what is that? What does that big black stick don't. What is that smell like? It smells like death. What is that? Smells like death. Just like this. Yo, bring it out. Oh, hey. Oh, how you doing, everybody? Oh, yeah. Uh, so let's see what else going on. Uh, I don't know. Not. Not. Do you? My child's been playing some really dangerous lately. What is that video game?

Well, I figured that, but no more. It's a space flea spaceship video game. Oh, well, for you, that's a very big stretch. That's a stretch. I know, right? The spaceship video game should have guessed. Uh huh. The over under is always a spaceship video game. Pretty good for the over under and yeah, it's been fun. I used to play it years ago and then I have a couple of friends that well, I say friends, but, you know, acquaintances that have gotten back into it.

And so I kind of thought it would be fun to get back into that and take a little break from Star Citizen from the game. That's an Alpha that has taken all your money. The game that yeah, this one's been a release for years. Okay now where they smart and have a bunch of extra purchases in that one as well. Uh, no, no. They, they only sell paint for your spaceships, so you can customize the way it looks. But they don't sell a spaceship. It's special. A spaceship paint?

Well, there's a lot of different colors and things and a lot of different styles and graphics. Like I've got spaceships with a sneak peek of them. If you have. If you don't get the right paint, does it chip off? What happens? It does chip off. But no, it's not a banner red paint. That is actually a very cool feature in this game that I wish more games that is that the the paint deteriorates over time so your ship looks more worn.

Do you have to repaint it? You do need to repair and that's the only thing they sell. So I'm guessing it looks good for like a day now. And you know, once you buy beyond forever, you don't need to pay more to repaint your ship. Oh, so you all in the paint and you remodel yet? Yeah, Yeah, exactly. But. But I love the look of a weathered spaceship. You know, if you look at the space rockets, they fly them multiple times. They don't repeat them every time they fly.

And so you can tell right away when they're using a a a previously used beige one, there's they do it. Yeah. So it's a it's neat to be able to see that that kind of weathering effect you're like hey that's rocket 146. Wow good will see it going up again. Mm. Until it explodes Well hopefully that by the way did you see this. Well you don't want basic launches but they recently launched the satellite breather which is going to be an it's an infrared telescope.

I forget what the acronym for the satellite was, but if the infrared telescope from ESA, which is the European Space Agency and it was launched on space, which is crazy, is Musk is telling you not only did he convince now, I don't know if you've heard this is you're not like a car guy, but all the competing plugs are going away. In the US, every manufacturer is standardizing on the Tesla flight. I did see that, which is genius for again? Elon Yup, Again? FREELON Exactly.

He's basically the main provider of spaceships for everybody. Now, if only countries like China and Russia use their own spaceships, but pretty much all the other countries put payloads, musk spaceships, flies, make it a little bit of money. He is making some money. Exactly. And it looks like the progress is coming along nicely. And then the next update, I guess, the rocket launch that I won't be down in the south, but another one will be going up soon.

So, yeah, the next revision of Starship should be ready probably within well, as early as maybe a month, but I'm thinking more like four months. But here's what I want to know. Certainly in the summer, especially with a infrared telescope, I'm hearing more and more from both the European states and the United States, like, Oh, we're going to have to do something to block out the sun for global warming, right? We're going to have to release shit in the atmosphere.

Yeah. To intentionally try to fuck with the nature, natural nature of things. Mm. Why is this okay when everything else that man does is bad for the environment? Who the fuck think this is a good idea? Well, let's. Because you're talking to the science and science knows all who thinks this is a good idea, that we're going to intentionally now try to mess with the climate.

It's so bad that man is having any effect on the climate whatsoever that our answer is to go have a huge impact on the climate. That sounds about right. Yeah. Yeah. Cotton gin says nobody with the brain thinks this is a good idea. I would agree how starting is the problem and the solution obviously is to block out the sun, right? Yeah. We have too many cows that are farting methane into the air, so blocking out the sun. Perfect. That makes a lot of sense. Let's get that written up and done.

Uh huh. It's like this is also why we went from, oh, global warming to climate change, because it's not all warming. Uh huh. Yeah. No, it's it's actually amazingly, it's cooling for about four months a year and then some warming for four months a year. And then the other eight months, it's kind of more or less the same. But we want to intentionally try to cool it now. Wait, that's too many months. Yeah, well, nobody was paying attention to that. Okay?

He's like, Yeah, we do this for four months, this before 16 months where they didn't disclose where I'm from. Yeah, we just did a whole 16 months. So whatever it's like on your planet, I don't know that. But probably it explains the beard, that's for sure. Why you think that's a beard, right? That's just my chin, huh? It's a whole weird race of folk, let me tell you. There are a lot of them are in Texas for some reason, and that's why there are. Uh huh. Keep Austin weird.

And you certainly are. You're helping. You're helping with that. Yeah. And then, by the way, that that movie Man in Black, that's totally fiction, right? Nobody has a little pen that they can just wave in front of your face and make you forget everything. Nope. Does not exist. Wouldn't that be the greatest thing to have? Uh, what? What? So what are we talking about? What do you do? And everybody. Yeah, and we can start locking out the sun. Yes. What a great idea.

Yeah, I think that's a good idea. I mean, what we need is some for anyway. It's just extraneous, and it's like, how are you going to hang your, like, trying to hang a big umbrella up in the atmosphere or something to block out the sun's rays. And it's like one, whatever you put in to the atmosphere, it's going to fall back down to earth unless it's up so high that it's not going to just float up into the ether.

So I don't understand how this is a any kind of a good idea at all and why all of a sudden there is multiple large factions, governments that are like, yeah, this is good. Well, I think they we've been doing seeding for many years. They do it in China, they do it in the U.S. They've been doing it for a long time. They do it in Russia. They a lot of places they do cleaning, but that's not what they're talking about here because the cloud seeding is trying to encourage moisture to to fall. Right.

Or to break what's to block out the sun. Sure, I guess. But it seems like that's that's the best way to block out the sun. Is it is that what they really want to do? Why don't you just build the thing they want to do what, To build a big dome over the cities. That'd be great. Well, that would be cool. I mean, I always thought that, like, if you look at all that movie gold Jim Carrey movie, where he was being watched by cameras and all The Truman Show. Yeah, I always thought that was really cool

because he controlled the weather. Right? Well, right. Because you're living on a set. Yeah. You're in big dome. Mm hmm. So if everybody would just live in a dome, then we wouldn't have to worry what's going on outside of the dome? Am Yeah, well, Adam always says there's a you know, the rockets are bouncing off the firmament. It's the government, man. I mean, we I look, as for everything else, commentary looks at both. It's just the colored painting. Sure.

That's all. The painting, the electric provider here, we'll give rebates and stuff for all sorts of things. I mean, I've made the comments multiple times about things like air purifiers because, well, okay, the you know, Costco's got a $79 air purifier that com that will give you $50 off if you buy it. And the replacement filters are 50 bucks. So I can tell you what I'm going to do, but get a better one. Why? Why ever buy a filter? Just keep throwing out the guy. Yeah, that's true. That's true.

That's a good point. It's cheaper. And I also don't understand why you give rebates on things that are just they're too that use more electricity. Because if I don't have any pure air purifiers in my home, you don't understand that. Let me explain that. They want you to use electricity. You pay for the rebate. Yeah. Yeah, that's this is true. But they no longer as of July 1st. So I don't know how how big my miss was here. They don't do rebates on condenser air conditioners.

They're only doing them now on heat pumps. Oh, my God. The heat pump suck. I know. That's what I said. Like, I don't want a fucking heat pump. No, my house would be cool to be cold in the winter and hot in the summer. Uh huh. That's the convenience of having the heat pump. Uh huh. It'll help a few degrees in each way. But when you have heat like y'all do in Texas, we have the same kind of heat in the summer just for a lot less.

Yeah, and we have the cold in the winter that, you know, like, it's just. It's going to be very bad. The more they push people into technology, like, Oh, for the sake of the planet, it's like, fuck the planet. Nobody's ever actually proven these things are bad in the first place. Mm hmm. But no, they want you to just go with heat pumps. You can't get a no rebates on the air conditioner. I'm like, Well, what's this thing? Hopefully, you know it.

Hopefully I last 15 years, but if the air conditioner last 15 years, I'm thinking, well, what's going to be available, you know, in 15 years? Will they even allow you to buy New age Fact you it's going to be like when the incandescent bulbs you can buy a fan for your ceiling. Uh huh. That's it. You're going to you're going to be able to buy a fan. Congratulations. Yeah. Welcome. The third reason the air conditioners should only last 15 year. No, they make them because of that.

I mean, that's they want you to buy new ones. Yeah, but I don't like it. Has got a new liner ACS that are supposed to like blast at least 30 as well they should. I mean, the technology is not high tech in any way, shape or form. Also, now that you bought one, would you, like know what the markup is on an air conditioners a decent amount? Yeah it's about 300% which I can see which I know I got a good deal from this guy.

So was one of the other reasons why it's like, um, now don't want to they want to deal with a normal company. And I knew this guy had a couple of years ago did it for my parents. He bought a whole new unit in there, and he's a perfectionist, which is also good. And the guy that he brought along as his helper is the guy that his Monday through Friday job is training. He's he works for the union and he trains the people that want to go into fact.

Yep. So like, well, okay, you should know what you're doing then. Yeah. Allegedly thoroughly. But yeah, you know, allegedly that would be the case. You hope they know what they're doing. And so far so good. You know, the old one, there was just a little leak that he put the new he put the goo back in and it worked fine.

And then after a couple of months, the leak, you know, obviously it's leaking the whole time through, but finally got to be low enough where the unit started freezing up and thus not cooling. Right. Irony. But it's good. Yeah, well, I was just in the wrong place. I guess it'll happen. It'll happen. Well, and a lot of the stuff that was done in this house because we did not build this house, we bought it and we run into weird things that were most likely DIY projects from the previous homeowners.

Mm hmm. Like when our kitchen sink, which we had that big ordeal on that like last year around the holidays, the plumbers that came out, like, went downstairs in the basement and they looked in there like, you almost have zero pitch on this line. It you know, it kind of goes down from the kitchen and then it goes from the back of the house to the sewer, which is in the front of the house.

So that line from the kitchen sink runs the whole length of the house and it's like barely a 1% grade, you know, I mean, it's it's like you really need flush that out. But if you put anything down the sink because otherwise it's going to harden in the middle of that big long line, It's like not fun. But again, people that don't do the job right, that doesn't sound like a do do a do it yourself project, though. That sounds like a builder issue. I don't know. It all depends.

You think they put their own damn line in the going from the. It looks like it's possible, although I don't understand how it wouldn't have been there in the first place. But that's got to be the builder. You never know. You never know. It's a weird world, I guess. What else going on? Well, now it's cool in here, so that's good. Yeah. You like it? Cool. I know that everybody loves the Monday morning unrelenting show. Yeah, it's a it's a great it's a great show. Great way to get your week going.

That's right. Oh, my. Apple week to a great start. It says, We found that Monday's work. The best for us though could be I you just put all my podcasts in one day and that way I would have the I mean, I'm shocked you didn't because frankly, the people that do multiple podcast usually do it that way, do them all in one day because then they have the rest of the week up. Yeah. And then it's like you're not even working well or doing your other things.

You will work out the schedule, we'll figure it out. Yeah, but the first guy to make $1,000,000 and podcasting, that's what he was doing. Well, he was the one that was totally front loading everything. Yeah. Which is not a bad idea if he can get away with it. And that was when podcasting, you would see we do something totally different because most of the shows are broadcast streamed live. Yeah, although we could lie about that as well.

I mean it's just a lot harder to then make snide comments to the people of the troll room If you're recording it like a week and three weeks, five weeks, or how we can kind of well, I think most people not in control room. That's true. And most people are just assuming there is such a thing that we're not lying about it. I think this is true that do you know it might not even be real. I ask you who the hell uses I see this is clearly a made up bullshit thing.

Yeah, they're like they're talking about technology. That's like 40 years ago when they were young, they were using it. I see. Maybe somebody uses it. They. That's like saying. Oh, I went on Gopher and I grabbed some video file. Right? Like, Oh, you do that? I'm sure you did, buddy. Yeah. Got to go for Buddy. That was long before that. I mean that before the fact that we remember the first browser and is sad, you're like, What's this World Wide Web?

But in that a buddy of mine actually was one of the developers that wrote Gopher Dam. Yeah. Why was it called Gopher? Was it just because of the college? Because the mascot of the University of Minnesota are gophers? Yeah, that's why I figured that. Mm hmm. It's like that's just how they chose it. And yet you're going out and getting information, so I guess it makes sense, too. Yeah. Yeah, it's. Yeah. Cause your gopher. Your gopher showing it, right? Mm.

Definitely. Exactly. But yeah, it was a, it was basically a professor that was unhappy with the fact that, that he had to have bunch of stuff printed on paper, distributed at meetings for his department and he thought, you know, this is ridiculous, this bureaucratic bullshit part of the job.

I'm just going to just give people access to these files that they can grab and they're too stupid to do command line FPP So let's make them something that's a little more graphically and recruited a couple of grad students do help on that project that was I'll go for started the way the internet grew out of nothing Yeah. Into the cesspool that it is today. Yeah. Gopher predated the World Wide Web. I mean it also we remember the time where video on the internet was not really a thing.

No. Yeah, it definitely was not a thing. When it started out. It was, what, like 320 by 320 boxes at like one one rain. First it was 120 by 160. Oh that's even worse. Like one frame per second and not at like 256 colors. Yeah. It all dithered. It was not good for people that wanted to watch baseball. It's not good for people or it wasn't good for anything. The now they can do this now with the streaming video in that high def and more is crazy to me.

The part that the most amazing is getting hundreds of megabytes per second speed on a portable device that that is like a quarter inch thick and fits in your pocket. Yes. Now, that's the crazy part to me is just the advancement in wireless technology is just I don't know everything else doesn't seem quite as impressive means that there is an important medical question in the real world.

We did not give medical advice, but since dude totally rearranging my office and found a prescription bottle with an Adderall in it, it's more than a year old. Wonder if it's still good. Yeah. I mean drugs that was the it should have an expiration date if it's more than a year old. But the expiration date, it doesn't go bad. It would lose effectiveness possibly. That's correct. That's exactly what happens. Unless it's been warm. If you warm up most drugs, they lose efficacy of very quickly.

But if it's been sitting at room temperature in an air conditioned place, then it's probably just fine. So let's say worst case scenario, let's say a year ago was the expiration date. So when it was prescribed, it was already at its last leg, which that would never happen, like they would never give you from a pharmacy stuff. The terms last. Like you said, it was literally right next to the A.C. vent which in the summer is. Yeah.

Then the monthly as long as if it's in the winter too, it's going to be cool coming from there. As long as that isn't also the heat vent. Well, okay, fair enough. If it's the heat vent, then you might have. But yeah, usually that's the worst thing that'll happen is just there will be less problem. You'll be like, Dude, why are they getting out of this? Yeah, but it's it's not a good thing, though. I don't recommend people take Adderall. Well, it will change your personality.

Well, what it'll do is it'll make you realize that you feel much better when you take it, and then it gets you addicted because you like that feeling. Yeah. And I'm not even talking about the physical addiction. I'm talking about the mental addiction. Like when you kind of like cocaine. So you always know. Okay. And I'm wondering now about all these stories that were allegedly out of Costa Rica and the Dominican. Did they? And the story. Gotcha.

Yeah. I mean, I look, I think it's undeniable that cocaine worked. And I can say it's good. I will say it work, but it's also undeniable that fat dudes die when they do coke. Okay. Yo This fat dude ain't doing coke. Does your heart's like, you know, Coke has been responsible for death of comedy. Yeah. Yeah. No. Dan Belushi. Yeah. The other guy. Oh, while the other. Yeah, the other big guy. Yeah, I live down by the river.

All of them. No. What are they were like, Let's list off the guys that comedians that have died from cocaine. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's they're generally overweight. Belushi, obviously. Yeah. Yeah. And then the other guy, well, you should know them. Why it's what's his name? The the the bears. Right. The Bears. What was the guy's name? Big guy. Big guy. Who's on SNL? Yeah, they're all on SNL. This is true.

You're going to be on if you're going to be on this, if you're dying, if you're on SNL, are much higher it was What the hell was his name? I know I can't I'm I'm from Farley also. Farley. Well, that was the one that was his name, right? Yeah. Dick Farley died from that. He was down by the river guy. But also the other guy. But the other. The other fat dude. There's a lot of John Candy. Candy? That dude died from cocaine. I, you know, like, you list off a fat comedian. He died from cocaine.

Not Sam Kinison. He went head on into another car while on cocaine. I thought he was sober by the time he died, but. Oh, he was sober. He was just I'm very, very choked up. That's a different story. Yeah. I'm telling you, it's a dangerous thing. It's a death. It works, but it's dangerous. I miss Sam Kinison. He was a genius. I missed cocaine. I missed. Okay, There's T-shirt in there. There's a T. Which one? Same killed someone. I know. I think the. I missed cocaine with that.

The grumpy old Benz. And I'm sorry, the unrelenting logo on it, just unrelated to a grumpy old Benz. One without True. That's true. I mean, we could it seems like something that could go across the verses. Yes, it's universal Dominion. Are you doing any cocaine tomorrow on the 4th of July or blowing stuff up? Blowing stuff up? I am not blowing stuff up. Fourth July is tomorrow. Yes. That would make today the 3rd of July one day.

If I'm going to have garbage service tomorrow, then, because I know I'm not on the fourth, I would be like, don't you don't think they're going to work on the fourth? No, not even Mexicans. Nope. Wow. Wow. I Was very my garbage service here is that run by American? I was very surprised. Run by the cartels. Oh, well, then maybe they'll show up. So I'm wondering. I was very surprised that the wife was working today, being that she now works for the village.

I guess, you know, they figured 3rd of July is no holiday. Why you keep calling in the village? That sounds very weird. It's the village. It's not a city. It's a village of Mokwena. Uh huh. But does that mean that when you go that where she works at the village hall? Oh, it's a city hall. No, it's village hall. It's a village. That's. What the hell's the legal distinction? I don't know whether you get by being a city instead of a village that you don't get as a village. I don't know.

I mean, you're incorporated, I assume. Yeah, but we're not an unincorporated village. Village? It varies by geographic area and legal jurisdiction, just for the administrative division at the local government level. Who said that? This is Wikipedia, I'm guessing. Oh, so it's really it's probably the history of Illinois being part of the Louisiana Purchase, and it's really a village in that. A village village. That's right. We say belies what's going on. What would I do with the Russian accent?

You know, the wife would come. I'll be like, yeah, what's going on in the village? You know, might get Villa. Everything good at village? There's a there's a Russian travel video check that I've posted some videos of in social who's a redhead, which is unusual. And you know I like travel shows in general. So always interesting to her. So she was in Australia for a while now for a couple of months doing videos from there.

But in one of the videos from Australia, it was hilarious is just talking about her impressions as a Russian person of us really, and she switches from her normal, slightly accented English to the stereotypical American movie Hollywood Russian accent. Nice. So she's actually pretending to be like a Russian person in the way that people are used to hearing Russian accent from Hollywood movies. Yeah, as a gift to me. I thought it was hilarious.

I just about but you know, I stay out of my mouth when I say that because it it is so ridiculous. But it's true. It's it's that the Russian accent that people that are Russian, that learn English have is completely different from the fake Russian accent that people who don't speak Russian but are pretending to play Russian characters in movie speak, those are two different accent. Oh, so having her switch from one to the other was pretty damn funny. It's a part of the world you live in.

Yeah. It's like the, you know, the Boris and Natasha accent from Rocky and Bullwinkle, which everybody goes back to as well because everybody is well familiar with that. If you grew up in Australia, I think we're dying off of the people that are familiar with Rocky and Bullwinkle. I think we're a dying breed. So we have village, town, city. There's all sorts of different things and I don't think there's a really good answer on the what the difference is between.

And besides just this is what it was called, I keep waiting for us them to be on the INC, just try to get away from all the big government. Know that big government doesn't like Austin is doing and the state is more than once threatened to take away Austin's City charter and turn it into a a territory of the state so effectively become just like Washington DC. Oh, interesting. It would it would lose a mayor and city council. It would be an administrative zone of the state of Texas.

I think that'd be that'd be awesome. If that happened. I would think the whole area, it would drive all these completely wacky California programs that we have in place out of here, which would be good, is that the state government is very conservative, but the city government is a little left of California that said. Mm hmm. And like like it's true for everybody that seems to do a podcast with you that you have to live in some kind of common area, Huh? Uh huh.

Where you got out, man? We got to give it to him. That's true. He didn't move up. Well, where do you move to? Wait a minute. Oh, maybe he moved to another one. He's not settled quite yet, but they're gone. They're gypsies. He's now a gypsy, kind of. I know. There were a couple of places he was hit. And in the interim, he's making a nice, slow family vacation out of this hit and some spots on the way towards the East Coast. But it's going to be somewhere towards the East Coast for a while.

Well, East Coast isn't really not for any towards the East Coast, is it? Towards the east coast of Florida? I, I don't think that far south. I think that's a lot for white Irish guys like us. It's a little too hot in Florida in the summer. As much as we like the freedom, I don't know. I couldn't stand Florida. And when the heat was I mean, I don't like it here. It's a different heat.

It's a yeah, it's the kind of you'll go outside standing on the beach in Florida and 77 degrees and it's February. Feels pretty fucking neat. Oh, yeah. Now when it's 116 in August. But here's the thing. Yeah. If you're near the water, it's never 160. Well If you live hotter. Oh, it cools off everything. You don't have to live in living them, but you have to be within like a block of the water. I don't know. Not even on the water itself, which is obviously better because the better view.

And the thing about a block, what's wrong with it? Nothing. You want to die? No. They make good pets. If I lived on the boat, I would totally have it. Now. The dog just got to Elvis. Got to have Elvis. That's right. Yeah. Elvis. You're going up to your local big 4th of July parade tomorrow. No, the wife's like, Oh, do you want to go on the the village float like Buck? No, no. It's going to be 92 degrees. No, I don't want to be outside.

I just know that I think I I've had a client as a fire or as a I've had a fireworks company as a client. So I got to watch their test. A firework way more interesting when you're sitting 25, 30 feet away, you don't want to be closer than that. That's about as close as you want to get. It's a little scary when you get closer. Well, it's a little loud, too. Yeah, but I've done that, you know, just watching nonstop fireworks going off right next to me for like an hour.

I've flown in an airplane through fireworks. That is safe. Safe. I think that's the best view of fireworks, like from being right there, right next to them. So as far as watching fireworks from the ground with a bunch of other sweaty people, just not that anymore now. Well, I've never really been all that interested in. I don't understand the fireworks concept. Oh, I can explain that. People like to go, Oh, it's loud and colorful.

Yeah. Yeah. It's a simulation of war, and this is entertaining to. Bring your kids to. Yeah, because you need to have your kids. Understand? If you want to be sorry, boys, you need them to understand that it takes a risk and courage to keep the country great. And if that doesn't happen, then everything goes to shit. Now, how were you in an airplane going through fireworks? That wouldn't seem to be recommended? Well, I wasn't. I guess in the firework explosion.

I was next with the firework explosion. Okay, so you were far enough to the side or above? Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I'm watching fireworks around me. You know, it just. I'm not, like, blowing through the fireworks implosion. I. But I'm flying right next to. Sounds dangerous. There are those that get a little hang glider go out there. Well, pretty sure it was like a 737. Oh, well, that's a little bigger. I thought you were like, you know, a Cessna, this circling or not, you know, the real flame.

Well, the real plane wasn't like lingering while the fireworks went off. So you can enjoy them. Well, the real plane was landing, so it was moving really slow. And which is also why it was at the height of a firework, is there not that high, But it went right through the firework. So it was it was perfect timing, couldn't have timed it better.

I mean, I didn't realize they would do this on a and an air pattern like the planes coming right in the, uh, I'm sure the there was somebody probably did the math and decided it was fine. Yeah, well, as long as you're not in the plane, that's fine. Yeah. What's the most keep in mind that, you know, the planes got to land, and if the wind changes, then the planes got change its path a little bit. This would make sense. And my work be them.

I have enjoyed a few videos on YouTube of planes landing in massive wind. Mhm. Those are like, damn, you're earning your money as a pilot on those days. Yes. Yes. When it's coming in at like a 15 degree angle and it only out when it hits the runway. Uh huh. It's like how do you do that and not just roll the thing? Yeah. Yeah. It's, uh, it's pretty impressive. I mean, I know the computers are there for a lot. You're not doing that. I don't think I don't. That's all. Hand flying. Yeah.

Yeah, if. If it is pretty cool. But also, keep in mind this one, you're flying into a strong headwind. Your ground speed is slower. Do have the same amount of lift. So it looks a lot more impressive because you're kind of floating. Still impressive. I don't want to take away from the impressiveness factor, but the plane is actually moving slower relative to the ground when it's landing in the spring. Had like that. That would make sense. Physics at all. Yeah, right.

So let's say that your you know, your landing speed is 130, not well. If you got a 30 that wind coming at you then really relative to the ground you're landing at about 100 that that adds up. So yeah, it's, you know, it's all that shit. You got to use a computer, your brain and one or the other to calculate. For most people I would recommend the computer. Yeah, but I don't know. I think if you're flying a small plane, you're. You're literally feeling what's happening to the wing.

Like you're feeling the through the yoke. You're feeling what's actually with the plane's doing that. It was just watching here. There was just a video of Shania Twain wiping out on stage. Ooh, You think $60? Yeah. Got to be. Mm hmm. She's older than us. And I mean, that's old. 57. It says 57. That's pretty much 60. Yeah, that's 50. Seven's the new 60. If he wears much lower cut tops though, than you are. And I do that. Just see. I would hope so.

Seems to be so what she married to a producer, right? But Lange. Mm hmm. The good old mutt. Yeah. He was big with a lot of those air bags. I'm going to send you a video to watch another one and then comment. Then, like during the show, a friend them? No, not during the show. After the show, this video, a friend of mine did that, talked about the problem with video game companies. But the first part of the video talks about the history of music and the problem with music.

And and he is a professional commercial musician who plays video games. And so he's really fucking good. I'm I should have taken advantage when I had the opportunity to have him, like, do something musically. Well, yes, some professional theme music is good. Yeah, because, well, he's he's really talented. He's a really good artist too, which just pisses me off when I meet people that are multitalented in in creative things.

Everything that you've tried and you're like, Well, you're better and you're not even trying. Well, it's not that I'm not good. It's just really hard work for me, you know what I mean? Like, I can drive reasonably well, but it'll take me a long time and I'll redo it a bunch of times before it looks good. As opposed to somebody who just grabs a piece of paper and pencil and is like, Exactly, exactly.

You know, I got into painting years ago and I got to a point where I was having a lot of fun with that. And it was I think it looked decent, you know, decent enough. What were your subject matter? What were you doing? Uh, I was basically I did a few I did some portraits, then I did I I'm pretty sure people have seen my self-portrait. I know the circle well that I painted myself, but which would be a self-portrait. It was. What was your medium? Medium of choice?

Acrylic paints, either oil or acrylic. And the oil is stinky and hard to work with. So what would be your choice? What you with the easier choice? Oh, hell, yeah. Yeah, absolutely. No, I think acrylic is way easier and easier to clean up, but it's another big of it. Not if you have a in-turn. A yes. Yeah. Well, you know, in terms are hard to find the good one. That's the whole thing with interns. You get a higher five, you could have one. That makes sense. So I have good luck with interns.

But I've also had plenty of bad luck with interns. I'm like, I'm actually my last company that the around the supplement company. I had really good luck with my low level hires, like the people that I hired that were not senior folks are not only still working there, but the did a great job, got promotions, really good workers. Well, that's the way it should be, because they should want to come in and learn that, Oh boy, I know I got out of college, so I know what I'm doing.

I'm going to tell you how I'm going to do the job. Yeah, but but what I mean is that the odds are stacked against you. So I'm having myself in the back for picking the good ones, because most typical hires are not going to be very good. I could see that, though. I don't know. We'll see. We'll see what happens. I'm probably not going to be hiring anybody anytime soon here, but maybe by then the euro that would need to be ramped up. Get really good. Very good shows made.

Yeah, more bookcases, more ponchos. When I was working at home, mainly working with air conditioning right now. Really? Wow. So we're working with that. That's why I'm fired. My clients are really air conditioning company. Yeah, you could have got me a good deal on a unit, man. No, no, no. You sent me a whole free unit to test for the next 15 years. Yeah, exactly. Do a test me unit? Yeah, well, I was looking for something nice and nice and quiet, but with cooling power, man.

Got to get the cooling power. I was glad to have the. The portable unit for last Friday night. Blue Douche is confused on what day it is. He thinks it's Friday now. I mean, it is. Well, we. Hey, enjoy your everybody. That's right. I turn on the air for the weekend, right I turn the air up is hot. You know you're not working tomorrow. You know I'm not either. Now the wife's off the weekend. It's the weekend. Yeah, a lot of celebrating going on.

A lot of celebrities hijacked the thing up, like, okay, let's blow this down. I just turned the air on as high as, you know, it would run until the guy came out to pull everything off. And when he turned everything off, it like 1030 in the morning or so, it was 66 degrees. And by that night, on the main level, it was 77, which means in the bedroom it would if we didn't have the portable unit up there, that would have been a good like 85 degrees, though. Do you like your portable unit?

I think it works fairly well, yes. Which brand did you end up going with? It is an LG, I believe. Okay. LG makes a good product that was like their stuff. And the one thing I did notice, which I was like, well, maybe I should have brought the dehumidifier up as well. I mean, it cools. But the and we were also going through, of course, with all the rain and everything very humid. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

That even though it was cooling down to like 68 degrees, the humidity level was still with the seventies, which is like, you know that's it feels a lot warmer with the what the humidity level is up to that. But overall I would say it does a nice job as I've to think I left it in the window. I mean it's the the portable units of the hoses on the window, not the whole unit.

But when days like today and tomorrow the next day where it's in the nineties, it's like there's no reason not to run that upstairs just to keep the upper level cool because we have a multi, you know, it's a split level. So there's technically between the basement, there's technically four different level changes in the house and the lower ones like where I am now nice and cool, but upstairs gets really hot.

So you need something to kind of supplement the same way in my parents house, they don't have a basement, but it's the same thing. It's very cold in the lower level. Gets very warm upstairs. Like it's a simple solution if you're willing to pay, you know, 500 bucks or whatever. One of these air conditioners run vented out the window. And that way you get some cool air rate wherever you want it. I have one in the office here.

If it wasn't for the fact that it would make so much noise, it would make doing anything out loud. They can be out, would run it on full. You figure it's the compressor, everything and the compressor and fan and what unit? I'm guessing they're going to continue getting quieter and quieter is the technology maybe improves on the smaller ones, but it would not be something that I would want to do a podcast while it was going on in the room. You know, three feet away. But otherwise I thought of it.

Put a hole right in the wall here, just vent it right out into the garage. Is that what I mean? Like the walls I can reach from where I'm broadcasting on the other side of it's our garage. Well, I could just throw the heat in there. Yeah. And I think. Yeah, well, the I think a lot of the Asian and European air conditioners, I'm sure you've seen them where you have like the, the vent, you have the long elongated thing up towards the ceiling.

Yes. Yeah. And then the, the rest of the unit outside, I think those are pretty quiet and I think that's more I don't know if I would say efficient, but I would think by being able to adjust every room to be whatever temperature you want rather than one unit that's trying cool the whole house down. Yeah, to me that makes a lot more sense. Now granted, there's a lot more places for it to fail. Yeah, exactly. But having a unit in every room.

Yeah, I think it's a little cheaper doing it that way because you're avoiding putting in central all the duct work. Yeah. There's no duct tape anywhere if you don't have the ducts already. Yeah. Yeah. Which we do for the heating. But with the heating it makes a lot more sense because the heat rises. So. So that's why in the winter, it's not like, wow, it's freezing upstairs. No, that it's the you know, you don't have the problem.

The ducting is basically made for the heat and then you add the AC to it and it's like, well that's not as efficient for doing that. I think it's actually all depends on how your house is built. I think it's actually better year than for heating interest. All the the ducts are in the ceiling. Actually, that's not what we've got for heat. Yeah, that makes sense because you're coming in you're coming in high. Them were the air that's been dropping down to the floor from the high. Yes.

And that's the air and the other air in the office where I might have a vent of the ceiling. But every other room, the vents are at the floor level. Yeah. Yeah. The elevator. So I thought if I was going to build another house, I will, man. Me, I, I would want to put in for heating or you have other underfloor heating. Right? Right. So it's got the coils underneath the tile. So you're just about I think it's like now.

Yeah, I kind of like that low Tyler marble, but I don't think I'm going to do marble floors. No, because there's scaling capability the of and, and the ability O but you're rich, you're a podcaster. Oh well yeah, I'm podcaster, which means I'm that roof. Exactly. And you sell orange ponchos. I mean, you have to be able to be a poncho millionaire by now. Oh, yeah. Pancham there a poncho? There, there. There you go. I'm basically one step away from being a mexican street vendor.

Well, some of those guys make a lot of good money doing ponchos. Well, no more probably likely tacos. And street food. But I'm. I mean, you could be a poncho there, but am I? I'm in the mood for for lunch here on this Friday evening. Lunch out in the evening. Would that be dinner? All right, now I've got left pizza from yesterday. Did the I mean, the race was on was enjoying it. Ordered a double theta, no chicken forever is a hot dog black. I was all good Chicago dogs. Always delightful.

I kind of like the the New York kosher. Now you're one of those, huh? Yeah. I was thinking yesterday about what should I try a deep dish? Haven't had a deep dish in such a long time. And I'm like, Oh, you should try this. We'll grab one. Maybe next time we'll get a deep dish. Mm hmm. And which ones do you like? The pizza. Even though the Beggar's pizza is the. The latest version of the main butcher's. A main street pizzas. Mm hmm. Yeah, They have come along over the past decade or so.

And to the point to where they even took over, you know, at the ballpark. So that is the official pizzas. And I was intrigued by that whole thing as well. We may have talked about that at some point. We did, Yeah. Because it's like I didn't realize that the people that own it are like, oh, you know, the Chicago White Sox go, Well, if you give us 100,000 a year, you could be the official pizza, provide all the pizza at cost. So it's like, oh wow.

So you're literally just doing that to spread the word. You're marketing. Yeah. Yeah. You're not making money out of having your pizza. Have you ever tried my pie? I don't think so. And that sounded very dirty. My pie is a deep dish pizza. Really? Started in, uh, Chicago or a little outside of Chicago, like on the West side and then spread through Wisconsin and into Minnesota. And it's m.y pie. That's just the. It's the the symbol pie. Oh, my pie with the base. And that's a lot harder to find.

Yeah, because it's not using the Latin alphabet. You're like, What the hell are you doing in the Greek alphabet? Yeah, but it's good stuff. I mean, I've never heard of that. Well, I don't know. I think there might be a couple of them left, but there used to be a whole bunch of them back in the eighties. Just like I really like brothers, man. Remember? Fuddruckers? Maybe we still have Fuddruckers here. Do you think? The only I think Texas may be one of the last bastions. Yeah. Yeah, yeah.

It's like, that's unfortunate, man, because I thought, well, whoever eventually, as our historical movie fellows like Idiocracy, eventually gets renamed through the wear shit. What is it, Rock fuckers, Right. It slowly changes them. Yeah, we still have, uh. They're still here. They still have one in there is one pie. My pie still left in Chicago. Oh, there is no one. Yeah, they used to have them all over Illinois, Wisconsin and the Midwest. Like Midwestern deep dish. For us. It's the beggar's.

We have a really O's, which I know was all over the place. Now. But for Deep Dish, it would probably be Giordano's or I mean I know everybody loves it. I've tried it. I don't Lubell That is, although it's the big one. Everybody's like, Oh, you got to go to BlueBell, ladies. It's like, Oh, they don't like it, don't like this. But again, that's all the people I saw, all the NASCAR people like going to portillo's for a beef sandwich, you know, it's like there's so much better places.

It was one of the best. But then the guy who started it and just a little stand that grew it into the massive thing that it is now, he sold it so it's not as good as it used to be. So there's a documentary about fuddruckers you may want to watch if you have fond memories. I saw one on YouTube that was like 15 minutes or so, but yeah, maybe that's the same one I'm thinking of, but it's it had a bit of a a a history. Yes. And lots of people meddling with it.

But the concept we have for a while there, it was owned by some buffet company and it was like half buffet and half. I was like, damn, I was happy to see that some dude bought it and those trying to resurrect it a little bit. Yeah, yeah. It was the, uh, yeah, we used to have the buffets here as well, but I think they shut down as well. But I, my memories of from the eighties were of the flagship stores like, you know, Fuddruckers that seats 150, 200 people.

Right. Has their own butcher shop. Right. So as you're walking in you see the butchers that the muted oh, they're grounding the meat right in front of you. Yeah. Yep. And then a separate you know milkshake area where they make all those and sell the pies and and then they had the toppings bar used to the toppings. The bar was always the awesome like that was and they had the cheap nacho cheese that there was probably no GZ But so delicious. The plastic cheese. Yeah, the plastic cheese.

And how low paid pantyhose. Just low. They get over the burger bad. MM That was my idea of a good time and I love the, the relish. I used to just I don't know why people don't do this here. I've always done that. But records and what I mean by people don't do it anywhere else I'm not really across this is to use relish on top of a burger very generously kind of like you would with an avocado.

Do you have like a burger with, you know, a nice, like half pound patty and then you've got cheese on top of that. And then I put like a a quarter inch of relish on top of that. That's the entire with the burger Patty. He got it just so good. I think it's a lot better than just putting a couple slices of pickle. Oh yeah. And love pickle. I mean, that's when I get a White Castle. When you go to White Castle, which I haven't for like, a year, I think, or over at this point. Now, those.

I don't think we have those. Let me look I like to go for extra pickle and if they do it right, that just elevates those little things in here. Okay now they're iso egg. I love pickle light. I could see why this is going to be. Everybody knows you love the title. This is going to be this is all I'm going to hear on the hog story now as I like Pickle. I love pickle. I love Pickle. So, uh, yeah, we don't have them in Texas. Maybe there's a reason for it. Maybe you're just not ready for it.

I think they're a northern thing. I believe so. Yeah. Midwest. They're. They came from the Midwest. I mean, there's the little burgers that just melt in your mouth. We can. I can buy them anywhere in the frozen section yet? No, they're not the same. So there was a recipe that somebody did that I watched. I think it was, uh, Epicurious. They think that where they re created an authentic White Castle using the original recipes, and it looked very good.

Obviously, I don't know what it tasted like, but it looked very authentic. Well, the original ones were way more burger like where they have kind of morphed now into something completely different. I mean, they used to look like a regular thick patty, normal kind of burger, just smaller. But they would never think, though.

Come on, the original ones looked like they were I mean because what they did, the original one and they had a this was the last time I had it was like a year or so ago where they had the original ones back. The patty was probably four times thicker than what the patty is now. So it was more of like you would get more meat or now you're getting less meat. It is almost like paper thin. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, they used to be about the same as like a McDonald's cheeseburger.

Not a Big Mac, but like the McDonald's. If you got a 69 cent cheeseburger. Right. That would be the same patty as you would have in the White Castle. The thing that always made their patties different is had those holes in them. Yes. To get the straw at the steam grill and. Right. Yeah. Because because that's what they were doing. They were doing steam grilling. So and I the onions on there and I don't know how you can have a White castle without. Oh you have to without the onions.

They're just flavorless. Yeah. Yeah totally. But I liked them with extra pickled. You don't know. Oh I'm telling you, that was it. And they just melt. You don't even have to chew. They just melt in your mouth. Well, and they are. I mean, most the bun is mostly air. Yes. Let's face it. So if you take one of those, you put it in your hand and you squeeze very lightly, like don't even put too much pressure on there. The whole thing turns into about a quarter inch thick. Uh huh. Oh, yeah.

If it is mostly you're buying mostly air, but also which is why when you order it, you want four or eight or 16. Exactly. We want to see that question. It was like, Oh, I'd like one burger, please. No, nobody wants one. I cannot remember how much they used to be, but something tells me they were under $0.50 apiece. Oh, yeah, Yeah. I don't know. They're like five bucks apiece now. That used to be it. It was like eight of them was about regular for some fries. That was me in high school. A would.

There was a white whipped green giant right where the right for the jolly green Giant used to eat, like, all the worst stuff at all. The worst time. My girlfriend at the time, that wife lived about 20 minutes from where I was living and on the way home after driving around enough time to bring up some food. There was a well because White Castle never closed, nor did l famous burrito.

So depending what I wanted, you could get a football sized burrito or the white castles, and that made plenty of use for those. Yeah, I bet that was what was always funny that when I would get the White Castles because my parents would, you know, I'd be getting home at midnight, well, that would wake them up. So I said they had to bring extra ones. Got you. Got White Castle, I mean White Castle smell. Well, take even the deepest sleeper right out of a sleep level with his wife. There's sliders.

It's. Yeah, it's a very mean the smell it it's like I need some of that and maybe a little. But we used to eat. So. Unhealthy, man. I would. Yeah. It's surprising we're still alive, especially with the public. Not for much longer. Probably. Probably. Yeah. The cocaine. Exactly. Sure. Well, you'd say. Oh, man, the pounds and pounds of coke all is that. Yeah. Well, I mean that would work. Help you work off the pounds in pounds of meat and burger. I'm telling you, I've been gaining weight steadily.

Just, you know, I'm not out. If you would just do more coke, you could be bottle thin. Mm mm. But we are a value for value show. That's true. As I said, we still value doing this show for Dale. One guy from the great land of Aussie land. That's right. Who comes in again with 103 48 life and he says comrades, so he knows the system. Uh huh. Image search Rexy car and Evo car. Their common nicknames worldwide picked it up in 5 minutes. You've been had surgery. Well, that's probably true.

What would be the what's your current thought you were saying you didn't know what Rexy car or something was. He's like just look it up our X-Y or Evo car They said their common nicknames worldwide Rexy car. Yeah I never heard of it. To be fair thing sorry x y car. Yeah. Okay. And it shows me a cartoon dinosaur. He does just do some better looking up there. He says Demolition man is far better than Idiocracy.

It stars a young Lycra clad Sandra Bullock hubba hubba with an apple Google sex scene, apple goggles, sex scene to boot twitch. A young Sandra Bullock. I will not argue with that. All right. I like the way she looked. I like her personality, too. And she was well, she was really good in the first. What was its speed? What's the name of that movie right there? Were you driving the bus If you get another 55 miles an hour, Roger, the guy is great. Misconstruing the reality.

Oh, she was. But that hilarious, Larry. She was an you know, when I moved to Austin, she lived here and she owned the restaurant and she got out the right after you got there. Yeah, pretty much. She moved in. Got to go. All right, hold on. Read that again. I there's I'm not getting anything on break. The search is in search rexy car and evel car. Do I have to do this to. Yes. Are we learning? Are we learning here children? Do they do it a Google? Should I do it and start page?

I like to you start page that theme. Okay. So I see talking about the Mitsubishi, even Lancer and Subaru. W correct. I'm confused because Rexy is not a thing that's a dinosaur. Evo The only evil that comes up with cars is the the Mitsubishi Lancer. Evo looks like a Lamar project. It comes up as the rexy.

There's a few of those that look like a in its painted green like a T rex and I think that's but I don't know if that is the race car I mean we'll need we'll need ID clarified better and it is I don't understand what this is even the relating to what is he saying I'm wrong about. We had talked about it and you're like you didn't know what it was. I'm guessing still don't know what is. No, no, I definitely don't see the Rexy car. It looks like it's a racing Porsche.

Maybe if I'm going to have to have you take a screenshot and send it to me because my Google search returns nothing but pictures of dinosaurs and a Subaru array. That's all I'm getting for Rexy. Well, you need to do a better search. Maybe your search engine is failing you. Yeah, maybe not. Maybe a neat. Well, you're still paying for that one, right? So I need to go and VPN to Australia through search it may be it may be enabled desktop notifications. Now stop hassling me Adobe.

I mean this car, it looks like the car that I have, but this is not clearly what he's referring to. I don't think this is what I get other rexy car and here's what I get. Yeah, that looks like a boring car, but it says Rexy. Hey, screw you, man. That was your car. The little Rex. Yeah. Oh, blue one Subaru. Mm hmm. That's what comes up on here to add which car accommodate dot aew. But I digress. There is more besides the demolition man, which is absurd. Darren O proceed with caution into animate.

Now, that is good advice. Oh yeah. Yeah. Enemies. That is a a transitional drug, he says. BLOCK Anyone with an anime avatar. I would agree with that. The anime too. Trans pipeline is real. Totally the K Yeah, because it's there's a lot of dudes that are getting laid that watch anime of high school girls and all of a sudden decide that they want to be a high school girl. That's how it happens, huh? That's exactly how he says is evidenced by the amount of transformer talk in the troll room.

It's full of anime weaves. Oh, I didn't know Dale was in the troll room. He doesn't go by Dale from down under. I don't think so. If you go by. I don't know. He's probably undercover. Probably. Don't email boost your hateful messages to the show and full knowledge that Sir Jean is refusing your dirty donations. What that says I don't email boosts your hateful messages to the show in full knowledge that sure Jean refusing your dirty donations.

You're like anybody under what Dale given you're like you don't want it. He's the man he said. I mean, I don't really see anything. I don't even anything coming from Dale because they're never sends me what was I supposed to send you part of this? I need to do the hunting. I need to do the accounting on that, I guess. Yeah. You've been saying that for literally a year. No, I was less than a year. They sent you one at the end of last year, so it can't be literally a year.

Did you though, or. Yes. They said, oh I should send him something like look at PayPal. You'll see. I have looked at PayPal. I don't see anything from you like from in the last year or so. At the end of last year. He says the audio dynamic of unrelenting is always struck me as the chad dynamic and powerful voice. Darren No, an energetic father. Podcasting in an effort to connect with this slightly muffled Vader prepubescent voice stepson Sergey like they needs an ear check.

I love these big donations and then just like, goes after you. Yeah, yeah, exactly. It's much appreciated. I'm like, Oh, what is it? I didn't understand. I mean, it's a British thing, I guess. The chad that's like the popular kid. I didn't know that. That the chad meant that, but I'm learning. I'm this is a learning experience. If one of us is a chatty you, but. All right. There's a good cold open there as well. There's that. You have this here, this particular episode. Yes.

There's definitely a few to go around. And he says, Happy of July in advance. You all stay unrelenting mofo. And he thought we'd be doing the show right now. It's the holiday. That last part actually made sense. But did use more letters or something. I mean, you just need to be more clear in your communication is don't assume that things that you think are obvious because you're in Australia are going to be obvious because we're not in Australia.

Could be totally confusing and you guys have a lot of idioms. You like, you have your own ways of saying things and being thinking of things out there that don't translate to us here in the US. Yeah, What do you mean? Put a shrimp on the barbie? I got no idea. Nobody says that in Australia that that's me. Well, what would it be? It would be prawn, not a shrimp. Was that. Oh that was for the steakhouse. Paul Hogan Right. Mal Hogan But it was doing the ads for the beer for what's that beer.

Oh was it Foster's. Yeah. By Foster's. It's Australian. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. It's like Heineken is the Australian for beer. Nobody actually drinks. No. We appreciate you listening and donating Dale and keep on taking shots at Jean. I'll eventually send him his money. And our buddy third truck driver gave in with 565. That's monthly. Kevin Seifert with five bucks, that's monthly. That's appreciated. Our Buddy Fifer, he was sending out a boost to grandma of 11,111 Satoshis Nice.

Which out Satoshi's of course the one and only CSB who sent in 80 the 8015 that is 8015 Satoshis So is that a buck? No, that's about two bucks. So if you split it, it's a little over a buck apiece. I mean, bitcoin's been doing well lately, so it has been doing a little bit better. It I think it's stalled. I might need to double in size. I might need to dump my lightning. I don't know. We'll see. Uh, maybe. I mean, I'm not dumping you. That's that. I think it's not big enough to do anything with.

And it's. It may one day, someday actually be worth more. And the CSB says, Howdy, Crackers, Darren and Gene. Well, that's racially inflammatory. Well, how do you see SB bullish guy? Howdy crackers Dare to Gene please invite your audience to use my chat GPG plug in called Podcast Search and to send me feedback about it via at CSB. It is available plug in the given the address for the plug in that we're supposed to pitch.

He says it's available in the plug in store for paid subscribers and it is you just search for a podcast search or that's what game of the day for what what the plug in for for chat JPT it oh okay so Chad GPP store has the plug it yes you see it and it is it will allow you to search all podcast using chat even though Chad GPT doesn't have a member in the thing, correct. Because its learning model goes so it's actually using the database or something nice. Which is cool. Yeah it's up.

Yeah. And thank you CSP and thanks everybody for listening to the show. Supporting the show, Unrelenting. That show is where you go if you want to help like CSB. So I need to get some data around podcasting data and I haven't gotten an answer back from Dave from Private yesterday. Do you looking to scrape some data from the podcast index?

Exactly. So and I don't see has been he's been pretty active in there as well so I'll send you DM and kind of tell you what I'm trying to get at and if you have any ideas on how to do that, that would be appreciate them. Rose of the program says Wait, CSB likes G Now am I the only Darren co-host he still hates? Yes, you're the only one CSB still. I mean, you're lucky I uh huh. Well, for a while there, I mean, after FASB, then I made up with me. You were all hot and bothered with them.

No I was. I just said I set boundaries, that's all. Well, what were the boundaries you set? I'm like, Stop saying that or I'm just going to block you. And then he's like, I think it's pretty good boundary. Yeah. Yeah. That never happens. Yeah, it all worked out okay. Good. It all worked out. And yes, there is no planet rage today. Larry is getting the hell out of California. I'm like taking me to planet raised They I mean and some other day usually right And sometimes we mix and match.

We should do them together. We can we can overlap them. Well, if you had a setup that allowed multiple people to be honest, I do. I'm I'm sure I could do it. The last time I tried to call you, you couldn't figure out how to do it yet. I just. I used caller ID and I was like, oh, cheap. Oh, no. That working podcast rig down. Yeah, I'm going. It's breaking up the lines break. It's breaking up, man. I like the I'm going through a tunnel better. It's like, aren't you at home to that?

The director Craig Carl Craig Podcast. Craig Podcast Fan I don't know who this is. Craig Podcast. Yeah, okay. Hey, I don't know. I'd rather have a hard out than a hard No, wait, that's not true. But most.

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