Transcribe your podcast
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People will keep on turning proud Mary, keep on burnin, burning, rollin, rollin, rollin, rollin, rollin.

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Guys, we are rolling right now. Everybody, everybody. Everybody's on ecstasy. This is a Rolling Stone.

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It's Molly. Molly is healthier. Is it? Oh, I thought. Yeah, it's it's more natural. It's within the earth. Oh OK. Yeah.

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A r f f e r h t h t did you see organ just like decriminalized.

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Oh yeah. It's insane. Psychedelic drugs. I thought it was a joke. I thought I was like this little mean that people were like it's like even cocaine. It's yeah.

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It's like I think it's heroin too. Right. Heroin, heroin, cocaine.

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All these guys take some good in this war.

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Just it's like I like I get why they did that, but I don't get why they did that because I get like they did that because like you were saying the other day, like if you want to do it, just they it's their choice. Let them do it. They want to do it. But at the same time it's like, yeah, but if these people are doing it all the time, every day, that's going to be a serious issue like where these people are because the stuff is definitely addictive.

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It's not probably the best thing for you. But I mean, people people are probably going to do it regardless. Yes. Like now you just don't got to worry about it isn't like doing too much cocaine or too much heroin.

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Much, much worse than doing too much alcohol, though, because alcohol is also bad for you and you get to do as much as you want. You can get it wherever you want.

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But I just my thought is like everybody picks their poison, whatever it is, somebody doing some bad shit, you eat a bunch of McDonald's and that's, you know, just as bad is just as bad as cocaine McDonalds does.

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Because, I mean, you people. Are you going to pay for bad things? Oh, yeah. Yeah. It's just in our blood. Speaking of people buying shit that harms our body, we have new murder, right?

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A very harmful marriage. I don't make you too good looking. Yeah.

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This is actually, I think our favorite Mursau we put out. Yeah, I'm really excited. It's very slick, very clean, very black, very entitled.

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And I will say the material of these hoodies is unreal. It is a step above.

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Yes, it is. And it fits very well. It's not like the stretchy shit like we used to have it, actually. It's like it's like a just a better built quality baby.

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Exactly. We're really excited to launch it for you guys. It's going to be coming out on Tuesday. You can go to Zanón Heath unfiltered dot com.

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Yes, sir. Yes, ma'am. It looks so good. Thank you, man. Where's yours?

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I'm hot.

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I mean, I'm hot, too, but maybe you got a rock when it's out. Oh, I thought you were going to wear it today.

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We're like, well, our outfits are kind of cute.

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We don't want to. That's like he's wearing a receipt. He brought the receipt. Every time I see your shirt.

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Can you like it? Just like it makes me think that you still have, like, the tag on it. You know, like when you leave a sticker on your shirt, it's like a giant sticker of the information of your shirt.

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What if that's like the next thing in fashion as people just like want people to know how much they paid for their shirt, so they just go around stapling receipts to their clothes.

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And I could see I was like leaving the tag on it. But then you got to like, look for the person. That was a huge trend. I remember in high school. You have a sticker on that. Yeah, I hated that.

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And they would let the tags, like, hang out with a shirt. It was like a cool thing to do and I never understood why.

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I think I heard that it started from people that would wear it and they would leave the tag on it. So then they could return it. And then it became like kind of like a trend.

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But it was in high school, the the thing the fitted caps with the sticker underneath it.

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And you can tell when shirts have been worn for a while because you remember when you go to the store, you try something on and it just it's just like people would bring it back smelling like cigarettes.

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Yeah. And you would have sign. They wouldn't wash it. They wouldn't wash it either, which is like really fucking gross. Yeah.

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That was always one of the most uncomfortable things. When we got returns at my old retail job, we would have to like go to the back and like, smell it.

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Oh yes we did, yeah. Did you do that? Like the pits, the bottom, the. I wouldn't it wasn't so targeted we would just try to like get a little if it was like you kind of like. Yeah, you laughed at George.

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We just was very fond of your Gucci perfume. And then well, because you smell an essence of someone, it might give you, you know, enough like to be like, you know, we can't take this. Unfortunately, I was yesterday I was working out and I was working out and what do you call it? Scott's and the song that we used to come on up on all the time because Heath and I used to work at Fox on which one?

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You know, the whole playlist.

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I, I, I actually it is so like so Kousser vibes, I should say that.

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But I'm not going, I'm not gonna pull this on.

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But like the song was playing and at the moment I was folding my sweaty shirt that I just took off and it literally triggers a wave that it hit me and it went through and went right back to Pax and just folded for their on their shelves. And it was like the craziest feeling. It's so weird having those, like, flashback memories. Yeah.

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Like you have it so vividly, like something that you haven't thought about in so long or even like a smell can bring you back some. Yeah.

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When you warrior colonia. Every day I smell that you gave me the dirtiest look, you're like not that it smelled bad, but it triggered a memory. And then when you said it was Prada, I was like, yeah, I used to work there. We go in every day and our brains are wild. Remember, theme song.

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We have a theme song. Yeah, it's the theme song. Oh, the intro. All right. All right, let's put it. It's all said. Well, welcome back to saying he's unfiltered on your Hosain, and I am he's and then we got Kenny Ammori the side.

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How do you spell that about him? Right. So what's going on?

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How was your week? I know you did a music video yesterday. You talk about that?

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Yeah, I was working for a very high end artist. Yeah.

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You guys aren't going to believe who was just booking all these music video rolls.

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No rhymes with body NIJ. I got nothing out of it.

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No. Scott. Scott Simon. Oh, it does rhyme with body. He he's he has his last song coming out of his album and he has me he has me as the main guy. The main guy.

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And he just read all your Tic-Tac comments. I say main character energy we got to have. And that's is definitely the main thing. I was like, I mean, you know why I want you in.

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I was like, why is I just trying to get views? I'm like, maybe it doesn't work anymore. It doesn't work for me anymore. So that's funny. When is it coming out?

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It comes out I think next week. I thought I was supposed to come on my birthday because they had like a like in the music video they had like a bird like a birthday cake with sudsing on it. So I was like, oh, they're probably really sick on my birthday. And it was like a funny thing Scott want to do with me on the video.

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But it doesn't go on to like the 20th and 21st. I don't know. I don't want to say a few days.

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Oh cool. Yeah, I'm excited. I was like that was like I feel like that was the first thing I've done or was just like all man.

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That was his first time getting a birthday cake. And I love birthdays are the first time that people just showed up for my birthday, you know, so it was really cool with cameras all over the place.

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It's all about you. And it was like, I got to act a law and I'm not going to acting.

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So we'll just see how they keep saying, like, it's just not my thing. But he keeps booking them. It's crazy where it's like you and dancing people can you get it says, so what else can I do this week?

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I got my teeth and they do. They look really good. That was a long silence.

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I thought I was going to get nothing. When you smiled, your teeth barely showed for some reason and I drank coffee.

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This morning was Bobby Brown right now, but I got my teeth white in one coming. Coffee. You're not supposed to drink. I suppose I use a straw like Keith. Yeah, but I don't want to do that. I just want to sit the whole time as my teeth are wine for six months. And then I. That's what Jay Boyce does.

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Probably that's why I sit there.

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So I he always has drank from a straw everything. So it's actually not white or yellow, it's God's teeth or crazy white. Yes, God has really. But I think the teeth are just white on the other side.

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It's also genetics I feel like. Yeah, it's crazy how we only have two chances though for teeth. It's like your baby teeth. Yeah. And then that's it. And then your actual teeth and you get no more, no more chances. I know.

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Could you imagine if we had like four pairs of teeth depending on we had like baby teeth.

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We have to learn each time like how to make them better, make them grow and better.

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Yeah. We had that many chances. Our teeth would be fucking nice because we know exactly what to do and what not to do.

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Like I feel like I look at teenagers now and I'm like, how, how are their teeth so perfect at 13 years old. Like, why do I feel like everybody we went to school with in like middle school and high school? We all had braces, we all had messed up teeth. But kids now have perfect teeth. I don't know.

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This is getting cheaper. I wonder if they're just I don't know if it's like braces. I think it's Invisalign and like different system things that didn't exist when we like that.

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They're still expensive, though. They're so. And I think and I think our parents like because a lot of like are not I'm not saying my prayers, but a lot of like adults, these like older adults, they don't have like the best teeth. And it's because braces weren't like popular. My parents.

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Yeah, my my teeth were in like the good enough states. They were like bad enough to get braces but they were just like I could have used them, I would have liked them. But it was just like they're all right.

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Yeah. Yeah. Now everybody gets their teeth like perfected by the age of like 13, 14.

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Like they look so good. It's crazy.

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You know, I had to wear like that mask most like a lot of hell for a lot of years, like gear, you know, and like like those like Nickelodeon shows will be that nerdy kid.

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The whole I wore that whole mask like I had to wear to bed when I woke up and always had to change, like the rubber bands that like I had to I had to wear to school for like only a little bit, not the whole time, just a little bit. And because that is just something I had to just keep on my face at all times, I'd have.

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That's crazy. I only took it off like out like a sore contraption.

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A girl from Finding Nemo, like the Dahla girl like that.

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And then after that, I had to get like a retainer in my like, OK, was it an expander? My daughter got an expander at the roof of her mouth. And every night we had to go in with a tool and crank it to expand her mouth in order for her to get braces like I only beauty is pain.

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I don't remember having a having to do that. Like I remember they had to tighten it because it would loosen.

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It was just a thing that sat on the top of my my mouth and. Isn't that crazy to think about all the tools we had to use? I know my mom like whenever back and back in her day when they gave fillings, they didn't have an option, I don't think, or it was like just insanely expensive to do like white fillings. So, like, a lot of older people have, like, that little or silver. They're like totally like gray silver in their mouth.

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So it's just like I think it's probably just things getting more advanced, I guess more accessible.

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Remember George Washington's wooden wooden teeth. Yeah.

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Did he ever see it? Is this this is like isn't crazy like old like pictures of people are like mostly drawings.

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Like there's no picture of George Washington. It's just all like paintings. Yeah. Like, you know how people can face you.

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Now what do people just painted you a little bit better or differently. They look nothing like what they look like on the paintings. Were you guys like artistic at all? Do you have to take art classes in school or anything? I avoided them at all costs.

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That was terrible. I went to art school outside of, like, regular school. She is really. Wow. Yeah.

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I don't know why. I'm really I have a special I have an aunt who's an artist. That's where I think I get it from. But then I saw my parents drawn. I was like, wait, they can draw to like they can draw like simple things. But I remember them always being good. And I was so into art when, like, I literally thought I was gonna be an artist.

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This is why you always want to play illustrations. You know, you're the best artist.

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Yeah, we took another drawing because that's what we were just really good at back in. Yeah.

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Every few years, starting at age five, I have a picture of me. I have a picture drawing of Jesus that I made. It's like five through I think sixteen or seventeen. I have pictures. I get better.

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My Jesus. Like progression. Yeah that's cool.

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Actually it's the way back with my husband now because I'm a friend and I was always pretty good at drawing, but I could never like just sit down, not looking at anything and just draw nothing.

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Yes, I'd, I don't know but I'm really good at looking at something and then putting it like just with like dimensions and sizing. I'm good at like duplicating something like I can barely trace.

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I remember when I was a kid I used to trace Pokémon.

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I know a lot of times I would trace them and I would pretend like I like drew it, like I like just to myself I wouldn't lie or anything. But I would just like I would look at it be like, this is really good. I did a really good job on this. I trace the entire thing. Why do I have this memory of me tracing something?

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And when someone was walking by or someone's going to pull the paper out and just go and just finish this book? Yeah, I'm just bored.

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Oh, you know, just to do it good. You could clearly see that, like, the lines don't don't like me because you move the paper, it's just you could tell that you fucked up. Oh God.

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I remember my it was my last project for like an English class or something, this dewater thing. And I had to do drawing words like the dots I sat next to you.

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I remember it was really good. I don't know what made me think to do that. But like, I just it was like this like this like five by six inch drawing that I did of like the city of the great guy in Great Gatsby. Right.

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It was some sort of like street with like buildings and stuff. Yeah.

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And I just like I, I shaded everything and ink dots and I said you were going to have your pen and pen. Yeah. Permanent.

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Very, very bold move.

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Well then I got a I got a B plus all. OK, good. I don't know what it was for. It wasn't for a specific thing I don't think. But it was like every year, once a year there would be like some ocean drawing mandatory thing and everybody had to draw some ocean scene.

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And I remember cheating every single time. These children wouldn't win. It was like some competition I'd have, like my brother help me or my dad.

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No, no, no, no. I used to have to make Eco-Systems like you would take a shoe box and you would go to like Michael. Yeah. Joannes and you would get like the fake moss and you would make your own ecosystem.

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My dad built some cool ones for me to see. My brain wouldn't let me do shit like that. I would just go to the easiest thing, like put the penny in vinegar, in water. So, oh, revolved around that. It shows like which Penny dissolves the quickest and what liquid.

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My hypothesis is in elementary school they had every year they had the fifth graders competition where the fifth graders were able to draw what they want the yearbook cover to be, and they would pick somebody to be the yearbook cover.

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And I never won because there was a kid who is always a lot better than me. He used to be my neighbor and he he won our year and I was so pissed. But I'm in the yearbook.

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I was like runner up. They put they put you on the back cover.

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But I'm surprised that your books don't do that. Like, who's going to be the cover of the yearbook?

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They don't cover. Yeah, everybody's a winner. Oh, come on. The entire I feel like it's not high school was a fucking competition. You do remember those now anymore.

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We're saying nowadays everybody's a winner. Oh, God. My mom, my mom, she works at different elementary schools. She said on the playground they're not allowed to keep score for anything.

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I'm like, what? Yeah, like there has to be some. Type of competition to make kids want to work hard. That's the thing, yeah. Yeah, it's the thing. It's a competition isn't always a bad thing. Yeah, like, it makes you want to do better and be like everyone's equal and nobody can like. Yeah, that's either stand out. What's the the motivation. That's how you have the best athletes in the world. There are.

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All right. Part of competitions all their life. And again, it's not a bad thing. That's how these are and it's not for everybody. So don't get involved like kickball. Yeah, it's it's really that simple.

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Everybody's a winner participation award. Yeah. Everybody everybody gets the green green ribbon. You know how many participation awards I got because I wasn't good enough to be like, oh, I remember I remember being younger. My brother played football and like I tried to play football too, I.

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Living in his shoe steps, living in his shoes steps. What was I saying? Living in his shadow. What are you following in his footsteps?

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He got framed friends living in his shoes. Don't be like it is, but it do.

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But yeah. So he would he would come home. He had like the big ass MVP trophy quarterback, and I would get the little green ribbon on him and try to act like it was just as good. But hey, it's her job to, like, pretend it's not good.

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Right. Make you feel better.

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My mom would be like, I'll try harder and you'll get a bigger one.

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I want to I like I feel like I would like that as a kid. I would hate at the moment. But like later on in life, I'd appreciate that my parents were right.

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Yeah. Because they'll be a little bitch. Yeah. Pretty much. Suck it up. Suck it up to better suck it.

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How is your week Mario. I've been waiting all day for this. It was good. I had some family in town which is always nice. I love your family. I love you.

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I love your mom. They're okay.

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We were at the airport and there was this car that's pulled up to the curb and it was a family. So as a husband and wife and their three little kids and they had a baby in the stroller, was maybe like five months old under your old and then like two three year olds. So they're getting the kids in the car. The husband gets in the car, the wife, like, packs up the stroller, and it was one of those expensive stroller.

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So, like, you have to fold it one way, fold it the other way and throws it in the trunk.

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As soon as she throws it in the trunk, she hears scores screaming, wailing.

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It's funny when you're saying that your parents are just watching these, too, just like remembering when they when you guys were like that's why we were staring at them, because my parents were like, I just remember when you guys were this little like I just really respect them for traveling with kids this young, like they're doing so well.

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Accidents happen and that's what happened.

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They heard crying.

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She had packed the baby in the stroller, folded it in in halfway through it in the trunk, because I thought, oh, my God, throw it in the trunk.

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And they were mortified. You can tell they were mortified. They pulled it out and now they have to flip it back over to get it out, unfold it twice to get it out. The strollers upside down, they open it up and they're like, oh, my God. And the baby's crying. I guess she probably thought that the husband put all the kids in the car, but he only put the two in.

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So she just packed up our generation, just forgetting you have another kid.

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But that's the thing I said, thank God it was us watching this happen because I feel like anybody else would have freaked out, like judgmental. Yeah. If that was like recorded and put on that. Oh, forget it. Have to be baby dragged you.

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The other half would be like somebody calls on these people.

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They don't deserve their child. Yeah. Yeah. It would be hard to go far enough to get their information and try to report it because there was another video just like that of a lady. She she opened her car door and the stroller was behind her and it started rolling to the street and it happened. But I remember seeing half the comments.

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It happens, but it's awful. Yeah, but it does happen. And it's like truly a mistake, I'm sure.

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Right. There's a video of a baby.

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They're like they're on a picnic on top of a hill. And this baby, again, like under one year old like it probably like seven months old, starts tumbling, starts tumbling down the hill.

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You've never seen this video. They were. And the parents were cracking up.

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It's funny. Like, kids are more like OK than you think. Like, yes, be careful with kids.

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Don't shake them around. Their bones are like rubber. Right. Like, you do have to be careful, like with their heads especially. That's what gets you nervous. But like things like that literally happen all the time. Like that's like trial and error being a parent and it's OK.

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And now they they'll never forget what people watch and shit like that or like younger don't have kids yet. And then once they have kids it's going to happen to them. They're going to be like, whoa, whoa.

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Yeah, accidents happen and it's OK. You move on.

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It's like the girl who who drove her car through that gas station and then got pissed at everybody else.

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But that would be me, though, if I drove through.

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It does, because it would be like somebody who puts a gas station here right on the corner of the street. Hey, that's not right. They're recording this. Oh, God.

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The yelling at everybody like it's their fault, not mine. Just blackout.

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Have you and the one lady who like blacks out and doesn't like know how to handle herself, where she's blocked in in the parking spot she like, hit the guy's car.

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Oh, they're panicking. Trying to get out now. Yeah. Yeah.

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And she's just back and forth just like you freak out. Doesn't know. And she's just doing everything she can to get out of the situation, just panicking, like trying to jump curbs and like just not realizing that you're she's still fucked. You're still fucked when you whether you get away or not. But I think in the moment with all those people watching her, you're embarrassed. It's just it's. Yeah. Half embarrassed. Half like panicking that someone's.

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To hurt you for doing this right, it's like a fight or flight, but like when you can't when you're blocked in and you can't flight, you also have to fight, right? Like, if I was in that situation, I would probably do everything I can to get out of there. But I wouldn't I would not run away or I would not drive off. I would just go to the other side park there and then call the cops.

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I just just to get away from like that. Right.

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Oh, that's so embarrassing, because it's can you please tell your nail salon story with your mom on our own?

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Zoome because it's just as just as good, right? Yeah. So we're getting our nails done. My mom's getting a pedicure. I'm getting a manicure. So we're across the room, Frej from each other. And this really pretty employee walks into the supply closet and she comes out in this gorgeous dress like really, really pretty dress out of nowhere, out of nowhere changes into this dress and walks out like this. And it's like me, my mom and one of the person in this whole salon.

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And she walks out and my mom just has to make friends with everybody, opens her mouth and she goes, Oh, that looks amazing on you. Like that looks bude like really beautiful. She looks at my mom, she's in the accent.

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Where do you avoid it? Don't just do it.

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She looks at my mom and she goes twenty dollar.

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And my mom's like, oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. And obviously you have money, you're paying for your nails. You can't be like, I don't have money because normally that's what you do. Oh, no, I don't have money. Like, if people are trying to sell you stuff. Yeah. Twenty eight dollar to my mom and she's like, no, it's OK.

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It's OK. It's OK. I don't buy it.

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I just said it was nice. Right. And then she comes over because she knows I'm the daughter. She comes over to me and she goes twenty dollar twenty. She said she wants you and she's like like telling me that like my mom wants to buy the dress.

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My mom's like, no, no, no, no. And like this girl comes, it was just so hectic. This girl comes in to get her nails done. She has an appointment and they're pointing at the dress and they're like yelling at her about the dress. And she's like, where do I sit? She goes, No, no, no. Twenty a dollar. And she's like, I didn't even get my nails done.

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My mom is like, they're trying to sell you the dress. They're trying to sell you this dress. So my mom goes, All right, let me what size is it? They go into the supply closet.

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They come back out with ten dresses, ten other dresses in different colors all the time. She just randomly walks into the closet, was like, what is going on in the middle? The nail in the middle of the nail salon getting her nails done. She comes out in the street like that was the plan. And my mom was real then, like it was a former store. Like give it to her though.

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I give it to her like she was so confident she was not letting us leave without that drive, the one that was happening.

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Did you watch the Stoss episode before that came from? Oh, that's the one I was avoiding all the comments of, like, where'd you get that? Drove my mouth. So I got so many compliments that I was there. Like, you look incredible. Maybe it was Nelson Nail Salon. And you know what's even funnier? We came back, we told we told everybody the story about the dress. And my mom's freaking out about it because obviously she bought the dress.

[00:24:18]

She said, yes, that's what we're filming that episode.

[00:24:21]

My mom goes back to the nail salon to get another color, another dress. And she went back and got another dress for my sister.

[00:24:28]

Oh, my God. She also got an oil change while she was there.

[00:24:34]

Like, it was so bizarre. But I was like, only my mom got to respect the hustle.

[00:24:40]

Yeah. Yeah. Twenty was a really cute dress for twenty eight dollars. I was like, are you kidding?

[00:24:45]

I would not have the balls to ask somebody if they want to dress if I was doing something that's cool.

[00:24:49]

She didn't look really good in it too. She looked really good in it. It's a good story though. You know, like you have that dress now. You keep it for 30 years.

[00:24:57]

You can still talk about the story. Speaking of doing some shopping, though, I want to talk about the online shopping right now, especially with Instagram. Don't even get me started.

[00:25:08]

The book, I want to die.

[00:25:11]

I hate it so stupid. They have they're not thinking about it. It's just money hungry. Just what they can do to push as and sell product and just get as many.

[00:25:21]

We go into an ad right after this. Yeah. Instagram shopping tool. No, look, you know what? I don't like whatever.

[00:25:28]

Do your store. It's fine, but fix the other things that everybody's having issues with first and then come up with a button for the store. But don't replace it with a button that people click on one hundred percent of the time. They're using that as it's the notification you do when you go on Instagram is go to your notifications to see who's engaged with you, who's like your post, whose message you are with the store, but where is his got replaced with his search box.

[00:25:51]

So yeah, my, my, my layouts different than yours, mine, where you normally would search like for a user which I like use that I guess kind of often too. It's like I feel I'm always president. Search. Yes. For Page.

[00:26:02]

I feel like it's the the two most users are the ones that they change, the one where it's your feed and then the one where it's your search thing. My search thing got changed and it's to realise and I'm like, I don't want to see this shit.

[00:26:12]

I don't want to see nobody. No I see it.

[00:26:14]

Yeah I understand. Like Instagram is very competitive, but I don't know why don't they don't just come up with their own things, like as soon as something else is popping off, it's like what happened to Snapchat and I'm guilty. I got rid of Snapchat as soon as Instagram came out with stories. I don't use Snapchat in years. I wasn't the same. I kept on actually using Snapchat and did not use stories at all. I don't know why there's something that happened with Snapchat.

[00:26:35]

It's a story which made me want to switch. I think they just made that into stories more. I think just more convenient and more friendly.

[00:26:42]

Yeah. On the app to just use it. And they made me just stop Snapchat and go on.

[00:26:47]

Yeah, I was just about the convenience. I was like at two and one. Why not. But now they're pulling into tick tock like me.

[00:26:54]

It was like you couldn't tag on Snapchat. Oh yeah. That was a big thing too.

[00:27:00]

Yeah. And it was just so much easier to like find people on Instagram. That's worse for Snapchat.

[00:27:06]

The thing is, is that like I don't know how they're going to make that more accessible or more user friendly. Like like I get it with the Snapchat thing. Totally. They did it. They actually pulled people away from that platform because they made changes that were better and they made it better. But like, I don't want to shop on Instagram and I don't want to see rels, which is essentially like a tech type thing. I don't have to talk.

[00:27:26]

So it's like I don't want. And half the time, people criticizing people's reels are there tech talks.

[00:27:31]

And I'm like, I don't get the difference between Instagram videos, Instagram rels and IG TV. It's all the same fucking.

[00:27:37]

Yeah, everybody just posts on all of it. It seems nobody knows what to do.

[00:27:41]

Yeah. They just post the same video in all the different. When you get that content on different parts of Instagram, it's not like the same thing. It's like why don't get to making it that much harder for everybody to. Right.

[00:27:50]

The reason we're on Instagram is because it's so it's quick. It's like, OK, I see someone's picture on video. Keep going, keep going. Not like going into their reels. I want to see if there's a new HDTV. Like, I don't I don't check the time you're trying to take over.

[00:28:02]

They're trying to be all in one. I get what they're doing, but the same time it's like you're you're ruining the app because again, this kind of this I think about this to replace the two most used buttons. Yeah. With what they want to click on a story. Yeah. And they're beating obviously.

[00:28:16]

They know, they know what they're doing at the end of the day, like I'm not going to get off Instagram, I'm still going to have it, but I just don't feel the need to check reels and TVs and all this. I don't, I don't know.

[00:28:27]

I will say it does bother me seeing all this like shopping and just swiping through. And it's just ad after ad. But that shit works. I have bought so much off of Instagram that this whole outfit right now is off of Instagram ads, really swear to God I'm guilty of checking.

[00:28:46]

OK, now let's get to writable like I hate it. I hate that I fucking do it. It feels incredible. I hate it.

[00:28:52]

Yeah, well, no, there's a difference between having a whole store and then having AC pop up through your feet. Your feet is like good. It's like a shirt like when I say natural it not whatever I'm scrolling through anyways, but it's so curated to me and what I like.

[00:29:05]

Yeah. Is the game. They're doing it right.

[00:29:08]

But as soon as I'm done invading my house, everything that all furniture and, and shelves and walls, all that shit comes up on my feet. That's what I feel.

[00:29:16]

That's why I just feel like it's getting annoying though at this point, because they've changed so much fairly recently. Like this is the first change. They say that it's the first like big change to the like layout in ten years, like really just changing the functionality of it, adding the shopping thing. I think the real thing. But they've been changing parts of the interface that I just don't like. Like I don't like how they. Have you gone through your stories and then after you go through a certain amount, there will be like it's not anyone's story, but it's a page that suggests.

[00:29:43]

Yes. Who to follow. You know, I haven't gotten that. I'm like, I don't want to I go, yeah. And then say, when you're scrolling on your feed every like for it's like you get an ad after every like fourth post that you see or third post it's like very frequent.

[00:29:58]

And then when you, when you're all caught up, when you're all caught up and you've seen everything and it as you suggested, posts the people that you don't even follow. And I'm like, yeah, if I wanted to see it, I'd follow them. Vine used to have this bias that I think after like a few years were on Vine, they made a suggested tab where it would when you download the vine up, it would suggest to you like the top careers to follow.

[00:30:20]

And I remember a lot of us were trying to get on that section because it was like you were you would get it was very much traction and viewership from Vine putting you on that spot. So I think Instagram is doing the same thing. I don't know if people those are those creators are paying to be there, just likes their content or they're just good with them or they're part of something where they just have their shit. I'm just wondering, I get a lot of I notice that I get a lot of, like, tattoo artist because I follow, like, a good amount of tattoo artists on Instagram.

[00:30:48]

And I and I actually do frequent their pages. So I think it's just a thing that they're using data. Yes. And and just trying to target what I'm looking at because I get a lot of when I finish with my feed, it'll say you're all checked up and then it'll suggest tattoo artist that I don't follow. And I'm like, you know, who's going to get there at some point to tick tock? Yeah, well, I've been up for a year.

[00:31:06]

I feel like I see it in the next half a year to year where Tick-Tock will do amazing things happen, where everyone's stuff is going to get like really what's what's really bugging me right now is like there's no denying that it's listening to what we're saying, because I was talking to read the other day and he was like, man, I wish I could find a pair of jeans that are like thermal insulated, like just like some sort of like lining on the inside.

[00:31:29]

That would keep me warm while wearing jeans, and I was like, yeah, I haven't really seen that. I go home from hanging out with him. And I get adds thermal insulated jeans, and I'm like, you can't like, how is this happening? You got the whack.

[00:31:46]

Yeah, that was the weirdest one that I've ever experienced. I've gotten a lot of those that are like, oh, my God, I just said this and it's popped up. I feel like I avoid it usually because I feel like it is mostly ticktock that that happens when you wear it. Like, really listen to what you're saying. I got a Facebook ad the other day when we were filming the James episode, and it was for the I remember he came out, got dressed.

[00:32:09]

I was like, oh, that looks cute on him. Whatever. He looks nice. I didn't say anything, though. I just I literally just thought it in my head. I was like, oh, no, I didn't say anything. He didn't say anything about his hat and nobody said anything about his hat. I opened Facebook.

[00:32:20]

I got an ad for the exact hat that he's wearing, the same style, same orange one. Yeah, it was like the French.

[00:32:29]

Yeah. What is it called? It's like a newsboy. Yeah. Oh yeah. Like a basic hat. Yeah. That's not I realized it was like I was like that's the exact same color that I realized the brand was Brixton, which I know that you wear a lot. I mean I have to screenshot this and I asked you what brand was that hot. And you said Brixton. And I go, is this the exact hot. It was the exact.

[00:32:46]

How does that make you heard? I don't know how it makes sense.

[00:32:48]

And it's also it was also, you know, on Facebook, the ads are like set up. So it's like a horizontal. Yeah. Like set up. It was the first one. It was the first one front and center was the hat you were wearing. OK, this this might sound a little like like far far fetched or whatever, but do you think Instagram knows that you guys follow each other? You guys are near each other because your locations are right next to each other.

[00:33:09]

So that's what I think it is. Yeah, I think they know that. They somehow know that I live here.

[00:33:12]

They probably saw like that. I had just ordered that and. Yeah. OK, have you have you seen the social dilemma.

[00:33:20]

What to do. I watch like that half like starting half because it was on at someone's house. Watch it. Oh you liked it. It will mess you.

[00:33:26]

I remember it was kind of like it was kind of corny. I like the way they were doing the storyline and the storyline is a little bit corny.

[00:33:33]

But what they're doing is real, and it's so insane, I hear it makes people really uncomfortable, like at the end, just knowing how much data mining is going on, like with you, like how much they they know about, you know, more about you and know how to make you think is the craziest thing.

[00:33:52]

It's a weird thing, but that's the thing is the manipulation. It's like it's under people's awareness. You don't know that you're being manipulated, you feel certain ways and you don't know you think it's like an original thought. But it was it was designed to make you feel that there's something really bad.

[00:34:07]

Maybe architectonic ideas aren't actually all right. Maybe they cure it. They know that we're going to do that. They'll, ah, come up with something like bingo.

[00:34:15]

They go into detail how like everything is planned and like set up almost like in like a magic way to make you think these things like and get you addicted to your phone, to your everything is just fighting for your attention and your time on your side.

[00:34:27]

And that's a specific job like this specific person that has that.

[00:34:31]

It's like it's like a like a psychologist basically doing this. Exactly. And, you know, like you swipe up to like refresh your feed. Yeah. It's set up in a way that it feels almost like a slot machine.

[00:34:45]

You don't know what you're going to get. So you like swipe up and it's like a refresh to see, like, what am I going to get? Yeah.

[00:34:52]

And like all of that is taken into consideration.

[00:34:55]

So you're like sitting there like your phone is right there and you're like, I just don't want to play the slot one more time. I let me just see if I could get something I'm going to like and I'm going to want to see. Yeah. So it's just like that constant like shit that you like. When they said that I was like, oh my God. And it made so much sense. That's exactly what it is, you know, it's like just unexplored.

[00:35:14]

Just refresh. Let me see if I'm going to get something I'm going to like let me like that picture.

[00:35:17]

And that's why this episode is sponsored by the doing on the social media and on social media. But yeah, no, it's so scary.

[00:35:27]

I watched the trailer for Social Dilemma too, and it was like they they initially thought that it was going to be a good thing. They were they were giving the people what they wanted. But it's actually having like psychological repercussions. Like there's an entire generation now that's growing up with more like everybody.

[00:35:41]

Yeah. And everybody's so addicted to their phone, the Internet and comparing to other people. They were saying that, like the self-harm rate and just anxiety, depression is through the roof. I believe it because they're exposed to this. And just like they even talked about, like using filters, like it was like you could post a normal picture. It doesn't do well. It doesn't get that many likes. But you put this filter on that makes you look beautiful.

[00:36:03]

And they're like, oh, my God, so cute. Yes. And it's just like, well, shit. Well, why would I want to post a normal picture? Doesn't do well. And like this this makes my cheeks look a little slimmer or puts a little Rosie on like like I could lead to body dysmorphia.

[00:36:16]

Yeah. It's so bad. Did they get into politics at all on that show. So I fell asleep on the last I think twenty minutes left and it looked like they were getting into what they were, they were talking about politics. How. Everybody thinks that they're seeing the same thing on their phones. Yeah, where I can see a whole bunch of different things, you can see a whole bunch of different things. But I'm assuming that you're seeing the same let's just call it propaganda or some sort of news outlet that fits what I think.

[00:36:47]

Right. Which is just separating people more and more and more, because this is being catered to me. This is being catered to. Somebody else is is being catered to somebody else.

[00:36:57]

And it's just feeding them a rabbit hole of what they're already thinking.

[00:37:03]

Yeah, my tick tock pages like a great example of it, because I was in the beginning, I was getting a lot of Biddington talks just on my feet and then on my fourth page and I got one Trump tick tock. It was obviously a person talking about Trump. So that was the first one I saw. I watched it. I went through the comments, just read the comments. People are saying, why the fuck is this on my page?

[00:37:23]

Well, I just I was just looking it was the first one I saw.

[00:37:26]

And then the next day I see three. The next day I see six. The next next.

[00:37:32]

Yeah. And it saw that you like interacted with it and they're like, oh, he wants to see more of it.

[00:37:36]

He wants to see more interactive by clicking through the comments and then ended up replacing all like the Democrat Ted talks the Republican ticket. I was, I was like, oh my God, this is insane. Imagine Howman like if this goes to anybody that can consume shit easily and just believe everything this kid like really fucked.

[00:37:55]

That's the thing. It works for a lot of people. Yeah, that's it was when I saw I was like, this is actually insane. And a lot of people don't notice this. What I found interesting the other day, this is before the election. But you were talking about how many, like, texts you were getting, like political text and a lot and most of yours were like all Democratic ones. Yeah. And I found it interesting because you have a you have a California number.

[00:38:19]

Yeah. And I still have my Florida number. I was getting nothing but Trump once I found that.

[00:38:24]

And you're not even a registered Republican either. Yeah, that's not 2000. Yeah. It just depends on what state you live in. Yeah. I was like everyone has I guess their own way of like who they want to tap into.

[00:38:35]

And it was tapped. And the social dilemma is talking about like on Google too, like your Google, if you start typing something in it is going to cater the drop down searches for you, specifically where you like, where you're located, what you have like done before.

[00:38:49]

You can literally type in a one letter and exactly what you're looking for is going to come up first like it's right in the trailer.

[00:38:56]

They use like climate change or something like that.

[00:39:00]

And depending on how they think you think about climate change is a conspiracy, is fake is whatever, or is killing the polar bears or what like climate change is not real, does vadas.

[00:39:14]

Why is this first of my good. Because I follow that.

[00:39:19]

That's so funny. That's wild.

[00:39:21]

It's going to be crazy. Like to see where this world goes. That's why I am preparing.

[00:39:27]

Oh I am prepping. Clothes are not the only thing you've been buying online. You've talked about the end of the world so much and it's like at first I was just like it was such an eye roll but now I'm like thinking about I'm like, oh no, not necessarily like the end of the world, but no, I just have, like, this feeling like.

[00:39:43]

It's just so much division and just getting everybody to attack everybody that I feel like something bad is coming and I am afraid of it.

[00:39:54]

I don't want something bad to happen anymore, but I'm just preparing for the worst.

[00:40:02]

I feel like a lot of people are unhappy and as they should be, a lot of people are on edge. And I would like to prepare myself for what may come.

[00:40:13]

So I've ordered I don't know anything about the order of the build up, build the bunker, a bunker portable.

[00:40:23]

But it's me online shopping at night. It's 1:00 in the morning on top of the Adderall. And just could you imagine at Miles instead of Build-A-Bear A, they have built a bunker. Oh, they build the bear bunkers. And so I wish I had a bunker, but yeah, I've been.

[00:40:39]

I bought. Quite a few months, over six months worth of emergency food and is this just like regular food or is this special food, camping, food?

[00:40:51]

It's basically just like freeze dried stuff that you would just add water to. Which brings me to my next point. I have water purification filtration systems. So if water gets contaminated, I don't have to worry about that. But, yeah, I have I have quite a bit of food on hand.

[00:41:08]

Oh, yeah. I'm going to be completely honest before you continue. Are you is this do you set up for things like this because you watch like a lot of movies or do movies help you like. Think, oh, maybe this could actually happen just because it's happening in movies doesn't mean it's fiction. Oh, it's like this could be possible.

[00:41:26]

I think movies not necessarily dictate what I think about this whole thing, but I think movies are not predictive.

[00:41:35]

I think the plot line of movies are seeming more realistic.

[00:41:37]

Right. Everything that we've watched has seemed like so outrageous, like they would never do that. And then come to find out, oh, my God, they're doing that. Oh, yeah. You know what I mean? So it's like it's better safe than sorry. Like worst case scenario. I've got six months worth of emergency food. That's not going to be wasted. I could eat it at any time. But if something does happen, like a lot of people, like if I asked you right now, how much food do you have in your house?

[00:42:00]

Like if if coronavirus comes back five times worse, holy shit, it's a crazy outbreak.

[00:42:05]

We can't even open grocery stores.

[00:42:07]

Oh, yeah, I'm fucked. I have to be a day and a half worth of food.

[00:42:10]

More people have a day, two days, maybe three days worth of stuff that they can eat.

[00:42:15]

And it's because I, I like I think it's impossible for a situation like that.

[00:42:19]

Exactly.

[00:42:20]

But what if I know it's crazy.

[00:42:22]

Well, I was going to say I was I feel like I was having these conversations with my sister because I quarantined with her back in Florida whenever this first kicked off. And I feel like back then it was becoming a very real thing that people had to think about because there was low supply on like, yeah, a lot of stuff, toilet paper and things like that. The supply chain was not meeting the demands. And so it was really not that far fetched.

[00:42:42]

We weren't far off back then from like being not sustainable. People are being fucking greedy and not giving enough supplies for everybody else has nothing to do with the stores.

[00:42:50]

It's all people will be. You got you've got to think about where where the stuff's coming from. If it's in a spot that's locked down and they can't produce the toilet paper or whatever it is you can't get, it was like twice in the meats or whatever. There were plants that were that somebody got covid and they had to shut down the entire plant, which means production had to halt for everyone to get to like they had to. So it's like now we're not getting the meat.

[00:43:11]

And also people are like, fuck, well, there's no more meat coming in. We got to get as much as we can. Got it. And that's all just like last minute stuff. So that's why I was like, you know what? I'll be ahead of the curve and get it.

[00:43:21]

Now, my sister and I were actually talking about this. We were just like, what if like, what if this happens? And then and then some people stockpile and other people don't. The other people that didn't are going to have to start getting aggressive if they want to get their supplies and people aren't able to get food.

[00:43:36]

I imagine everybody, not everybody in Los Angeles, but you got a good majority of people here that don't have enough food and they're like grocery stores. Sorry, we can't open it like this thing's going on. It's crazy. What are you going to do for food? Do we, like, break into a McDonald's or something? Like, how do you like. Well, they're not they're not going. Yeah, I'm like, they're not. Are you going to do I don't know.

[00:43:56]

They got to make plans. You're going to start going. They probably have a lot of those. Oh, I'm just saying, like, I'm not saying this like it's going to be happening and this is one hundred percent guarantee. But as a just in case, which is why I am stocking up on everything, because you were saying that, like, look, I'm like I'm good.

[00:44:14]

I'm a very Volvo. You're like, I'm going to buy myself a bike so I can go through traffic and shows like that. But you're talking about bike or you couldn't even fit more than you might give you. What are you doing about.

[00:44:23]

And when I said I bought six months worth of goods that ain't cutting down to three months and he's working like and I'm going to be completely honest. Yeah. Like you, OK, you need to get on the bike now. And because shit is getting crazy, you can't like being a truck because it's like back to back traffic. You need to get the fuck out of there on a bike. You got all this six month worth worth of food.

[00:44:45]

Where's that going in? Your backpack was going to be good right before we hit the road.

[00:44:49]

So I guess you have you have bread for any type of situation. If you were stuck in your house, you're prepared for me to leave, right? Yes.

[00:44:56]

And you have a bike to get out of here. There's like a zombie apocalypse. I'm going to be building out the bike to do some sort of saddlebag, some sort of a emergency type of vehicle, throw it in the back of the truck if if, you know, we got gridlock, can't leave L.A. Everybody's stuck on the highway. Boom, zombies are come in. Exactly.

[00:45:14]

You're right.

[00:45:14]

You've dropped the bike out the back of the truck, pull the truck off the side of the road or we got the Raptor. We can go off roading. OK, but if I get to the point where I can't do it anymore, I got the bike in the back. She can hop on the back and we'll just and that's only if he has dropped her bike. You're kind of fucked. You have to figure out if riding around on your own life learning all of this right now.

[00:45:35]

I'm like writing this down, just getting prepared. All right. You ought to know.

[00:45:39]

I think I think that's good to have, though, like this. This is why we're match, because I not that I don't think about stuff like this. I think about it. But I never worry ever. I'm very laid back. I'm like, if we all hit rock bottom, we're all at rock bottom together and then you can only go up from there. That's what I'm thinking. If I was like, if this happens, it happens like rock bottom together.

[00:45:59]

A lot of times it's not.

[00:46:00]

No, I understand that. But like, you make it work and you're going to figure it out. Right. You know what I mean? Like, you're going to get out of everything like like this world has been through so much. Like I feel like you're every feeling everything's going to be OK. I'm glad you're doing what you're doing because I probably wouldn't survive without you. But I don't I don't have that mindset. I'm just like. Good, everybody eat some cake and be happy, like I'm just way too like I'm like he's just like a tricycle in the back.

[00:46:24]

I guess I need to roll.

[00:46:26]

My 640 people will think I'm crazy, but then why so crazy? No, I'm saying some people think, oh, what? Oh yeah. Yeah, but what some shit goes down there. Like who would you where would you go to. And they're like Heath.

[00:46:37]

Like what I watched when I watched the movie Contagion, I thought that movie was not believable. I was like, oh my God, there would never be like the system or America would never let it get this bad weather and contagion is much more exaggerated than what actually happened. The contagion. You got it. You fucking died. There was like a there was a three percent chance that you're, like, going to stay alive after catching that virus.

[00:46:58]

Have you seen. To a it's the opposite for Corona. But that movie made it like when you watch it, you're like, oh my God, it's happening kind of right now, like with everybody, like, freaking out, going to the grocery store, like stockpiling, like locking down. So like so after that I was like, oh, so it is possible.

[00:47:14]

I wonder what other movies make us stronger. Have you all be there for each other and it'll be like a whole like helping each.

[00:47:20]

I think the world's going to end well, total the world if the world ends. I know Possuelo and has a little bunker that he's making.

[00:47:26]

So are you going to where's your bunker going to be? I'm probably going to go close to him. We could we could bunk out together and have some late night jam sessions.

[00:47:36]

Well, probably not anymore. You just told everybody that you're bunking next opposer. He's going to want to be by himself at this point.

[00:47:42]

That's because I don't want to tell you guys where my underground bunker is. We're not going to tell us now. Is it a one person bunker? Yes, it is. OK, we're going to put all your food, then it's all your food.

[00:47:53]

And then one little circle for you in the middle does. No, I don't.

[00:47:56]

I don't I don't have a bunker, but I don't know. I'm just I'm trying to do the best that I possibly can.

[00:48:02]

So you're fully prepared. Got it. I'm trying to show the press conference for the end of the world.

[00:48:07]

That'll be nice, guys. Just be prepared.

[00:48:09]

I'm just saying, like, I would rather be safe than sorry. And it's all stuff that I can I can use eventually, you know what I mean?

[00:48:15]

We got food, guns and ammo. Maybe that's all we need.

[00:48:19]

You just need to be what you need to prioritize which one is the most important and then go from there. Guns and ammo.

[00:48:28]

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Thank you. Always right. You know about the story when Kenny came home, not expected, no. Oh, are you saying it came to this house? It was the Porter Ranch house. OK, so OK. So like a year ago. Yeah. So Kenny has been in California. He lived in the Bay Area and he was down visiting. Mm hmm. And he was staying at my house. What is the Bay Area. San San Francisco.

[00:53:02]

San Francisco.

[00:53:03]

North Shore. This she knows. Where are you interested. Very good. I just told Zander in the bathroom break I was complaining because half the time I don't know what you guys are talking about. I don't get a lot of things and seems like it's OK to ask questions, like it's OK to sound like a little silly.

[00:53:21]

I was just saying dumb and just ask questions that just makes you not it may just make you more interested in like it could possibly ask questions that people or that people don't want.

[00:53:32]

Right. Right.

[00:53:32]

But you know what I thought of I knew it was San Francisco, but I never heard of the Bay Area until I moved to California. So I'm like, OK, other people don't know. What's that? San Francisco. I didn't know. I was like, you know, let's try this. What's the Bay Area? And I answered my own question. That's right. I start a podcast. You can if we can.

[00:53:53]

And I didn't know what the Bay Area was five years ago, so maybe people don't know.

[00:53:59]

I didn't know when I moved out here. Very good. Yeah. Good job. All right. Continue. So. So Kenny came down from the bay.

[00:54:08]

And he was standing with me. He went out one night I was home and I ended up going to sleep early. I heard something in like the kitchen, like downstairs, like just like moving around, what's the kitchen?

[00:54:26]

And a kitchen is it's a room in the house, right where you might cook cheese.

[00:54:33]

You clarify. There's no this is actually a crazy story so sorry for.

[00:54:37]

So I hear something and I'm like, oh, shit. It startled me. I woke up to it and I was like, oh my God. I was like, I got like, really nervous. So I texted. I quickly grabbed my phone. I texted Kenny. I was like, Are you home right now? Is that you in the kitchen? And he was like, what are you talking about? I'm in my Uber.

[00:54:54]

I'm almost home. It was like, you're not here. And he's like, No, I'm almost home. Like, is everything OK? Like, what's going on?

[00:55:01]

I know. I know. I know. I know. I don't know. I didn't plan on doing that. Or obviously I didn't know you were going to wake up. I was. It was like 2:00 a.m. I want to say, if I remember correctly and I remember I was throwing something away in the trash, I didn't think I was being that loud. But you heard me upstairs.

[00:55:17]

Oh, we are always alert. Yeah. All right. You stay ready for the end of the world.

[00:55:21]

But like, I was just doing something away. And then when you texted me, my phone was on silent so it didn't make a noise. And so I was like, oh, this is going to be funny.

[00:55:29]

I'm going to get up and go. I'm going to get him like a little lighthearted prank, not even thinking like thinking back. I'm like, that was the dumbest thing. I know.

[00:55:36]

He was always like strapped and ready. So like I was just like, it's going to be funny. And then so, yeah, I was texting him. I was like, what? No, I'm no, I'm in the Uber. What is everything OK, Oscar worthy.

[00:55:48]

But you just texted. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was a really good voice. No, what are you talking about. He has like a car driving like sound effect sizes. He added set on like a movie. Real quick. I'm like, what are you talking about?

[00:56:01]

No, sir. It's a left up here. Yes, a lot in text, sir. It's a left, sir.

[00:56:08]

So he goes along with it. And I double checked and I was like, all right, shit. So I ended up grabbing my gun and I start walking down stairs and I'm like going slowly around the corner, like just peeking.

[00:56:21]

And I see him standing there at the bottom of the stairs and he's just I was like smiling, like, gotcha, gotcha. And I'm like, oh, god. Oh, God, oh, god. Oh, God. Oh, he pointed at me. I was like, oh, OK. Not a joke.

[00:56:36]

I was just like I was like actually freaking out, though, because. I was probably more scared than you were with a gun pointed at me. Yeah, and obviously, like, I'm not fucking stupid, I'm not going to go shoot.

[00:56:48]

And we're like, what, you really, like, actually shoot somebody? Unless, you know, it is like I've talked about this before, like I have a gun just in case. Yeah. And I pray to God I never have to use it for anything other than just like at the range or whatever. But like, I hope I never have to use it. Yeah. And you can protect yourself because there's like crazy stories of like YouTube or is getting broken into.

[00:57:11]

And there was a I think there was a couple of YouTube or is that like where this guy came over ready to like like take them, take him hostage and like, tie him up and then who knows, probably kill him because yet I think he had guns in his trunk. But like, you don't know who's fucking crazy enough because to find people's addresses these days, they have it so public. It's unbelievable how legal that is. It makes no fucking sense that you can just be public, even you could find them.

[00:57:35]

Even your friend from I don't know if I should say Jordan, but. Oh, yeah, even your friend from back home, like his house got broken into. They got tied up, robbed. And that was it, like at gunpoint.

[00:57:45]

He got held at gunpoint. They tied the entire family up, roped them up, Saddam on the living room and just ransacked the house. And they just had a fucking he literally had a gun to his head and he had a burglar.

[00:57:56]

Yeah. Dude, he said it was the most like you never know. It could happen to anybody, you know. Yeah. Yeah. And obviously, like like I said, I'm not like just going to go shoot anybody. Like obviously I would try to avoid that situation and nobody do it.

[00:58:10]

I'm all for it. Like, like you have to be alert at all fucking at all costs because it's not worth it, because once it happens they're like, well you should have been well you should have had something to protect you.

[00:58:19]

It's like, well, I mean, you don't think about that until a fucking happens.

[00:58:24]

Like, when I got broken into, I was a kid. Can you come over, come over there, done this because this dude kept breaking it and it was forced entry and it got worse and worse. And I did not know if this guy was trying to hurt us or not.

[00:58:33]

And that was because these little tiny camera, any cellphones without without the cops trying to help at all.

[00:58:38]

Yeah. And the cops were helping it. So it's like we have to take this matter in our own hands. I'm not I can't just walk into a hotel for the rest of my life like I have to be in this house. It's my house. I bought it. So I'm just becoming home alone.

[00:58:49]

This is my house I have to defend. But now it's scary.

[00:58:53]

I'd like you guys might think it's crazy that he has a gun and he's, like, ready to use that whatever. But like, fuck shit happens. And there's there's you two birds that have been killed by crazy people because they know where they are and they know where they live. And it's like that's all you need. That's everything you need.

[00:59:08]

At the end of the day, too, it's like you.

[00:59:10]

If you shot me like you would have been in the right I mean, like. I don't I wasn't living there at the time, like it wasn't my like, right, you had a homosexual break in, you know, he was trying to touch me.

[00:59:26]

Imagine the headlines. Rednecks, homosexual throwing something away, homosexual tries recycling, shock drives, recycling those actual shot after trying to tell a joke.

[00:59:48]

Homosexual joke ends in bloodshed. We had Kenny Allen at the hospital.

[00:59:52]

I just can't believe a friend like that would do this.

[00:59:55]

I, I, I trusted him coming out and I just never thought he would do this thing.

[01:00:02]

And I literally told him this less than 12 hours ago and his door's always open if I need it. You just can't trust anybody. Bottom line. Oh, shit. Meet me in the hospital bed.

[01:00:16]

That's why I now carry a gun with me everywhere that I go.

[01:00:19]

And they go, oh, oh, oh, oh.

[01:00:25]

These guys just you have to laugh at these situations. I almost died. Sorry, Kenny, I almost died.

[01:00:31]

And I think I mean, I'm pretty sure I did that once. I think we talked about it already. But there was a time where I, like, told you I wasn't there when you asked me if I was there. Yeah. And why is a joke.

[01:00:40]

Yeah, I don't know. Why do we think that's funny. It's not funny. Scott did that to Scott, Zane and Kenny. Yeah.

[01:00:46]

You told that story where Scott just like was going to do a video where he breaks into your house or like sleeps over in your house for twenty four hours and he showed up and you like we forget there's a million trillion other people in this world that can all be it doesn't revolve around us.

[01:01:01]

Yeah. Clearly we need to get a better sense of humor because all of us think that that's the funniest thing ever to tell him. I'm not here to give you that think that something like this is funny to your friends.

[01:01:11]

Just don't tell me of all people, you know, why do you ever see, like, the like I feel like it's becoming more and more trendy.

[01:01:18]

A lot of girls post like their their weapons on their like, key chains and stuff, and they're kind of cute. They're buying pepper spray and pepper spray. They have like these cute little cats now where it just looks like a cat keychain, but the ears are like daggers.

[01:01:29]

Oh, all right. I'm guilty like you. They all, like, look really cute now. And all the girls are like posting about their like on the phone where you just go.

[01:01:40]

It's just in case, like, you can now write that down. Oh, I said that in a weird way just to protect myself. Oh I want one on my phone.

[01:01:47]

I don't know why I feel like I might be making this up. I feel like I've seen something where it's like a phone case that like doubles as a taser.

[01:01:54]

I might just know that too. But I was like, is this a joke? Because that would not be good. It's an app. The Taser, just like the beer or the lighter. Yeah, because because imagine you're just like next to somebody and you go like, yeah.

[01:02:08]

Your hair just fried like but guys, whatever.

[01:02:13]

And if the end of the world is going to happen, I could probably save you all financially with my bitcoin.

[01:02:18]

Oh damn bitcoin.

[01:02:21]

I so like six, seven or eight. Sorry I'm here I go.

[01:02:25]

I don't know what bitcoin is. What is bitcoin. I don't, I don't know what it is either.

[01:02:30]

It's just like this coin is a currency.

[01:02:32]

I know what crypto is. I know what currency is. I just need to get it together like I know what pickles are here tonight and currencies.

[01:02:40]

My oh my my girl said to me, cryptocurrency like gambling currency.

[01:02:48]

It's an online currency that is universally accepted. Say you have a dollar here or a dollar somewhere else. They're not worth the same exact thing. Right. I know that. And this allows it to be universal. It's all equal. Like it. It's just it's cool.

[01:03:05]

Yes. It's actually why wouldn't they just use that for everything? Well, that's that's what I feel like is going to be happening very, very.

[01:03:11]

Because also that sound like a bad thing. You guys are like that's going to happen like one amazing thing. It's just going to be like a one world. Currency that just accepted. Don't we all just want to be one and accepted because not because, like, a government can't really there's not like there isn't any sort of like laws or anything in place about like how governments can deal with, you know, like interfere with like regulation and everything like that.

[01:03:37]

So it's just kind of like a big like we don't know if it's going to be like it gets really tricky.

[01:03:41]

So our dollar was backed by gold. Gold is something that you can't make. It's there's a limited amount of it, which is what gives it its worth, right then cryptocurrency is backed by a fake mining of a bitcoin. So a Bitcoin, you have to have like super computers. And people that have multiple super computers can run programs and some sort of I don't know the exact word for it, but you can make a Bitcoin yourself.

[01:04:17]

It just takes a long time of some sort of algorithm.

[01:04:19]

Wait, a bitcoin is is tangible, like, no, no, no, it's not.

[01:04:24]

You can't counterfeit it online. It's it's some sort. Like, I don't know. Is there a picture of a bitcoin or. No. Or isn't it.

[01:04:33]

It's like like a bathtub. It's like, it's like it's nonexistent. It's kind of like but there's also a bunch of different crises.

[01:04:39]

There's this Mikoyan, there's a theory, it's confusing, but every single person talks about it.

[01:04:44]

And I don't I don't it sounds like something that you can easily like, do something illegal with. That's why. Yeah.

[01:04:52]

It's not it's not traceable. Like, I don't know, it's really bizarre. I don't know too much about it. I kind of did a little bit of research, but basically Bitcoin a long time ago wasn't worth anything. A bunch of people bought Bitcoin that were like ahead of the curve and it skyrocketed.

[01:05:10]

I think it went up to like. Close to 20 thousand dollars per bitcoin, one coin when it started out like 100 hundred bucks, right. Even below that. Yeah. So if you had that bought a bunch of coins.

[01:05:23]

A lot of people became multi multimillionaires off of it, but Zain decided to buy some Bitcoin for like a fifth of a Bitcoin, it's six, seven years ago and recently I was like, oh, my gosh, because I haven't been on my Bitcoin like page in years.

[01:05:40]

I was like, oh, my God, I wonder how much money I've made off putting. Like, I put like twenty five hundred dollars worth of how long ago.

[01:05:46]

Like six years ago, like five, six years ago. And I was like, oh my God, I'm probably sitting on like 50 to 100000.

[01:05:54]

I might be a millionaire. So I, I like I said, I didn't know my password or anything. I had to it took me a while to get like that information back. And I finally logged in. I was just like, baby, let's see what I got negative.

[01:06:06]

And I looked and it went up 700 dollars in six years.

[01:06:13]

But it is kind of cool.

[01:06:15]

But at the same time, I don't get it. It's like wish we could go back to paying with like a coin, like a gold coin. They're trying to get rid of coins. No, a lot of places don't even accept to change.

[01:06:26]

They don't have a lot of money paying cash back.

[01:06:29]

They never give to a lot of places are starting to get rid of it like you can't pay with coins. And if they give you change back, they'll give you a like a receipt.

[01:06:37]

Like a lot of gasifier. I used to pay for gas with coins. I used to dig up coins. I used to steal my mom's quarters. I go buy cigarettes.

[01:06:44]

I did that all the time, but I would buy honey buns, not cigarettes. Well, everyone's got their vices.

[01:06:52]

Your poison, baby, your kryptonite. Pick your kryptonite.

[01:06:57]

She goes to her parents. Have you guys heard of kryptonite? I'm like, you have it. She goes, It's the currency that Superman uses.

[01:07:08]

Quiz me in five minutes. And I have no idea what to say. I've never heard of it. I don't know her.

[01:07:17]

Before we get to new this episode, we want to give a big thank you to Doordarshan, this podcast between never ending laundry cycles and incoming emails.

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[01:09:12]

I wish I wish I knew more about stocks. I just recently got into stocks this year. Yeah, just the whole world just seems so shady.

[01:09:19]

You know what I like to call them? Like, just just make my money. That's what I did. Yeah.

[01:09:23]

I put my money like it's a grown up gambling, but, like, you could learn about it and. Do better than normal gambling. Well, you know what I wish I would learn about and do better with gaming. I know, I know. Kenny don't I don't want to talk about it.

[01:09:39]

It's a sensitive topic, OK? Heath and I made a twitch joint twitch channels and Heath. And it just we tried going on a couple of times and just it's really stressful because we have all these different apps that we got to use to go live, especially when we're playing with friends online. And then we have like this whole discourse that we got to worry about and stream labs and the game we have on. And then we have a bunch of all of you guys saying that you can't hear discord, you can't hear the game that you can't get us.

[01:10:07]

And then he said they're putting the audio up. I'm sitting here trying to stream labs and it's like there's something loud and he's too quiet.

[01:10:14]

Are they muted? And it's just like I don't know which one it is. Yeah. And yeah, it just and there are mikes are going out and we had a lot of technical difficulties that we didn't expect and we're trying to dial it in. And we had somebody come over and look at it and trying to set it up.

[01:10:30]

So sorry about that last Celestron the hard and the one before that said the one before that was just really messy.

[01:10:40]

They said no, I spent like thousands of dollars on furniture to make the room multiple, OK, even isn't even seen on camera, but we will get it figured out shortly.

[01:10:48]

And we're sorry for the people that did watch it is being worked on.

[01:10:53]

There's like I've dedicated all my library to make it right and we just we don't do it anymore.

[01:10:58]

I know you were talking about you're like, oh, it was just so stressful. It was stressful to watch it stressful as a viewer.

[01:11:05]

But we'll get there. We'll get a fix. Babies, don't worry. Let's lighten the mood. They're all deep questions of the mood. What's your least favorite quality?

[01:11:16]

You got twenty minutes.

[01:11:18]

My family, you know, so we had to do that at we used to do that. It was like the most you had we had family sit down at dinner. We had we have family sit down during dinner. It would be like just like, like after dinner. Oh yeah. We would all sit at the table and like we would all not my idea. This is like when we're young too. It was like everybody had to talk about everything they liked about each other and not liked about it.

[01:11:40]

Was the crew the crazy at the more. And the moment I was just like, oh my God, that's like I guess we have to do this as a family. But I think everybody does this right. I was like, that was the worst possible thing you can do as a family. It's like my hope you didn't like about each other because all I did was make everybody, like, cry and feel weird. But I feel like I could be, like, constructive.

[01:11:57]

Yeah, I was going to say I like I remember being constructive at the time. I remember being young and like, I was the youngest in my family and I just knew my family had so much like drama and underlying things. I was like, I really think we should hold. I remember as a kid, like telling my mom, I think we need to have, like, family meetings like like a game night or something where we just like talk about things that never happened.

[01:12:19]

And like I said, you know, I moved away. I feel like that's good for people that have a hard time speaking their mind. I'm like saying what they feel. Right.

[01:12:27]

Start with the I would start with the criticism be like, I think you should do better with this. I don't like when you do this. However, you are very helpful.

[01:12:35]

You are very this you are like now you said to me that what comes after is this all petty. It's just like I'm saying. So that's why you do the compliment sandwich. You're like, I love your shoes. Also, your breath is a little bit stinky today, but she wears the same complement of shoes.

[01:12:51]

So we're going to we're going to kick this off with some calling questions from the Zany Heath Hotline. We haven't we haven't done much of these.

[01:12:57]

We're supposed to, but we just kind of lose track and kind of forget it. You also had to leave early on the last episode. Oh, yeah.

[01:13:02]

Was so again, guys, you can get the number in our description below if you want to call and leave us unfelt a hot line.

[01:13:09]

I'm waiting for someone to call him with the name Colin because every time you guys say Colin, Colin, I think Colin coffee and then Kenny's going to make a joke and it can be really funny.

[01:13:18]

And Maragos. But I just wanted to make it first.

[01:13:20]

So when that happens, I mean, the joke where it came from.

[01:13:23]

OK, let's get started. Maybe it's Colin copies of it. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. Hey, all right. Ready, ready.

[01:13:31]

Hey man. Carrington, I am from Georgia, so my question is pretty generalized for everybody. So I'm going to the very first contest and I don't feel confident about what you were doing. Was very low not to call you out, but how would you say from episode one sensitivity, your confidence is change. Like, do you know what you're doing? Are you glad that you ended up doing the podcast and done so well? So, yeah, I want your opinion on you know, they want to know about the podcast.

[01:14:09]

So yeah. Let me guys.

[01:14:11]

Thank you, Carrington. That was a really good question and that's a very good question. And I'm surprised this came out like two days after I did this.

[01:14:19]

I was watching older episodes of the podcast just because it was just popped up and I was like, oh, let me watch a few of these, because I kind of forgot how we podcast back then and what we were about. No, no, I was actually really surprised, we I think, because here's the thing, just like like when we started our YouTube channel, anything we get so excited because we have it's a brand new it's a clean slate.

[01:14:42]

We have so much to talk about. And we just talk to a bunch of people we feel like we've never talked to before and that I saw a lot of that excitement in our older episodes because we never talked about anything on a podcast. So we were actually, I feel like much more amped to talk about things because we just again, we just had nothing we had or we just had so much to be open about. And now obviously, like throw out a podcast by, like the fiftieth episode.

[01:15:09]

Now, especially since we're not doing much, it becomes harder to come up with things to talk about, like because there's nothing really going on during the week because we don't go out or anything. So it's like, fuck, we have to come up with, like, things to talk about. So I definitely felt like my comics is going a little lower because like every week I'm just like, oh my God.

[01:15:23]

What? And then I think about that throughout every episode, I get what you're saying with that, I think in the beginning, like the first few episodes, I wasn't confident in the sake of this is a new platform to to try a new video time out. So I was a little bit nervous and then obviously got more comfortable, like I feel the most comfortable for a podcast now than I ever have. But I do get what you're saying about that with like topics and stuff, because we were doing a lot more.

[01:15:48]

And I think the big difference with back then versus now is that I lived 30 minutes away and we honestly didn't see each other that much. That's true. So everything that we were talking about was told on the podcast for the first time. But we do have exciting things that do happen, like some stories that we tell. Yeah. That we've heard before. So it's just getting the story out to you guys listening and viewing, because we obviously think they're funny and we want to share them.

[01:16:19]

So it's not like our first time hearing stuff. But yeah, I think that that's where the excitement comes during. Yeah, and we do talk we do talk a lot outside of this podcast room. Yeah, especially lately.

[01:16:33]

I agree with bits and pieces of that. But I think I remember the first two months of filming. We were so we were a mess. I remember being so nervous.

[01:16:46]

We were all like, I don't know if like or do we sound smart, do we sound dumb? We're kind of messy. But then I think we learn to embrace it because we're like, oh, you guys sound really authentic because you're not perfect. And that's we really like took that on as like, OK, this is our brand. Like, it's OK to be this way. We don't have to be perfect. I think, yes, we're more confident speaking now, but at the same time, it could be dropping like it could be like plateauing because there's a lot more pressure because we did, like, amp up the set and like everything's being stepped up and we have these, like, big guests coming on.

[01:17:22]

And it's very like we feel a little bit under pressure because they are doing so well, which we're super grateful for. But that's just us like wanting to like meet those expectations. So every week we're like, we need something to talk about. Meanwhile, the people listening are like just sit and talk about whatever.

[01:17:37]

Like, who cares? But we're very excited. We try to do that. But sometimes, yeah, we're very in our heads.

[01:17:42]

Yes, we're more confident, like speaking wise and interview and stuff like that. We still have a long way to go, I think.

[01:17:49]

But I have obviously not been around that long. So from episode thirty eight to now, it's like you guys even said it to you said to me initially you were like it's going to take probably like ten or so podcasts to get like kind of comfortable because that's kind of like how long you said it took for you, which I agree with. But it was it's funny because I had basically that little 10 episode window and then we were having these big gusts.

[01:18:12]

So it was interesting because it's like I just kind of started getting like a little bit of my footing and then we have to throw gas in the mix. So I was like nervous just about that. But now that I've experienced it, like those were two of the episodes that were like the most fun to film. And it's just and it's actually cool and it helps what I like to your point about not having a lot to talk about, like it helps when there's another person that you can learn about and you can actually take a genuine interest in them and it just keeps the conversation flowing very freely.

[01:18:40]

That's what I like. I would I would just say, because I feel like I wasn't confident the beginning kind of got there was less confident about gas, but now I'm getting more confident with that. So I think it's just like growing pains. I feel like it's a natural progression. I feel like it's harder with the episodes. We have guests, but it's actually easier because it's like the brand new canvas that you could just just pick a set of.

[01:19:02]

Knowing more about each other when we know each other so well, we definitely overall, we've definitely grown so much. I feel like we've gotten so much better. But right before each podcast, we remind ourselves every day, like, let's not talk over each other, remember, like breathe before you speak Zen, like take a breath before you say your sentence. Like, we do have to do those things that I cut out. It's just like it's very nerve wracking.

[01:19:24]

We're trying to sound as not intelligent letters, like a word I'm looking for.

[01:19:27]

Like it's I think what it is, is in the beginning we were just like excited and we felt like we need to constantly be talking and have this energy, insane energy to make it seem fun and just constantly just all be talking at the same time.

[01:19:43]

But yes, it's good to have the energy, but at the same time, it's a little overwhelming to hear you talking.

[01:19:51]

So now I feel like we're kind of finding our comfort and being like, OK, yeah, that's a really good point. And I'm going to add on to this. What did you think about that? Yeah, and it becomes more of a natural free flowing conversation.

[01:20:03]

Do you remember in the beginning when we would if there was any breath or pause for like five seconds, we would freak?

[01:20:10]

Yes, we would. There were times when we started all over because the momentum was slowed down. Now we do bathroom breaks. We do we chill out for a second like we're OK. We're OK with that. We could jump right into it.

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Even got to the point where we would just redo the whole episode because we think that those moments.

[01:20:23]

Yes, like holding like a whole the mood would switch would be like, OK, is this not good enough?

[01:20:28]

Like, are we boring right now? What? Just start all over.

[01:20:31]

Like, we'll have to put his seat cooler in the fridge because I would get so hot because I'm so nervous for like, oh my God. Yeah.

[01:20:43]

Because it was like I went from like filming YouTube videos. It was just me, like just the camera to like all these lights and everything. And I'm really bad at like being on set. Yeah. So I felt like I was on set even though it was just our video and. Yeah. But like it just made me feel like I couldn't.

[01:20:57]

I think it also is training all of us.

[01:20:59]

I noticed like outside of the podcast where we're a little better with telling stories if that makes sense or like speaking in general to people, I feel like we're annunciating a little bit better. I've just noticed it in everybody. Like I feel like before this we would tell a story and then jump all over the place, but we would know what we're trying to say on the podcast. We we'd to be very cautious of that. We have to be like these people have no idea what's going on.

[01:21:21]

We have to break it down for them. And I feel like we're carrying that over into, like, everyday conversations, which is good.

[01:21:26]

Yeah, I think it's important to just to know that, like, because I feel like sometimes it's it's a hindrance to progress when you nitpick about every little thing and just realizing that, like, at the end of the day, every kind of like what James said last episode, he posts twice a week, every every single episode. Can't be like a banger. Hit it out of the park, home run like you drive yourself crazy. Yeah, exactly.

[01:21:48]

And then into the point of like you just won't it'll like. Bring you to a complete stop, like you won't want to produce anything because it's not living up to the expectations. I know I was trying not to look at the definition of exactly, but let's think about that, though. Like, I imagine like the way you put that, like a banger home run. Imagine a baseball player that every time he went up to bat would be so boring if he didn't get a home run, he would fucking beat himself up.

[01:22:15]

Yeah, it does. It just doesn't. Yeah, but imagine you could layer's hitting a homerun every single time.

[01:22:20]

Nobody would want to watch. That's just not true. Yeah.

[01:22:23]

And then then it's expected then it's like, you know what. And then if you don't.

[01:22:26]

Oh my God. Because what do you do when someone goes up. It gets to the point where you know, I can go grab a drink from the bar, OK, because I know he's going to get a home run. Yeah. It becomes boring when it's actually exciting. Right. Nobody wants to justify making that stuff.

[01:22:41]

So it's going to be boring sometimes.

[01:22:42]

And that's why I think it's important, though, to just because we since we are doing us now, like, I'll be totally honest, like I was probably the most nervous maybe for a podcast during the Stoss one just because I didn't know what the structure of those episodes looked like. Yeah. And then when the structure kind of went out the window for that episode, I panicked because it's my job to bring the structure. But going from that episode and seeing how great that episode was and it doesn't mean that I didn't have a great time filming it like she's the coolest girl ever.

[01:23:10]

But like going from that to the James episode where it was much more structured, I think it was so cool to see that just because it tells us, like, every episode is not going to be the same. That's just nonsense.

[01:23:19]

They're not going to be the same is different. We're trying to adapt to the guests. Right. And what makes them most comfortable? Yeah.

[01:23:24]

And I think that's what we did well, is that we didn't like hype up guests in any sort of way that made people expect anything. So whatever they get, it's just kind of a different view of that person's just real of them being in the room.

[01:23:35]

Yeah, yeah. Like we didn't say it was going to be interview style. We didn't say like like like it was going to be messy or whatever it like it's going to be flow.

[01:23:42]

Yeah. Yeah it's structured but it flows. Yeah. And it works out perfectly. Everything's fine. All right. Let's get another one. Right.

[01:23:48]

The bottom of your shoe looks like you know those Asmar videos where you cut the soap and then it goes, oh, I got that. I thought that looks just like it. I just want to slice it.

[01:23:55]

I mean, hi, I'm Alexa and I'm Nicole and we're sisters from Pasadena, California. We're huge fans of you guys and have been for a few years now. So our question is for both of you. What are your thoughts on social media personalities, kind of like being looked down upon in the entertainment industry? And how have you guys seen that stigma sort of changed throughout these past few years since you started on Vine and now going on to YouTube?

[01:24:25]

Because, like, you know, you've just seen some of the YouTube and other entering different platforms, even television and movies. So what are your thoughts on all of that? We love you guys. Yeah, thank you. Bye bye. Hi, Alexia.

[01:24:39]

Thanks. Girliest. Thanks for the question. I have them. I see. I love Pasadena.

[01:24:45]

It's a good question. I still feel like even still today, social media people are not taken seriously at all. You get you can tell that some celebrities, even when they do work with traditional or traditional people, are working with social media people there. You could tell what the video they're filming or even like podcasts or interviews. There's a hint of them not taking them seriously. The tension, there's like a little bit of tension still.

[01:25:09]

Yeah, I feel like they just see it as like a not an easy route or road to success. But I feel like a lot of mainstream celebrities feel like we got our success really fast and undeservedly. Yeah. So there's a little bit of like.

[01:25:27]

Yeah, because they have no idea like all these, like we know how they got there, they got to where they got to be. Right. All their movies, all their shows, all just everything they've done and they know that. So when we get excited and we collaborate with them on something that favors in return because they're just like, oh I don't know what they've done, all I know is that they're social media. They've probably got they're from out of nowhere.

[01:25:48]

Right. And we're just going to be here because they have a following and they're going to bring me numbers. I think that's what I like most of them like.

[01:25:53]

Yeah, it was basically like just like because it does look easy. Like YouTube looks so easy from an outside perspective.

[01:26:02]

Well, like everybody thinks like our job isn't even real, like, oh, what do you oh, you film your life cool must be so hard. There's a lot of shit that goes into it.

[01:26:10]

And people people forget that, like when you watch actors on shows or movies, those actors aren't there filming and editing and producing and directing. That's right. You Tuba's do have to do all that most of the time. Sometimes they have editors and some of the people writing their shit, but most YouTube ers have to do everything themselves and people will tend to forget that they think it's easy just because they see it filmed in their house or they just it just feels so attainable.

[01:26:35]

Exactly. A typical job would be a nine to five. You can visually see that work. You can see me showing up on time, putting in the hours, clocking out, and then you go home and your work is shut off for the rest of the night.

[01:26:49]

Living paycheck to paycheck. Yeah, do whatever you want. But with social media like doing what we do, our brain doesn't shut off and we're constantly thinking about ideas. What can we talk about? What is the next video? What is the next podcast topic? Our brains are always going and to me that is more work and more strenuous. And I'm not going to say like everybody can feel differently about it. But if you told me, like.

[01:27:17]

You can do what you do. Make this much money, whatever it is, but you do a nine to five and you work construction, I would take that all day.

[01:27:26]

Yeah, I was telling you the other day, I'm like, dude, I wish imagine what we would be like financially. We get what we get now and we work a nine five job. I would take that in a fucking heartbeat because it's so less stressful to go into somewhere and knowing exactly what you have to do every day. Like when I worked at the airport and hotels, it was the easiest job in the world because I knew exactly what to do.

[01:27:47]

And you make money and no, no day was going to be different because I was doing the exact same thing every day and I was drawing. Sure.

[01:27:53]

And yeah, it's it's it's comfortable. To know exactly what your day is going to be and what you're going to do. Yes, we have the freedom and it looks amazing like, wow, these guys can yeah, tomorrow we could go on vacation or whatever we wanted to do, but like, depending on what we have to get done the next day. But for the most part, we have a pretty open schedule.

[01:28:14]

Yeah, but even booking like a vacation or a trip or doing some sort of activity, the first thing that comes to our minds is like, what are we filming?

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We are just going to say like a vacation. It's like, what? What are we going to post?

[01:28:28]

We we have to put out content.

[01:28:29]

It's like it's like you can look at it. There's two sides to every coin. It's like you could look at it as the freedom, of course, very desirable. But you can also look at it as uncertainty. Like you don't know what the next thing is going to be or what you're the captain of the ship like. I mean, I my last job was retail and I didn't like the world. Like, I didn't think I didn't like what I was doing versus like I didn't think it had a lot of value.

[01:28:50]

I find more value in this. It's like bringing people joy, you know, accompanying people on their day to day thing, whatever. But it's true what you're saying. It's like I went from having a very structured job to now having a job that is not structured and it's just this constant state of like wondering if am I on top of everything I forget?

[01:29:07]

I mean, am I like, oh, like that just can pop up like out of nowhere. Yeah. And you have to always be available. Yeah.

[01:29:14]

And to go with the questions, she was saying that social media people are like taken seriously. And it's really sad because these social media people, most of them weren't even born here and they went to like they went to the acting around and all that. A lot of people we had all normal jobs for years. We worked our asses off inaudible jobs.

[01:29:32]

And you went to school, you had a job. Yeah.

[01:29:34]

And when we started doing social media, we didn't even know it was like it could lead to a job. And we were working so hard at it for free, getting nothing in return. Yeah. And it is really sad that, like, traditional traditional media, like just does not see that. And and but like I'm talking about back then, I feel like when we were like doing social media, now I feel like it is like a it is a you wake up and you are.

[01:29:57]

Yeah. You are the biggest Internet creator in the world. So it's definitely different now. It's very accessible these days. But back then it was not at all.

[01:30:05]

You have to work really hard to where you got to like an overnight sensation on social media could be like a model being discovered at the mall or something. If someone's like, oh my gosh, you're gorgeous for me, you start.

[01:30:16]

Yeah, like a Victoria's Secret model. They started, they got discovered. They got looked at your beautiful be a model. They worked their way up and now they're Victoria's Secret model. Now everyone's like, wow, that's so sick. That's amazing. You're working with, like, huge brands, blah, blah, blah. It's the same thing, but different.

[01:30:33]

You know what I mean? I think at the at the baseball game, she was she got put on the Jumbotron that she got covered.

[01:30:40]

Sorry, it was a it was ABC Lions football game.

[01:30:43]

She was wearing a cut off beer t shirt.

[01:30:45]

That's really everybody's pets are different, like she's meant to be doing what she's doing. And that was that like a like a restaurant out here or something like I want to say Taco Bell, but like, whatever it was and got discovered like that. Oh, no. Yeah.

[01:31:00]

He was working at a local. Yeah. Oh really.

[01:31:03]

And he got discovered there an agent or somebody was went there and saw him working behind the counter was like can you come in for just come into the office. We want to like isn't that crazy.

[01:31:14]

Crazy. Courteney Cox got discovered at a Bruce Springsteen concert. She got pulled on stage as a fan, you know how to, you know, bring somebody. She was that person and got discovered. Somebody looked at her and was like, we want her.

[01:31:24]

Yeah. People I feel like a lot of that's like traditional people all the time go on stage for causers because, yeah, I feel like a lot of traditional people get discovered as just a normal person, not even in the entertainment career. It's just like straight looks and they're like, you have the look, we're going to put you through training to become an actor and actress. It's kind of like tick tock, but they don't they don't got a way they could just post.

[01:31:46]

It's just the new wave, like I understand where they're coming from, why they're confused and why they would be frustrated. But at the end of the day, like with any job, you start from the bottom. Yeah. And then you work your way up and that's it.

[01:31:57]

And so at the end of the day, if people don't respect you for what career you have, fuck them.

[01:32:02]

Like because they were in your shoes, they would take this. And I would imagine people thinking about I was like, honestly, who gives a shit if they don't think we work great? Like, as long as, you know your worth, your value, your work ethic, like what you're putting into what you're doing, that's all that matters. And people will recognize that. Yeah. And if they don't, then so be it. I agree.

[01:32:25]

And yeah, that's it. And that's that's the answer to that question and that's the way the cookie crumbles. All right, guys, again, we love you so much. We post the audio every single Monday and the video comes out Tuesday on Zanin Heath Unfiltered.

[01:32:36]

Oh, what did I say that you said that right underneath and so on.

[01:32:40]

No YouTube, dotcom, dotcom, Zane and Heath. And also we have Murchú on. I was excited about the merch guys. Make sure to check that out and we will see you guys in a couple of days. We love you.

[01:32:53]

We sell bumper. Oh.