Andy Frasco's World Saving Podcast - EP 279: Brent Pella (Wild 'N Out)
Episode Date: July 16, 2024Andy updates from a mile high. Was the Vegas Sphere really that amazing? (Yes. Yes, it was.) And on the Interview Hour, we got comedian, Brent Pella from MTV's Wild 'N Out! Brent's got the comedy pedi...gree, the resume, and the know-how to steer Andy and Nick back on course. Does he microdose psilocybin? You betcha! We're here to learn how to navigate the seas of entertainment without getting sucked under by the Kraken of burn-out, or over taken by the Blue Beard of drug overdose. And watch out for the Johnny Depp of Depression! (deppression, clinically) Boy, is this metaphor strained or what! Keep those post-show mushrooms flowing, people. Us stage monkeys need the good stuff to keep our minds healthy. And guess what... now you can see a cool dog by the name of Denzel should you choose to watch this episode *exclusively* on Volume.com... now in color! Generally speaking, we are psyched to partner up with our buddies at Volume.com! Check out their roster of upcoming live events and on-demand shows to enrich that sweet life of yours. Call, leave a message, and tell us if you think one can get addicted to mushrooms: (720) 996-2403 Check out our new album!, L'Optimist on all platforms Follow us on Instagram @worldsavingpodcast For more information on Andy Frasco, the band and/or the blog, go to: AndyFrasco.com Check out our good friends that help us unwind and sleep easy while on the road and at home: dialedingummies.com Produced by Andy Frasco, Joe Angelhow, & Chris Lorentz Audio mix by Chris Lorentz Featuring: Arno Bakker Travis Gray
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'd rather be a big kid than a young adult.
Cool.
Here's some more cum songs.
I wake up with cum on my dick
Cause I just had a wet dream
At night I have to release all the cum
All the cum inside of me
I've been unable to cum on time
My dreams are the only thing keeping my dick alive
Oh, baby, it rips the cum from my sack
Whether it's nighttime or during a nap that's in the sun
Our pants are up, baby we were born to come
Baby we were born to come Come. I had to do some emergency landing in a different city,
so I wasn't going to be able to make it to the studio.
So I'm on here.
I'm doing this on a plane.
Man, Vegas was insane.
I had a blast.
I'm going to keep this short.
Brent Pella's on.
And I'll talk about the whole Dead & Co. show next week when I'm with Nick.
And we've got Maggie Rose on the show.
But holy shit, I think I took enough acid to turn monkey into human.
It was a lot of fun.
I had a blast with it.
But just the whole experience was amazing.
I'm really stoked.
That was like the speed.
I mean, that is like stimulation overload.
I couldn't believe the stimulation I saw.
We felt like me and Jason,
I drank a sulk and felt like a sphere group.
Our buddy got us, shout out to the anonymous,
I won't say, but hooked us up extremely well.
And shout out to Kanika.
I saw Kanika randomly for giving us that
miracle for that one night.
Then our buddy who
kind of runs the show out there, hooked us up
for the rest of the weekend.
You gotta go check it out.
I know it's like hella expensive.
It's like a rich man's party,
I guess, to go see a concert this year.
But when it gets cheaper, you gotta go
check it out, because it is
un-fucking-real. It really is.
But Vegas was fun.
Didn't spend that much
money, which was kind of dope.
I spent a couple
G's gambling and whatnot,
and I was like,
damn, down to my last 200 bucks
on Sunday. I'm'm like i'm just gonna
go to the penny slot see what's up grab a couple cocktails and i won a jackpot i was like hell yeah
it was universal like you know i'm not normally not a big fan of vegas as we talked about in
previous podcasts but i had a fucking blast um it was killer and just one out of another, met some great people, great fans.
Dead Show was way better than I expected.
Just the whole experience in Vegas was a fucking blast.
And had a great, it was like a brocation
with me and Jeremy Sulkin from Big Gigantic
and so many homies.
We saw so many homies.
Played
Bronny James.
I met Kurt Rambis,
one of the owners of the Lakers.
And then
they asked me to go
do this event for Call of Duty.
And I walked in and it was
just for the NBA Summer League
and Bronny James,
LeBron's kid,
was playing and whatnot, playing Call of Duty.
And I got confident and thought I could take down this 19-year-old kid on Call of Duty, and he whooped my ass.
So shout out to you, Bronny, for doing it up like that.
But overall, it's been a great experience.
But now I'm on the plane.
And I have to put this out tomorrow.
So, you know, when I come back before we talk about Brent Pella.
Brent Pella's on the show from Wild N' Out.
You know, that Nick Cannon comedy show.
He's a great comedian.
Great, fantastic comedian.
He does a lot of stuff, collaborations with all these different comedians and whatnot.
But when I came back from Vegas, I had no expectations.
And I think the best part of life is when you don't expect anything.
And you just get out there and just live presently.
You know, we could build an idea of what the future is going to hold in our heads and build an idea of what life is going to bring to us.
But at the end of the day, what's most important is if you stay present.
And I wouldn't have, you know, we're waiting and we're like,
should we go to the dead show on Friday?
You know, I pulled the trigger and went and had the most you know we're waiting and we're like should we go to the dead show on friday you like pulled
the trigger and went and had the most and had the greatest experience for the last for the last
weekend so maybe you got to do to stay present stay present even through all the madness um it's
important to follow your gut follow your instinct but also save some room for improvisation you know
that's all we got so. So shout out to Volume.
Sorry.
So head to volume.com.
I didn't even do the pitch yet.
Head to volume.com.
One of the best live stream programs in the country,
in the world, actually.
Better than Nugs, better than all that.
Head to Volume.
Go see the madness.
If you want to see all the back stockpile of podcast stuff
that we've already done um head over there for that
um and if you're a content creator let's take your you know youtube nugs are all not giving
you that much money putting all your stuff out there might as well put it on a platform that is
artist friendly not saying that nugs in isn artist-friendly or YouTube isn't artist-friendly,
but make a little more dough.
And that's what it's all about,
is make it as much as we can
through figuring out how to navigate.
It's like the Wild Wild West,
figuring out royalties through content on the internet.
And you might as well test out all these different angles.
All right, guys. So head to these different angles. All right, guys.
So head to volume.com.
All right, Rempella.
You guys ready for this one?
This was a lot of fun.
He's hilarious.
Me and Nick were just cracking up the whole time.
If you don't know who he is, you'll recognize him.
Google Rempella.
He was on Wild N' Out for years and years
and he's just such a smart
brain and he also has a podcast
where he dresses up
as an alien and it's two aliens
improv-ing about
the world and stuff so you're gonna love
this. Alright guys, I'll catch you next
week. We'll talk more about the shows
and talk more about what's going on
I'm flying to Nashville
on Thursday to record flying to Nashville on Thursday
to record the final song
on our record. And then it goes to
mixing. We're getting so close.
Can't wait to announce all the big things
that are happening. Coming up.
Alright. Enjoy yourself.
Have fun.
Stay in the moment.
And remember to give yourself
a couple inches for,
to let life improv or dance its way through your existence.
Because if we save a little time for that,
I think that's where we could really find happiness.
Love you. Enjoy.
How you doing buddy? Thanks for being on the show. Thanks for coming on. And what's going on?
I'm doing great, man. Thank you for having me. I'm just trying to
have a good time before the world fucking ends.
I know. How are you feeling about the world ending? What's your philosophy on everything
going down? Are you part of the Illuminati brand? A lot of comedians are. Tell me.
They've rejected my application every time.
Apparently, I haven't had sex with enough goats.
So I can't do it.
His SAT scores weren't high enough.
SAT scores, STD scores.
As far as the world ending, dude, you know what?
We had a good run.
We did. We had a good run. We had a good run.
I think we had a really good run.
I don't know any other world that's made it as long as we have.
So if everything hits the fan tomorrow and we dissolve into nothing,
let's just do some extra dopamine and we'll be fine.
We'll be okay.
How would your last stand-up set be while the world is ending?
What would you end your standup closer?
Oh,
uh,
crying.
Probably just start sobbing into the mic.
Um,
and I bet people would laugh even harder than they would if I was actually
telling a joke too.
I'd want to laugh if the,
if we know the world's going to end,
I'd like to go to a comedy. It'd be really awkward
though, right? Everyone knows the world's
ending, but they're at Brent's
show and they're like,
Alright, make us laugh.
Trying to talk about going to the mall
and everyone's like, dude. There's no mall.
Burnt in like 30 minutes.
The memes are going to be great though.
Yeah.
Yeah, solid memes. The internet is going to be great though. Yeah. Yeah.
The internet is going to be on fire as the world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The best place to be on the internet.
The best time to be on the internet.
Yep.
Like right before everything smashes.
I just like a Khloe Kardashian post.
It's like,
it's going to go.
Um,
so where are you from,
bro?
Where are you? You grew up in LA or what's the world?
No, I grew up up in Davis, up near Sacramento.
Oh, sick.
Kind of a little farm town.
Denver-esque, but not quite as maybe granola-y.
I don't know.
Yeah, Denver with more farmers.
Yeah, a lot more farmers.
A lot more farmers up there.
A lot more cow poop.
I grew up up there. I was raised by a single mom. She A lot more farmers up there. A lot more cow poop. I grew up up
there. I was raised by a single mom. She was kind of a deadhead. So she brought me to a
lot of great dead shows as a baby.
Oh, sick. Cool.
I was high at a very young age.
What's your take of the community? This is like a jam podcast. What's your take of the
dead community?
Dude, I love the dead community. Dude, I feel like dead heads spun
so that today's wooks could run. You know what I mean?
True. It's true. Do you listen to any of that?
Do you listen? I do. I do. I genuinely love the dead. I grew up with the dead, Fleetwood Mac,
Crosby, Stills, and Nash. My mom raised me on all that. Um, and, and then, you know,
after college I started going to a lot of music festivals,
like transformational, you know, desert music festivals. Um,
and then I just went to,
I've been to two dead shows in the past couple of years and it's so funny to
see like how hippie culture
has evolved.
They're angrier.
Yeah, and they're more like
Republican. Oh, for sure.
Dude, he's been talking about this the whole
fucking time. It's like people
think of the Grateful Dead scene as a bunch of
center-left sort of like...
Half of them are boomer Trump supporters.
They just keep it under wraps. I kind of
like it, though. You don't want everyone to be politically
the same in your crowd.
Yeah. You want a mixed bag.
Today's hippies have sage
in their satchel and then
a.45 on their hip.
Hell yeah, dude. They're ready for anything.
They're rubbing their pistols.
I love you and we're one,
but also stay the fuck out of property.
But I got your back too.
Yeah, exactly.
I love the community.
The shows are fun.
The ethos of the whole culture around
the music festival space,
the conscious festival space.
It's really beautiful.
I have a good time.
What's the difference between deadheads
and uh your uh pella pella heads oh dude um hopefully the the all right i'll tell you a
story so deadheads can be a little like uh territorial oh yeah oh my god god weird way
oh yeah we went i i took my mom to go see dead and company this past summer on their final tour
right and we went with my sister who's younger than me she's 22 um and her and her boyfriend
were at the show and this guy got like angry that they were standing up um and we're in a massive
stadium right they weren't even standing in front of him. They were standing up and like kind of talking to each other just really briefly.
And he started yelling.
He was like, hey, stop talking during the show.
You guys don't even listen to this music.
That's so weird.
You don't even listen.
Fucking hell.
It was super weird.
They call that chompers.
They call that chompers.
You know what's crazy?
He probably was on like really bad acid or something.
Yeah.
What's crazy about that is he's being louder than them.
Yeah.
Which is so annoying.
You're being more intrusive than they are.
Yeah.
I know.
It's insane.
Like they keep hard to,
they gatekeep hard to like,
it's not like that in comedy world.
We're like,
we only like Chappelle or we only like Chrysler.
Like every comedian's just like,
yeah,
they were all just make
me laugh and let's have some fun like is there what's what's the backstage like when you're
doing these like um you know these sit-ins or what do they call it spots yeah it's like
is it competitive everyone wants to kill does no one want to talk to each other everyone's like
suck it peller does like are they friends no we're all homies backstage. I mean, it's fun.
The comedy world is funny because on the surface,
everybody's really supportive and loves each other.
But deep down,
you like,
you know,
you don't want,
or I do,
but generally,
a lot of people don't want the person who goes up before them to do really
well.
Cause it makes it harder for them.
Right.
I want everybody to do well.
Cause it's a better experience for the audience.
Yeah.
Right.
It gets to be there.
Um,
so there,
there has always been like just a touch of competition in the comedy world.
Right.
It's,
it's always for love and,
and I've never known people to have like crazy beefs or anything like that.
So it's pretty supportive.
What about,
um,
like,
um,
you know,
you've been,
you've been rocking with JPp spears that dude's
pretty conservative like do you ever get flack for rocking with him oh yeah absolutely like
what do they call you like a cuck or something what do they call you they'll be like they'll
be like uh i'll see a comment on a video that's like wow dude can't believe you got radicalized
i'm out and i'm like well who's radical now
you fuck i don't like just because you do one video with somebody that another person doesn't
like the internet is a nightmare yeah i know absolutely um but i don't really i'm past the
point of like caring you know because i know who jp is and yeah yeah, he's a pretty hard right dude, but he's also a super nice guy and has no ill will toward anybody.
I just don't understand why you can't hang out with someone just because of their political background. Why are people giving so much shit? They're already judging a person just because of their political thoughts.
Yeah. It's weird. It's weird. Like people on the internet these days
feel like they have a certain right
to like control the content you're putting out.
Yeah.
Or they think that you need to keep making stuff for them
because they found you from this thing.
And so if you don't do this thing over and over and over again,
then they're going to be upset,
which is insane.
I don't know where this came from or how it started. But
my theory is just that people keep getting dumber.
And that's how we're...
Also, the dumbest people are the ones doing that. So it's not like people with jobs...
Yeah. The dumbest people.
All the people who are doing that online have very little going on. That's why they have time
to do that.
Right.
Right. If you had a reason to... If you had purpose in your life, that online have like very little going on that's why they have time to do that right right right if
you if you had you know a reason to to if you had like purpose in your life then you wouldn't find
satisfaction from taking other people down in the comments exactly crazy yeah it's like uh go
fucking feed your child like why do you i'm so worried about fucking what we're doing then you
make a video yeah you make a fucking video go Go on a walk. Yeah. Get some fucking air.
Get laid.
Anyway, this is supposed to be a happy podcast. I'm already
fucking fired up.
I mean, obviously there's a line with politics,
but no one's really across, you know, I mean, you don't want to be a Nazi.
Of course, if you're like a wacko,
you're a super wacko, like I can't, you know,
I'm not going to take you to my Jewish family. If you're a full-on Nazi,
I'm probably going to have a problem with your comedy.
Yeah. But like, that's not what he's doing.
There's a line.
Yeah, there is a line.
Yeah.
So you have a podcast
called The Good Trip Podcast.
Is this about psychedelics?
Yeah, Good Trip.
So that's a 10-part series
I put out once a year.
Talk to a lot of cool people.
Are you into psychedelic space?
I assume yes.
Oh, fuck yeah.
By the man on your right hand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You look like every dude at 3 a.m.
Yeah.
It's so true, man.
They would type two on that one.
Yeah.
Yeah, we don't really know each other.
Yeah, I'm in a band.
We do like 250 shows a year.
We're fucking...
Yeah, we're both musicians.
We take mushrooms and blow and we party. Yes, we do party. Yeah, you'm in a band. We do like 250 shows a year. We're both musicians. We take mushrooms and blow and we party.
Yes, we do party.
Yeah, you party.
So tell me about the pod.
The pod is dope.
So yeah, I've talked to a lot of cool people on there, man.
Rick Doblin, founder of MAPS,
the organization that's pushing MDMA through the FDA for therapeutic use.
Dr. Bronner, David Bronner of Dr. Bronner Soaps.
Sick.
That dude is wild.
He's got some crazy stories.
What's his vibe?
But his vibe is like the David Bronner's vibe is like the little jester character you see when you're on a DMT trip.
That's like him personified.
I love that.
Like in a good way.
Like in a good way.
He's just like, he's always like, man, what's up, man?
Do you need some soap?
He's a cool dude.
I started the podcast to learn more about psychedelics.
I've been working with psychedelics for about 10 years.
And so just over the course of my evolution,
working with different substances for personal and medicinal use,
I thought it'd be cool to talk to people who know a lot more than I do.
And I've learned a lot.
You depressed?
Were you depressed?
I don't think I'm depressed,
but I also think I'm depressed.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Same.
So you're like a person.
I think it's because it's...
I think the entertainment business does this to us.
Because we have to make people happy all the time
that we kind of like...
We shouldn't be depressed
because we have a cool job,
but it's sucking the life out of us.
I also think just everybody has it a little bit. Do you feel like you have a lot of, but it's sucking the life out of us. I also think just everybody
has it a little bit. Do you feel like you have a lot
of pressure sometimes to create?
Yeah. And keep a fan base going?
Yeah.
Stress and anxiety just piles up.
Yeah. Is that the
reason why you started taking psychedelics or what?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's going to be a lifelong thing
trying to
approach different um patterns of thought uh with with new ways of navigating you know for me it's
been stress anxiety uh in the past i've had a pretty um toxic trait of like doing a lot of
comparison to other people yeah you know i do that instead of
yeah it's bad and it's so easy to look over the fence into somebody's backyard
and then you like neglect your own um so just in like a microdosing psilocybin for the past
eight years on a on and off protocol has been yeah it's been like a huge help for me not only
creatively but also just to
navigate that space of being down
or being stressed or anxious and
focus that energy being creative
and productive. I have a question about that. So do you have a
set schedule with that? Like you said, it's on and off?
Or do you just do it like,
I want to stop for a while? Or do you have an actual
plan for it? Like the microdosing?
Right now,
I'm pretty loose with it uh a couple years ago i was
on a fairly strict ish protocol uh given to me by a buddy of mine more experienced you know it was
like 100 milligram capsule this is not uh what's how do i protect myself legally don't do drugs
right right um they're legal well they're legal here in denver yeah they're they're legal
they're legal on the internet they're also legal on the internet so you're fine yeah exactly so i
did um it was like a couple days on during the week three or four days and then a couple days
off and you do that for like four four weeks and then you go off for about a month to let your brain
reset everything yeah reset a little bit. Now it's,
I'm a bit looser with it.
Maybe once a week,
maybe every other week,
maybe I'll be off
for like two months,
two months.
Right.
So I'm not too strict now.
Do you have a protocol
you go with
or do you kind of
just vibe it out?
Just as much as I can
as many days as I know.
Like the mushroom monster,
give me mushrooms.
No, but I did it. I was depressed. Like I was like, give me mushrooms. No, but I, I did it.
I was depressed. Like I was like suicidal seven years ago.
And I started taking mushrooms cause I was afraid to go to therapy and that kind of rewired my brain to actually like communicate your feelings.
So I took them every day. I took them every day for like six years.
Oh wow. Right on. As a microdose or like?
Yeah, I do like a, um, yeah, it depends on the, on the dosage,
but I'll do about 0.5 to one gram a day.
And then during show,
my fans always throw mushrooms at us in the crowd.
So I'll eat maybe another gram. Not exactly a microdose.
Dude,
I get,
I get so many mushrooms given to me after shows.
I actually,
I bet,
uh,
Denver,
I was in Denver like a year and a half ago and I did a show and so many
people gave me stuff after that.
When I got to the airport to fly home,
I legit thought I would be arrested.
I felt like I had a felony amount.
They don't care about that.
Yeah. We bring, we bring. TSA is another government dog and pony show. Yeah. It felt like I had a felony amount. They don't care about that. Yeah, we bring...
TSA is another government dog and pony show.
Yeah, it's a fucking dog and pony show.
I got the TSA and the TSA agent
gave me more mushroom.
He's like,
you need some white abalones too?
So tell me about your start, man.
You're from Dave's.
When did you get on wild and out how many
years were you on wild now yeah so i've been on the cast for a couple of years um so i've been
doing comedy videos since college for the past like 10 years uh and then a couple years ago i
started doing a lot of impressions like celebrity impressions yeah eminem joe rogan other people
and the eminem impressions actually kind of popped off online.
And they were my first run of viral videos back in 2017, 2018.
And I remember Nick Cannon had a rap beef with Eminem,
which is insane.
That's insane. Eminem will destroy him.
He'll destroy anyone.
Exactly.
And he'll definitely destroy the star of Drumline. Exactly. Yeah's insane. Eminem will destroy him. He'll destroy anyone. Exactly. And he'll definitely
destroy the star of
Drumline. Exactly. Yeah, yeah.
Who doesn't rap, really?
No. I love Nick,
but he should have
roll-balanced his way out of
that rap.
So I was
doing a bunch of Eminem impressions, and then
Nick puts out a diss track toward Eminem. Oh, no. And I saw it, and I was doing a bunch of Eminem impressions and then Nick puts out a disc track toward Eminem
and I saw it and it was awful. Uh, and everybody knows it's awful. And, and, and I knew Eminem
was not going to respond. So I went onto the video that Nick had made and I looked at all
the comments and I chose cause the internet is hilarious and people's comments were so funny. So I screenshotted a bunch of the comments and I rearranged them
to make them all rhyme. And then I delivered as Eminem on camera as Eminem response to Nick.
And that got super popular. And Nick saw it and DM'd me on Instagram like a month after the video came out.
And he was like, bro, I saw the diss.
Like you went crazy.
Are you ready to come wild out?
And I was like, oh shit, really?
That's crazy.
Yeah, I'll be on TV.
Yeah, which was also really cool
because like I kind of torched him in the video.
Yeah, yeah, it's kind of makes him look cooler.
Yeah, and so he invited me out to meet him the next day Cause like I, I kind of torched him in the video. Yeah. Yeah. It's kind of makes him look cooler. Yeah.
And, and so he invited me out to meet him the next day.
And the next day was March 16th, 2020.
Oh my God.
The day.
Literally.
Everything got shot down.
The, the airports, everything, everything.
Holy shit, dude.
So we had to wait a full year and a half before we shot again.
And in that year and a half, you know,
I was bummed because I didn't get the opportunity to get on the show,
but Nick, Nick had promised me a spot when I started back up again.
So I took that year and a half and I just started writing like crazy, um,
for the show, like in preparation for the show.
And then we shot our first season in 2021. Um,
and I've done four seasons since then. Oh, cool.
Thank God you had a couple
years of mushrooms under your belt.
Because if you're sad before that,
if you couldn't have that job
and it hits COVID, dude,
that would be depressing.
It's like the symbolism of,
we're all waiting to wild out during COVID,
but he's literally waiting to go
wild out after COVID.
Yeah, exactly.
I was literally waiting to go wild out. So. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. I was literally waiting
to go wild out. So what's the backstage like
over there? Is there like a hundred of Nick's kids
just like chilling or like...
Right, Gary? Every one of Nick's kids
walking around with a plate of snacks.
Yeah. Just so we get...
stay refreshed throughout the shoot.
He's got so many kids. It's fucking wild, dude.
He's got a football team.
He's building an army. He's got a whole roster, dude.
That's a lot of good cum.
He's a fertile man.
He's a fertile man.
It's fucking wild.
So yeah, what's it like out there?
Is that kind of like preparing?
Because it's mostly an improv show.
Are you prepared mostly or do you like going in there
and not having have you
watched have you watched the show a good amount a little yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah so yeah you know
i watched it all the way through high school i started watching it again like a year or two
before i got on it um just because i had a couple friends get on and i was always really intimidated
by the improv and the freestyling stuff. Even though I come from an improv background on stage, the way they do it is way quicker.
It's faster.
It's more brutal.
It's more punchy.
So backstage, there's 30 people on the cast.
And we're all just...
It's like comedy summer camp.
For two or three weeks, we're shooting 30 episodes.
Everybody's together.
And everybody's just roasting each other left and right, which is a really cool environment.
Because everybody's homies.
Everybody's super close.
And then when you get out on stage to perform, you're in front of a live audience, which is pressure number one.
But pressure number two, it's a black audience.
Oh, my God.
Different.
That's different.
Black audience is different, dude.
A black audience, if they like you, they love you.
I know.
And if they don't like you, you're fucked.
Yeah.
It's not like a white audience.
What was the worst one?
Dude, like I did a, I forget what the joke was.
You're fucked.
It was my first.
like i did a um i forget what the joke was my first i went out there and i delivered it was some random punch line for like a game and it was so quiet in the room like so quiet like not even
a mutter of not even a mutter and somebody on the cast went out on stage and pulled me off the stage
because the joke went so badly and I could just feel
this like it wasn't it wasn't a big deal
like my job right
my job was on the line
but dude if you feel
it they're like fuck this white motherfucker
dude
who is this fucking cracker
Nick
where'd you find him
off the stage
where'd you get him? He's the saltine off the stage.
Where'd you get him?
When you crush.
Yeah.
Do you ever like,
did it prepare you?
Do you think those tools prepare you for like your newer specials now?
Like, do you feel like having something like that in your brain is like,
totally helps you with making new bits,
right?
Yeah.
Cause like,
so,
so in music what what do
you play what instrument are you uh piano i play saxophone and he plays sax okay dope have you guys
ever picked up like another instrument yeah for fun yeah yeah having your article yeah and so now
maybe you might write a song where whatever that other instrument is you might have the ability to
jump in on that and record it because you have like an extra muscle now right so with wild now it built this muscle of like
roasting like like so now whenever i do a live show i do a lot i do a lot of crowd work and i
interact with the audience more and i find that just naturally i'm quicker to find something to
make fun of you know right right um which really cool. I didn't really have that before
because I was always nervous of like making fun of people.
But after doing Wild N' Out
and being forced to be in a space
where I got to like pick you apart
and mock everything about you,
it's been cool.
It's been a cool like kind of muscle to work.
You know, it's similar to like the instrument.
Yeah, and like it probably makes your crowd work stuff
during shows probably even better
because now you don't have that filter.
Man, you remind me of Phil Hanley.
You know Phil Hanley?
Yeah, I remember Phil Hanley.
Grateful Dead. He's a deadhead too.
Big time deadhead.
Family deadhead.
Yep.
That's fucking...
Totally, yeah.
That's killer, Brent.
So now that you have your new special,
Conscious Bro right
yep
how you feeling about it how's it going
feeling good it's cool dude
it was um you know
it was a different approach to make it a special
because I have the
attention span of a
fucking illiterate gen z
person we all do
melts in my brain dude if something lasts longer than 10 seconds of a fucking illiterate Gen Z person. We all do.
Melted my brain, dude.
If something lasts longer than 10 seconds and I haven't laughed yet, I'm out.
Yeah.
So, you know, I knew that I wanted to make a special
that was different than like the traditional special
where somebody's just talking into a mic the whole time.
So I really tried to add a lot of like visual elements.
And if anybody watches, they'll see a lot of visual effects, a lot of cutaway scenes, a lot of different kind of variety stuff.
So I wanted it to feel like an acid trip.
Anybody that has never done LSD, hopefully just watching the special will get you like an eighth of a tab there.
So it was cool.
Yeah, we put it out with this distribution company called 800 pound gorilla.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
They're the best.
Yeah.
They crush it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was a good experience,
man.
What's the deal with distribution companies?
Do they actually do something or they just put their name on it and then you
have to do all the work?
I don't know.
You know,
everybody wants like a big distributor these days.
Everybody wants a Netflix or a Hulu.
They all said no to me, which is fine because whatever.
They say no to everybody unless your last name is Chappelle.
Unless you're a blind Muslim lesbian with one foot.
Or Shane Gillis.
Or Shane Gillis.
Which I identify as.
Or Shane Gillis.
Or Shane Gillis.
Which I identify as.
Hopefully that gets me canceled so that I can have a bigger career.
That'll be the breakout.
That'll be the backflip.
This is this guy's worldview. Check it out.
But you know, it's cool to do it independently because you really get to test your your finished piece in the most neutral way possible um without a big marketing budget
without like a huge pre-existing audience uh these independent distributors like 800 pound gorilla
they're very friendly to to the creative um will
of the artists like they'll they let me have full creative freedom on everything from front to back
of the special uh how it's marketed the promo graphics the clips i want to put out um so they
were great and it was a really cool kind of step forward as you know the first big project i've
released so it was a good you know
and i'll look back on it like a year or two from now and i'll probably cringe and be like why why
was i talking about that that was not funny that was weird i'm sure do you guys have oh yeah my
god i can't i can't listen to a record for four records ago like in half an hour any of my records
yeah i'm like nope not today jesus yeah yeah. Yeah. So how do you, how do you feel when
somebody comes up to you and says, dude, that track blah, blah, blah from four years ago is my
shit. Like I just found it. I love it. Do you ever get like, Oh man, really? Yeah. I think that,
well, the difference is we have to play all those tracks, you know, you don't, you can just do a new
bit every year. Like, it's like, that's why I tell musicians like, be very careful about what you release.
Like if you are just chasing, you know, are you just trying,
are you trying to suck that corporate dick and you're just trying to make pop
songs? You're going to have to play those songs every day, bro. Yeah.
It's fucked up. Tell me about your hatred towards Gavin Newsom.
Oh, what a fucking nightmare this guy is. He's fucked up. Yeah. Just tell me about your hatred towards Gavin Newsom. Oh,
dude.
Oh,
what a fucking nightmare this guy is.
He's like,
he's like the stepdad that you know is banging your mom and you can't do
anything about it.
You know?
Yeah.
He's,
I,
I,
I,
I,
I really want him to end up running for president.
I think that'd be hilarious.
Yeah.
Funny.
Cause he's, he's such a, he's such a piece of shit. I think that'd be hilarious. He's such
a piece of shit.
Good looking guy, though.
Good looking guy.
He's like that guy, Tyrese movie
where the
big black dude is like naked
cooking eggs for
Tyrese's mom.
Can't do shit about it.
So why'd you start? What's your hatred? I mean, you. Can't do shit about it. So why'd you start?
What's your hatred?
I mean, you are a California boy,
so it totally makes sense.
Yeah, I'm California.
And dude, I love California.
California is amazing.
It's got the best nature of anywhere else in the US.
Right.
And a lot of good people.
A lot of good people.
A lot of amazing people.
But there's certain things like in LA,
if you get really specific into the political stuff you know the whole da situation in la is a nightmare crime
is insane had there's like a wild theft wave happening in apartment buildings all across the
city really i haven't even heard about this yeah people just aren't getting caught and if they do
get caught,
they're not punished.
They're just given like a ticket.
It's like those San Francisco biffers or whatever.
They just break into cars all day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's just like that.
It's just like that.
And you know,
there's,
it just feels like someone like Gavin and there's other politicians on both
sides that do this too.
They,
they enjoy looking like they're doing something more than they
enjoyed something. Um, which I guess can be said for almost every politician. Right. In his case,
I started actually like paying attention to politics in 2016, but then even more so in 2020,
uh, during all the COVID hysteria and we had like lockdowns that I didn't believe in at the time and now have been like proven to have done nothing.
And he was shutting down schools.
He said, don't eat Thanksgiving dinner together.
Right.
He did all he was saying all crazy shit.
So I decided to slick back my hair and throw some gray hairspray in it and do a bunch of impressions of Gavin Newsom.
And after one of them, he said in a press conference
he like kind of alluded to the video it was something along the lines of uh you know a lot
of people on the internet especially some comedians are putting words in my mouth and saying that i'm
telling you things uh when the reality is i'm just following the science and da da da da and i was
like you motherfucker,
say my handle so people know where to find me.
You triggered him.
You triggered Gavin Newsom, baby.
That's what I'm talking about, Brett.
Was he the mayor of San Francisco or LA before he was gone? LA. No, I thought he was San Francisco,
right?
San Francisco. Garcetti was LA.
Oh, Garcetti. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Damn.
Yeah. I love that you triggered...
What a little ho.
You ever wonder if California should just be like four states?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's too big to be...
It's got a bigger
GDP and economy
than a lot of countries out there.
Almost every, I think. It's like seventh
or something like that.
Do you feel like, going back
to that algorithm thing you're talking about
for YouTube, do you feel like you have to that algorithm thing you're talking about for YouTube, do you feel like you have to keep like,
if like you do a video like that's very making fun of the right,
do you feel like you,
you have to do more videos like that or can't like how,
what's your expression on that?
Cause you're like,
you want it.
You are such a full circle comedian.
Like it sucks that you can't get some of the other shit.
That's also just as funny,
uh,
to the algorithm. You guys just
got to beat... You're beating a dead horse
with the Rogan thing or beating a dead horse with the
anti-vax thing. Do you feel like you have
to do that? I appreciate
that, dude. Yeah. You know, the
battle that I
accepted a couple of years ago
is that I
really do enjoy
popping in and out of different spaces, uh, with comedy, like,
like all mock spirituality, I'll play around in the political space. I'll mess with current events.
I'll do celebrity impressions. And I realized a couple of years ago that that is, uh, not, um,
uh, that, that doesn't encourage growth in the way that if I were to just plant my flag in one of those spaces,
then I would probably take off and my following would increase at a much higher rate,
but I'd be creatively limited. And so I made a conscious choice to move with creative freedom over being pigeonholed into a certain type of creator.
And as frustrating as it is to see the growth very slowly ticking up one grain of fucking sand at a time, as frustrating as that is, it's more fulfilling to be able to just do whatever i want on a week-to-week basis
and and and i do try to i do try to stay within you know my own sensibilities i'm not going to
do some random thing that i've never done before right um and and i do try to to play around with
like more topical stuff day to day because that stuff tends to hit and it's also fun to mess with
and you know it's going to be new and someone else hasn't done it like when it's like on topic right like it's not something someone's made a video of 800 million
times already yeah yeah so if i can turn if i can turn around something quick um that usually gets
like a lot more pop than you know a typical random sketch or something so i try to be conscious of
that but yeah dude making content for a career on the internet is a nightmare.
It's a fucking nightmare, dude.
Nightmare. I don't want to do it anymore. Honestly, I'm trying to, my goal is to move
into the TV and film world and work on my own bigger projects that I've been trying to produce
for a while. Everything that I'm doing now is just kind of creating like a foundation and a
launchpad for that. So, and it's fun in the meantime, you know, but it is a, it is a constant battle between like,
do I do something that I know is going to pop and help me, but I really won't enjoy it personally.
Or do I do what I'll really enjoy making, knowing that that might take, that might force me to take
longer, uh, to grow in the long run so it's a it's a it's a
weird balance but that's what mushrooms are for no one puts fucking brent in a corner god damn it
you do have a fucking one baby these haters tell them all to suck it from the back brent tell them
to suck it from the fucking back yes the other huge drawback of that is you have to keep doing
the same thing to get people to watch your stuff and then your fans are like you're like you're
making the same thing all the time
it's like well I have to live yeah it's like
make make up your mind you're not watching
the other content I make exactly you want
me to just be pigeonholed in this and then you
say oh he's doing the same thing like fuck off
suck it it's a WNBA
basically fuck off
is it is it you say WNBA
yeah like like how I think yeah
Bill Burr's like if you want the WNBA players to make more money,
watch the WNBA.
Yeah, exactly.
You know what I'm saying?
It's crazy.
Yeah.
It's a weird balance, but it's where I'm at right now.
And it's fun to make weird shit that nobody watches.
Sometimes it's more fun to make something and put it out
knowing it's going to
bomb.
Right.
Um,
cause that is,
is an open mic dude.
The internet is not the hall of fame where it posts all your best stuff.
The internet is where you grab all the shit out of your ass and you throw it
at the wall and then you walk away.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh,
so that's my content.
Yeah.
Fuck you.
I'm going to you out of my asshole
throw it at the wall flip off
the wall and walk away it's called
art called art bitch
fuck
I'm gonna clap again for you my dude let's go
that's our guy
I think we're gonna be friends bro
so have you ever had like because you do a lot of this
right right wing stuff you ever get any wackos
in your dms like hell, hell yeah, brother.
Fucking QAnon is real. What's the craziest one?
Yeah. I've gotten people, I've had people invite me to like militia events.
Whoa. How hard is it to not go though? I would want to go so bad just to see.
I want to go really bad. Yeah. I want to see it. Yeah. Yeah.
Um, no, I don to see it. Yeah. You kill militia?
No, I don't. What is it?
So a militia, like a private militia,
is basically just a bunch of citizens
who have like a
meet-up group
and talk about ways that they're going to save the world
from the elites.
And they all got guns.
A lot of them were like doomsday preppers.
They tried to kidnap...
That Michigan governor? Yeah. Like, yeah.
That Michigan governor?
Yeah, right, right.
And they meet up in the woods and they do like target practice and drills.
And it's basically like a little mini police or military group.
It's coming.
They're huge in Michigan by where I'm from.
They're big up there.
Yeah.
So what'd they say?
Hey, brother. Hey, somebody they say? Hey, brother.
Somebody was like,
hey, man, saw you're coming through Oklahoma
for some shows.
I'm part of this group that does a lot
of training, exercise, and programs.
And if you'd ever want to come through, we give you
a free session for the day.
Free session?
Yeah, like a training.
Oh, training. Okay, okay, okay.
Yeah, I learned how to hog tie somebody who, hog tie a liberal.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, yeah.
Jesus Christ.
And I kind of want to go.
If there's an offer out there, I'm down.
I couldn't do it because my flight was leaving too early, but I'm into it.
I get a lot of conspiracy theory people too, which is super fun.
Oh, dude.
We were just talking about Twitter has just become just conspiracy theory
central.
Dude, it's so fun.
And guys who hate women.
Yeah.
That part, I'm not really into.
Yeah.
Those guys are weird.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The traditional marriage guys who live with their mom.
What's the biggest conspiracy theory
that you kind of believe?
So
the JFK assassination, I think,
was for sure an inside job.
That was the CIA.
I don't know if that's a conspiracy anymore.
Yeah, I think it's just a fact.
I'm not a flat-earth guy. i'm definitely a round earther yeah uh so i'm not
that one um aliens for sure there's some weird stuff happening in the government
yeah um i did this event do you know who rick perry is yeah i don't rick perry texas governor
he's the former yeah former governor of Texas.
He ran for president over a decade ago and didn't get past the primaries.
But he does a lot of work in the psychedelic space because he's such an avid supporter of the troops and veterans.
And so I worked at this event where Rick Perry was there.
And they were raising money for veterans to go overseas for psychedelic therapy to treat PTSD. And so I went up to Rick at the event because he's, he, so he's former governor of
Texas and then Donald Trump appointed him secretary of energy. That's what it was. Yeah.
So he had like a legit cabinet position during the Trump administration. And so I went up to him and
I was like, Rick, you were secretary of energy. I know, you know, some trippy shit. Can you please tell me what's going on out there as much as you can? And he said, you know what, Brent, I'm gonna tell you this. There's some stuff out there that if you saw it, you would think it's magic and it belongs to us and it's human made. I don't know anything about aliens or UFOs. And I don't know if he's
telling the truth about that, but he said the classified projects that I'm not allowed to tell
you about, if you saw what we have, you, you literally would not believe your eyes. So that's
exciting. And that's kind of a, I mean, you know, maybe we've heard people say that from time to
time in like weird conspiracy YouTube videos, but to hear it in person from a real dude who
had a cabinet White House was trippy, dude.
That's some trippy shit.
That's true.
So I think when it comes to aliens and government tech, I think any conspiracies around all
that stuff are probably, you know, based in truth.
That's wilder than we believe, you know?
Let's fucking go.
Let's go.
I'm ready for you.
I'm an inside source.
There he is.
Yeah, because Rick Perry has no reason to lie to you there.
Like, he doesn't...
He's not on TV.
Yeah.
You're our Geraldo Riviera or whatever that guy's name is.
Geraldo?
Geraldo.
You're our Riviera.
Is that the French one?
Yeah, the French one.
He's got a baby mustache.
He's got a big old thick ass fucking mustache.
Oh man,
I could talk to you forever, Brent.
We should do these things, Conspiracy Theories with Brent.
We'll do these segments. We'll call you up.
I fucking love them.
We'd love to get you on the show more.
I don't need to believe them. I just think they're interesting.
I'll be your talking head.
I'll just be the guy. I'll wear a whole
fucking suit and tie.
I don't know why
your comment... I just see
you on The Daily Show, dude. I don't know.
Is that a dream of yours to be on something like that?
I would love to be.
I think that would be super cool. The Daily
Show, you know, they've been
pretty... The original Daily
Show was pretty moderate. Yeah. Kilborn? The way Stuart ran it. Oh... The original Daily Show was pretty moderate. Yeah.
Kilborn? The way Stuart ran it. Oh, that one.
It was pretty moderate. Yeah, yeah.
And then
it got pretty
left, but now it's dancing back and
forth a little bit. I think it would be a blast, dude.
Yeah. John Stuart's the goat of that.
Yeah. Still good at that.
Are you a single man? You got a girlfriend?
I do have a girlfriend.
Yeah, yeah. Do comedians get pussy?
Yeah.
Yeah, we do.
Let's go.
Frank Collin, ladies and gentlemen.
I was told early on
doing stand-up, within my first year
doing stand-up, this older comic
came up to me and he was like, Hey man,
if I have one piece of advice for you, don't fuck your fans.
Oh yeah. Because you don't something weird to happen.
You never know how much somebody likes you or doesn't like you or how you
never know how much someone likes you, uh,
but it's pretending that they don't.
And then they end up being super weird and make a weird situation, blah,
blah, blah. And I took that to being super weird and make a weird situation, blah,
blah,
blah.
And I took that to heart,
dude.
So I really,
um,
tried not to as best I could.
So your girlfriend hates what you do.
So your girlfriend hates what you do.
Only fuck people who hate you.
Yeah.
Sex is way better by the way.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
I totally don't fuck my fans.
I totally don't fuck my fans. I totally don't fuck my fans.
Right.
You'd fuck a ceiling fan if you could.
I'd fuck a ceiling fan if I could.
Any kind of fan.
Well,
Brent,
we'll let you go,
bro.
Thank you so much for being on the show.
You're the fucking man.
Yeah,
dude.
That was awesome.
Go watch his new special,
Conscious Bro.
And yeah,
check out everything Brent's doing. He's a fucking
brilliant man. I met your manager on
the Burt Kreischer cruise and he was pimping you
out hard. Oh, he was there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He loves you.
Oh, hell yeah. He's the man. Right on.
Fuck yeah. I love Matt. Yeah, Matt's
a great dude.
And let's keep in touch because I'll be in
Denver, hopefully in the winter for some shows.
I'll shoot you my
number on Instagram. I'll shoot you my number on Instagram.
I'll shoot you a text.
We'll keep the dream alive.
Now that we got the, we got some exciting sources.
There's some magic in the government.
Comedians get pussy.
There's, there's algorithm weirdness in YouTube.
Let's fucking go.
Wow.
My man's a grateful deadhead.
We didn't talk about the ayahuasca trip.
I want to know a little bit about that before we leave.
You took ayahuasca?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Have you sat with ayahuasca before?
I've done like the frog, the smaller version of that, the frog.
Bufo?
Yeah, it's kind of like in between DMT and ayahuasca.
Yeah, there's the bufo frog.
There's all kinds of toads and shit.
You like that? did you like it
i did i i uh it's well it's hard to say like it is a weird way of right hell it's hell dude
everyone says it's like a perch is it like hiking a mountain and you're done you're like well i'm
glad i did that but it sucked the whole time or something is it um it's more like crawling up a mountain while your ass is on
fire and somebody is punching you in the face at the same time you're coming the entire time whoa
um is the best way actually i feel that bro i might have to get some ayahuasca
ayahuasca is something that uh i try not to talk about too lightly because it's a pretty sacred
like plant medicine that's been around for thousands of years.
And it's also a very powerful tool.
I would never tell anybody just loosely to go do it.
I like to just encourage people to go read about it and learn about it as much as they can, because it does have, um, a lot of powerful potential to really help you,
uh, fix or heal or navigate different challenges in your life, um, or traumas from your past.
Uh, first time I sat was in a couple of ceremonies about a year ago. Um, and then recently I just
went to Costa Rica for a week to do four ceremonies, uh, at this place called Sultara,
which is an awesome spot out in Costa Rica. Uh, and it was, it was intense, man. It's super
intense. It's very, very intense. It's not like mushrooms. It's not like LSD. It's not,
you know, a casual thing that you do do and then you kind of recover from.
You need to prep mentally and physically and emotionally.
And then afterwards, there's a whole integration period where you really reflect and talk about and think about everything that you just went through.
But if you're interested in it, dude, I'd say go learn about it and check out more resources
because I certainly am not experienced enough
to recommend anything like that.
But I did find good that came from it.
This guy is like a good lawyer.
He's like, listen, whatever I say about the government,
this is just my opinion.
This is my opinion.
I like this guy.
See, I just say whatever the fuck I want and deal with it.
Caveats. The last question I have about this, and i'll let you go because i'm very fast what was the first what was the thing that you were suppressing the most in your life that just
came right in front of your face during ayahuasca uh so But so, um, I don't know that I had anything surprising come up, but it did like, you know, I, I've had like family trouble in. Um, also just, you know,
one of my intentions going into these ceremonies was to really grow like a
deeper understanding of, of my sense of self, my sense of purpose,
my place in the world, what good I can be doing before I die. Um,
cause we're all on these finite tracks and with death at the very end,
we got to figure out how to make the best of our time. What are we really putting out? What are we
gifting to other people? How are we positively impacting the space around us? And so that's
something that I went in really trying to meditate on and find more clarity for toward. Uh, and I
came out with a lot of good answers that all that I'm continuing
to kind of reflect on. And I do a lot of writing and, uh, kind of journaling just about this
specific experience, which is nice. And there, but there's just like so much that comes up
because the ceremony itself is around four hours, sometimes more, sometimes maybe a little less.
Uh, and there's just so much that comes up. It's hard to like pinpoint one thing.
But the general,
like deepening the level of connection to what my spirit is and who I am as a
person and what I'm doing in this life was pretty profound.
You know?
Damn.
Did you shit yourself?
No,
but there was a dude next to me who was like scream vomiting.
Whoa.
How does that not trip you out?
Scream vomiting.
How does it not trip you out?
Well, I would notice it, but then it's so intense.
The individual experience is so intense that eventually that gets blocked out.
It doesn't even matter.
And then maybe you hear it again a little later, but it's just part...
There's music, there's other people crying
or laughing, but there's
so much happening in your own mind
that it's hard to be distracted.
So you're not on TikTok during this.
No, no.
You're not on TikTok for this.
This dude was
scream vomiting the whole night and the next day I was like, hey man, how was last night for this. This dude was scream vomiting the whole night.
And the next day I was like, hey man, how was last night for you?
And he was like, brother, that was one of the most beautiful experiences I've ever had.
What the hell?
That's amazing.
Everyone thinks like he's dying, but it's like, man, that's like...
He purged.
He was purging.
I just think about when everyone gets...
He was spewing up all his demons.
And whatever
visuals are happening in his mind
that are connected to the physical
aspect of vomiting, it's a whole
medicinal
therapeutic purging
process.
After when it's all done, do you guys all
sit by a fireplace? You guys all have
blankets on you and just drink a a tea just think about what happened kind of yeah so that's what i feel it's
cool about about a year ago uh post ceremony when everybody was like landed from the ship
um we all had tea and there was soup and we kind of mingled and put on some really soft music
and one by one people went to bed.
So it's also very communal, depending on
where you sit and who you sit with.
But it was a beautiful experience, bro.
I fucking love it.
Look at you. He's growing. He's mature.
I'm evolving.
He's evolving.
I'm working with the algorithm.
Yes, he does.
He's even babysitting all 100 of Nick Cannon's kids
on the side.
Yeah.
He needs to be a millionaire.
Yeah.
Can you imagine how much money he can make?
They're all walking around with snacks right now.
They're all watching.
Brent, thanks for being on the show.
I just, yeah, you're a great dude and I'm honored to talk to you.
So thanks for being here.
I appreciate you guys, man.
Oh, yeah.
You rule, man.
Still to be here.
Still to be friends, dude.
Yeah, let's kick it some real life.
Yeah, LA, let's do it. Let's get the vibe. You know Catherine Blanford? I do. Yeah, I know Oh, yeah. You rule, man. Let's kick it some real life. Yeah. L.A. Let's do it. Let's get
the vibe. You know, Catherine Blanford?
I do. Yeah, I know who that is.
My bad. She's my queen. She's the baddest
dude. She's cool. She's awesome.
Yeah, well, I'll get a hang in there.
But yeah, Brent, have a great day.
Stay inspired. Keep fucking taking
drugs, bud. Keep fighting the system.
Tell and I'll see you at the next militia
meeting. Okay. Yeah. Dude, I'm going. I'll see you at the next militia meeting. Okay. Yeah.
Love it,
dude.
I'm going off.
Look at this beer.
I'll blend right in.
You'll blend right in.
Like,
is your first time?
You're perfect.
I'm from Northern Indiana,
dude.
I'm supposed to be in a militia.
I just moved to Denver and play sacks instead.
I'm a,
yeah,
I'm Jewish.
They'd be like,
what the fuck is happening?
You know,
you're a wrong militia,
bro.
Wrong militia,
brother.
You're malicious.
The U S government.
All right, friend. Have a militia, bro. Wrong militia, brother. Your militia is the U.S. government. Get him! All right, friend.
Have a great day, bud.
Enjoy L.A.
And we'll catch you later.
Later, buddy.
Yep.
Peace.
You tuned in to the World Seventy Podcast with Andy Fresco.
Thank you for listening to this episode produced by Andy Fresco, Joe Angelo, and Chris Lawrence.
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We thank this week's guest, our co-host,
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