Chewing the Fat with Jeff Fisher - Ep 630 | You Want Freedom!? Follow The Rules

Episode Date: May 26, 2021

Lifespan of humans no more than 150 without help… NYC School porn class… Airlines coming back / struggling with passengers… Did you see the Blood Moon?... Amazon does the deal for MGM… Nap ...for cash… Subscribe to the YouTube Channel… Email to Chewingthefat@theblaze.com Subscribe www.blazetv.com/jeffy Promo code jeffy… Thrift Store find… Ellen back to Montecito… UK historic grounds for sale…why?... Half Americans fully vaccinated… New drug for severe Covid-19 pateints… Navy says no to “normal life” unless vaccinated… Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Scientists have now predicted the maximum human lifespan. And they believe that the oldest age will ever reach is 150 years of age. I know. Seems kind of low. Researchers used extensive medical and fitness data from the UK and U.S. volunteers. It included blood tests, daily states. steps taken and information on their DNA fed into an AI system to calculate maximum lifespan. They found that the resilience and biological age play key roles in the lifespan,
Starting point is 00:00:44 finding that the maximum a human can live naturally, naturally is the key word, from 120 to 150 years of age. That's pretty incredible, naturally. want to live to be 150? I don't know. I don't know. It seems like that's going to be probably the usual, right? If you're going between 120 and 150, there's going to be a lot of, a lot more of
Starting point is 00:01:18 110s, 105s, the 115s. So the 120s and the 150s are going to start being, you know, Still out of the ordinary, but not like, holy cow. It's going to be, yeah, you know, grandpa's 110. Grandma's 112. And now, if it's not naturally, I mean, if you're talking about genetic manipulation, calorie restriction, drugs, you're going to extend life much farther than 150, right? and so
Starting point is 00:01:59 I know many researchers have said it's going to be possible to live to a thousand. Live to a thousand. So if we regularly get people living to 150, now you're looking at
Starting point is 00:02:19 200 being the outside. Then you're looking at 250 and then we're going to start looking at the genetic manipulation and the other drugs that are going to extend life. Incredible. Incredible. Welcome. You ready for that?
Starting point is 00:02:41 You ready for, yeah, we've got to go to a birthday party. Grandpa's turning 500. Welcome. Welcome to chewing the fat. All right. I have the story from the New York City Prep School that we talked a little bit about on Pat Unleashed today during my chewing the fat portion of the show. Well, this actually, you know, today was Chewing the Fat Day on Pat Unleashed,
Starting point is 00:03:14 but this story came up during the show. And I said, eh, don't throw that away. We're going to talk about that on chewing the fat. So I just want to bring it to your attention if you happen to miss. There's an elite private school in New York. 47,000 a year to go to this school. Ooh, that is an elite school. Parents apparently were a little upset about a class
Starting point is 00:03:38 that was added to the curriculum without their knowledge. And it is a porn literacy class. The course for juniors at the Manhattan's Columbia Grammar and Prep School introduced teens, I suppose I should say that properly. It's the Columbia Grammar and Preparatory. School. I introduced teens to adult-themed topics such as Kink and BDSM. The school was founded back in 1764
Starting point is 00:04:11 and is the oldest non-sectarian independent school in New York City. A business insider named the institution is one of the nine most elite prep schools in New York City. President Donald Trump's son Barron attended the Distinguished School. And now the school is being condemned for the new porn literacy class. Huh. Students between the ages of 16 and 17 attended a health and sexuality workshop, which most believed would be just a sex ed class.
Starting point is 00:04:44 Instead, the teens were educated on everything about porn. It was pornography, literacy, an intersectional focus on mainstream porn. featured a list of the most searched porn terms in 2019. So the 120 boys and girls included lessons on how porn takes care of three big male vulnerabilities. Statistics on the orgasm gap showing straight women have far fewer of them with their partners than gay. men or other women and they had photos of partially nude women some tied up and they analyzed what porn and what is art huh so one of the topics taught to the teen girls and boys in the course was the marketability of only fans which is a subscription app where adults sell well look it says
Starting point is 00:05:51 here where adults sell nude and explicit images of videos of themselves that's not the only thing that's on only fans, but it is a huge part of only fans. That's why you go there and subscribe to someone's only fans channel. Now the course was taught over Zoom, which apparently that's what tipped the parents off. So they were doing classes at home for their kids over Zoom and the parents just happened to be walking by going, what are they talking about? Are they talking about pornography in just a regular classroom? Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:32 So people are all wound up talking about this is just another way to indoctrinate the kids. And it's a goal to disrupt the families. And we're not sure why the school is making porn a priority as opposed to physics, art, literature, or poetry. I don't think they are. They're just adding it to the curriculum. That would be their argument. They're not taking away from physics, art, and literature, and or poetry, but they are adding to it with the pornography literacy class
Starting point is 00:07:04 and making people aware of how important it is that they know this. And how important it is to know the marketability of an only fans page. I mean, holy cow. Nothing screams education like porn literacy class. Right? Am I right? What is going on with the airlines? I mean, we've talked quite a bit about the struggles of the airlines
Starting point is 00:07:48 and their struggle to stay alive during the pandemic. For a while, we were giving you the TSA turnstile numbers every day to let you know how the struggle was coming. If you look at the turnstile numbers for yesterday, which was the 25th of May. So those of you listening live today is the 26th of May, 2021. So yesterday they had 1,470,840 travelers through the turnstiles. A year ago was only 264,843. I mean, they were, they were.
Starting point is 00:08:32 This was, we were in the heat of the pandemic lockdown at that time. And then in 2019, it was almost 2.5 million, $2,453,649. So we are not back to those levels yet, but or a million off. So it's, you know, it's climbing back. No question. I mean, a couple days ago, they had 1,863,000. and in 2019 they had two million, so it was pretty close. I'm pretty close.
Starting point is 00:09:06 They're getting back to it. And we know that they are, you know, trying to be part of the new world. We just saw where United Airlines is raffling off free flights for a year to some vaccinated customers. Isn't that special? And that's bad. You're not going to be able to fly without being vaccinated. That's going to happen very soon. And, you know, that's why a lot of people responded to my vaccine questions that they want to travel.
Starting point is 00:09:39 And they're afraid that they're not going to be able to travel unless they get the vaccine. So, okay, I'll give you that. But it really has brought to light now that we are back to traveling again. What is going on with the airlines themselves and the travelers? So we have the story where a flight attendant for Southwest loses two teeth after a passenger assault. I mean, the flight attendants are being assaulted? So right now, between the 8th of April and May 15th,
Starting point is 00:10:14 they're saying that 477 passenger misconduct incidents on Southwest Airlines alone. and they're saying this is an unprecedented number of incidents. It's reached an intolerable level. Well, and they're saying that it's passenger non-compliance events and that are becoming more aggressive in nature. Now, I realize that, you know, you're being assaulted and losing two teeth is, it's not a good thing.
Starting point is 00:10:49 You can quote me out of that. It is not a good thing. But I will say that perhaps the flight attendants are becoming more strict in the way that they deal with things. That's all. I'm not saying it's their fault. It's not their fault. I'm just saying that it's possible that they've become overzealous in their, in their, in their, daily activities as a flight attendant
Starting point is 00:11:26 to some of the passengers. I mean, we had a story about the American Airlines flight from Tokyo to Dallas, and it was diverted to Seattle with a level three lockdown because the passenger assaulted a flight attendant and banged on the flight deck door because the phone charger at her seat stopped working. Now, there's something like that
Starting point is 00:11:52 Would that have happened in the past? Maybe, because that person is whacked out of their mind, right? So there were 60 passengers on board, and, you know, this Japanese citizen was connecting through Dallas on her way to Cancun, Mexico, according to court documents. She was initially calm when she boarded the flight, kept to herself, watching her movie, but three or four hours into the flight,
Starting point is 00:12:17 it's an 11-hour flight. As the plane was flying over the Pacific, she requested assistance from the flight attendant because the phone charger at her seat didn't appear to be working. Flight attendant attempted to help Suzuki, but apparently couldn't resolve the issue leading to Suzuki shouting at the flight attendant
Starting point is 00:12:36 becoming increasingly hostile and belligerent toward crew members, and she demanded that flight attendants bring her items to resolve the issue. Okay, so I don't know what the flight attendants did to, you know, not resolve the issue, but according to this, they couldn't resolve the issue. So she ran down the aircraft aisle from her seat in economy towards the flight deck. How dare she? How dare she?
Starting point is 00:13:07 That means she started to approach first class. Oh, my gosh. So another flight attendant attempted to stop her, but she pushed past her and stomped on her foot and continued going forward until she got to the flight deck, started banging on the door, demanding help to resolve the phone charging issue. That's when the captain put the aircraft into level three lockdown and informed the FAA of the threat to the aircraft.
Starting point is 00:13:35 Suzuki was restrained with plastic flexicuffs. The flight was diverted to Seattle where she refused to plane for 25 minutes. They finally drug her off the damn plane. And here's the thing. She was rude and dismissive toward her. That's what she claimed the flight attendants were to her. And she admitted to banging on the door. She wanted her phone charge her thing fixed.
Starting point is 00:14:02 And she admitted, yeah, I punched an elbow of the flight attendant. But the crew spit on her and pushed her to the floor. And they didn't have any alcohol. She doesn't take any medicine. So she's accused of knowingly and intentionally interfering with flight crew members. Okay. So my point is, I know this is a crazy person.
Starting point is 00:14:26 I get it. But some of this crazy stuff is going to happen, no matter what time of the world we're in. But we are in a pandemic and we're trying to come out of the pandemic and the airlines are still with their crazy rules. So then we get into
Starting point is 00:14:46 mask flights and B.Y.O breaches, bring your own booze, the FAA proposes $64,500 in fines against five unruly passengers. Wow. So, I mean, these airlines are now saying they have zero tolerance for airline passengers behaving badly. Well, I realize that. I realize that the airlines
Starting point is 00:15:15 have zero tolerance. But, They do still have, and maybe they don't anymore. Maybe there's no common sense, but they do have some common sense. So whoever is in charge of the flight attendants should be able to at least reel in some of the flight attendants that may have gone overboard. Don't look at me like that. Don't start with me.
Starting point is 00:15:40 Oh, I'm a flight attendant, and people are becoming unruly and bastards and mean to me. We're going to put an end to that right now. I'll tell you that. Okay. I know, I know, I know. And there's, you know, we've had occurrences, you know, daily, maybe weekly, but for sure. I mean, it's getting close. And they've got new infractions, including mass struggles, which has been a constant problem. Yeah, I know.
Starting point is 00:16:06 And, you know, passengers are bringing their own alcohol on board and sharing alcohol from first class. That can't happen. That can, I will not have that. No. I do not want to see someone from first class sharing what they have with those low lives in the back of the plane. Okay, that won't happen. No. We'll lock this thing down.
Starting point is 00:16:36 So Sarah Nelson, the president of the Association of Flight Attendants, CWA International, said in a statement that, wear a mask. is required, period. Well, thank you, Sarah. We really appreciate it. That wasn't an actual audio cut from Sarah. It was just a quote. Wear a mask. It's required, period.
Starting point is 00:17:01 Okay. So flight attendants are charged with the safety, health, and security of everyone in the cabin. Our instructions to the traveling public keep everyone safe. Listen up and do your part. The consequences are steep if you do not. isn't playing around on this, okay?
Starting point is 00:17:19 Oh, okay. Thank you, Sarah. We appreciate it, and we know that, you know, you're charged with the safety, health, and security of everyone in the cabin. I know. I like the line from Sarah also. The freedom of the flight
Starting point is 00:17:36 depends on all of us following the rules and treating others with respect. So the freedom of the flight depends on you just doing what you're told. You sit down and you shut your mouth. I don't want to hear anything from you. Okay?
Starting point is 00:17:56 Put your mask on. And I don't even want you taking it down to drink anything now. And don't you even think about walking into that first class area or business class and seeing one of your friends and getting something to drink from them. Don't do it. Don't do it.
Starting point is 00:18:12 So you've got 15,000 against the passenger from a jet blue flight from Miami to L.A. That passenger apparently visited a friend in first class and brought back the free items served in the front of the plane, including champagne, food, and a headset. See, this is what I mean. Okay? So the flight attendant then carried the items back to first class.
Starting point is 00:18:48 Come on. The passenger then followed the flight attendant to first class section and allegedly assaulted him with their body and almost pushed him into the bathroom. The flight, they diverted this flight to Austin and had the passenger removed. I mean, come on. So the flight attendant, really? And I know. I know. But the flight attendant really
Starting point is 00:19:13 Had just let this person I don't know Have the stuff Everything would have been fine But don't you dare Don't you dare Take anything from first class You took shampoo champagne food and a headset
Starting point is 00:19:36 No We're going to have you arrested Okay. Come on now. And I know you're not supposed to drink on board and bring your own alcohol. I get that. So they tell you, you know, don't drink.
Starting point is 00:19:53 And if they catch you with zero tolerance, if you brought a little hotel bottle and put it in your drink, you're busted. You're gone. We'll shut you down. We're going to find you. I mean, we have one passenger being fined for $10,500. They allege that the passenger did not comply with instructions about face mask requirements
Starting point is 00:20:17 and swore when he was approached several times by the flight attendant. How dare he? You speak with reverence, reverence to those flight attendants, okay? I mean, I know, don't look at me like that. I know And that's just very frustrating I know that we're all supposed to follow the rules And we're flying on the plane
Starting point is 00:20:48 I get it And you know the there's no reason for you Not to know the rules If you're flying on the plane You know that they're going to you have to wear your mask And you drink And you take your drink and you slide your mask Back up over your face
Starting point is 00:21:02 And you do what you're told And you just follow the rules I get it I get it But really, we're going to, I go see a friend of mine in first class, and I bring back a drink and a headset, and you're just going to take it from me and store them away, and I'm supposed to just, oh, well, okay.
Starting point is 00:21:23 I mean, why is that a problem? It's a problem because the flight attendant didn't like it. I, I know, I know, it's wrong. It's wrong. It's wrong. I know it's wrong. And, you know, in the words of Sarah Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendance and CWA International, the freedom of the flight depends on all of us following the rules.
Starting point is 00:21:58 Thank you, Sarah. Thank you. At Desjardin, we speak business. We speak startup funding and comprehensive games. game plans. We've mastered made to measure growth and expansion advice, and we can talk your ear off about transferring your business when the time comes. Because at Desjardin business, we speak the same language you do, business. So join the more than 400,000 Canadian entrepreneurs who already count on us, and contact Desjardin today. We'd love to talk, business.
Starting point is 00:22:32 All right, let's go to the break room. Desperately. Oh, man. It's a cold drink. I'm going to take another one. So good. So did you see it? Hey, we're in the break room. I was just wondering.
Starting point is 00:22:53 Did you see the lunar eclipse and the super blood moon that occurred simultaneously? You didn't see it? Oh, come on. I know. I know. Well, it took place. You get to, you know, saw how the solar systems work. It's the Super Blood Moon.
Starting point is 00:23:12 Now, it wasn't visible everywhere. Mostly people on the West Coast from Southern California through Washington State saw the moon. People in Australia, East Asia, Islands in the Pacific, got a glimpse of the Superblood Moon. So the lunar eclipse happened at about 147 a.m. Pacific time. And so it's the first one in a couple of years. So you didn't see it? Oh, well, it just was the super blood moon. Don't worry about it.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Oh, and tune the fat. Right again, we talked about how the deal was almost done for Amazon to buy MGM. And yes, that deal was finalized and announced today. It's worth 8.45. billion dollars. It really seems like a bargain for MGM. I really feel like that's a bargain. Sure, I know I don't have $8, $4,000,
Starting point is 00:24:24 but it just seems like a bargain in today's world. So it gives Amazon the library and library of film and TV shows that, I mean, that's prime video content for a long time. It has 4,000 films, 17,000 TV shows. Wow. I don't know. It just seems like $8.45 billion is a bargain for Prime to get the MGM studios. So we shall see.
Starting point is 00:24:59 We shall see. You know, I don't know how I miss this, but you have until the 31st of May to apply for this. job. Okay, today again, if you're listing live, is the 26th of May, 2021. So if you're listing to this after the 31st of May, 2021, too late. Now, you can maybe reach out. Maybe they'll extend it. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:25:23 But right now, they're offering applications through the 31st of May. They are offering $1,500 for a professional napper. We want you to be able to take a nap for a month. So they're hiring a team of five people to become nap reviewers and get paid to nap. So the nap reviewers will need to be prepared to start work right away as well as being committed to napping every day for 30 days. You must be able to sleep alone during the testing period to ensure that naps are undisturbed, all applications. must also have strong English writing skills in order to accurately carry out the reviews of their naps
Starting point is 00:26:13 and follow any relevant instructions. You must be over 18 too. Of course, the 30 days, over the course of those 30 days, you're going to be required to take part in a variety of experiments, testing out theories such as the best nap duration for feeling refreshed, the effects of napping on overall levels of fatigue,
Starting point is 00:26:36 and the effects of napping on memory, motivation, and productivity. You're going to be required to take part in a video call before and after each experiment to ensure they understand their tasks fully and to complete a verbal questionnaire detailing their experiences and results. And in return, you're going to get a payment for $1,500 at the end of the test period. You know, as I'm reading this, I'm thinking $1,500 doesn't sound like that much money. I mean, if you need the money And you ought to be a professional napper and do that You go right ahead and it's a good gig and I'm all for you
Starting point is 00:27:12 Bless your heart But to have to go through all of that For a month For 30 days And only get 1,500 bucks? No, my time is more important than that. Come on now. Because you're not napping at your leisure
Starting point is 00:27:29 You're napping when they want you to nap. They're telling you to nap for a certain amount of time, and then they're going to see how you feel, and they're going to have you nap with and without alarm clocks at different times of the day, and that's going to be all part of their testing period, and their memory, motivation, productivity tests afterward, tests before, and you only get $1,500, now I'm done with them. Now I'm done with them. I know.
Starting point is 00:28:00 I know I was all for it. I'm all for the, you know, professional napper, get paid to nap kind of thing. But they start looking at what they expect for the job. I don't want the job now. You know, I'd keep your professional napper. That's too much work. That's too much work to nap. Let me nap.
Starting point is 00:28:24 I mean, I'm all for napping. I'm a huge fan, huge, huge fan. And I'm a huge fan of different lengths. Some days, you only need just even a couple of minutes. You just need to stop and close your eyes for just, you know, a few minutes, even if it's just five minutes, ten minutes, but you just need to stop. Stop all noise and just close your eyes and let it be. You've got to kind of reset.
Starting point is 00:28:56 I get that. But if you start waking up with alarms and stuff, we've talked about it before. I hate having to wake up with an alarm. I just hate it. I just hate so much. I trained myself how to get up without an alarm so that I don't have to have the alarm. Now, I still set the alarm now because I'm out of training. I don't have, I do have an exact time that I get up usually every day.
Starting point is 00:29:27 but it doesn't really matter if I get up at that exact time. So I haven't, I've let go of my mental sharpness and preparedness. But it's, you got to work on it. You got to work on it. And if you get overtired, then that your body clock doesn't work right. So when you're on a schedule, though, when I was working, when I was doing mornings, and I mean, the show started at five of Monday through Friday. So you're up at, I was up at two every day.
Starting point is 00:30:02 And that's right, 2 a.m. And so during that time, my kids were little. And it was so, I mean, I loved coming home in the early afternoon and catching a nap with the kids. Oh man, they were little and they had to take their naps and just lay down with them. It was so nice. But I used to train myself to wake up at, you know, about one-fif. every morning, so I didn't have to hear the alarm. I just despise hearing the alarm.
Starting point is 00:30:33 But that's what they're going to make you do with your nap. So, you know, it's just too much work. All right, so why doesn't this happen to me? So a volunteer at a thrift store in North Carolina is walking by some dusty old broken frames, and paintings and says you know, hey, that Alan looks, I like
Starting point is 00:31:03 that one, that's a, that's pretty good. Turns out to be a Salvador Dolly. What? So I saw it was lined up on the floor and it was, I said, man, that, that's, that looks pretty old and it looks like it would be something special. So she took the painting down to an art gallery
Starting point is 00:31:21 and the, uh, the owner, dealer, appraiser at the art gallery, looked at it for about a week and checked out the authenticity and it is a Salvador Dally. It's part of the official catalog of the graphic works of Salvador
Starting point is 00:31:37 Dally where he was examining it. He did a whole deal in the 50s based on the Divine Comedy and they had him paint
Starting point is 00:31:52 purgatory and what were the other? They had him do Tante's his birthday seven List of Dalleystown celebrated 700's birthday on 1965 so then they had a big upwork as they didn't want a spaniard
Starting point is 00:32:09 on the project so Dali was dismissed but he kept working on the project anyway they said ooh even back then I mean the Italians said no we don't want a Spaniard part of this project so they said it'll go but he kept working on the project so he produced 100 watercolors
Starting point is 00:32:26 to match the original original poem. He wrote 100 different verses and he produced 34 paintings of inferno, 33 of purgatory and 33 of paradise. And this particular one is, uh, from purgatory. And I love Salvador Dali. I mean, I've been to his museum multiple times. There's a Salvador Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida. I love it. And I love his work. And I like that happen to me. I mean, I actually, I hesitate to say this out loud because it's not mine, but it is mine. Salvador Dally. No, I'm not going to tell you.
Starting point is 00:33:05 I'm not going to tell you, but I love Salvador Dali. And I would, why, I just want to know why it doesn't happen to me. People find something like this. I used to shop at the thrift store. Maybe that's why, Jeff. Maybe you start going to the thrift stores again. I shop to thrift stores for years, and I look for stuff like that all the time. You know, you just kind of look out of the corner of your eye at stuff.
Starting point is 00:33:24 and I've purchased paintings that still hang in my house from thrift stores. And, you know, I always check in the back, you always open those bad boys up because you never know. Could be a map to some treasure. Could be, you know, bearer bonds.
Starting point is 00:33:41 Could be cash. Could be a note that's worth, you know, millions. And you got to catch all that. But no, do I find the Salvador dolly at the thrift shop at North Carolina? No. No. And the thrift store is like, yeah, people just drop stuff off all the time.
Starting point is 00:33:59 We don't know where it came from. We don't know where it came from. You know, people donate art after cleaning out their beach cabins. And we try to put some of those things together all for, you know, art for condos, cookie cutter stuff. But if people drop stuff off in the middle of the night, you know, they just drop it off. So we have no idea who donated it. Oh. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:22 Well, no problem then. And I'll tell you another thing. The problem with thrift stores in today's world is so many of them think that all of their stuff is Salvador Dolly stuff. So they're priced through the roof really ticks me off. There is a Goodwill store that far from where I live in Fort Worth, Texas. The Goodwill store I don't think is in Fort Worth. I think it's in another municipality. But the guy that runs that place thinks he has Salvador Dollies.
Starting point is 00:34:53 and he breaks up the store. So he's got some stuff that he puts in cases and charges more money for that he thinks are, you know, the high-end Salvador Dahl. There's not Salvador Dali stuff, okay? It's just better stuff. So give us a fair price
Starting point is 00:35:11 and put it on the shelf. Don't make us hawk through all of that stuff. Ticks me off, man. And some of the better clothes, he puts up front in a separate section, charges a lot more money for it. Really ticks me off. Man, what happened to the good old day?
Starting point is 00:35:23 What happened to the good old days when you'd go into the thrift store and you'd have a pocket full of change and the old lady would feel sorry for you so they'd charge you less for the shirts because you're paying with coins out of your pocket. What happened to those days? That's what I want to know. What happened to those days? That's annoying. What? You're a muffler. You don't hear it? Oh, I don't even notice it. I usually drown it out with the radio. How's this? Oh yeah? Way better. Save on insurance by switching to Bell Air Direct and use the money to fix your car. Air Direct, insurance, simplified. Conditions apply. Did you see where Ellen has, she missed her Montecito ranch? So she's moving back in.
Starting point is 00:36:16 I know. She's a little jealous. She's got Oprah living there. She's got Prince Harry and Megan living there. She's got Tyler Perry living there. She's got Rob Lowe living there. Remember, we found out that Rob Lowe's house was the place where Oprah shot the Harry and Megan interview. Just beautiful.
Starting point is 00:36:32 but Ellen has decided that she's going to move back to her Montecito, California Rant, or at least buy it again for her and Porta for $14.3 million. Now, she bought it back in 2017 for $7.2 million, and then she sold it in 2018 for $11 million. And now she's buying it back for $14.3 million. What is going on? What kind of money laundering? scheme are we trying to pull out there in Montecito?
Starting point is 00:37:05 But she's, you know, she's happy and she's all good now that she's, you know, going to stop her daily show. And she's going to have six acres, 6,700 square feet, four bedrooms, six bathrooms. That's kind of small, actually, for a ranch place. But, okay, I'll give it to you, whatever. And it's located in the garden community, long driveway, ancient olive. trees, several buildings, including, oh, it's got a little 3,100 square foot, single-story Hacienda, built back in the 1850s and carefully preserved. Oh, good, because we want to be
Starting point is 00:37:46 able to have an exact replica of a hacienda from 1850. Yeah, we're spending 14 million on that, okay? It's an L-shaped structure known as the Adobe House, and it encircles a cobblestone courtyard and offers one bedroom and one bathroom. Well, that must be nice. Hey, we're going to go see Ellen. Yeah, you're going to stay in the hacienda. You know, the dump that was built back in 1850. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:15 Oh, okay. All right. No problem. Now, the other residents, known as the Monterey House, includes living room, kitchen, three bedrooms, four baths. It's got outdoor entertainment terrace, fireplace, dining areas, adjacent form of library and fitness room. And it also has horse stables.
Starting point is 00:38:38 All good, because we don't want to be able to be out there in Montecito without horses, right? And we just sold the place in Beverly Hills for $45 million. We've got some extra cash. We might as well move back to Montecito and be, you know, in the neighborhood with O and Harry and Meg and Robbie and Tyler Perry. Tyler was in the Angelina Jolie movie, too. Those Who Wished Me Dead. He was in that movie, played a part in that.
Starting point is 00:39:11 It was just like one little appearance. I mean, we never heard from again. Anyway, disappointing. Anyway, congratulations to Ellen for moving back into Montecito. I see where you can get an estate in an English estate. They're saying it's bigger than Central Park. Whoa, big deal. Up for sale after 400 years.
Starting point is 00:39:30 and this place looks really nice. I mean, it's in South England's most historic properties. Okay? Wow, it's in UK's New Forest National Park. Comes on the market for more than $25 million. It's been owned by the same family since 1633. Why are they selling that? The entire compound spans more than $1,000,000.
Starting point is 00:40:00 900 acres and the village south of Salisbury and Wilshire includes the main house, a clock house, stables, outbuildings, four cottages, and a farmhouse. The new land consists of extensive lawns, walled garden, parkland, lake, farmland, and woodlands.
Starting point is 00:40:19 Wow. I mean, this is really historic. It's an incredibly manageable house, head of national estates and farms, just listing, property. It's truly stunning, historic, and incredibly manageable, is it? It's incredibly manageable because if you can buy it for $30 million, you can manage it. It's not vast and is in fact a beautiful
Starting point is 00:40:45 family home in a quite extraordinary position. One thing that people are searching for is privacy and tranquility, of which the estate has an abundance. Seven bedrooms, five reception rooms, three bathroom estate, available for purchase as a whole, or in up to, hey, they're breaking it up and they hate lots. Are you freaking kidding me? Come on now. That does not seem. Why are, what's happening?
Starting point is 00:41:14 Why are these people selling this? This cannot be. It looks beautiful. Look at these pictures of this joint. And the outside, oh man, come on now. Something is not right. They're selling this property. like that. It's been in the same family since
Starting point is 00:41:29 1633. What is happening? This needs to, we need an investigation. Something needs to be found. Why are they selling this? I'm serious. What's wrong? Well, how is this happening? 1633, it's been in the same family? Come on now. I mean, it's being touted as the legendary English Jacobean Mansion. And it's, you know, that's bigger,
Starting point is 00:41:57 than Central Parks, so were a lot of places. But this should not. Why is the family selling this? They went broke somehow. What happened? Did they, it was a Jeffrey Epstein? Did they have investments with Epstein?
Starting point is 00:42:12 What happened? How can this be happening? It looks gorgeous. I wish I could buy it, I would. This is unbelievable that this place is, I mean, I don't have your money. I don't have your money. So there's not even clubbing,
Starting point is 00:42:26 and $25 million is like asking me for $100 today. All right, I don't have it. But I'm telling you, there's a problem with this. I don't understand why this, we are doing and are chewing the fat investigation on this. That is happening. I'm going to find out what the heck. Because I don't, I don't believe that this family is selling this place.
Starting point is 00:42:48 And they're cutting it up. I mean, they're not even mandating that you buy the whole thing. They're cutting it up into eight locks. if you want it. No, something is fishy. Something is fishy. And we're going to get to the bottom of it here on chewing the fat. I'll tell you that right now. So before we get out of here today,
Starting point is 00:43:08 reminder that half now, half of the U.S. adults are now fully vaccinated against the COVID-19. That's what against the old COVID-19. That's what CDC says. So half of U.S. adults are now fully. vaccinated. More than 129 million people over 18 are now fully vaccinated against the virus. The CDC data also shows that 49.5% of Americans
Starting point is 00:43:39 of all ages, roughly 164 million people, have had at least one vaccine dose. So, you know, if you're your vaccine hesitant, like me, now may be a good time to think about, you know, getting the vaccine. Thank all of you for emailing me at chewing the fat at the blaze.com with your vaccine stories. I appreciate it. You know, I'm still hesitant.
Starting point is 00:44:13 Every time I get close, it keeps pulling me back into the hesitancy file. But, you know, I'm not 100% opposed to it, but I just can't get over. the hump of going to get it. I know. I know. Look at me like that. I get it. So also we have a new drug called
Starting point is 00:44:35 Narsoplimab. Narsoplimab. Narsoplimab. It's showing promise as treatment for patients with severe COVID-19. Wow. It's from a company headquartered in Seattle. It's scientific rationale,
Starting point is 00:44:54 certainly suggest that it is potentially one of the premier treatments for critically ill COVID patients. Wow, of course, of course. Of course right now it warrants further investigation and development. Okay, thank you. Thank you. So they were making this drug for leukemia because it was treating the side effect particular type of leukemia. which triggers this lectin pathway and causing symptoms similar to COVID-19 and in doing the research, like, it worked. So, okay, I'm all for it.
Starting point is 00:45:41 It's worked in Italy, and studies with larger numbers of patients are needed before an arsumpline. It could be approved by the FDA. All right, good. Well, let's hop to it. We need it more than ever. Right? But if they start pushing this kind of stuff, that means less people will get the vaccine.
Starting point is 00:46:00 So they're going to put a pause on making sure that we have treatment for patients with severe COVID-19. Because they'll tell you, well, you won't get severe COVID-19 if you get the vaccine. All right. Thank you. And I told you it would happen. One last, I told you that it would happen. But now we're hearing that the Navy is saying. saying, yeah, sailors who decline getting the vaccine, yeah, you're not going to be able to resume normal life.
Starting point is 00:46:33 Told you, man. No way the military lets you survive that. You're getting the vaccine. And the family is to, if you want to live on the bases, you want to be part of that, you want to get them to the vaccine. We're not mandating it, but sure, if you want to go back to normal life and be a part of the Navy, well, then you're going to have to get the vaccine, okay? So right now, they say more than 230,000 fully immunized sailors and Marines.
Starting point is 00:47:06 None of them have been hospitalized for COVID-19. That's pretty huge. That's a big deal. The science is pretty clear, according to Vice Admiral Phil Sawyer. Vaccinations are key to best. protecting our sailors. The more sailors that are vaccinated, the better for them,
Starting point is 00:47:27 their families, the Navy, and the nation. So you can count out of it. I don't know why they just don't say you have to get it. I'm really, really strange that
Starting point is 00:47:37 they're the military. You do what you're told. It's the military. Time to take, they give you shots for everything else under the sun. What's the big deal about the, about the COVID-19?
Starting point is 00:47:52 vaccine. Take it. And you know what? Get your family and kids in here too because none of you, none of you are going to do anything that you think is normal without getting the vaccine. Okay? What was that? That's what I thought. You didn't say a thing. Just stand right here for a moment.

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