God Awful Movies - 502: Terrain
Episode Date: April 15, 2025This week, Dr. Alice Howarth joins us for a skeptical review of Terrain, the story of how germs aren't real and therefore neither is the rest of science. --- This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. G...ive online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/awful and get on your way to being your best self. --- Check out more from Dr. Alice on Skeptics with a K Learn more about the final QED here: https://qedcon.org/ --- If you’d like to make a per episode donation and get monthly bonus episodes, please check us out on Patreon: http://patreon.com/godawful Check out our other shows, The Scathing Atheist, The Skepticrat, Citation Needed, and D&D Minus. Our theme music is written and performed by Ryan Slotnick of Evil Giraffes on Mars. If you’d like to hear more, check out their Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EvilGiraffesOnMars/ Report instances of harassment or abuse connected to this show to the Creator Accountability Network here: https://creatoraccountabilitynetwork.org/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, then we hear from Florence Nightingale.
Yeah.
Right?
That beacon of modern medical insight.
Yes.
Florence Nightingale.
We had a lot fewer treatment options in the 1800s.
Yeah, right.
A lot fewer.
Because what she's saying is she's like, just like, just go out and get that, you know,
walk it off, get a good breath of fresh air.
Get some fresh air.
Yeah. You need fresh air and light and you lack punctuality.
I wrote in my notes.
You don't have COVID, you lack punctuality.
Me to Marsh.
God awful movies. Movie! Movie! Movie!
Movie!
Movie!
Welcome back to the GAMCast, where each week we sample
another selection from Christian Cinema or
something equally wrong at all counts.
I'm your host, Noah Lujans. Heath is off this week.
But sitting 900 miles to my northeast is my bad
friend, Eli Bosnik. Eli!
How are you this fine afternoon, sir?
I think this might be wronger than religion, though. I don't want to nitpick your intro.
I know, I think...
But I think we found it.
If anything was going to break that record, yeah. And we're also excited to welcome guest
masochist Dr. Alice Howarth, co-host of Skeptics with a K and person wildly overqualified to
debunk this stupid movie. Dr. Alice, welcome to the show.
Hello. Thank you so much for having me.
All right. So tell us Alice, what will we be breaking down today?
Well, you have accidentally stumbled on an absolutely killer film for us to watch together
today. We watched Terrain, a film that takes basically the entirety of my PhD thesis and
threads pseudoscience through every single layer of it.
And claims that germ theory isn't real.
Yeah, oh, it's so funny. I was going through your notes before that.
I always read through everybody's notes to make sure I make room for them beforehand.
And the extent to which this movie nails everything that Dr. Alice knows and loves is just amazing. This movie might as well be about your favorite color not being your favorite color.
Yeah, it is absolutely just, I mean, some of the experiments they talk about, some of
the particular, you know, they spend a long time talking about cell culture.
I've done so much cell culture in my career to the point that my
ribs are slightly deformed because of the amount of cell culture I've done throughout
my research career.
And Eli.
Lab nerds in the audience are loving it, right? Lab nerds in the audience are getting it.
How bad was this movie?
Well, if you're a refuse to believe in the moon landing until NASA sends you personally
to space level skeptic, but you wish your doubts could have been assuaged in the moon landing till NASA sends you personally to space level skeptic,
but you wish your doubts could have been assuaged in the sixth grade science class you dropped
out of.
You will love this movie.
It's a conspiracy theory that Joe Rogan wouldn't waste time on.
I feel like if we looked back through his back catalog, we'd find a couple of these
motherfuckers.
We'd find Kaufman in there somewhere.
We'd find an anti-joke theory person in there. Yeah.
Right. Right. Yeah. Also, hey, before we get too deep into this week's movie, I want to revisit
last week's episode long enough to acknowledge that we all spaced out and forgot that Seth
Andrews actually was on the show before. He did an episode of Bible Man with us back on episode 100.
And based on the terabytes of emails that we got correcting us on the fact that we missed it,
it seems that the only people who didn't remember that fact were on the record.
So our apologies for that.
I challenge you to remember the 100th time you did anything 500 times.
Yeah, right.
All right.
So is there anything you guys want to nominate this one for being the best at being the worst
at?
For me, it's definitely the best worst producer narration.
Sure.
There are entire chunks where they're the two producers, well, not even the two producers.
I looked this up.
One of them is the producer of the film and a director.
The other is Jason Lindgren, who is just a narrator and the sound engineer for the film
and also directed a film called Shoot the Moon, which describes itself as a man named
Crow set out to shoot the moon and then uploaded
what he saw as Crow 777.
I'm in.
Bizarre enough.
I'm in.
That these are the two people having the conversations midway through the film, but also like having
a conversation midway through the film.
It is completely not relevant.
And it's also why are there two narrators?
So much of this movie feels like it was a compromise between the two?
Moneyed interest right like they both showed up with their own narrator, and they're like well my narrator show it and no binary
They seem unclear whether or not this is a TV show with commercials in it at one point in the movie
Yeah, they're trying to work it out on air. Yes
Yeah, they do leave it in the film.
Yep, they do leave it in the film, they do.
All right, well, I'm going with,
I originally had best worst compromises
between two moneyed interests,
but I'm gonna go with best worst podcast averse character
appearing in the film.
Hey, hey, hey.
I'm not gonna say anything else about it,
but if you know and love the podcast averse
and watch this movie,
there was a point where you're like, holy shit, is that actual podcast averse character acts?
I feel like we have a lawsuit. Someone has a lawsuit. It's either us or depending on the
existence of that person. I think it might be us. Yeah. And I'm going to take the easy one. I'm
going to go with best worst chyrons. Oh, my God. Look, whenever we watch a bullshit documentary, they usually
sneak in one or two horseshit chyrons there, right? They're like medical doctor and you're
like, okay, well that's a weird non-specialized researcher and author. Yeah, right. Right.
Every single is more terrifying and bat shit than the last.
Oh, but there's a clear winner.
We'll get to it earlier.
There is a clear winner.
Yeah, no.
All right, well, to be honest,
I don't think any of us was quite prepared
for something as foundational as defend germ theory
when we walked into this thing.
So we're gonna take a break to fortify ourselves,
but we'll be back in a minute
with all the exponentially increasing idiocy that is terrain.
Thanks for agreeing to do the ads with us, Alice.
Yeah, no problem.
Now, obviously, we didn't want to bog you down with a ton of copy on this first one,
so we left your lines nice and short.
Oh, great.
Thanks.
Hey, podcast listener.
I'm Eli Bosnick, paid spokesperson for HelloFresh.
If you've been listening to our shows for a while, you know that with HelloFresh, you
get farm fresh, pre-portioned ingredients, and seasonal recipes delivered
right to your doorstep. Skip trips to the grocery store and count on HelloFresh to make
home cooking easy, fun, and affordable. That's why it's America's number one meal kit.
But did you know that HelloFresh is a medical prescription from a real doctor? Isn't that
right, Dr. Allison? Either or also, do you like dogs?
Yes.
Sorry.
Wait, what?
I don't know, Noah.
Don't those meal kits get kind of samey?
Well, with 50 wholesome hassle-free meals to choose from each week delivered to your
door, there's always something new to try with HelloFresh.
Also, it's medicine recommended by a doctor.
Isn't that right?
Your name is Alice.
I mean, my name is Alice, but...
I don't know Noah
Have you actually tried it sure have I love that HelloFresh unpacks into my fridge in seconds
It's an easy way for me to eat great while sticking to my heart healthy diet
That's why I know illusions just like dr. Alice here personally endorse HelloFresh
You've just written the word yes on a piece of paper three times for me to read
Get up to 10 free meals and a free high protein item for life at hellofresh.com slash awful10fm.
One item per box with active subscription.
Free meals applied as discount on first box.
New subscribers only.
Various by plan.
That's up to 10 free HelloFresh meals.
Just go to hellofresh.com slash awful10fm.
HelloFresh, the literal cure for cancer. Isn't that right, Alice? Hello, Fresh.
The literal cure for cancer.
Isn't that right, Alice?
I'm not saying it.
Yes, crumpets.
Did you add crumpets just because I'm British?
Yes, I did.
Alright, everyone.
Welcome to the second writer's meeting for Terrain the movie.
Now, I'll admit we did get off to a bit of a rocky start last week.
I admit that when I agreed to run this film about the COVID virus. So called COVID virus.
So called COVID virus. Yes. Thank you. I was unaware that we also just didn't believe in viruses
also just didn't believe in viruses at all. Or germs.
Or germs?
You can fucking see germs, Craig.
Yeah, but they don't make you sick.
Okay, all right, fine, sure, right.
So we'll start off by explaining that viruses aren't real
and the germs don't make you sick,
but then I guess we'll need to explain
why there are vaccines then.
It's an evil plot.
Okay, about what? I don't know.
That's not my job. Oh, all right. Well, yeah. So, okay. So we'll just explain that vaccines are
some kind of evil plot. Oh, and my girlfriend could talk to water. I would like her to be a
very prominent person in the film. Does she talk to water about COVID?
Not really. No.
Would she?
Sure.
All right.
Okay, great.
It's in the movie.
Of course that doesn't leave us any time to really explain what terrain theory
is or, or anything about it.
I feel like it's implied.
You feel like our medical hypothesis about the physical
world is implied?
Yes.
Yeah, fuck it.
Why not?
Can she talk to Suda?
No, just water, I asked.
Got it.
And we're back for the breakdown and we're going to open up on a
very involved graphic that just is telling us that the movie's
right around the corner. Right? Like I thought it was a really involved graphic that just is telling us that the movie's right around the corner.
I thought it was a really nice production logo, but it's not.
It just is like feature presentation or whatever.
I feel like it's just there so that the first thing that we see looks high quality.
It looks like a stock graphic type thing.
Yeah.
And then we get to the actual production logos.
One of them is Andrew Kaufman Films.
And I started getting this feeling like Andy's just been alive this whole time
and he's just doing this movie as part of a long term borat bit or something.
Planting the long gun, yeah.
See, I just keep thinking about Charlie Kaufman for some reason.
And it just puts me in that space of watching Being John Malkovich and how weird and
unsettling that film is right when we were about to sit down to watch what turns out to be a weird and unsettling film.
Yeah.
I'd like to argue that this movie is a lot more unsettling than being John Malcolm.
So we get this opening quote and it's like a really long and like verbose way of saying
it, but what it says is you can't prove a negative, right?
And at first I'm like, why would you guys be pointing that
out? But then later we'll realize that that's because their whole argument is, no, you guys
are wrong. And so that that's them basically insulating their argument against any, any
counter. It's such a nothing quote attributed to somebody who I'd never heard of. And usually
like when you see a quote from somebody, you kind of assume that it's either
a really meaningful quote or it's a really important person.
So the first thing I did was Google this guy, Dr. Stefan Lanker, because he must be interesting.
Turns out he is quite interesting.
I don't know if you guys have Googled him and had a look at this.
Apparently he had offered 100,000 euros to anyone who could prove the existence
and size of the measles virus, like the Randy Million Dollar Challenge. And then when a
doctor did provide six publications to that effect, he refused to pay up. A court ruled
that he had to pay. Ultimately, it was overturned on a technicality, but it was ruled that he
had to pay.
Oh, well, you got Mike Lindell.
That's amazing. Amazing.
Well, we see him for a second here.
He's he shows up on like the world's worst zoom call.
Yeah. At the beginning of the movie.
He's basically on a fucking Gameboy camera.
And what Lug is going to introduce here is what Noah was just talking about, right?
This notion that you can't prove a negative, which they actually misunderstand.
What they mean is you can't disprove
whatever the fuck I just made up instantly.
Oh, basically, yeah.
Because you can prove the existence of germs.
What you can't do is prove the existence of germs
according to insane standards of non-science that I
just pulled out of my ass.
Exactly.
And that's what they mean by you can't prove a negative.
That's the whole fucking movie.
So our narrator says nothing over pictures of birds talking about like looking at things
in new ways or whatever.
Yeah.
I really like this part because the narrator comes over saying sometimes looking at things from a new
perspective is so easy and fluid.
And they're showing pictures of the
underside of flying birds,
which is just the normal perspective.
That's not a new perspective.
That's how we normally see that shit.
And then we cut to the fucking
opening of the 2012 London Olympics
and I'm like, what is this about?
But apparently in that opening to the Olympics, there was like a tribute to the NHS that they that they're all upset about or something
Yeah, they're explaining that they had NHS doctors and patients participate in the opening ceremony
And they were there they were in the little mountain area like waving gently at the crowd that applauded for them
They were not the dancers doing dances around the hospital beds.
I wrote in my notes, hey, if they were having the patients do that dance,
that could not be therapeutic.
I agree with you.
That was a bad idea.
Well, they start talking about this kids' hospital,
and I'm like, oh my God, is the bad guy in this movie a kids' hospital?
And sort of, yes.
Yeah, I mean, all hospitals, think about it.
Yeah, really, really.
So, okay, so then we see this,
now we're gonna get into the COVID bullshit,
which is what this movie's really, well, mostly about.
We see this Newsweek article about a California hospital
being overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients, right?
But then we see a citizen reporter
who went to that very same hospital and couldn't find
anybody at all.
It didn't look very busy.
And it was just only like six days later.
Yeah.
So what happened?
What are the chances that a large administrative hospital might work out the outside lines
that were leading to the deaths of hundreds of people in a mere six calendar days?
Well, so the other thing too is,
and this happened a lot during the pandemic,
a lot of these idiots would go to hospitals and say,
wow, this hospital is so empty for there to be a pandemic.
Well, but like nobody was having elective surgeries
or anything during the pandemic.
So there were parts of hospitals
that were completely shut down, right?
There were like whole wings of hospitals
that we didn't fucking need at the time. And that's what they were getting video of.
Yeah.
Especially on New Year's Day.
Oh yeah.
Right.
And then there were those magic teenagers who tried to go into the hospital to cure
everybody's COVID and they didn't let them and it makes me sad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, but then we're going to get this like opening montage where we sort of speed meet
all the talking heads that are going to be in this movie and we get just this series of ever dumber Chiron starting
with holistic psychiatrist Kelly Brokian.
I'm not just a psychiatrist for your brain. I'm a psychiatrist for your anus as well.
I'm listening and I genuinely they introduce these people so quickly.
It's like they know, hey, God awful movies hosts usually stop and Google people as we
introduce them.
Let's do all 75 so that they're too exhausted by the time we get to our real bullshit artists.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
So we meet Kelly Brogan and she explains that COVID is
Sorcery her word literal sorcery her words spiritual warfare and literal sorcery. Mm-hmm
So let me since we're making claims here. I just want to throw up one of my own Kelly Brogan is
Schizophrenic and in psychosis. So now now we've all made claims about
and in psychosis. So now we've all made claims about unsubstantiated medical claims about each other. Speaking of psychosis, we then meet Bar Lando, who is identified as a bioterrain practitioner in his Chiron.
I have no idea what that means.
It means nothing at all.
Why don't they ever shoot Bar Lando head on?
He is, for some reason they got Darren Aronofsky to shoot all of Bar Lando's footage.
It's always from like the corner of the room looking down or the cameras on the floor and
he's standing over it with an open, it's fucking bizarre.
Also he's always going to be, every time we see him, it's a, the quality of the camera will be a little worse than the last time we saw him. It's crazy
time traveling backwards to 240p
He's gonna be a Lumiere's cinematograph of eventually or whatever the fuck that thing was called
You're gonna have to pay a nickel to keep watching
Also also this movie is daring me to make fun of that one big ass tooth of his right?
I'm like hey, you know what bar I had dentures in my mid 40s. I'm allowed to use tooth slurs. Thank you
Here's the thing right if you're gonna claim you have like a cornerstone on
Medicine you need to not look like you're being turned into a chipmunk bio
look like you're being turned into a chipmunk bio witch actively while you speak in the name. Benicio del Toro halfway to a werewolf would be like,
are you okay man? You should go to a doctor.
So and then we're going to meet the best Chiron in this or any movie really.
This is where we meet Vader Austin.
Water whisperer.
Water whisperer, baby!
I swear I'm not making that shit up.
So.
You couldn't have made it up.
It's so bizarre and ridiculous that she is acquiesced to them calling her the water whisperer.
Yeah.
I wrote in my notes, okay, Dr. Alice, you might have your so-called degree, but have
you ever whispered to water?
I thought not.
I have talked to cells though.
I definitely have talked to cells.
So yeah, yeah.
We'll put you down as cell talker in the show notes.
So and then we also meet Sire G, who is, he's just boring old author researcher.
And if you think about it, like that to me is the quintessential
Stupid Chiron right that these movies use author researchers like anyone can say that
Right. Yeah, and he said he says absolutely nothing like nothing of any consequence
So and I believe he's the guy who is in charge of green med calm
And if you're wondering what green med calm is that's the website we based natural greenmed.com. And if you're wondering what greenmed.com is, that's the website we based naturalgreenmommy.com.
Come on, it's greenmed.com.
And speaking of bullshit chyrons,
we meet Peggy Hall who is educator slash activist.
Yep.
Yep.
You may remember Peggy Hall from every town hall
and school board meeting during COVID ever.
Yeah, right, right.
She's screaming about how we can't breathe with masks on.
I'm like, I breathed with a mask on.
I'm pretty sure I was breathing that whole time.
So, and then we also meet, and he's gonna be like
one of the central, one of the two sort of central voices
in the movie, we meet Thomas Cowan, Cowan.
He is like, you know, one of these central germ deniers that we're going to be leaning
on.
Right.
We also meet Sally Fallon, who is the president of the Weston Price Foundation.
I'm like, that's also probably nothing.
I didn't bother.
Yeah, I wrote West and my Google was like, it's bullshit.
You don't have to press that.
Thank you, Google.
Appreciate it.
I like Sally Fallon.
She's the one who says,
when we become so fixated on germ theory,
we stop looking at other causes,
which is the complaint that a lot of like people
who believe in alternative diseases will say,
will say that once we've stopped getting fixated
on one thing, we stop looking for other causes.
Like people who have chronic Lyme,
who are utterly convinced that they have some
infection that the doctors refuse to look at because they're looking at all of the other
causes.
Right.
And yet there's one cure that they won't consider, Alice.
I agree.
Closed minded.
That's a callback for the people who've been here for a while.
But ultimately what she's saying here is, you know, it's weird how once I find my glasses,
I stop looking for them entirely.
You know, that's where we're at.
Right.
Yeah.
We also meet, we meet Mark McDonald, who's just, he's just mad at Americans for not pushing
back against our own health.
Yeah.
He's not mad.
He is just disappointed.
That's exactly what I wrote as well.
Yes.
He's disappointed in all you Americans you should all be ashamed
of yourself. Yes well I mean you know what man I don't disagree. Some statements
are evergreen even when the bad guys say them. Yep yep also they do this several
times in this montage they keep showing masked babies. Like, you know, like seven week old.
Nobody was putting masks on fucking babies.
Yeah, I was, but it was more of like a Halloween goof situation.
It wasn't in the episode then.
We meet Samantha Bailey.
She shows up to tell us there's no fucking virus.
And then we finally get to the main character, Andrew Kaufman, MD himself.
Hey, he made this movie.
Yeah, right, right. Exactly. He gave himself plenty of screen time.
I like how the... So he shows up a lot, as you say, but I like that the first time he shows up,
he's just wrapped up in a hat and a coat and looks really fucking cold.
He always looks chilly in almost every clip that they show of him.
The most bizarre choice they made in this movie
that does not believe in germ theory
and all the accompanying true things
that come with having to not believe in germ theory
is that they chose to shoot him
in wildly different locations,
in wildly different scenarios.
He's on Zoom calls, he's outside, he's in parks,
he's in rivers, he's in streams.
They follow him. He's on a stage? Yes, he's on a stage. They follow him like the fuck it. What's that?
The long journey home where the cat and the dog find their way back. So fuck it. If at
the end he ran into the arms of a happy American boy. This movie makes it's bizarre.
But this is where we meet our co-narrators.
Yep. This is where they first enter the sound booth at the same time.
And they're like, Oh, are we, we're both narrating at the same time.
I guess we are Suzanne. Well, okay.
It's okay. So it's Marcelina and Jason and Marcelina is like, Hey, Jason,
I'm going to need you to help out narrating my movie. And he's like, Oh, okay.
And he starts doing it. And he's sending these like, wait, are you still here?
You're going to.
What am I doing here? That?
Yeah.
You forgot to, you forgot to go back out out of the doodly-doo.
Right.
You got right.
I'm Jason.
So, and then it comes up, the title card comes up and it says part one, stork flu.
They will never tell us what the fuck that means.
There must've been a stork something that was a major part of this movie that got cut
because there will be stork imagery, stork chyrons, stork CGI just randomly sprinkled
throughout the film for no reason.
Like a stork produced it, right?
Like it was produced in the nation of stork and there was a minimum number of storks that had to work on the goddamn
Film to get the tax rebate
Storks are to this movie as Jews are to regular
So yeah, it says part one stork flu and then it starts to explain to us right off the bat the germ theory
Is a bunch of tired old bullshit.
Coming for Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch.
And I was like, they're going to make me defend Robert Koch, aren't they?
And in fact, they will manage to get famous charlatan, racist and wife beater Robert Koch wrong.
And so, and this is the first and not last time I wrote into my notes like, OK, I dare
you to lick this then.
Because they're talking about they're like, well, you know, it turns out that you
actually can't get sick just from being exposed to bacteria.
And I'm like, you're like, you can't.
Of course you can.
You definitely can.
That's how we discovered that H. I feel like you can, man. Of course you can. You definitely can.
That's how we discovered that H. pylori causes stomach ulcers is because the researcher was
just like, I wonder what happens if I drink this vial of H. cobaltopylori and gave himself
gastritis and proved that this this bacteria gives us gives us nasty stomach problems.
Well, right.
It's such a bullshit fucking claim that they're like, Okay, well, let's prove it
with a little bit of data. Let's go where is all the cutting edge science that with 1918,
I guess really. And so we go to this, this study that they've got from the during the Spanish flu
epidemic, where I guess they tried to get some soldiers sick by introducing them
to the saliva and shit of people who had Spanish flu. Yeah and look I think we
can all agree that the scientific rigor of 1912 is unmatched. There's no way
anything about this experiment went wrong. But the funniest thing is that their
methods, and I'm sure this is true, are like what I would do if I was told
to make a study.
Oh, we gotta expo- what if we rub them together?
Yeah, so we listen to these guys, they're like for a very long time they're reading
excerpts from it and they're like, so first we had them blow their snot up each other's
butts and then we had them smear their tongues all on each other's
eyeballs.
You guys see the weight of water? They did that to me.
But yeah, but they ultimately determined that there was no such thing as contagion. And
so that they're going to address this question of like, okay, well, then why do we always
find all these bacteria or viruses in the diseased tissue? They're like, it's just there
to clean shit up. When you're sick, all of the bacteria and germs show up to like eat
your dead tissue and that's what they're finding.
Hey, Suzanne, I feel like people aren't quite going to get your metaphor here that you're
explaining. Do you have a really normal and chill metaphor?
Maggots!
Maggots! Okay, maggots is good, but maybe what are the magnets on?
What are the magnets on? Maggots dead dog corpse. You what are the magnets on? What are the magnets on?
A maggot dead dog corpse.
You want to talk about dead dogs for like seven and a half minutes in the middle?
Well can we do some close-ups of just swarms of maggots as we do it?
It's just dead dogs, so your dog is dead, right? And you know what? You get another dog. That one died. It's fucking nuts.
When they're doing close-ups of a maggots, are they more still photo?
Because all the close ups of anything in this film seem to be still images, not actual moving
images.
Generally speaking, with the maggots, they made them arrive just to gross me out.
So, at some point, one of these anti-germ people came up with this analogy and they're
so proud of it that like nine different people use it before the movies out right what this is blaming the disease on germs is like blaming the death of
a you know an animal corpse that you find on them dog pet dog my brother's dog scruffy yeah scruffy
let's give him a name yeah yeah what breed was scruffy scruffy the english terrier yeah right so
but when you see an animal and it's dead and it's covered in maggots, you don't go,
oh, those maggots killed that animal, right?
That's what they're saying that people who believe in germs are doing.
They're super proud of that one.
All right.
So then we cut to Andy at some kind of convention for these idiots.
He's on stage explaining that he can't prove the virus doesn't exist because you can't
prove a negative, right?
He's using that as a shield yet again.
Sometimes people say to me, prove your point.
And I say to them, no, he has this fucking brilliant.
It's such a fucking amazing moment of accidentally calling himself out.
He's in this room full of people who obviously buy his bullshit
And he goes just by a show of hands who thinks that we have the real story on 9-eleven and nobody raises their hand
Because the room is full of stupid people and he's like exactly because they never looked in
tonight
Okay, I have to mention the guy because when he asks that one guy yells out one, steel doesn't
burn that hot or whatever, chat-cast yells, I believe in science.
But again, like, if you had a real idea or a real thing, people would disagree on other
subjects that weren't related, right?
But because the requirement for being in that room is,
be a fucking idiot.
They're like, well, who the heck are you?
There's things.
I've actually been in the room for a Flat Earth convention
where that exact question was asked.
Mm-hmm.
And me and...
Did you raise your hand?
Well, yeah, absolutely.
And me and... Did you raise your hand?
Well, yeah, absolutely.
It was only me, Marsh, and a journalist who was in the room.
So this is the point where a metaphor occurred to me about this movie.
So sometimes when I'm talking to smart people like Noah and Heath, and I'm wrong about something,
they'll be like, so you know how blank to try to help me understand what they're saying?
And then I say, no, I don't know that.
And the conversation has to stop and recalibrate
to me not knowing the thing they said.
That's what this whole movie is like.
So you know how blank, no?
No, you don't, you sure?
So, okay, so now the people who don't believe in 9-11 or germs
are going to explain to Dr.
Alice what a cell membrane is.
Yes, this is delightful.
I mean, and he doesn't get everything wrong.
He starts talking about lipid bilayers.
There is a lipid bilayer.
He talks about the fluid mosaic model.
Those are both true.
They're not mutually exclusive.
He seems to think they're mutually exclusive.
And that there's 15 other theories that he refuses to tell us.
But the two that he does mention, the two like prevailing theories that are how we think
the cell membrane looks, he's not wrong on that.
That's what we think.
Yeah.
But his claim though is that we have no idea what the cell membrane is and that
everybody's got their own pet theory.
Yeah, there's 17 different theories and we all disagree on what it looks like.
And they're all the same validity, all the same.
Right but then he says, he's like, and you know, and that's a problem because 50 to 80
percent of our pharmaceuticals work with receptors on the cell membrane.
Yeah.
I have no idea where he's got that number from.
I have no idea if that number is true.
That number might well be true.
I actually worked on a particular protein that's involved in regulating cell membrane
receptors as part of my PhD thesis.
Allegedly.
So I've measured changes in receptors that we, we might not be able to see them under
a microscope because proteins are too small to see in a microscope, but we have ways of
detecting them. We can see them. I have looked at them quite a lot.
And hey, it wouldn't matter if you could fucking see it under a microscope because as he's
going to explain later, none of that can. No.
Then we tag in Stefan Lanker, who he's the one who's basically going to just go like,
hey, look, why does nobody have a selfie with a COVID virus?
Right?
Why can't you introduce me to a COVID virus and tell me its name and its wife's name?
Until you do that, I refuse to believe in it.
Show me the mugshot of the COVID virus, Lloyd Snow to be you.
And here's the funny thing.
Okay. So we've run into Lanka in previous documentaries
and Lanka's big spiel is no one has isolated a virus,
which is insane because it's obviously something we've done.
Is that really what he thinks?
Are you sure?
Are you definitely sure that that is what you think?
That's what he says.
Because he's gonna explain it now,
how little he understands isolate
because he's gonna be like, you know, isolate.
Like when the child goes to the bank and the money and the pig and he goes down and he's
like, you shake, shake, shake, now there are euros or dollars or chocolate bars.
The failure of his ability to explain the word isolate through metaphor is so indicative of his inability
to understand isolation.
It's actually perfect.
It's like he's been told that people like stories and analogies.
So he's trying so hard to give an analogy failing miserably.
Also I have to point this out.
Okay.
So this movie was made by Andrew Kaufman and the guy with the funny accent's name is
Lonka.
I'm just, I'm not buying this.
There's, there's something to this.
This could be a long con.
This could be a long con.
So, but they come up and they're like, they're trying to get explained to us that viruses
aren't real.
And they're like, see, when these scientists do these experiments where they give diseases
to animals, they don't just introduce them to the virus, right? They inject stuff into them. Like, they never give mice AIDS by making them fuck
other AIDS mice, right? That's the argument that he's making. They don't start a really repressive
culture in the 1950s among the gay mice and then sort of hold that turns into a hookup scene in
the late 60s, early 70s.
That would be real science.
But they also claim that we've never genetically sequenced
the COVID virus, which seems unlikely.
No, we've definitely, definitely, definitely sequenced
the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
In fact, I found an article from the UK government
from 2021, I think, that says that we had completed
over 2 million
SARS-CoV-2 whole genome sequences.
Jesus.
We've done this a lot.
Amazing.
So, then we cut to this over busy title card in a font that we haven't seen before.
This movie, every time we see a title card, it's in a different fucking font that says
Coke's postulates, have they been proven for viruses?
And because that's not enough words on the fucking screen,
they add a parenthetical that says,
or the rooster in the river of rats.
At least it's not a stalk.
No, that's fair. That's fair. Yeah.
And I love this part because it's literally just
using the fact that most people, myself included, don't understand
how words are used in medical papers.
So they seem like they're not the words we use in common parlance.
So for example, one of the first ones that he puts out here is he says that something
is only an association, not a causation.
Now I am a stupid person, so I also think that those are different words.
So I plugged it into our good Christian friend, ChatGPT.
And ChatGPT was instantly like, oh yeah, you're just a stupid person.
You don't understand how those words are used in medical terminology.
And I was like, thanks AI!
And they'll show like a paper where it's like, you know, the virus wasn't isolated and then
they're like, see it was never isolated.
And I'm like, in that study!
Yeah, so this is like my favorite part, because not only do they select six papers to talk about,
when there are, in 2020, there were 12 and a half thousand papers published on COVID,
but they've picked six. And they think these six are like the real killer papers. They do the
screenshots on screen so I can see who the authors are and what these papers are like the real killer papers. They do the screenshots on screen so I can see who the
authors are and what these papers are called. So I looked them up to see what these papers were about
because they claim that they're about SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19. One of the papers is from 2005.
What? Jesus Christ.
Three of them are from 2003. Really? So only two of those papers are actually about COVID-19.
Wow.
And those two are from the same research group.
They're from a Greek research group.
So they've cherry picked six papers, only two of which are about SARS-CoV-2, the COVID-19
virus, and they're from the same research group.
Amazing.
Well, and then after they, because they're showing these quotes and they're from the same research group. Amazing. Well, and then after they,
cause they're showing these quotes,
they're like presenting these quotes on screen
and highlighting them from these papers.
But afterwards we just go into Andy making a bunch of claims
where he's like, you know, rumors and lies
placed COVID-19 as the cause of the pandemic
without any proof.
That is being presented in the same font,
in the same style and with the same highlights
as the stuff from the papers
Yes, he's literally made slides that were quotes, but then later they're just the things
He just whatever he feels like saying he just puts them in the same fucking font
Yeah, and then the narrator the interviewer asked him she's like, you know, did doctors read these papers?
He's like no most doctors don't know how to read papers.
They're not.
It's complicated.
To be fair, like I actually,
I think that was probably quite true.
Like a lot of medical doctors
do struggle to read academic papers,
but like it's not their job to read academic papers.
It's their job to treat patients.
Right, right.
Yeah, and as long as the movie doesn't accidentally tell us
that there are huge organizations
that do read those papers and then explain them to the doctors, it'll be, oh, they literally
talk about Medscape.
I was like, okay, well, they're just not going to mention Medscape.
And they're like, yeah, they're sure there's Medscape, but those guys are fucking fucking
liars.
So, okay.
So, but then Cowan shows up again to confuse us about how viruses are isolated more.
Because what he wants is he wants one single virus on a pair of tweezers and he's mad that
nobody can give him that.
Right?
Yes.
At this point of the movie, he explains to himself why he's wrong, but in a, ne meh meh meh meh voice. Yes. Right. Literally. He's like, that's not how composing viruses works.
We can draw an inference on those things together. And I was like, you can't just say the other
person's point in a meh meh meh voice. Well, yeah, I wrote my notes. I'm like, he clearly knows why
this is stupid or at least he's been told it enough times that he can repeat it verbatim
Right, right, but he starts explaining to us how viruses are tested or
Isolated or whatever. I don't fucking know right
So their point is because again like one of the real disprovers of this idea is living tissue samples, right?
Because like one could make the argument in a world
where living tissue diagnosis didn't exist,
that it would be hard to quote unquote prove things things,
right?
Because you couldn't prove the effects on the cells
because you can't press your microscope
up to Larry's fucking heart while it's going
and be like, yeah, yes, I see the damage to Larry's heart.
But living tissue is a really good example.
So the whole point about all this shit about the fucking dying it with fetal serum and the fucking they starve the bacteria is that all the damage that you see to cells that proves the existence of viruses that's just from the additives we put into tissue diagnostics.
Yeah.
So yeah, we see a little cartoon where they're like,
I'm gonna bullshit and pretend that I've isolated a virus.
Why, that's a great idea.
And then they go into this whole big,
like what exactly is a tissue culture part of the film?
Yeah, this is where they just decide
to basically explain my day-to-day life as a subject.
Oh, do they really?
Then you go out for a couple of beers with Marsh and he's there.
It's genuinely like, they give a recipe for making the media that you grow tissue culture
cells in.
It's like, okay, but that's just a recipe.
I can give you my recipe if you like.
It's just the things that we need to keep to feed the cells to keep the
cells alive. And he seems very upset that we use fetal bovine calf serum because it comes
from baby cows, which like, well actually at first he says it comes from from baby humans
and then corrects himself. Yeah. But that's the nutrients that our cells need to grow.
If you're growing cells outside of a body, you've got to give them nutrients somehow.
Now does Alice also make them into protein shakes occasionally? Yes. Has she gotten in to grow. If you're growing cells outside of a body, you've got to give them nutrients somehow.
Now, does Alice also make them into protein shakes occasionally? Yes. Has she gotten in
trouble for that at work? Yes. But that's not what today's meeting is about.
Well, but they seem to be acting like you could just like lay the cells there on the
table and they'd be fine on their own, right? That's just the thing. So first of all, he
talks about how they're using monkey cells instead of human lung cells
in the testing.
Yeah, and says that these are the most commonly used cells, which just isn't true.
If you ask any single cell biologist on the planet, they will tell you that the most commonly
used cells in the lab are HeLa cells, which are human derived.
Maybe the Vero cells that they're talking about, these monkey kidney cells are used
more commonly in virology, but it's definitely HeLa cells that are mostly used in most labs.
Well, I love that every time they talk about the monkey cells, they cut to this picture
of this monkey with this very like, why are you, what are you doing with my fucking cells?
Kind of a look on his face as though we're supposed to be going, poor monkey. It's like,
well, but you're not, but you're not trying to like not, you trying to use human stuff, right? Like that's not like if you were trying
to like, if you were like, well, you know, they're using bovine, fetal, and there's a,
you know, a vegetable version that you could use that would be like better. That's one
thing, but you're talking about using human shit. I know it's just fucking cells and that
doesn't matter, but it's just cells from fucking monkeys too.
Well, yeah. And not derived from a monkey that still exists. These cells will have been
kept in, they're immortal cells, they will have been kept in culture for decades. There
will be no monkeys still alive.
Yeah, right.
That's what that cell is derived from.
It's missing his kidney cells.
A bunch of Catholic monkeys out front of the lab.
Yeah, there's a, at one point they want to bring in the
bovine fetal calf serum thing. So the way that they do that is they just have the interviewer
say what about the bovine fetal calf serum? And I'm like, that's a great question. Was
that someone's handsome? You're saying something about handsome. Smart. But so then they're,
the argument though that they're trying to make when they tell you how these
cell cultures are created and everything is they're trying to say that they create these
very diseased tissue cultures and then they introduce them to the disease and they're
like, hey, look, they're diseased, right?
That's the argument they're trying to make.
But the very existence of a control group disproves that.
Yeah.
And this is the thing that's so confusing.
So the guy who's talking about this
seems to know a reasonable amount of cell culture.
He's clearly done some of these experiments before
or really got to grips with like how you do them
because he absolutely understands them and says,
we starve cells of the FBS, of the fetal bovine serum.
And that is what we would do in an experiment. We would take away that FBS, of the fetal bovine serum. And that is what we would do in an experiment.
We would take away that FBS, take away the nutrients,
and the cells kind of go into like a suspended animation
sort of phase, so they're not doing anything,
they're not active.
And then you add your treatment as a one-by-one thing,
so you know that it's not any of the other factors
that are in the serum that are actually causing that effect.
But what you do is whatever you're treating your cells with, you put some in a
solution and you give some cells that solution with the treatment factor in and
some cells just the solution with nothing added to it.
So you've got a negative control.
Yeah.
They seem to think that negative controls don't exist in research and that they've
never been done ever and it's
Incredible that this has never been done. It is done in every cell based experiment ever
You would never not do a negative control. Well, yeah, and the way they describe it
It's like they're starving the cells as some kind of war crime
Starve amnesty international is gonna show up with black and white photos of cells in a
Petri dish being like, look what Alice did to these cells.
Yep.
Yep.
Well, I will say one nice thing about a stream of consciousness movie is that I can put the
brakes anywhere the fuck I feel like it.
So we're going to take one here, but we'll be back in a minute with even more terrain.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
Okay, but if you had to guess medically.
Eli, I'm not your doctor.
Please stop.
Hey guys, what's with the meemaw squabble?
Come on, that one's not real.
Appalachian slang, Google it.
Eli's trying to get me to be his therapist.
All I said was in your professional opinion.
That's being a doctor.
Being a doctor is my profession.
Okay, Eli, why are you trying to get Alice to be your therapist?
Because therapy is too expensive and she's already here.
Well, Eli, why don't you just try BetterHelp?
What's BetterHelp?
With BetterHelp, you pay a flat fee for weekly sessions, saving you big on costs and on time.
Therapy should feel accessible, not like a luxury. With online therapy, you get quality
care at a price that makes sense and can help you with anything from anxiety to
everyday stress. Your mental health is worth it, and now it's within reach.
Within reach, you say? How so?
Well, it's convenient. You can join a session with a click of a button, helping you fit
therapy into your busy life. Plus, switch therapists at any time.
So no awkward therapist breakups?
No awkward therapist breakups.
Your well-being is worth it.
Visit betterhelp.com slash awful to get 10% off your first month.
That's betterhelp.help.com slash awful.
All right, Noah.
Thanks.
Sorry, Alice.
I guess I don't need your help after all.
Good riddance.
Can I still show you this picture of a mole though?
Could you not?
We went over this so many times, Eli.
We did, it's true.
Gentlemen, thank you both for agreeing to be part of this very important influenza experiment.
It's vital that here at the turn of the century we discover the cause of this terrible disease.
Right-ho!
So, Sergeant Jenkins, you are currently exhibiting the signs and symptoms of influenza,
and Sergeant Perkins here is not.
Indeed. So what I need you to do, influenza and Sergeant Perkins here is not. Indeed.
So what I need you to do, for medical science of course, is kiss.
I'm sorry?
Yes, I'm afraid it's vital for the experiment that you two boys really get your faces in
there on each other.
Surely there's some other way we could, um...
No, no, of course if you'd like you could sweep Jenkins off his feet for a sort of dip,
if that's preferable.
Why would that be preferable?
Or perhaps you're wrestling about, sort of rolling around, almost fighting, but then
you pause and realize the connection and then you kiss.
Doctor, I have to say, I don't think that this is, uh...
Fine, fine. If you guys don't want to help science, there is another experiment we could
use your assistance on.
Yes, I should probably do that one, Doctor.
Please, I'd prefer that.
Have either of you ever rubbed butts?
Okay.
And we're back for more of this shit. We're going to rejoin the action,
getting into big barma's profit motive here by comparing the price of a gallon of gasoline
to the price of a gallon of vaccine.
Yeah, because that's a really sensible fucking comparison.
You know, a pound of laptop costs so much more than a pound of candle.
It's bullshit.
How much is a gallon of microchips?
You guys know?
You'd be amazed at what I can get for a gallon of podcasts, guys.
Right. You'd be amazed at what I can get for a gallon of podcasts, guys.
And then they explained to us that virus photos are CGI.
And I was like, well, no, there's CGI of viruses based on photos.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, yeah, because they're like, what about all of those pictures that you see of viruses?
And the dude goes, well, most of those are CGI.
And I'm like, well, most.
Most being the key there.
Yeah. Most of those are CGI and I'm like, well, most. Most being the key there.
Yes.
And especially because they're the ones who complained about the electron microscopy images
of viruses.
So like people don't want to see EM images.
They want to see pretty shiny CGI images.
Right.
Right.
Exactly.
Right.
So then we get this fucking downright time cube of a title card.
It has, I shit you not, four different
shades of purple and two different fonts.
Hell yeah they do.
Because this is where they're going to get into our argument, right? We were just talking
about how control groups disprove their whole, you know, the tissue cultures or disease to
begin with point. So now they have to try to pretend that control groups don't exist.
Right? So they're going to make all
of these big arguments about how like these cell biologists, they don't use control groups.
They're full of shit. Yeah.
Yeah, they definitely use control groups. Definitely. 100%. I do not believe for a second
that the virus researchers are any different to the researchers in the groups that I've
worked in. You do fucking controls.
Well, so and then the one instance where you don't, of course,
is when you've got human beings
and there's like a deadly virus going on and everything,
and it would be unethical to deny a group of people.
So, yeah, but they conflate those things, right?
And then, like Heath, realizing he forgot to write a segue
and skepticrat, the fucking narrator just comes out and says, meanwhile, there are different types of microscopy.
Right?
He genuinely just spends the next few minutes explaining microscopes for no reason whatsoever.
And like, I love microscopes.
I think microscopes are pretty cool.
Even I was fucking bored.
I'm like, why are you telling me about this?
Now, Alice, here's my question.
Is everything that's ever been photographed by an electron microscope put into a ninja
bullet and then spilled on the floor and then they take T1000, he lays on top of it and
then you take a picture with a ray gun?
Is that how it works 100% of the time, always forever?
Well, so what, but what they're,
what they're trying to do here is cast out on anything
that we learned through electron microscopes, right?
Because they're like, well, you can't look at living things
through electron microscopes, which is true, right?
Like there are limitations,
but every tool we use has limitations.
Yeah, that's why we do lots of different versions and stick it together.
Yes, exactly.
It's like, well, you know, I can't read this contract at all through this telescope.
This telescope is useless.
So fucking dumb.
But we do that for a little while.
And then we check in with the Oxford English Dictionary to learn what artifacts are.
Yes.
Right. They do this several times with the whole like, you know, the dictionary defines it's
over and over again.
Always with a screenshot, always with highlight, like are they in the pockets of big highlighter?
Because they use a lot of highlighting.
They really do.
Well, the thing is, is that the only three things that they're aware of that you're allowed
to put on a screen are people talking, highlighted text, and stork images.
And they've run out of stork images.
I rented this movie on Amazon Prime and I am really glad that I did not pay extra for
the HD version because there is nothing HD.
Oh, by God.
Yeah, no, it's not a lot going on.
When Colin shows up at this point on his even shittier camera, I'm like, man, to be that
low res, normally you have to be telling me my princess is in another castle.
It's fucking terrible.
And then we see Andrew again, we see Andrew Kaufman again, and now he's sitting in a field
somewhere and he's talking, but they've 80 are different lines into him talking,
which is crazy because it's just him talking.
Why not just use the time he said those words or fucking highlight some words on
a screen?
Yeah. Maybe get one of those animated things that they do sometimes for famous
speeches. Yeah, there you go. But he explains that the virus is just a patsy. They're blaming the virus
for something that it had nothing to do. In fact, that thing that we're calling a coronavirus that
you see on those images, that's really just a kidney protein. Yeah. Not a virus at all.
He goes back and forth so many times on whether this fucking spike protein exists. One minute,
it doesn't exist. It's not real. It's never existed. It just isn't real. And then very next minute
he's like, Oh, well, no, they want to inject mRNA to make you produce the spike protein.
What is it? Yes. It either exists or it doesn't exist.
Right. Well, because this is such a beautiful part of the movie, right? Because look, these
two guys, they have been sort of fringe nutbags who
don't believe in germ theory, dealing with a very, very small percentage of the anti-vax population,
right? They're the weirdos of the anti-vax population. And so they're trying to use
anti-COVID hysteria to push them into the mainstream of alternative ideas about vaccines.
The problem is, most of those are based on an understanding of germ theory.
So here's the first time they have to be like, and the spike proteins, wait,
which aren't real because viruses are real.
The thoughts when you think about spike proteins, you make them real.
No, wait, what happens is they're poison.
The spike proteins are poison made to look like viruses, which aren't real, but
they do affect your cells.
So listeners to understand just how bad a job he does explaining what he's trying
to say here at the end of it, obviously the filmmakers looked over the video and
they're like, wow, what the fuck is he even talking about?
And they sent him a, what the fuck are you talking about email? And they just reproduced the clarification email
that he sent them back as a title card. Right. Right. There's just a title card, like answering
the, what the fuck is he talking about question? It's on the screen for so fucking long. Yeah.
Slow readers in this audience. I get it. I get it. And then we see a stork again.
And on the fucking...
And so the end of his email is, you know, something about like, don't think these people
are stupid.
They're really smart, you know?
And on the fucking heels of him saying that, on the heels of him saying, the other guys
are really smart, we see the dumbest possible stork carrying a baby graphic.
We see a bird Demick level stork, right?
We're like, yeah, but, um,
on your side, though, just so you know who we're working with, we made this store.
Yeah. And this is where he makes one of my favorite arguments in the movie.
He kind of made it earlier, but this is where he really clearly makes it.
He says that if covid causes lung fluid, there should be COVID in the lung fluid.
And I wrote in my notes, that's like saying if opening the dam flooded the city, then
there should be little pieces of dam in the city.
And then both of the narrators say at the same time, like they simultaneously say,
so what happened in Wuhan?
As though they were arguing over who got to use that line.
But then they just try to explain away the Wuhan virus
by saying, oh, you know, they got a weird pneumonia.
And I'm like, well, that's, that's COVID.
Yeah.
That's COVID.
We named that weird pneumonia.
You didn't think they were gonna keep calling it
a weird pneumonia, Did you guys? Yeah
Oh, and then they start telling us and this is gonna be a big part of their fucking argument that PCR tests don't count
Because they amplify the DNA and that's cheating
Wait till they hear about those microscopes, they're such a fan
Wait till they hear about those microscopes. They're such a fan.
When they do that, did you notice that they did not immediately show a graphic of a PCR?
They do eventually show a PCR.
They start off by showing lateral flow tests, which is a completely different test and does
not do any amplification whatsoever.
And they do that repeatedly throughout.
When they talk about PCRs. They show lateral flow tests.
It just must be a cooler looking test, right?
It's also the one we're familiar with.
And to be fair, if you show a PCR test, you're like, ah, fuck, that looks a lot like science.
The government mailed me five lateral flow tests.
That's got to be bullshit.
So yeah, but then they said they explained that the COVID virus is just a mental construct.
They told us to be afraid of it.
So we brought it into existence with our fear.
And this was the first time I wrote my notes.
Actually, I think the second time I wrote my notes, I'm really pissed that they introduced
us to a water whisperer at the beginning of this movie and we haven't heard from her again.
Don't worry.
She just disappeared.
She'll be back.
She'll come back. She'll be there. She's not like the stork thing. Eventually there will be
a reason for her. Yeah. I do also like this bit where they're like, Oh, well, they use
the PCR test to look at the SARS-CoV-2 virus. And they found that when they compared it
to the original old SARS virus, it was only 80% similar. So therefore it's a completely
different virus. Like what are
they doing? It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's why we called it something new.
That's where we put the two.
This is two. That's what they put the two in there.
That's what the two was about, man.
That's why we had a whole pandemic about this.
Why are these fucking Ninja Turtles in Ninja Turtles 2? It's supposed to be...
Makes no sense.
So, and then with the help of an entirely new
fucking aqua blue Star Wars font,
we're gonna learn about next generation sequencing, right?
So one of the arguments that they're gonna make
is that we don't actually have a genetic sequence
of the COVID virus because they didn't just like unravel
one long DNA.
Right.
They didn't pull on one thread of a COVID virus, a sweater, and then have it spin around
the whole month.
I am a deeply spiritually stupid person.
So I absolutely, I've never identified with the movie stronger than I do where they're
trying to be like,
that's like when if you tried to, if you gave up on a puzzle, because actually they sent
you the one that was impossible.
The jigsaw puzzle that maybe your jigsaw puzzle is impossible because it's just random pieces
from everywhere.
And there probably couldn't even be a bear in the forest on it
if you tried.
Well, that's it.
Well, so, okay.
So how it's done is that they get all these little pieces of the DNA and then they look
at those and then they figure out how they all sort together, right?
Using like the overlapping segments of the DNA, right?
But they're going to act like they just like,'re like, okay, well, that's an A.
So let's just line that up with any other A nailed it.
They keep talking about how they use a computer to do it like your eighth grade English teacher
who wouldn't let you use Wikipedia, right? Any old person can just plug any old DNA sequence
into a supercomputer and use hundreds of thousands of man hours and some of the most advanced technology in the world to
sequence DNA
You need to use the dusty cum covered encyclopedias in the library
To virus for me, thank you and also like through all of this there's a there's a moment where they have a bat graphic and he's holding
a human skull as he flies.
Yeah, that's my favorite bit in the whole thing, I think.
Just randomly, a bat just flapping away with a skull in his mouth.
I came for free with the stork.
I think they bought the stork and they got to choose one other asset because it was Halloween
or something.
And then they're like, the narrators are like, well, you know, so how did they fill in the
gaps in the, in the genome sequence?
And they're like, oh, I just put whatever they wanted in there.
I don't think that they did that.
I wish that would fucking rule.
Well, they use this analogy, which is actually a brilliant analogy.
They're like, what if I had a secret family recipe and I cut it up into lots of little
pieces and gave you the pieces? and how would you stitch it together?
And then in their example, they've got like fucking teddy bears in the recipe. It's like,
no, but the point is the point in having the recipe is it gives you the context. So, you
know, this is a recipe. It probably doesn't say teddy bears. Let's play around some more
and see if we can get it to actually work.
Yes.
But Dr. Alice, you're not a fucking idiot.
Unlike me and these guys, we'd be like, well, the first thing I did is I put together six
grams of teddy bears.
So get the fuck to build a bear.
We'll make you some cookies.
What they've done here is so fucking dumb because again, they're acting like what the
researchers did is that they just look for any spot where there's a G and an A next to each other
on any two snippets and they're like,
oh, those must go together, right?
But they're using huge long strands
of the huge amounts of sequences that they find.
And of course they've got 56 million fucking snippets.
So they've got plenty to work with here.
But what they've done with this recipe
is they've looked for any time,
like the end of one sentence ended with the same two letters of as the next sentence began with and they put those
together, right? Which isn't how you would do it even in their analogy.
No.
Because you wouldn't think that the word like, like the two letters at the end of
one word were also the two letters at the beginning of another word. The
correct analogy would be if you had this recipe and like several
words overlapped within the recipe.
Yeah.
Right? Or within the snippet of the recipe that you had.
You've got the same snippets of recipe repeated so you can start to figure out where the overlaps
are. The perfect example that they actually give is a little bit earlier where the director
comes over and says, my name is Marcelina Kvatt. And she says, but you could also call me, what is it?
INAK, because it's the end of a first name with the first part of a surname stitched together.
And that's a great analogy, because if we were looking at like DNA this way, we take little
fragmented pieces and see how they might fit together. So you might have Marcy, Lena,
Crava and T in one place, but you're also going to find Mar and Avatt and Einach and Selene in
other places. But you've never seen Clit or Ram or Bellet because the letters just don't go in that
order in that word. So you only can stitch together the bits that have the letters in the exact right order and then you can figure out where you've got your duplications and where you
make your whole set, your whole word.
Right.
And keep in mind, I want to plant a little flag on this scene, because keep in mind,
they are going to spend, what, this is like a six minute sequence, right?
Where they shit all over the, ah, computer's just guessing.
They're going to shit on this version of guessing.
Let's keep that in mind towards the end of the movie when they do their own version
Interpretation yeah, but first we have to shit on one of the most important scientific discoveries of the last 50 years
This is where they're gonna talk about how polymerous chain reactions are bullshit, right?
And they cheat cheat make you think that you've got diseases that you don't have
Yeah, he has a Nobel Prize, but Samantha Bailey has a 480p webcam. Yeah. And he says, he says, well, you know, when they use PCR, they're amplifying existing
sequences. So that doesn't prove the existence of the alleged organism. I'm like, but it does. What else would they be amplifying existing sequences. So that doesn't prove the existence of the alleged organism.
I'm like, but it does.
What else would they be amplified?
You can't amplify it if it's not there.
Right.
Right.
But they, they seem to think that you can.
It is a risk for PCR, but that's why we have, like, we know that and we have to
be really careful and you have to like, be really cautious about not contaminating
your samples because it's really easy to accidentally get your own DNA sample to you.
But like we know that so we're careful.
So we do lots of things to make sure that we reduce that risk.
Right.
And the people who are really concerned about this stuff are doctors and scientists and
medical researchers, right?
They're using it as a gotcha, but it's something that medicine and science are working on all the time.
Well, also, so, and he's like, so, you know, because of that, all the COVID tests that they sent out are fake, right?
Because they use this PCR system.
And it's just like, OK, but like, but like I've taken the test and then and it came up positive and then I had COVID and then my wife took it and it came up negative and she didn't like like, like that.
That's the level of bullshit.
She was less afraid than you.
Oh, that must have been.
Right, right.
I saw mine and I got all that.
Yep.
They've got me.
I also just have to mention, I know it's such a little thing, but I do have to point it
out.
The background music for this PCR tests aren't real section is the music at my Indian restaurant.
Why?
For some reason, they got full Bollywood just blasting in the background of this section
and only this section for no reason.
But the Australian lady, she cuts in real quick to explain to us like, look, if you're
looking for a DNA sequence, you know, any sequence you're looking for, you could potentially
find it.
And I'm like, well, right, because if you couldn't potentially find it, you wouldn't be looking for it. What the fuck does
that even mean? We get to this point where it's like, oh, if you look for something, you'll
probably find it. But if you just observe it, then you'll find the truth. But that's how we
figured out about COVID-19. We observed people getting that atypical pneumonia. You told us about
that. Yes. Right. We observed it. We saw what was happening. We figured out what was happening.
Yeah, exactly. And the Australian lady, she fails like three times. She's like,
you know, this would be like getting all worked up about diabetes. Well,
shit. No, that would be actually a good thing to get worked up at.
Be getting worked up by getting a stroke. Well, fuck. No, that's another great thing.
She tries again and again, never gets it.
And then they start talking about how, and this is a claim that you get in every fucking
anti-COVID movie, because they have to explain away, okay, so why did all these people die?
Right?
So they start trying to convince us that anybody who died to anything was getting, they were
saying it was COVID at that point.
One of the things that is often brought up in defense of this is how many fewer people
died from the flu
during the pandemic, right?
Because we were isolating.
Yeah, because we stopped passing infections onto each other
because we weren't hanging out so much.
Right, we were wearing masks
and we were washing our hands more
and we were isolating and we were shutting things down.
Of course people would die of the flu less.
It can't be that Noah, because germs don't exist.
Oh, right, no, yeah, absolutely.
Yeah. And then so and then the narrators compare it with AIDS.
And we're like, oh, God, you guys are going to deny AIDS now too, aren't you?
And of course, I should have seen it coming.
They don't believe in germs.
So why the hell would they believe in HIV?
Yeah, it's kind of like that moment where you're having a conversation
with a 9-11 truther and like, it's not fun and
you're not having a good time.
But then like somehow the Holocaust comes up and they're
like, yeah, exactly.
And you're like, oh, now we got to do this.
Yeah, that's fun version.
Yeah.
So yeah, but they explain that there's no evidence of a new
virus.
I feel like there is.
I like this section because they introduce fear-demic.
And they're talking a lot about fear,
and they're saying that, like, oh, you know,
if you're looking for a virus, you're going to be so scared,
and you're going to get symptoms
because you're scared of this virus.
It's like, you're a load of conspiracy people
who are just talking about things that make yourself scared.
Like, you're creating the fear that he's damaging
for society.
Yes, absolutely. Over absolutely fucking nothing. Yeah. So yeah, so, but then, and then we get
the, the narrators just sure agreeing with each other about how vaccines violate consent.
We get a whole long section about that.
They have a real issue with consent.
They come back to this a few times, like consent is the beginning of the end, that as soon
as you consent to stuff, then bad shit happens.
Yeah, they're going to go full sovereign citizen later in the movie.
And this is sort of the teasers of that.
It's the Chekhov's gun of the Fremen of the land that they'll eventually give us.
But first they need a break for a big announcement.
Guys were they supposed to put an announcement here and then forgot?
They forgot.
They forgot.
They had a bunch of emails of people at the news.
No wait did you notice they're not fucking emails?
No they're not.
They're not fucking emails. No, they're not. They're not email addresses. They're Bill Gates at hell and Kamala Harris at White House and Jack Dorsey at Twitter.
And they use the same one several times.
Like Jack Dorsey at Twitter shows up in there like five or six times.
I don't know what the hell they...
I think they were like, oh, let's because you know, that big lawsuits going to come
in in our favor and we better like make room for that in the movie.
And then it didn't or whatever. I think that's what happened.
And the music is gone at this point. It is just a black screen with white writing on
it. Yep.
With all these email addresses and absolute silence.
It's fucking nuts. And then, okay, so now they're going to tell us about Dr. Lanka's
groundbreaking study that showed there was no virus.
I think this is the announcement they were supposed to be throwing to.
Oh, is that it? Oh, they just did it in such a sloppy fucking way that I couldn't tell.
Wow. Okay. So yeah, they're going to tell us about Dr. Lanka's study. Now, the way that
they're going to do that is we're just going to watch him look at a sunset, drive to the
shore or whatever, they have like detailed explanations
on the bottom of the screen of what he did, what his protocols were. Yeah, it's a really weird,
really weird scene, really uncomfortable scene to watch. In fact, I think I just kept clicking the
10 seconds plus button on this scene. Yeah, who could blame you? Well, so now the argument that
they've been making up to this point, of course, is that
when they do these tests, the tissue cultures are so diseased that they would have been
diseased anyway and you didn't have to introduce the virus or whatever it is that you're testing.
And so what apparently this guy did is he made up two tissue cultures and that didn't
do anything to them at all and they died.
And he said, see?
That was his...
It's so easy for cells to die that way. It's just remarkable that he's gone, oh yeah. And
it took five days for them to die.
How long do cells normally last if you just don't feed them?
That's probably about right, right? I wouldn't expect them to last much longer.
Just like if you didn't feed a child or a pet.
Or any other living thing for five days.
You're gonna be unwell after five days.
So I tried to look into this, right, from like the bullshit side.
And Google knows that I am at least casually interested in bullshit.
So it usually offers me the crazy person right away.
The only thing I could find online about Dr. Alanka's experiment was a Snopes
article that was like, Alanka's a piece of shit, don't fucking listen to him.
And I was like, oh, okay.
Alright, it's all coming together.
But my favorite part is that at the end of the montage, in his walking around the beach,
we watch him watch a CGI, interspersed House of Cards collapse.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, all right.
Well, it's becoming increasingly clear that this won't end until we get Dr. Alice and
Lanka together for a cage match.
So we're going to take a quick break to make some arrangements.
But first, let me give Act 3 the hard sell.
Why wouldn't you spell out what you had in mind with the stork thing?
Did you actually think it was intuitive?
Also, what the fuck was that rooster in the River of the Rats bit?
Find out the answers to entirely different questions when we return for the increasingly
dangerous conclusion of…
Terrain.
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say or do…
Stop right there, officer.
Who are you?
I'm your new commanding officer, human biologist, water whisperer, and super skeptic, Tom Kamongermakong.
I'm sorry, did you say water whisperer?
Indeed.
Tell me, officer, what evidence do you have against this man?
Well, I heard signs of a struggle, and I came in here and he was covered in the victim's blood and holding that knife.
It's true, I was.
Oh, officer, you stupid rube. That's not evidence. That's not even... anything.
It's not?
I feel like it is.
No, because she didn't isolate the variables. Did you see him stab the victim?
Well, no.
So that could be anybody's blood. This victim hasn't even had an autopsy done. They could they could have had a heart attack
Anyways, sir. I'm sorry. You're free to go. Really? Oh, yeah, absolutely
I am so sorry so little thought was put in before you were arrested. All right. See ya. I
Hope you've learned something today, Officer.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to go see why people keep getting hit by a train
at the exact same spot in the middle of the desert.
Is it on train tracks?
I don't know.
And I'm not going to check.
Got it.
Hey, Dave, I totally got away with murdering that guy.
He could be talking about anything.
And we're back for more of this shit. We're going to rejoin the action with the narrator's
chat together about how profound this movie is so far. We should all probably try to spread
it far and wide. There's a whole fucking segment of just hit that like and subscribe button
Yeah, and I gotta admit everybody. Let's get a little bored at this point
Movie was kind of dragging on I was wondering if they could introduce someone to
Reinvigorate my love for this movie the way only outfit stuff could
I'm talking about Tony Robbin, baby! Restaurateur and activist.
I wrote in my notes, well, that guy is just Tony D.
And they introduce him and his fucking name is Tony.
And he's like, I got me a restaurant and I'm not shutting it down for no fucking masks and COVID bullshit.
So we're going to meet Tony Roman, the anti-vax restaurateur who kept his restaurant open
despite the mask mandates and in fact wouldn't even let people wear a mask in his restaurant.
That's right.
And he was eventually also anti-vaccine as well.
I like the shot that they film of him actively telling somebody going into his restaurant
that they have to take the mask off. And then immediately after that, there's just a,
you rock, Tony.
Yes. And it's obviously it's so fucking staged because the guys like oh wow I didn't wear this anything
Oh now that I know that I can be free. Yeah, yeah, right, right
Yeah, we get a little montage in the restaurants of a bunch of dead boomers
They're all dead now and they all asked for the vaccine while they were dying, right?
Which is fun if you think about it, it's a good time
Yeah, so and then we we see some anti-shutdown protests, right?
We get a bunch of clips of these people making asses of themselves during the lockdown.
There's a great moment where like one of the people is like, you know, why isn't the media
also saying the things that we're saying?
You're like, yeah, why is that?
Is it because they're too afraid?
I like this.
They say the mainstream media are absent.
They show a black screen
because they run out of things to screenshot.
Right. There's no highlights. There's no headlines there to highlight.
A Jewish stork refusing to report on something.
This is where we get our holistic psychiatrist back. Right. She explains that our problem
is that we love authorities so much because we're so childish.
We're childish. We have a childlike psychology. We're highly compliant citizens and highly
compliant citizens are literally the worst.
Yeah. She's just making up psychology terms. I feel like Kara needs to fight this woman
at the end of her movie.
Right. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Alice will fight. Lanka and Carol fight. Who do you and I get
to fight, Eli? show and Carol fight. Who do you and I get to fight, Eli?
David A. Erwin.
Oh, I was going to take Andrew Kaufman, but okay.
Sure, yeah.
Speaking of which, now we're going to watch like seven or eight fucking minutes of his
trying to go into the store without a mask and getting kicked out video.
Imagine what a douchebag you have to be that I spend an entire scene being like,
I love this police officer. This police officer is making great points.
I hope this police officer enacts violence on this person for their words and actions.
Oh, he's such a prick.
He is such a prick.
It's almost like they just decided to be as hypocritical as possible because he's like,
oh, you know, you can't not let me in. This is a public place. It's almost like they just decided to be as hypocritical as possible because he's like,
oh, you know, you can't not let me in.
This is a public place.
You have to let me in if I'm not wearing a mask.
But fucking Tony Roman doesn't let people in wearing masks.
Yes.
Yeah.
Right.
So they have this incredibly long thing where he's going like, well, come on, that's ridiculous.
They can't make me wear a mask.
And the cop is like, well, they can.
It's a private property.
They own a business.
They can set the rules and tell you that they don't want you in there.
And if you stay in there, you're trespassing and I have to remove you.
He goes, he gives like two or three examples and they're all stupid, right?
Because he's like, well, what if it said you couldn't go in without lipstick?
And I'm like, well, yeah, dude, it doesn't fucking matter.
If I had a business and I said, I'm only serving people with lipstick
as long as I'm making everyone wear lipstick, right, as long as I'm not like just enforcing
that against black people or whatever, right, that's perfectly legal. And nobody would do
that, but that would be legal.
And he can't make up his mind why he doesn't have to wear a mask, right? At first, because
he's interrupting them the whole time, which is so frustrating, right? Every time they
try to answer his question, he interrupts with a new argument because he's a psychopath and a liar. But at first,
his thing is, I have a medical exception. And they're like, cool, let's see it. And
he's like, HIPAA, I don't have to show you my medical exception, which is a fucking insane
thing to say. But then later when he realizes that isn't working, he says that actually
it's not that he has a medical exception is it's that the emergency thing is not the law.
So he can't be in trouble for not breaking the law.
And then they're like, okay, cool.
Well, we're going to trespass you anyway.
And then he runs away.
Well, my absolute favorite part, they're like, what's your full name?
He's like, I don't want to tell you.
And then he goes to his car and they're like, well, that's your fucking car, man.
We're just going to run your license plate.
He's like, fuck, I literally didn't think of that.
That's how dumb I am.
Oh, shit.
So fucking stupid.
Here's the other thing that's great about that.
I promise you, that's his grocery store.
And he was trespassed from that grocery store.
Which means the next week when he came in in his mask,
he's not a piece of shit.
Or he is a piece of shit, but he doesn't always act like a piece of shit.
They were like, hey man, you're trespassed. You can't come here.
And he was like, oh, no, I'm not.
I was doing some theater. What do you mean?
And they were like, oh no, no, you don't get to shop here anymore.
And he's like, but this, I like your kumquats.
This is where the good blueberries are available.
I don't understand.
You say there are consequences for my actions?
So there's also like, there's a great moment here where he turns to the, he just says to
the guy, he's like, I want to speak to your superior officer.
And he goes, okay, you'd have to wear a mask
At what point the cop says what don't you understand he goes I'm very well educated as you can tell
When I am wrong from
Every time it is being explained to the me that I am wrong now on, I'm going to be like, I'm very well educated.
As you can see.
As you can see.
My favorite part is the calm, quiet voice he's using the whole way through.
Like speaking quietly and calmly and slowly as if he's like trying really hard to not
get irritated.
He looks like an absolute prick.
Absolute prick.
Oh yeah.
And then, okay, so we get done with him.
He gets in his car and fucks off.
And then we get Alfons Fagiolo.
Alfons Fagiolo, hey everybody, welcome to Big Al's house.
I'm going to get you in jail.
All right.
So his fucking chiron says, quote,
common law expert.
You'll note it.
It doesn't say lawyer.
It sure the fuck doesn't.
Alfons is a person who turns your parking tickets
into a felony. Guaranteed, everybody.
Oh, my God.
This is a technological low point of the entire movie. Yes.
He was invited to be on this film and he was like, oh, so you want to come and film me
with like a proper camera?
And they're like, no, no, let's just jump on a zoom call and it'll be totally fine.
Does it matter that I have a Blackberry from 1997 both as my webcam and my sole source
of internet?
No?
Well then big house ready to go, baby.
Yeah.
Don't worry.
I'm sure the onboard microphone in your goddamn computer will be fine.
You know, guys clipping every fourth fucking word the whole time he's talking.
But then, okay, so but then the narrator cuts in to tell us about this scary Pfizer document
that shows how many people died from the vaccine. I mean but then the narrator cuts in to tell us about this scary Pfizer document that shows how
many people died from the vaccine. I mean, after the vaccine. It's so funny. They're scrolling through
it and they've highlighted the ones that they want to pretend are from the vaccine, but they're all
next to things that are very clearly not like nasal obstruction and Crohn's disease. Yeah,
right. Crohn's. Yeah, the vaccine gave you Crohn's disease. Exactly.
He goes, look at all these claims of injuries and deaths that were reported.
And I'm like, claims.
Yeah.
Claims of injuries and deaths, man.
And the number is incredibly small.
It's like 1,223.
1,223 out of over 42,000.
I think it's like 2.9%.
I worked this out because that doesn't seem a big number. And it is not a big number.
Yeah. And Big Al explains that if you're getting fired because you won't get your vaccine,
you should sue your company. Fun fact, they all lost.
But then, then you're going to file a bar complaint against the lawyer for your company.
Fun fact, those will be dismissed.
But then all of that is going to drive up their insurance.
Yes. Which it will not.
Well, but that could though. That's the thing though, right?
Like it was a shockingly honest thing where he's like, hey, you know, we're going to flood them with a bunch of bullshit lawsuits that'll go nowhere.
But if enough people are suing them, that's going to scare their insurance companies and that might make them give in.
And they might be right. You know, it's just weird that they would admit that like, you know,
they're manipulating it to that degree.
We're using illegal harassment and intimidation technique to satisfy
our schizophrenia.
Right, right.
They ask like one time they're like, why isn't everybody
furious about this?
And there's just this tick tick tick and then, cause they're all stupid.
I bet they're all stupid.
We get this great montage of people getting tackled by cops anti-maskers getting tackled by cops loved it.
Also they at this point in the montage they explained that wearing masks is self segregation
just like the Jewish star.
Yes.
I wrote in my notes.
I'm pretty sure that wasn't self segregation.
Sure. So yeah, it's just like the Holocaust. I'm surprised we made it over an hour into
the movie before that came up. And he's saying that it's the bad guys who are wearing the
star. Yeah. Well, right. Yeah. He's really telling on himself. Jesus Christ. Isn't he
though? That didn't occur to me.
And then we're going to devolve into my friend told me a story that their kid made up.
We're going to hear about a kid who came home and told his parent that one of his classmates
got a vaccine and the teacher brought them to the front and said, Oh, what a nice thing.
Let's all applaud for that kid. And like, not only is that story not
true, but like the moral of it is like, and then your kids will hate you because they're not allowed
to get the cool Minecraft themed vaccine. But the story ends, his story ends with some theoretical
kid going, mommy, can I please get vaccinated? And Mommy's saying no!
Yeah, I wrote my notes. Well, you see, Timmy, Mommy lost her sense of self when
she became a mom and I have undiagnosed bipolar disorder. So I fixed it on YouTube
videos while your father was having an affair. And now Measles is back. Now why don't you run along and play?
Well, what's so funny is he finishes off that story and then this chick Peggy, she cuts
in and she goes, so this is where the evil sets in.
And I'm like, yes, but only because of the edit.
Hi, Peggy.
Yeah.
But we learned that asking children to wear masks is tantamount to child abuse.
And I'm like, well, at least it's not just like the Holocaust.
I guess.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is again, more masked babies
or more masked people.
And I had a covid baby, right?
My son was born in May of 2020.
I can assure you, maybe it was just me.
Maybe we were being irresponsible.
We did not actually wear masks around my son
in our home.
Nor did he. Right.
They're showing like a person like with their baby
laying on a bed, their mask.
And so is the baby.
I was just imagining you and
the baby
Be careful
So yeah, but but but they explained that like babies need to see faces as part of their development
I'm like baby saw faces
Fuck are you talking only? They only half developed.
That's a whole lot of spooks.
And we get this weird sort of tearjerker moment
that's supposed to happen. Jade's surprise party.
Yeah. Which I assume is one of their friends' kids or maybe his kid.
It's not clarified, but like she sees her friends for the first time and like, yeah,
everyone was lonely during
COVID.
We didn't have to invest in anti-mask bullshit to deal with it.
Right?
This is like if kids during the bombing of Dresden were like, man, I'm sad.
The bombs mean I can't hang out with my friends.
So I'm going to pretend there are no bombs.
Just go play at the playground.
Well, so yeah.
And what they're showing here is that like, okay, so their friend, their kid had their
birthday party and nobody thought, you know, it was during the pandemic.
So you know, she couldn't be around her friends, but her friends came over anyway.
And the friends that she hadn't seen in so long were there for her party.
And that's what happened everywhere, right?
We made exceptions to the lockdown here and there where we're like, hey, you know, this
is the, you know, the only chance I'm gonna get to see
this person or this is only gonna happen once whatever.
We all did that, we all made exceptions to that.
Maybe we shouldn't have made as many as we did.
But what they're saying in the movie is,
this is the kind of moment that didn't happen.
Here's video of it.
So fucking dumb.
But then they, and look, some of the problems they're pointing out are real,
right?
Because they're talking about how like kids have had a lot of problems psychologically
and how the suicide rates skyrocketed during the pandemic.
There are very real problems that came from the pandemic.
I think, you know, when you're not weighing them against people dying in mass of the disease,
they all seem really unforgivable.
Yeah, sure. people dying in mass of the disease, they all seem really unforgivable.
Yeah, sure.
And they seem to think that we kept everyone inside
recreationally.
Right, yeah, exactly.
Then they make the claim that, like,
we were fucking up the planet with this,
and I'm like, oh, come on, you at least have to admit
that the lockdown was good for the environment, no.
Also, masks not recyclable.
So yeah, then we hear from Florence Nightingale. Yeah. Right. That beacon of modern medical
insight. Yes. Florence Nightingale. We had a lot fewer treatment options in the 1800s.
Yeah, right. Because what she's saying is she's like, just like, man, just go out and get
that, you know, walk it off, get a good, get a good breath of fresh air.
Get some fresh air.
You need fresh air and light and you lack punctuality. I wrote in my notes,
you don't have COVID, you lack punctuality. Me to Marsh.
So then, so okay, then the title card comes up and it says, pleomorphism.
They will never tell us what that fucking word means and it will never be relevant.
They're just like, look at this big word we know.
Right.
So this at some point they were like, guys, we should probably explain the terrain theory.
And it's fucking stupid.
This is the closest they get to it, which is that germs, viruses, whatever they choose
to define as a thing is a phase your body is going through of
adaptation to like the energy signals changing in the group and I read a terrain-based
Medical website to glean that information. I deserve a fucking metal
Yeah, he's saying that there's like a cycle that the thing goes through that it's a protein and then it's a virus and then it's a
Bacteria, but then it goes back and depending on when you look at it. It'll be a different thing
Yeah, you've got like a bacterial phase and a fungal phase and it sounds like he's talking about werewolves and moon faces
Shoulders of giants you have to be standing on to survive being this stupid.
Right?
Yes.
If people in the 1500s were this stupid, we'd be fucked.
We'd be fucked.
We'd be dying left and right.
The average age would be 22 years old.
It is only by the grace of people being smarter than this asshole in his webcam that we are
all alive on this podcast.
Yeah.
Jesus. Well, right, because what he's saying, the argument that he's making is that
disease is sort of one of these natural cycles of this protein virus, bacteria fungus that's
in us. And that so actually diseases swell. That's your body getting healthier.
Yeah, it's homeopathy. Really?
Symptoms are required to manage something in the body, so we shouldn't try to treat
them.
Just let them do, let it run its course.
Yes.
And sometimes getting sick kills you, but only if you're old and you, and I quote, don't
have love in your field.
That's when we get to have love in your field, obviously.
And then they, I shit you not, they make the they make the argument that hey look if it's good for
Compost how could it not be good for us? You should be more like a dead corpse of a deer
They know they say they're like hey look when when you're composting in a bunch of viruses and well
It's not viruses, but you know a bunch of bacteria and shit show up to break stuff down.
You don't say it's infected.
And I'm like, well, yeah, man.
But like if my innards look like compost, there would be problems.
There'd be all kinds of problems.
What the fuck are you saying?
Compost does get quite hot like a fever.
Yeah, exactly.
I know you're right.
So that's exactly the same.
Yeah.
But then Kelly, the holistic psychiatrist comes in to explain her personal understanding
of contagion.
And I'm like, well, as a holistic psychiatrist, I guess you're something of an expert in this
field.
Really interested that you're going to tell me what it is now.
Yeah.
And again, I've just gotten my notes.
Okay, lick this then.
And then I have in all caps, bring back the water whisperer, but she is coming.
She is coming. I promise.
She's coming. Wait for it.
So then the narrator says these exact fucking words, I'll quote, perhaps humans communicate
through some sort of resonance field. Well, I mean, technically we talk to each other.
They think we're all connected.
Like, they say mycelium and trees, there's this theory that trees kind of in the same
area will communicate with each other through root systems and stuff and some, they seem
to think that we're all like physically connected.
Yes.
In some way.
Yes.
That's where we're at now.
In our alphabetical list of bullshit, that's where we've shown up.
There's also, I don't even understand why she brings this up.
There's this part where Kelly starts talking, the holistic psychiatrist starts talking about
this heart epidemic in China and people were looking for the cause and it turned out to
be a lack of selenium.
Did anybody get what the point of that was?
Because that was a time when people thought a thing might have been a germ, but then it
wasn't a germ.
Right, but the science worked in that case.
Yes.
No, but it wasn't a germ.
Right, but it wasn't like anti-germ people coming through and going, did you check this
...
I Googled wasn't a germ and this was the only thing that came up, motherfucker.
Not being very holistically psychological right now.
Just using your brain.
And now, so, and now the fucking, the movie does the whole evolution is just a theory
argument, but with all the theories, right?
Look, I almost empathize with the movie at this point, because they're like, okay, you're
probably wondering, is medicine wrong about everything?
And by definition of the shit I've said, yeah.
Yeah.
Like everything.
It's coming up.
It's going cancer theory.
And I'm like, cancer theory?
Really?
Yep.
Yep.
That's where we're going now.
Antibodies.
Those aren't real.
Antibodies are bullshit. Fuck. Yep. Cells. Yep. That's where we're going now. Antibodies. Those aren't real. Antibodies are bullshit.
Cells, stupid, blood.
Do we think blood is real, Chris?
Okay, but it's magic water.
It's just magic water.
Fuck!
Yes, but then we learned that the
Oxford English Dictionary defines
antibody as...
Okay, so I don't give a shit what he's saying at this point.
What I give a shit about is that Andrew Kaufman is sitting right next to like
this image of like a it's almost like a tribal tattoo kind of image.
It's such a weird drawing it pops up right at the opening scenes of the film.
It's like the company logo yeah.
And then it's flipped on its side for these
scenes with him being filmed in the studio,
I guess.
It's so bizarre.
Yeah, I think he was probably doing a talk for a cult and that's their symbol.
I screenshotted it and asked Chachi BT and they were like, are you dating someone who
doesn't bathe?
And I was like, no, no.
I guarantee that's tattooed on his body somewhere, right?
Because that was the logo for like Andrew Kaufman pictures as well.
It's very personally. Oh, OK.
And so the narrators are like they're doing the Eli thing right now,
because they go like, OK, so do we also not believe in DNA?
And he goes, yeah, I know pretty much we don't believe in DNA either.
I mean, there's DNA is real, but quote
DNA reflects the electrical vectors that put
the DNA into a material form.
He spouts pure nonsense for five straight minutes and then he goes, and that's how it
works.
He says the DNA isn't a double helix. It's the cell water that is a double helix.
He says that the DNA seems to be in the nucleus.
Like no, no, it's, it's definitely that.
Your DNA is only shaped that way because of your cell water, everybody.
Yeah.
And then yeah, he gets very confused about cytoplasm, like incredibly confused about
the fluid inside of cells.
Yeah.
And again, this is all unnecessary extension of not believing that germs are real, right?
Because one of the evidences of viruses is how they change the DNA and the inside of
cells.
So you have to be like, no, your cell, there's no cells.
Yeah.
Yeah, right.
Don't believe in cells, fuck.
Right.
Yeah. It reminds, do you remember that 60 minutes interview
with the guy who hit the lady in the legs with the bar
and he was like, I worked for the CIA.
And she was like, no, you didn't.
And he was like, I did though.
Like he just has to keep lying.
That's what this documentary is doing, but to itself.
Right, yes, all by itself.
60 minutes before her.
Yeah.
No, the one lady comes on here and she goes, you know, like if we didn't believe viruses
cause disease, we wouldn't be afraid of viruses.
And I'm like, well, we'd be afraid of fucking disease demons.
How does that help?
Right?
There's just another great segue here where the narrator just suddenly goes out of nowhere.
What about antibody dependent enhancement?
But guys, think of some way to move to the next subject, my God.
Can I say a phone call we had once?
Yeah, there's a really weird moment where she's like, I want to play this candid phone call that
we had. And he's like, oh, fine. Right. He's like very pissed about it.
If you must. Yeah. And on that phone call, he says this sentence.
It might be my favorite sentence from the movie.
I can't prove to you that no one anywhere has ever done a controlled experiment.
Well, no, you can't prove that.
I can prove that it's incorrect.
Right.
Yeah. This is also where he starts talking about how when they're studying this, they
don't use the real virus, they use a lab created pseudo virus.
Make scientists sound so evil.
I made a pseudo virus once.
Oh shit.
Yeah.
Because I am Dr. Frankenstein.
What color was it?
You can't see them, Eli.
Have you not learned anything from this film?
I haven't, but I'm very educated as you can tell.
So in my case, I was making this fake virus because I wanted to create something in my
cells.
I was infecting my cells so that it would create a change inside the cell.
Superpower.
And you use a fake virus because you don't want to infect people or yourself.
Oh, right.
Right.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah.
You leave out the infectious bits, do you then?
Exactly.
Yeah.
So you leave out the bits that would make it infectious and contagious and spread, and
you make it effectively safe.
I assume this is true of virologists as well, that if you're researching some parts
of the virus, you need to keep it in its risky form. So we have these really high category
labs and protocols to make sure that we're being really safe and avoiding contamination.
But if we just want to noodle around with some other parts of the virus, we're going
to make it safe so that we can piss about in the less high category safety labs?
Alice, I don't like to give people feedback on the area of expertise, but I
would love it if you would never noodle about or piss around.
I know who am I to make demands, but just if you ever find yourself in your job at
a medical lab in your own words, noodling about, I would love for you to maybe take the day off.
Take the day off!
But Andrew says it this way, he goes, why would you use a lab created pseudovirus?
And obviously Dr. Ellis has just explained to us, and there's obviously a pretty easy
and justifiable reason, but his actual line in the movie after that is, and I quote, virologists don't talk with me so I can't ask them that question.
Like all virologists together, they have a fucking a text thread where they're like,
not this guy, just this.
He made this entire movie because his friends stopped talking to him.
Yeah, right. Right. Uh-huh.
And then, okay, so then we ask, you know,
how much can we trust second opinions
if they're all saying the same thing?
Are doctors even thinking critically these days?
No, yeah, and this is where we cut back
to our Australian doctor lady.
She explains that you had to know things
to pass the exams at medical school
and you'd be laughed at if you didn't know those things.
Yes, yeah, right, right. She says you have to take on the dogmas that are taught to you,
by which she means germ theory, right? So you can't get through medical school without
acknowledging the existence of viruses.
Excuse me, professor. I'll be the judge of that
Well, this is the first time anybody actually mentions the term terrain theory at all
Right. She says something like if you believe in terrain theory, for example You'll be laughed out of medical school and and then they go on not to explain what that means at all
but yeah, but she but she's there to explain that
all science is wrong about all things and Louis Pasteur bit of an asshole.
A lot of problems with Louis Pasteur. A fraud, a fake, a friend of the French monarchy. And
I was like, one of these things doesn't belong.
Yeah, the French aristocracy, he probably had I had some friends in the what and then and then they say he
recounted germ theory on his death bed
Stand aside evolutionists who pretend that Darwin was an atheist who recounted and became Christian
Here come the terrain theory asshole
Oh my fucking god
And then we see this moment where there's some nobody interviewing one
of their bullshit talking heads, right? And she's talking about her FOIA requests.
Yes. They don't, she doesn't get a chiron.
No, she doesn't.
She never gets introduced. We don't know who she is. She's just some whistleblower kind
of person.
I guess. Now what I got from this, and, correct me if I'm wrong on this, but what
I got from this is that she was writing to all of these government institutions demanding
this very narrow and specific type of proof of COVID that could not possibly exist, right?
She wanted a picture of a COVID virus with its family or whatever, with today's newspaper
or something like that. And then all of these agencies wrote back and said, yeah, no, that doesn't exist.
Yeah, basically.
Right.
And she's like, see, the evidence doesn't exist.
Aha!
Got them.
And again, so we're highlighting, you know, because now we have the return letters to
her saying this doesn't exist.
We have text to highlight on screen.
So we're doing that.
And every single one of them that we highlight, after the highlight, there's some form of
now leave us alone and never send us another letter or we'll send the fucking cops around.
Yeah, I wrote my notes at this point.
My definition of isolation is sealed into a gold bar.
Why hasn't any medical institution produced it?
So yeah, and by the way, the clip of the interview that she's on, there's just a remnant at one
point when they cut to like something like a fluoride free farmington.com or some shit.
So that's the quality of interview that we're plucking from here.
And then there's some weird like little background audio, including the thing that says, children
are particularly vulnerable to stork populations.
It does say that.
Okay, so here's the thing. They never explained what the stork thing is. I think I've done
a lot of thinking about this. I was up to like 330 in the fucking morning going, why
the stork flu? What I think is, is that the analogy that they're going for is that believing that virus causes disease is like believing the stork brings the babe.
Okay.
Right? It's a simplistic view. And I don't think they ever feel the need to spell that out,
because I think that they're so far up their own asses that like everybody in that like anti-germ
world already uses that analogy, right?
So they think that everybody will automatically associate storks with, you know, not believing
in viruses.
Will Dasher missile pops into frame.
I think you're losing people a little bit.
Might want to create a more open dialogue with your audience.
So okay.
So now it's time to unmask the Scooby-Doo villain behind it all with this actual title
card.
Who controls the academic world?
And can I say, I was surprised at how little effort and time they spend on who's behind
it all.
They literally just like, I mean, look, I don't know what their evil plan is.
It's probably something Jewish.
It's like you've canceled plans with someone.
They're like, oh, what are you doing that night?
And you're like, right.
Because ultimately this is the what is your theory of the case moment?
Yeah.
And they're like, I don't know, probably the control. They want control. It's, that's probably
what it's all about. They can control you with the disease stuff. Your fear, probably.
They switched lanes to talk about how they're trying to take control of our
children with social media at one point here.
Yeah.
They're just naming things that old people are scared of.
Really?
Phones, social media.
They talk about how-
Free speech, we probably care about that.
Yeah, right.
Right.
The guy goes, there's no example ever of a totalitarian government allowing free speech.
And I'm like, right, because of what the word totalitarian means, man.
But yeah, they explain how the drug companies actually secretly love diseases because otherwise,
what would they cure?
Their favorite is cancer.
Got them?
Yeah.
Yeah.
They always want to...
We're going to make money by treating cancer. So we mustn't cure cancer.
Do you know how much money you would make if you cured?
Fucking stupid. Yeah.
Who would want a cancer cure?
Come on. Get to wear that little bandana.
Yeah. And then so then they explain that epidemics don't exist.
And in order to get there, they tell us that Spanish flu just coincidentally
happened to come about right around the time that electricity
was spreading all over the world.
Was there the Spanish flu or was everyone reacting to the fact that the first energy
grid existed in 1912?
I believe is their claim.
So fucking dumb.
So yeah, but what they're saying is that the Spanish flu was everybody reacting like everybody's
body getting used to the
idea of there being so much electricity around.
Yeah, like he's not saying electricity is bad. We just had to get used to it. We had
to adapt and go through some domestic response to that change. Which makes me just think
like what are you claiming the symptomatic change is in response to when it comes to
COVID? Like there were a lot of things that happened around the time of COVID. We had
Donald Trump's first presidency.
Obviously, like, we've got ongoing global warming.
Are these the things that we're adapting to with COVID?
Well, they don't make a claim, but they make a bunch of them,
right, because they've uncorked the bottle of crazy.
So they don't say them, but we see like 5G.
We see EMF.
Chemtrails.
Chemtrails show up.
So they're just sort of throwing spaghetti
at the wall
There is a very guys we have 23 more bullshit, and there's only half an hour in this movie. Yeah, there's a
Very that like at this point in the movie. We're just running. We're at a full fucking sprint One guy says we need to activate our detoxification pathways immediately
place immediately. Worst Power Rangers reboot ever. But yeah, so the point though of vaccines is that they apparently they rob us of our ability to clean out our own cells. Right?
Because then once we have well, once we're dependent on them for all our cell cleaning,
they have control and it's
all about control.
You're going to have to get your cells cleaned every 3000 miles of the dealership and it's
always way more expensive than you think.
And they ask if you want premium fluid in your cells and you feel like you should say
yes because you care about your cells, but maybe your cells don't need a premium fluid.
And so, and then they explain how vaccines lead to more cancer and heart disease, which is true,
right?
Because people live longer.
You live longer.
Yeah.
They die of old people's shit instead of polio.
So fucking stupid.
So okay.
So then we get a headline from a website called Vaccine Impact.
That's probably a pretty good objective source.
It tells us that deaths among 18 to 64 year olds are up 40% since the introduction of
the vaccine.
Hey, did anything else happen around that time?
No.
I just, I have to touch on one thing for this montage at one point
They show a photo of white people all white people holding a banner that says
Medical freedom is the new civil rights movement and honestly
That should be the logo for our podcast when we do
White people holding a banner that says I am the new civil rights
Right, right. Right.
Ah.
I don't understand why they're showing deaths up by insurance companies.
It's like the doctors won't talk to us anymore.
So we had to talk to those most reputable people who have absolutely no incentive to
insinuate that people are increasingly less safe.
The insurance companies.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah. Why wasn't according to life insurance claims. Right. Yeah, right. Yeah. Why wasn't according to life insurance claims?
Right.
And then they have this like this weird moment where they're like, you know,
the numbers didn't actually work out for us when all the shit we were saying in
terms of how many people would have to die because everybody got the vaccine.
Right. So if the vaccine is so so deadly, why don't we know people who died from
the vaccine? So now they start arguing that some
people didn't really get the vaccine, they just got a placebo. Right. And that's why the deaths
aren't higher from the vaccine. Just in the batches at the bottom of the list, like, you know,
the most recent batches where we stopped giving notice of the adverse events they were happening,
because we all stopped
being really paranoid about the vaccines or, you know, are so recently given that people
haven't lived long enough to acquire normal disabilities that we acquire just from living
life.
Right. Yeah, because, yeah, right. They're like all the newer batches of the vaccine
don't kill as many people and maim as many people. Right. That's the evidence that they're
using and they're using the verse, right're using and they which they claim is under reported
which is fucking nonsense so funny right because the thing that makes verse less useful is
that crazy people literally lie on it all the time and they're like you know a lot of
people say verse isn't a reliable system because of me exactly. Yes, because I tried so hard to undermine it.
Yes.
But they present this study that says only 1% of adverse vaccine events are reported
averse.
That can't possibly be right.
But then they explain that the fucking vaccines are changing our DNA.
Now it's a movie and it has to represent genetic modifications.
So of course we see them injecting colors into ripe tomatoes. Yep that is the only way to show it in the movie.
And again keep in mind they have already said that DNA doesn't exist it's just
in your cell fluid so we get to watch them be like no so it's gene therapy
it's Oxford. It's gene therapy. Whenever you hack hack is is not a legally protected word, so I'm allowed to say it.
Whenever you hack genes, that's gene therapy.
Which doesn't exist.
Fuck.
God damn it.
Cut back to Tony D's house of anti-vac pasta.
We cut back to Tony D's pasta place.
He's painting a COVID is bullshit mural on the side of his building now.
Slash pasta advertisement is a man.
Right now.
He's a man with two very distinct core identities and they are intertwined.
What I love most about Tony D besides the fact that he looks like a soprano's extra wax figure that they left out in the sun
Is that he very clearly was like look I'm willing to stand against this
Fascist government trying to Institute poison into our children and control the populace
But I also want people to see how delicious my alfredo is
Yes, right, yes exactly, but sell the cannolis though, yes
If I was trying to start a fight with Cecil,
then I would act the way Tony acts in this film.
This is my, I need to get to the hospital
to get my million dollar set-ups
to get Cecil to stab me.
Oh, for fuck's sake.
Jason and the other, the two narrators,
they cut in, tell us how worried they are.
At one point, the guy narrator says, it's all about frequency and consciousness guides
frequency.
And I'm like, fucking what?
And then the lady narrator is like, oh, you mean like that famous experiment with the
four tuning force?
I'm like, what do you fuck?
No, no, we didn't derive anything from that weird shit he just
said. No.
Mm-hmm.
What's worse about the weird shit he just said is that he makes it sound like that's
what we've taken from the film so far. No one's mentioned frequency not once.
No!
They've mentioned isolate a million fucking times, but they've never mentioned frequency.
Okay, but guys, let's say you were dating a water whisperer and she lets you do like
butt stuff and outfit stuff and now it's her turn to talk.
Yes.
Okay.
Does she have any water interpretations of the COVID-19 virus?
Clearly what happened here is they brought this woman in and she says, okay, we're not
bringing in to the last 10 minutes of the movie.
I dare you to be the most insane person
in this film in that short time that we're going to give to you.
So yes, we're going to finally meet our water whisperer.
She quote, communicates with the consciousness of water.
She for sure fucking does.
But how, Noah?
How?
Well, so her job is Rorschach test interpretations,
but with frozen water under a microscope.
Do they look really good?
Are they very clearly the thing that she hopes
that we think they are?
She shows one to one guy and he's like,
oh, it looks like a worm.
That must mean that COVID is a parasite.
Yes! Right!
Which is why Ivermectin works so well against it.
Yes. Her interpretation of the frozen water on top of the words COVID-19.
Yes. Yes, that's exactly what she did. She put water over the fucking words of COVID-19 in a
Petri dish and then froze it. And some of the stuff that she froze looked like a little worm.
So she says, yeah. The other one looked like a fingerprint.
So it's the Jews and the world.
I like the way she's like, oh, I asked the water.
Do you know who I am?
Yeah.
And when I looked at it, it gave me my initials.
Yes.
Oh God, that's so good.
Her initials VA were on the sort of, you got to...
Well, they weren't. A was kind of there, and then there was a line attached to the A.
There's a little tick.
There's lines.
There were lines and that's all that mattered.
Hey, guys, this girl's really interesting and dating one of the people making this movie, guaranteed.
What's her backstory?
So, yeah, so we have to talk about this one moment though, because this guy, Cohen, who
has been one of our major bullshit artists, he's been one of the two, right?
There was Andy and then there's this other guy who is an MD, right?
And I feel like there has to be a moment where you as an MD are being asked for the purposes
of a documentary that you've already invested quite a bit of time in to interpret the images
of a water whisperer, where you have to mentally confront what you've already invested quite a bit of time in to interpret the images of a water
whisperer where you have to mentally confront what you've become.
Sure.
And I like living in that moment.
So sorry, I had to bring that up.
But yeah, we learned about her car accident and how, you know, she had eight operations
and a lot of medicine, but also alkaline water.
Yeah, but she also found a secret fountain that made her skin shit out all
It's so good we see her holding up a piece of glass and the chyrons like this is like the piece of glass she found
It's not the yeah, right
Apparently not telling that lie, but yeah
But she did the Ayurvedic medicine and the alkaline water saved her life. The doctor said she'd never have kids.
So she had one kid for every doctor that said that.
That's a weird way to make life decisions.
It's not the worst reason to have kids, but it's up there.
So, but we spent a lot of time looking at her water images and going, no, these are
really good.
These are really awesome.
These are great, babe. These are great.
I am so interested.
You're such an important part of this documentary to me.
And everyone on the crew feels this way.
They don't say it and they're really busy, but they really love that you're participating
to the extent and magnitude that you are.
And then, okay, so we're done with Ed's girlfriend
and now it's time for a few closing arguments, right?
They show us a Buddhist ritual.
The guy with the one big tooth, he comes in here
and he goes, you know, with waveform physics,
and I'm like, fast forward 10 seconds, fuck you.
He's going full quantum at this point. He's going.
I think they've hit like every single woo that I've ever heard of.
That was the last one. They didn't have a cue yet. He gets quantum. He nails it. Yeah.
She comes back in. She goes, you know, for me, water is a spiritual teacher. And I'm
like, that's because you're an idiot. Most of us have very little to learn from fucking water.
I think she's I think she's just drank too much and hit that like water toxicity
level and gone a bit spacey and felt unwell.
Glass of water passed through your ancestors.
And what happens when you're cremated?
You're salt, salt water.
I'm literally just saying my stream of consciousness right now.
But I put my mouth on Ed's butthole.
So, yeah, right. So I get the end of the movie and then we get the final title
card, which basically I didn't I didn't copy it down because it's everything in
this movie. So verbose.
But basically it just says, you know, if enough people watch this movie,
that will fix the world.
Yeah, we'll get rid of war.
Yep. Yes. Yes, we can solve war if only enough people watch their fucking movie.
And learn what terrain theory is, which this movie does not.
No, it doesn't.
Tune in for the sequel.
Oh, clearly, clearly.
Well, all right.
Well, I'll tell you what, Dr.
Alice, I can't thank you enough, nor can I apologize enough, but it was really
awesome to have you for this movie specifically.
Before we let you go, can you remind us where our audience can go to hear more from you?
Yep.
You can find me at the Skeptics for the K podcast.
You can also find me at the Skeptic magazine where I do occasionally write some articles
still.
But most importantly, this October, you can find me for the last time ever at QEDCon in
Manchester, UK.
It's QED that's ending, not Dr. Alice.
That's exactly the follow-up.
Now, with Alice, can I interest you in a murder-suicide ball?
We're there.
Because I was going to threaten to do that to Marsh anyways, but I feel like if I got...
No, it's the last QED.
It's so sad.
It is the last QED.
It's the very best conference I've ever been to, about anything.
I always say it's the best skeptical conference, it's the best conference that I've ever
attended, I'm gonna be really, really sad when it's gone.
All right, well, but yes, be sure to check the show notes,
you'll find links there to Skeptics with a K,
as well as links to get your tickets to QED.
Again, it's the best conference in skepticism,
you gotta get there if you can, this is your last chance.
It's the last one everybody, fucking tuck in!
All right. Oh, think about how drunk Marsh is gonna be oh wow
I bet we can get Marsh to do coke with I think so we're gonna try that's gonna be my mission
Bring me cocaine to QED yes
Our official position is puzzle little thunderstorm. It's our official position as QED. Yes
Position is an organizer. Yeah, all right, so that's gonna to do it for our review of Terrain Quick before Alice can refute that.
But it's not going to do it for the episode just yet because we still need to pay more
bills next week.
So Eli, tell us what's on deck.
Well, as we were recommended by first time guest Seth Andrews on our last episode, a
small town is disturbed when a murderous car wreaks havoc by viciously mowing down innocent
victims and Sheriff Wade Parent is the only one that can stop it. We'll be watching
The car oh fuck you for doing that on a week that I'm off
So with that to look forward to we're gonna bring episode 502 to a merciful close once again a huge
Thanks to dr
Alice for all her help and perhaps even a huge thanks to all the patreoners that help make the show go if you'd like to
Count yourself among their ranks you can make a prep so donation of patreon.com slash got off when they're by earning access to an ad free version
of every episode. You can also help a ton by leaving a five star review and by sharing the show
on all your various social media platforms. And if you enjoyed this show, be sure to check out our
sibling shows, the scaling of the citation DND minus and the scavenger hunt available wherever
podcasts live. If you have questions, comments or cinematic suggestions, you can get my got off movies
and gmail.com Tim Robertson takes care of our social media. Our theme song was written and
performed by Ryce Slavik of the Dress on Mars. All the other music was written and performed by our
audio engineer Morgan Kirkland while she was on permission. Thanks again for giving us
a check of your life this week for Heath Henwright, Neelay Bosnik, I'm No Illusions, promise to
work hard to earn another check next week. Until then, we'll leave you with a Breakfast
Club close.
Beda Austin stopped calling herself the Water Whisperer, she graduated to crystallographer,
and now works with psychic
autistic children from the telepathy tapes.
That one's not a joke, that's literally what happened.
Noah got arrested for daring Andrew Kaufman to lick ever more diseased Petri dishes.
Eli drank some magic water and 27 pieces of this movie expelled from the system.
This content is canned credentialed which means you can report instances of harassment,
abuse or other harm at their hotline at 617-249-4255 or on their website at creatoraccountabilitynetwork.org.
The preceding podcast was a production of Puzzle and the Thunderstorm LLC copyright
2025, all rights reserved.