Pablo Torre Finds Out - Share & Squirrel & Tell with Elle Duncan and Desus Nice

Episode Date: April 3, 2026

Do we need robot umpires more than we thought? Is Netflix the Yankees of media? What's the best kind of catfishing? And have we finally evolved beyond pizza rat? Plus: Aaron Judge choking, Teanna Trum...p choking, an old man smoking with a crowd... and the price of free p*rn.• Vote for PTFO at The Webby Awards: Best Sports Podcast + Experimental & Innovation Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is. You suck at your job! I'm better than you! And if you listen to our show on Apple Podcasts, you can now watch video there as well. Just update to the latest iOS, and then over to our show page to start watching. But for right now, just a quick word from our sponsors. I went to the doctor today, and as I'm checking in, the receptionist goes,
Starting point is 00:00:34 I'm a fan, but don't wear that bullshit in here. Wow. And I was like, oh, wow. Is that where you guys are at? Where are you at in the grief cycle of being a Knicks fan? No, it's actually a weird thing now because it's reality. Because it's like before the Knicks were just so terrible, you had no hope. So then, you know, you get into like the Coke dream of, oh, my God, the Knicks are doing it this year.
Starting point is 00:00:55 And then it's just like, you can no longer look at the Knicks through the lens you used to look at where it's like, hey, they lose all the time. Now it's like, hey, are they really contenders? Then you have to put some pressure on them and really treat them like a real team. and you have to come to reality because I'm just like oh you know they'll figure it out by the playoffs
Starting point is 00:01:09 and now it's just like yeah maybe not big change of course too because New York sports fans notoriously put no pressure on their team
Starting point is 00:01:17 so now you're having to do that which is probably like but the beauty is I have the Yankees now so now I can hit on the Yankees air balling what kind of what drug is the dream that is this Yankee season
Starting point is 00:01:26 if the next are historically a Coke dream what is a Yankee season these days The beauty of being a Yankee fan since birth the way I have is I
Starting point is 00:01:34 I grew up knowing it has to be the World Series and bus. Yes. And if it's not the World Series, it's a bus. So I've already gotten used to the idea. It's going to be a bus. I'm not expecting them to win. I'm expecting them to waste my time all season.
Starting point is 00:01:47 We're going to go on the hot street. We're going to lose for a couple weeks. Go on another hot street. Going to playoffs, do our thing for maybe the first two rounds, and then just choke. Great. You know, just watch Aaron Judge. Choke in situate. You know, he's going to have a great year.
Starting point is 00:02:02 But the ab bats that we see are not going to take. and everyone's going to be like he's a bum, he's the worst player ever. You know, typical Yankee stuff? God, is this Yankees fan going to make this Braves fan defend Aaron Judge a little bit? There are three former MVPs on that team, and I get it. Like, he's the captain, but he hit 500 in the postseason last year. He did, but it's not good enough. That's what I'm saying, though.
Starting point is 00:02:21 I feel like he's a victim of his own success, Pablo. Like, you expect a home run every time the man comes up to bat. But he had seven RBI and he hit 500 last year in the playoffs. I like how the face of Netflix sports and Major League Baseball now. Yeah. It is trying to convince Deezus that Aaron Judge is good, actually. No, he's great. I love Aaron.
Starting point is 00:02:40 I've got the jersey and everything. I hate him. Hold on. Before we do the sports stuff, I do want to explain that part of the reason I want to bring you guys together is not merely because I suspected that you guys would enjoy each other. It's also because when it comes to the jobs you both had before you got into media, I think you've both lived an interesting bunch of resumes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Deez, can you give us the capsule summary of some of the things you did before you got into what resembles entertainment and media. Programming for the New York Public Library, bought and sold domain names, did encryption programming for various porn companies. It was a nightclub bouncer, manager, co-check person. What else have I done? Possible drug dealer. Possible. Librarian. Did you sell drugs at the library? It's a great combo hustle. No, I should. No, that was back when I was more innocent. Oh, that was before I became jaded with my soul. you. I actually cared as a librarian.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Like, I was reading The Hungry Caterpillar of the kids. Oh, that's really cute. And there's a kid in Riverdale who he kicked the back door and I choked him out because, you know, that's New York. And I told that story once on Twitter and somebody was like, whoa, were you the black guy at this line? And I was like, you know what, I'm not asked for that question because you are going to sue me. Because
Starting point is 00:03:54 I definitely choked you out, little boy. Have you choked out anybody in your previous life? I never had to choke anybody out. Although I did have someone attack me at one of the clubs I was hosting because I did also have have a bit of a whirling dervish of jobs. I was a bartender. I washed hair for a living. I also hosted a gospel music channel show. I don't know any gospel music. And yeah, radio, traffic, television. But I was hosting a club at a nightclub in Atlanta called the Velvet Room. Anyone from
Starting point is 00:04:28 Atlanta is very familiar. And at the end of the night, I was leaving. It was my 25th birthday. and this girl wanted to fight one of my friends who was completely inebriated and not ready to fight. I mean, I don't like to fight either, but I was going to, of course, defend my friend and I was like, hey, you know, I'm going to be the adult in the room.
Starting point is 00:04:44 I haven't been drinking, I've been working, like, this is my place of business. Hey, there, we're in the parking lot. Enough of this. You know, you guys can settle this, and before I could even get it out, she swung on me. And I don't know if she had taken bath salts,
Starting point is 00:04:56 but this girl would not be stopped. She was like the Terminator. So we had to fight. And she ripped my dress. dress and she pulled my hair, just all the particulars that you usually do that I had come accustomed to sing, people doing fights on television. And yeah, I did a couple moves. Karate chopped her in the back of the neck. She went flying into the pavement, busted her mouth open. Okay. But then hopped back up. And it's the best salt. I was like, this is, so eventually, you know, finally the guys came in and
Starting point is 00:05:24 separated us and the rest is history. And now you co-host baseball games with Barry Bonds. How about that? Nice turn. I want to get into some of the baseball stuff because I have a pet cause that I now realize has become the reality. Let's go. The ABS system. Around the Horn, starting in 2012, I was calling for robot umpires. Look, man, I've been talking about robot umpires for nine years. Finally, we're getting these things tested, right?
Starting point is 00:06:13 Experimentally at the lower levels of baseball. The question, though, that baseball has to ask itself, and we, as sports fans, have to ask ourselves, do we want accuracy or do we want entertainment? And over time, I sort of backed off of it because I was like, it's not fun to yell at a robot. You sort of lose the thing of how mad people get at umpires and the satisfaction of like cursing an authority figure. Sure.
Starting point is 00:06:40 Who's a human. But the ABS system, as Major League Baseball has pioneered it, has given us the best of all worlds. So, Elle, before we get into the Netflix stuff, before we get into like the finer points of your experience with the sport, can you explain the ABS system and why it's been a revelation? Yeah, I mean, basically they measure your height. It's been a revelation because we are finally exposing all these dudes who claim to be 6-3 and are actually 5'10. It's incredible, honestly, to have precision like this. It's unprecedented in sports. 100%, where we get an actual depiction, like, depiction of how tall you are. So it measures. how tall you are, and then it comes up with your strike zone.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And there's been, there was a report that came out yesterday. All these dudes have been exposed. Six dudes at least have lied about being three inches taller than they actually were. The batter in the pitcher are the only ones that can call a challenge. You've got two seconds. You've got to tap your head, make a signal. If the umpire thinks for any reason you were tipped or you waited too long, they can deny you the challenge.
Starting point is 00:07:42 But I think why it's been a revelation is because, listen, I was on the Netflix game when Jose Caballero decided to challenge with his team up by five runs on an O-O-O-count and no-outs, which seemed absolutely absurd to me. But at the end of games, when these guys get it wrong, and I think the best marketing tool for ABS was what happened at the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic, where they ended on that super questionable call. You want to be able to get it right in the end. I don't care about using it in the first and second inning.
Starting point is 00:08:11 But so far, it's also exposed some of these umpires who are tragically wrong consistently. We love complaining, we love embarrassing people. So you get to do both. You get to complain that they don't know what they're doing. And then when they show it on the Jumpertron and you just hear the crowd roar, and you just see how sad the ump looks like, wow, I'm going to lose my job. Yeah, that's great. Oh, it's so good.
Starting point is 00:08:29 It's great. The thing I underrated was the way in which the robot would be the ally of the fan. Yes. And so the ump, who is most in the dunk tank these days is a gentleman by the name of C.B. Buckner. Oh. Mm-hmm. Runners all hold. Bases loaded.
Starting point is 00:08:56 Two strikes, two outs. Top of the six, three, five game. BBS powered by Team Mobile. That's out of the zone. Oh, my God, what's the same I'm going to do? So, CB Buckner already is just like... Mm-hmm. Getting cucked by a machine.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Yes. And then the very next pitch. No. Now the two, two. Cold strike three. He's so annoyed. It's challenging the pitch. Here we go.
Starting point is 00:09:38 It's so beautiful the presentation how dramatic is. It really is. So dramatic. The rats have been challenges. They measure it. You are 1.1 inches away. Just twisting the knife of his back. Look at the fans.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Yeah. You suck at your job. I'm better than you. Yeah, the thing that we need is not robots to replace people's jobs, but humans to use robots to point out the people. people who are terrible at their jobs. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:08 And that feels like a winning political position that I had not considered before. And also I feel like we don't have to limit this to baseball. Like I'm gonna start tapping my hat just in general stuff in life. Sure. You mess up my coffee order? Let's go. Review it. Yes. And the best part, if people don't know what you're doing, you just look crazy.
Starting point is 00:10:22 But if they do, they're gonna be so mad. They're gonna, yeah. They're like, really? What was the most offensive hand gesture? It was like the too small thing? Yeah, too small. Doing... I think it's this now.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Right. Or the school. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But doing this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Doing this. If you do that on a train to somebody, like you're fighting to get the seat, they get there first, you're like. Run the tape. Run the tape. Also, when I am making fun of Al for being the face of baseball, I'm not really joking. I want to be very clear here. But I was watching Elle, who I've known from our time of ESPN together, you're on a set. And it's just like you and all these Hall of Famers.
Starting point is 00:11:01 And you're like figuring out, okay, so Netflix, which is the word. worldwide leader of everything, is going to do sports, specifically going to do baseball. And something happened with the ABS, Elle, where history was made, but... Every one of their hitters is capable of doing damage, and he's got good stuff, so it's a battle that you're going to see you, each at bat. I think there's a couple things that are different than maybe in the past or some things that they've seen in particular tonight. So they're just trying to communicate and stay ahead of the game. Appreciate it, Tom. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:11:32 Maddie. Yeah, Laura, thanks. our first ABS challenge. It was not enshrined in Cooperstown, the first ABS experience. Listen, I get it. I think the timing is super unfortunate. Every single broadcast does an in-game interview, whether it's with the player out in the field or with a coach in the dugout,
Starting point is 00:11:50 and they do cutaways and whatnot. But this idea of people being outraged, I'm like, what? You were going to go to the Smithsonian and watch it over and over again? You were hoping for its official enshriman into baseball lore. Like, fuck out of here. Y'all stop. You don't care that much.
Starting point is 00:12:06 Stop it. And also, let's be real. I said it before. Nobody thought you would challenge an O-O count, up five runs, like, with no one on base. It doesn't matter. It's not an O-2 count. It did not affect the game. There are no runners in the scoring position.
Starting point is 00:12:23 I'm just saying, like, that was bad luck. Was it unfortunate? The timing was not great. But, like, you know, the outrage is so ridiculous. It doesn't fit the crime. But this is the thing about being on Netflix. It's like... It's the evil empire.
Starting point is 00:12:36 You guys are the New York Yankees of media now. Yeah. And so you come in and all these eyeballs are on and it's like, what the fuck are these people doing? Here's what I'll say about the criticism when I am learning. Because there were criticisms about like, oh, there's a stand-up comic. You guys are serving hot dogs after the game. You're trying to make this thing. Netflix-y?
Starting point is 00:12:56 Netflix. Yeah. Like literally, that's what we told you from the beginning. So here's a thing. because there is feedback that's constructive, right? Constructive feedback is too many promos. Message received as the person that was reading the promos, the shark one, because it was like,
Starting point is 00:13:12 uh, Bert Kreischer, out in the water, that sounds like the beginning of a shark movie. Speaking of which, you know as a broadcaster, whenever you have to say speaking of which, your segue was shit. And so I tried so hard to make that work. So, like, yes, message received, like, as soon as we got off air, you right?
Starting point is 00:13:29 The Netflix brass was like, yeah, probably too many promos message received. scorebug, real feedback. Like, it was too small, whatever, that's cool. All of that is real constructive criticism that is very fixable and will be fixed. But whenever there's criticism that I saw of like, you know, it was just so Netflix.
Starting point is 00:13:46 It was just, it was, it was not for baseball purists. Well, first of all, I come from a baseball purist mother who will watch 162 Braves games this year. She would have watched opening day if you would broadcast it on the fucking moon, all right? this was not for baseball like purists you'll watch it anywhere this was for the baseball curious and we told you that coming in like this is for and in fact a lot of what net Netflix is doing in the sports world is yes for the people that are always going to watch those sports but also for
Starting point is 00:14:18 the people that maybe tuned in to watch love is blind saw the button for opening day on Netflix and thought all right i'll check it out and so i just think like listen this is like going to a Mexican restaurant and then bitching that they don't have barbecue. They advertised as a Mexican restaurant. It's your fault that you somehow thought they were going to serve barbecue there. Netflix has made no qualms about who they are. Like, we're going to eventize these things. We're going to pull people from the Netflix universe. Like, that's what we're going to do. Yes, we could probably save some of the promos. But you're telling me that no sports network has ever had a comedian on before. There's dudes who make like whole careers out of doing sports,
Starting point is 00:14:53 stuff like that. And I'm sorry if you didn't like Bert Kreischer. I'm sorry he took up six minutes of your four-hour viewing experience. So I just think if you're asking us to, like, stop being Netflix-y, if you're asking us to stop using Jason Bateman or John Cena to explain ABS or any of these other huge movie stars that every other network would love to have on their broadcast, ultimately asking us not to, like, be Netflix is just like not a thing that's going to happen. So I got to delete my tweet about the cabs and the lean-back.
Starting point is 00:15:20 I was like, I turned it to the oldest New Yorker ever. I was like, what the hell is this? They got livery cabs on the field? What is this? Also, it was not Netflix. Like, MLB wanted this to feel really big. It was a standalone game for the first time, like ever. It was supposed to be big, big, big.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Hence the trolley cars and the cabs and the, you know, and the comedians doing the lineups and all of that. I mean, my son is five years old. He was never going to watch that baseball game, but I told Jay Uso would be there and he watched. So the through line in this entire conversation about baseball is that baseball has figured out ways as a sport to do crazy sounding things that I used to pitch on around the horn
Starting point is 00:15:59 and implement it, and somehow the fans have come along. And at all times, when you're working through, like, you're trying to navigate what are a baseball fan's kinks? Sometimes what a baseball fan wants is to feel like the oldest person in the world. Yes. It's greatest feeling in the world. Nostalgia. They love that.
Starting point is 00:16:19 They love nostalgia. Or just being a crumagine and complaint. Like yesterday. Lovely beautiful day, MLB is like, hey, these are the new foods coming in different ballparks and everything. Me, I'm sitting there, I'm like, whatever happened to hot dogs and burgers. Right. Where's my cracker jack? Oh, my God. I just want boiled peanuts.
Starting point is 00:16:37 Yeah. What was all that? You can't get a black coffee anymore. And it's just like, I'm looking at myself. I was like, what are you complaining about? I was like, you can always get a hot dog and a hamburger. Still available. And then you start lying.
Starting point is 00:16:48 You're like, yeah, they didn't have this in an old stadium. Because if you asked me, the old Yankee Stadium, all that sold was hot dogs. Never been the same. Water, black coffee, and shasta soda. That's it. Nothing new. None of the fancy stuff. We didn't have napkins.
Starting point is 00:17:01 And everyone was like, that's not how. And like, no, that's what we remember. But, you know, and then also I'm a big hypocrite because if you see me at a Yankee game, yes, I will be in the Delta section eating a lobster roll. Yes. You will. Out of a helmet. Out of a helmet.
Starting point is 00:17:13 Yeah. Gleefully. So my personal perspective was not everything about the broadcast worked as you just outlined, and much did. Yeah. And the thing that I'm grateful for as someone who is endlessly shoveling. content into a content furnace, like it's coal, is thank God some new shit's happening that we can talk about. 100%. I just think, like, ultimately, you know, we want to take big swings. And, like, if you're
Starting point is 00:17:36 there for the baseball, like, we had Barry Frickin Bonds. That dude doesn't do television. They somehow convinced Barry Bonds to do TV. And he was telling stories. And he was... It kind of felt like, who lied to Barry Bonds to get him to, like, do this? Like, how... Did he know he was going to be... Oh, you think we, like, bait and switched him? We were like, we're just going to... you an award and then we threw him on the desk. It's Barry Bond Day. It's like, Barry, you're getting into the Hall of Fame. Come to this stadium on opening night.
Starting point is 00:18:04 And it's like, oh, I'm here to do media. Yeah, yeah. I have to do media. No, he was actually like super, it was cool because he was a rookie and a self-admittedly and he was like soliciting feedback. You were hazing Barry Bonds? I'm like coaching up Barry Bonds.
Starting point is 00:18:19 I was like, you can do this. Be anecdotal. Lean on this. Da-da-da-da-da. And that was really cool. Rizzo had never done. television before. Albert's done television, obviously. We all met the day before. So I'm really proud of... You actually love is blinded your... 100%. And so I was really proud of, like, how everybody rallied.
Starting point is 00:18:36 They were all in. They really tried to work as a team. And again, nothing is as good the first time as it's the second, third or fourth. But that was our first time ever working together. I thought it was a really good product. I wish the game was better. I know you liked it. But, yeah, ultimately, like, I feel really good about, you know, what we did. And it was really nice and nice things that were said about me. But ultimately, like... People liked you. My one suggestion was, could you have a guy also be climbing a skyscraper who might die at any moment? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Could we have that in the back? Just in the outfield somewhere. For drama? Yeah, yeah, yeah. 100%. Just the threat of a life fatal. Yeah, absolutely. At any moment, we'll just check in with it.
Starting point is 00:19:08 I'm sure someone would have had something to complain about with that too. I want to get to a grand jury charging document that I read. There's also this NFLPA memo that was circulated because a 34-year-old man from Buford, named Huamein Jarrell Ford had dozens of victims and the way that he victimized these NFL and NBA players who were among those dozens
Starting point is 00:19:44 was he posed allegedly as a well-known adult film star named Tiana Trump. There she is. There she goes. This is a visual aid to show that she is not one of the Trump families. Here you go.
Starting point is 00:19:58 I wonder. I was like, is that maybe one of the ones that they adopted to feel better about what they do? Shout to all the innocent people. who didn't automatically have an image of her as soon as you heard the name, but didn't have like a favorite scene or anything, you know, you know.
Starting point is 00:20:08 What's the scatter your part on Tiana Trump? Why would she be a useful, fit person to impersonate? You see, we both looked at D's. Fill us in, tell us about this four stars. She's a strong number three, you know. She keeps the dialogue going in the opening scenes, you know, doesn't get affected by light changing position,
Starting point is 00:20:25 not afraid of the fluids. Strong finisher, you know, I definitely put her in, like, you know, put her before the cleanup guy. You know, she's just like, listen, Old school. Is there like a sports comp, like an athlete comp? Like she's the blank of porn? She's like a...
Starting point is 00:20:40 I'm thinking maybe like a Josh Hart kind of. Oh. You know, a little breast milk, that kind of thing. Oh, God. Bangs down low. I should clarify that Quameen, Jarrell Ford, not actually Tiana Trump, and the thing he did,
Starting point is 00:20:54 which I think brings us squarely into Deez's sort of resume here. Let's go. Is that, allegedly. Is that there was something of a catfishing scheme, although the catfishing concept is sort of underselling it. So this dude was allegedly impersonating Tiana Trump, and there are now 22 charges to which he has pleaded not guilty. Nine counts of wire fraud, seven counts of computer fraud,
Starting point is 00:21:15 one count of access device fraud, four counts of aggravated identity theft, one charge of sex trafficking, which I will explain, because the dude was not merely impersonating Tiana Trump to these athletes. He was also posing as an Apple customer service account. And so this is a bit of the cleverness here. because what this guy would do, allegedly, is falsely represent to the professional athlete that he was receiving a video file shared through an ICloud account
Starting point is 00:21:41 that required him to reply with a multi-factor authentication code. We're not familiar with this. And so there would be a code sent to the athlete, and that athlete would share that code with the Apple customer service rep who is this dude, and that guy suddenly now had access to all these athletes' iCloud accounts. Brilliant.
Starting point is 00:22:00 And that was, honestly, When I saw that in the grand jury document, I was like, damn, that's a good idea. That is brilliant. That is. See, that's the problem with scammers because for all that effort, if he did something legit, he'd be rich and successful. But no, people, they're just like, no, I'm going to use all this smarts for just terrible stuff. Yeah, I'm using my powers for evil. And then also, when you get that code, every time someone sends you that code, they're like, do not share this code with anybody.
Starting point is 00:22:25 Right. Do not share this code. Is this person like, yeah, the code that got sent? Yeah, I'll give it to you right now. So, wow. Yeah. This guy previously in 2019 in the Northern District of Georgia had been convicted of computer fraud and aggravated identity theft
Starting point is 00:22:38 for similar fishing attacks. He had previously spent nearly $325,000 by using victims stolen financial information. And this scheme allegedly began in November of 2020 while he was still in custody in the Federal Bureau of Prisons, according to prosecutors. There you go. Can't keep a good man down. This dude's scheme escalated in May of 2021, allegedly.
Starting point is 00:23:00 He was also not merely posing. as Tiana Trump. He was also recruiting an only fan's creator making these promises that would advance the victim's modeling career. Sure. This only fans creator was then going to have sex with the athletes and then you might not be surprised to learn.
Starting point is 00:23:17 They were being taped without the athlete's knowledge. But it always returns to me to the notion that, man, athletes really need those, you know, like when HR will send those test emails? Yes. Oh, yeah. Like, you have been spearfished. You just clicked on a link that now resulted in the stealing of your identity.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Like, athletes need that more than any other population that I've ever encountered. The amount of people who fall for those, they won't even send you like a complex email. They'll just be like, click here for a Chipoli gift card. And I have one of our friends, and she constantly falls for it. Yes. Like, maybe five times she's falling for it. And I was like, why do you keep clicking on it? She was like, I'm not going to pass up a free gift card from Chipoli.
Starting point is 00:23:58 You had me at free. People fall for it. But yes, NBA athletes definitely need that because I've seen some in the club. And listen, life is hard for them. You know, everything's a challenge. So if you don't have a good manager, you need someone to go to the emails. Lots of natural predators in that ecosystem. Oh, for sure.
Starting point is 00:24:15 Yeah. And you are always, always the meal. Yes. But I will say this. There was a part of the story to me that was more confusing because it's like he would say to the athletes, this is at least what I read, that he would say to the athletes, like, if you want these pictures of Tiana Trump, then you have to send your account details.
Starting point is 00:24:34 And they were like sending account details and things like that. The thing that does not make sense to me is that she has one of those jobs or by function of the job, you can just like Google nudies of her. So why would you need to give up any information to have access to pictures of someone who has many naked pictures readily available for free? You know what? Some guys I've heard. they like to brag that they know a porn star
Starting point is 00:25:03 and the biggest brag you do if you know a porn star is show a picture of her in clothes doing regular stuff Oh so not even Because you're like oh I know her in real life Or they do the reverse thing That group you used to do with rappers Where they'll say a rapper's real name
Starting point is 00:25:18 Oh And they're like oh you hang with this rapper Yeah I was hanging with Andre You're like oh So they'll say the porn star's real name Or they'll be like yeah We got coffee out in Silverlo Lake or something like that.
Starting point is 00:25:30 Right. But for that person, like, look, I'm so cool. I've gotten past the veil. Right. I'm over the wall. This is her with Zit cream on. Exactly. Here she is.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Look at her. No makeup. Filing her tax return. Yeah. Look at her. She stayed in bed all day because she has IBS. She had dairy last night. She's having a huge problem.
Starting point is 00:25:48 The free Chipotle guard. It struck again. Oh, my God. I mean, but look, Deez, when you worked on the proverbial back end of porn company, infrastructure. Yes. What did you learn about your customers? They are insane.
Starting point is 00:26:06 They are insane and big horny. Huge horny. Big. Like, shout to men. Because, and I've always figured this, the blood it takes to make the erection steals blood from your brain. So you don't think clearly.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Because one point in side I worked for, we would do marketing. And I was doing the DNS. I wasn't spread eagle in front of the camera, nothing like that. DNS is a technical actor. Domain name services. setting up email, setting up the server,
Starting point is 00:26:31 the addresses, all that thing. What we did was a little unethical... He was giving that DNS. Hey, hey, say that for Netflix. Okay. So we set up these fake profiles for some of the performers. Mind you, we did not shoot any of the content on the site.
Starting point is 00:26:45 We bought the content from third-party sites in Brazil. So anyone could use... This is like white label porn. Okay. Anyone can buy these image sets and put them up. So we would just give the models fake... email addresses. All the email addresses, they all resolve to one general email address. But people would write these dedicated letters, these emails to these models under their fake
Starting point is 00:27:10 email addresses that we read. No problem. Harmless, whatever. Every now and then you look at it, it breaks your heart, some 85-year-old, like putting her in the will or whatever. No problem. Here's where the problem was. Say the site was supposed to update at 11 p.m. on Friday. Okay. God forbid the site doesn't update at 11 p.m. Oh, no. At 11.01, you're getting death threats. People are like, you stupid fucking, you're trying to take my money.
Starting point is 00:27:35 I'm going to find you. I'm going to kill you. I'm just like, hey. It's me answering the emails. And people are like, you're going to rob my money. And I'm like, it's one minute late. Wait, wait. It is one minute late with the update.
Starting point is 00:27:48 What I'm realizing is that Deez's was the CB Buckner of pornography. Yes. People were looking at up the updates. I'm like, close is not good enough. Okay? Challenge. That was 11. And then you get people that are like,
Starting point is 00:27:59 is, or they're asking like dramatic, they're like, by 11.m., did you mean Eastern Standard Time or PSTon Standard Time? Because I haven't seen an update yet. They're like, all, calm down, horny. I don't judge people for watching porn at all. I'm no prude. I absolutely judge people for paying for porn.
Starting point is 00:28:16 It's too free. It's free. It's free. And I've never paid to watch any porn in my life, but I can't imagine the quality is that much different than what you can get on the alleged porn It's free. Hold on.
Starting point is 00:28:30 Hold on. Hold on. We're tapping on. No, it's free. I just like how the representative, the face of Netflix sports is saying, subscription fees for me, but not for the... Wow. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Well, yes, because I can't watch some of these banger-ass shows for free. But you can absolutely watch... Banger... Litteral asses for free. I'm just saying, like, why would you risk your relationship? Like, I have a friend... God, I hope she's not listening to this. at all because she swore me to secrecy.
Starting point is 00:29:00 I won't say her name. But she found out that her husband's spending $800 a month on OnlyFans models. And I'm like, I'm like, I would have, it would not bother me at all if I opened up my spouse's browser and I saw a bunch of porn. But if he paid for it, I'm judging him. It's free.
Starting point is 00:29:14 Why are you spending money on this? This is insane. Sometimes you have to pay more for top shelf stuff. I appreciate supporting individual creators. Also, shout to that creator. You're making $800 worth of content? These are on different ones. Oh, different ones.
Starting point is 00:29:26 He's various only fans models. Oh, a diversified portfolio. 100%. He wants to diversify his stock. That's what he's calling it anyway. Not mad at that, you know? That should be a job. The seed investment.
Starting point is 00:29:36 Oh, there is. There it is. I want to get to one more topic here, and this topic is very serious. Where do we go from here? Let me get to one more thing. What's a nice topic? I think this is really important to discuss journalistically. We're going to that squirrel in London that was vaping.
Starting point is 00:30:07 He's getting after it. He's getting after it. Wow. But it makes sense, because you would feel like the squirrels in England are a little more sophisticated than American squirrels? Yeah. I have never heard a squirrel talk, but I'm pretty sure that squirrel has a thick British accent. Views on Tories, you know, that kind of thing. All this time, we just thought squirrel's right here trying to get a nut.
Starting point is 00:30:29 And now they're out here trying to get a little vape on, too. A little vape on. We did find a vape flavor called Wincent 2.0 Vapor Shield Acorn, which we brought up in an interview that we did with the world's preeminent expert on squirrels. Hi, I'm John Kuprooski. I'm Dean and a professor at the University of Wyoming in its Hobbs School of Environment and Natural Resources. I love the lengthy name that you shared for the acorn, acorn flavored.
Starting point is 00:31:00 I don't vape, but I might try that one. Squirrels are a little high-strung, so they are fun to hang out with in some situations. hard to mellow with, so I think you've got that challenge. But for me, 321 species of squirrel around the world, you know, there's a lot of good hanging out time, even though they are a bit high-strong. I have good questions. I have so many questions about him. We're all learning about jobs we didn't know existed before on the show today. What he was telling us was, this is mostly about smell. Squirrels, apparently, you know, they eat, quote, some really nasty kinds of things. And yeah, apparently in nicotine, there are chemicals that can detoxify inside a squirrel's stomach.
Starting point is 00:31:48 And so the danger is more in the vape itself and not the vaping. And this is, of course, because of the plastics and all that stuff. But it reminded me, Deez-is, of a previous New York City creature. You remember this guy. Oh, yeah. Listen, he's all of us. You know, you get home, you just like, it's a beautiful city, but it's rough to live in. Look at that cockroach, he's like, Aaron Judge.
Starting point is 00:32:14 Oh, this guy. He only hit 500 last year. Come on, how many times I've got to see this guy. Oh, my goodness. And then, of course, classic, I mean, pizza rat. Oh, yeah. I like how big the objects are compared to how small the bodies of the animals are. But apparently, there are further similarities between the vaping squirrel and the smoking roach
Starting point is 00:32:44 and pizza rat, according to the dean of squirrels. Dean of squirrels. All three of those make sense when you think about what cockroaches, what rats, and what squirrels eat. They all think they've found something new and are ahead of the game. So they think they're the smartest animal in the room, I'm guessing, you know, when they get there. And so, you know, I just love the fact that that's what animals do. They, you know, these all kind of exemplify, hey, you know, yeah, we're talking. too. We'll make it, you know, we'll make it here in the city.
Starting point is 00:33:18 Meanwhile, the pizza rat is like, whoa, whoa, I've been eating Finney's pizza for three years. I'm talking about it's new. Come on. This is a new. TikTok has made it so that everybody thinks they can be pizza rad, but pizza rat's been ahead of the curve. Also, that pizza rat video is kind of sad because it's just like, it's like every New Yorker. He's just trying to go, he's like, had a rough day. Yeah. It's just going home with your food.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Yeah. Like, he's just going home to his pizza rat family with a slice. Yep. You know, he's like, you know, little Cesar's, I, technically, I can't. I can't get the hot ready because I'm a rat, but, you know, here you go, kids. I got you something. Is it the contrarian in me that when I see these stories, the first thing I think is Big Tobacco at it again.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Yeah, I do. Whenever I see, like, a story about the impact that Vap is having, I'm not saying it doesn't have an impact. I get it, I know. But whenever I see these stories, I'm like, I feel like this is like big tobacco being like, hey, man, in order to preserve the squirrels, we really need to start smoking cigarettes again, guys, because they don't smoke cigarettes. They just like the fruity flavors of vapes. I think I was the unwitting pawn of big tobacco a couple months ago.
Starting point is 00:34:21 Because remember we had the Tompkin Square Park and everyone met with the old man to smoke. I was there. I was the old man's right-hand guard. I have no idea how I got that job. I have every job in the world. And we just all lit up and smoked cigarettes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:34 Hold on. The flyer that got circulated around New York City that simply said smoke a cigarette with me and was a photo of an old guy. No. You actually went to that? I not only went to that, I was his security when he's talking on the loudspeaker. What did he say?
Starting point is 00:34:50 He was just like, like, we didn't expect that many people to come out. It was like he filled the park. It was a QR code. It said free sig if you are as VP, 21 plus, of course. Yes, and we're handing out the cigarettes and lighters and everything. Everyone smoked. And also, I didn't realize is if you're in a park for the people, everyone's smoking at the same time, you're about to get the biggest cloud of secondhand smoke ever.
Starting point is 00:35:12 Ever. I felt my lungs off fire. I was passed out. But it was great. And then at the end of the end of we all started spinning an empire state of mind. And it was really one of those things where, God forbid, you're visiting New York
Starting point is 00:35:22 with your little kids. They see that they're like, I know where I'm moving to when I get older. I'm moving to New York. Yeah. What's this old man's name? Shout to Bob. Bob?
Starting point is 00:35:32 Shout to Bob. Smoking. Smoke a cigarette with me. All lowercase. And look at the time. 2 o'clock to 205. And we did it. And you accomplished everything
Starting point is 00:35:41 you needed to accomplish in five minutes. And then it just went to three. It was just unbridled chaos. We're doing it again next year. So, you know, flying for it. What's his deal? Who is this guy?
Starting point is 00:35:51 She's just, like, the coolest old man. He used to, I think he used to be an art dealer. And talking to him, he's such a quintessential New Yorker. He lived in New York. He lived in L.A., but he came back to New York. His kid goes to school out here. Just, like, very old school was around for, like, Ed Koch and all the original New York stuff.
Starting point is 00:36:11 And he still smokes. And people were just like, you're too old to smoke, but he's like, look how old I have I've been smoking? How did I end up giving Jesus a platform to do sponsored tobacco industry content? My father was Philip Morris, so, you know. I know Joe Camel. We went to school together. So, admittedly, this is a terrifying thing.
Starting point is 00:36:29 I did not know what Jesus was doing in his free time. But also, when we asked the dean of squirrels, what is he most concerned about when it comes to urban wildlife and what these animals may or may not be consuming. Squirrels look for things that kind of look like, you know, a mushroom or explore new smells, which are the potential for new food items. You know, is this the most recent strange mushroom that's popped up from the ground? Need to check it out.
Starting point is 00:37:02 Haven't smelled this before. And then, you know, with the potential of that pastrami on it. There was a lot of terrifying things said by that man. Like, do we have to protect cats' deli? Like, are the rats going for the pastrami there? Or is that? Also, can I just say Dina Squirrels is maybe the coolest name? You think he introduces himself like that?
Starting point is 00:37:20 He has to. He has to. Oh, Philip Morris, Dana Squirrels. Oh, here comes to Dean. Here comes to Dean. What I found out today is that maybe replaced Bert Kreischer with the old guy who smoked cigarettes for five minutes. Yeah, perfect.
Starting point is 00:37:33 Yeah, the seventh inning stretch can just be him smoking a save. Seven-in-in-s Smoke? Yeah. I think that's a great idea, actually. I'm sure the baseball purists will really love it. I mean, they were smoking cigarettes, like, in the press box back in the day. Back when the game was good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:46 Little Reggie Jackson puffing on a Marl'roll after a game. Vrons is burning behind him. He's got like a shit spear. That's right. Before all the bad flipping. Before they was disrespecting the game. I don't know why I keep going to a Boston accent. No, you have to.
Starting point is 00:37:59 If you're talking about old school baseball, you either do a Boston accent or old school New York accent. Fair. Because there was only two teams before 1970. Sure, that's fair. I don't want my baseball without a pole right in front of me while I'm watching it. Elle, what did you find out on this episode of Pablo Torre finds out? I found out that there is an actual behind-the-scenes job in porn that doesn't have anything to do with just loving watching porn. Well done, DZS.
Starting point is 00:38:23 DNS, is that what you? DNS. Domain name services. Wow. Very cool. There is a person behind those purvey emails, you guys. Just, yeah, let's do it. Love it the game. It's also one of the most boring jobs ever because everything is super horny and sexualized,
Starting point is 00:38:37 except for your job. Ah. So you're just on a Zoom and you're talking, you're like, yeah, so this new site that came out, you know,
Starting point is 00:38:43 big booty breasts. They're like, yeah, so we're having a problem is not, the domain name is not resolving on the West Coast,
Starting point is 00:38:49 so we need to, like, really look at the IP addresses and really do a trace route here. I'm doing NS lookup and it's just not fully resolving on the Pings. D's is what did you find out?
Starting point is 00:38:59 Today. I found out that I have a new job I possibly want. I want to be the next Dina Squirrels. like we can have a squirrel off. Like, you know, maybe that should be the thing.
Starting point is 00:39:11 We're going to fight to see who's the true dean of squirrels while the old man smokes next time in the park. I mean, that is definitely someone's subscription-only premium price-structured porn. That is someone's very specific kink. Someone will pay money. I think there should be an only fan to watch squirrels vape. Someone will watch it. Someone will watch it.
Starting point is 00:39:30 100%. Sexy squirrels. So what defines a sexy squirrel from a regular one? There's a nut joke here. I'm just too tired. You know what? You are a respected journalist and people hold this show in high esteem. So we're not going to do that joke.
Starting point is 00:39:44 We'll do it once the mic's wrong. Never. Al Duncan, D's nice. Thank you both for doing what is a show that I don't think anyone has ever done before. It's always amazing, Pablo. It's incredible. Pablo Torre finds out is produced by Walter Avaroma, Maxwell Carney, Ryan Cortez, Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim, Neely Loman, Rob McRae, Matt Sullivan, Claire Taylor, and Chris Tumenllo.
Starting point is 00:40:12 Our studio engineering is by RG Systems. Our sound designed by Andrew Bursick, Digital Strategy, by Bailey Carlin and Andrew Northern, and our theme song, as always, by John Bravo. We'll talk to you next time.

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