The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1798 Deductive Reasoning, Everyone!

Episode Date: December 1, 2023

Dr. Drew kicks off the show talking about the recent F1 takeover Las Vegas, Adam teaches him a little F1 history, and the Drew dreams of Sid Krofft. Adam's crystal brain then goes after Jay Leno.and D...r. Drew. Plus, they explore the psychology of inflation. Please Support Our Sponsors: HenryMeds.com/ADS, use promo code: ADS The Jordan Harbinger Show - Available everywhere you listen to podcasts

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Oh, that's just me, Perez Hilton, drinking all the tea that goes on in this world. And with the way social media is, I just can't get enough. I'm obsessed. It's like every day something new and scandalous comes out and I want it all. I'm the OG of entertainment gossip and if you are like me and have an unrelenting thirst for all the drama that's flying around, you should listen to my podcast, The Perez Hilton Podcast, available wherever you get your podcasts. Recorded live at Corolla One Studios with Adam Corolla and board-certified physician and addiction medicine specialist, Dr. Drew Pinsky. You're listening to The Adam and Dr. Drew Show.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Yeah, get it on, got to get on it, get it on, Dr. Drew's board-certified physician and addiction medicine specialist. What's going on, Drewsky? Did you see the F1 race in Las Vegas? No, I didn't. I was out of town. A lot of wheel and tire talk.
Starting point is 00:01:10 A lot of tires. A lot of wheels. I love tire and wheel talk. It was, you know, it was odd to me. I just, this just, it's not a big deal, but how people were sort of, there are all these naysayers. Like, oh, it's such a failure. It was glorious.
Starting point is 00:01:26 My son went. Oh, really? I'm so jealous. Oh, my God. He said it was the greatest sort of sporting or entertainment event he'd ever been to. Really? He just called me, wants to talk about it. It was a couple days ago.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Yeah. It just looked amazing to me. I watched. I couldn't go to sleep the first half of the race, and I did. And then I watched the rest of it last night. Yeah. Well, listen. F1 knows what they're doing.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Oh, yeah. You know? And when you get an organization that knows what they're doing, then they come in and they execute. Well, funny. First of all, you know, a lot of it was, I mean, when you see the infrastructure they built, I mean, they built huge, you know, all up and down the street. I was there, you know, three months ago and that shit was half done. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:20 It's incredible. Yeah. But again, when you're motivated and the city and the state are working with you. But you're talking about how the F1 knows what they're doing. Do you know that F1 got bought by Liberty Media? It's owned by a big company. And the guy there that they put in charge of F1, remember my friend Curtis? It was his roommate in business school.
Starting point is 00:02:45 Wow. And he's the one that has lit it up, you know, made it such a thing. And so the F1 part, the team part, where they know what the fuck, where they're doing, like they're performing at these incredible levels, has sort of now being met with the level
Starting point is 00:03:01 at which the promotion and the infrastructure and everything that goes on around F1 is getting done. You know what I mean? Yeah, the story goes because we interviewed Bernie Eccleston who owned F1 for, I don't know, 25 years, maybe 30. I don't know. One guy owned it for a million years. And he was in Uppity, the doc that I did. And he's a very interesting guy.
Starting point is 00:03:28 But story goes in the later 70s or something, maybe it was the later 70s, maybe it was the mid or 70s. He just went around to all the teams and said, if everyone just put in 100 grand, we could get F1 for a million dollars. You know, back when a million dollars meant100,000, we could get F1 for a million dollars, back when a million dollars meant something, right? When was this, roughly? I've just told you. I'm sorry, I missed it. Come on, Drew, you've got to listen better. I said, maybe I'm screwing it up, but the later 70s or mid or 70s.
Starting point is 00:03:59 That's my recollection. It could have been into the early 80s, but I doubt it. And we can look it up or you can look up on your phone when did bernie eccleson acquire it's not f1 yeah i get the idea he needed a million bucks he went to all the formula one teams said everyone pony up 100 grand that'll be a million bucks and we'll all own F1. And everyone turned him down. Because everyone said we could use the $100,000 for testing or wheels and tires equipment. You know? All right.
Starting point is 00:04:33 I kind of get it. You know, it's a very sort of here and now kind of equation. You know, you need money right now if you're running an F1 team. And it was probably pre-inflation. I mean, not 1950, but you forget, in the early 70s, a million dollars was a lot of money, a lot. Yes. And they're going to sell the TV rights 1978. So I could not be more correct.
Starting point is 00:05:07 Now, so I don't know. Bernie sold the TV rights or something. I don't know what he did, but he just bought it in 78. And then, of course, it's billions, you know. Now, so that guy had an idea. Does he still have ownership in it? He, I think, sold it a few years back. And sometimes those guys, 2016, those guys maintain some sort of something.
Starting point is 00:05:34 That's what I'm wondering, yeah. Some minority stake or something. I don't know. But Bernie Eccleston's 82 years old. Right, right. So he doesn't, you know, he's not going to be able to spend that money or whatever. I don't know how people work, but that's F1. You mentioned Bernie being 82.
Starting point is 00:05:53 This is completely off. Listen, he could be 84. He could be 81. I'm just saying completely off topic. But I ended up waking up in the middle of the night last night thinking about Sid Croft. Mm-hmm. And your interview with him. Oh, I know why I did it
Starting point is 00:06:06 because I saw he's 93. Wow. Jesus fit 93. Oh my God. It's so, I had the weirdest dream about Sid Croft. It was because I saw a little video, Sid and Marty Croft. Yeah. Your thing about Sid Croft, the one you interviewed, I'm trying to tell everyone to love Sid and Marty Kroff. Yes. And Sid is, but I'm asking, Sid is the one you interviewed, right? I'm not getting it wrong. And I was, to me, that was one of the most astonishing interviews. I still think about it all the time.
Starting point is 00:06:36 Because you shit all over them. And Sid A was so good natured about it and still came in and had a conversation. And you totally adjusted your position based on what historically had gone on that led up to the dreck they were producing, which we didn't realize. We thought it was like a cartoon, but it was a puppet show that had been around for 50 years. It just kept getting more bizarre. Well, no, it wasn't a puppet show that had been around for 50 years. He was a puppeteer back when puppeteer was kind of a job, opening for Judy Garland on Broadway and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:07:16 This is why I woke up with a dream. I saw a video of Dean Martin with one of Sid's puppets. And underneath it, Sid goes, oh, I toured the world with this puppet. She was my very favorite. All the celebrities always appeared with her and stuff. And I didn't know when I read it that it registered, but it woke me up in the middle of the night thinking about it. Again, I think about the strangest stuff. Well, I mean, the idea of being a puppeteer and touring the world, you know, opening in gay Paris as a puppeteer. Judy Garland.
Starting point is 00:07:50 It's so odd. It's so crazy, right? Yeah. took any umbrage to the Sid and Marty Kropp, you know, the Sigmund and the Sea Monster and Lidsville and HR Puff and stuff. I never took any, I never had any beef with the puppets and the creativity and the sets and things like that. I would readily recognize that as interesting or took took some skill. To me, it was the writing and the jokes and the fact that they controlled 37 percent of programming, you know, in the 70s, day and night. It wasn't just daytime TV. They were doing variety shows. A lot.
Starting point is 00:08:41 A lot of them. Yes. And and how insanely bad all the product was and then and then how everything was bad well no because we had all in the family and we had mash and we had other quality tv shows back then there was a taxi driver movies and um dog day afternoon and stuff there was good we were capable of it but we didn't do much of it no we didn't do much of it but we were we were capable of it and now i find myself watching not only the love boat but the partridge family you made me watch that too i were watching it yes it's talking about bad writing there's like
Starting point is 00:09:25 nothing happens on every episode well the jokes the thing that's funny is how they would go with they would go with so many they just go the same joke over and over again like so they would like the two jokes for the two kids the the two littlest kids, Chris and Tracy, is their joke would be Ruben would say something like, you know, you've got to get on the road and play tertiary markets. Tertiary markets, Tertiary markets. That's where the money is. And then they'd cut to the two little kids.
Starting point is 00:10:09 And the one kid, Chris, would turn to Tracy and look at him like, what? And Tracy would go, she'd shrug her shoulders, go, I don't know. And that'd be a laugh. Yes. They did a lot of I don't know. Yes. Right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:10:22 That's all they did. They did. One would look at the other and the other would just go, I don't know. And then Danny's jokes were pretty much all the same. Some sort of money something. Some sort of scammy something. Yes. But I watched the show.
Starting point is 00:10:34 You know one of the things I think about when I watch it is that you were locked in a room with Danny Bonaduce for a few years. One year. I can't think. I can't stop thinking about that. Yeah, it was crazy. Do you think about that when you watch it? No. Oh my God. I just watch it.
Starting point is 00:10:52 I normally watch it. Maybe you should tell people what the history is there. Maybe they don't, around the country may not know. I did a year with Danny Bonaduce in the morning. Yeah, radio morning. Until I stopped it after a year, I just said, no, not coming in anymore. Yeah. I mean, they did what they do. You know, I just said no more. And they said, oh, come on. And I said, no, not doing this for
Starting point is 00:11:21 another year or two years or whatever it is. And then I had a meeting with the head guy over there and we had a lunch at the Ivy. I remember. And I was just like, do not sign him up for another year. I'm not doing it for another year. And he's like, okay, yeah, we feel you. And they just went and signed him because that's kind of radio. That's how radio works. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:42 So same guy that told you to get rid of your friends, your comedic friends that donated their time every week. Well, I mean, well, no, that was Jack Silver, the program director who didn't like Louis C.K., Zach Galifianakis, and Joel McHale coming in so regularly. Because they were radio death. They weren't funny. No, he was just like, why do they haveale coming in so regularly. Because they were radio death. They weren't funny. No, it was just like why they have to come in so much.
Starting point is 00:12:10 I don't know. That's how they – well, you know, that's kind of what you're up against in radio for sure. And he loved Danny Bonaduce and he wanted him. And the whole thing was a kind of mess from day one. He never wanted me to be the morning guy. He wanted his guys to be the morning guy. and he wanted him and the whole thing was a kind of mess from day one. He never wanted me to be the morning guy. He wanted his guys to be the morning guy. Oh, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:12:35 And so he just kind of – everyone essentially tried to sabotage the show. The show had a lot of stuff working against it, a lot. But it was able to persevere anyway. But, um, but the point is, is the point is, is I then didn't go in. Once I found out that they signed Danny, I, I didn't, I stopped going in.
Starting point is 00:12:55 Yeah. And then that caused an issue. Really? Yeah. Shocking. And then, uh, times have you had to do that on your radio?
Starting point is 00:13:05 Well, you know, as a great Mike August would say, there's no more powerful word in show business than no. That's the most powerful. And I wouldn't even say no. I didn't alert them that I wasn't coming in. I just stopped. And I didn't tell them what I was doing other than I'm not coming in. And so then I left it up to them to pick either he or I for, for that job. Yeah. That's what I did. Did you learn anything about Danny and the Partridge family or Danny as you watch it now?
Starting point is 00:13:39 Does it, is it even connected in any way for you? Well, I did learn that Danny came from a bad family. Oh, yeah. Maybe abusive. Oh, yeah. And that Reuben Kincaid, the manager, and I'll think of his name in a minute, became like a father to Danny. Tried to save him. Tried to help him.
Starting point is 00:13:59 And became a very good presence. And Dave Madden, the actor. And it just sort of made me like him. Yeah. I always kind of liked him on the show. And I thought he was pretty funny. And he brought some comedy to it. But whatever.
Starting point is 00:14:15 But when I sort of pictured on the set with Danny or saying, Danny, why don't you spend the weekend over at my house? Things are a little hectic at your house or whatever. Made me like him. Dave Madden. Yeah. You know, Danny, why don't you spend the weekend over at my house? Things are a little hectic at your house or whatever. Made me like him, Dave Madden. Yeah. All right, Drew. Wake up.
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Starting point is 00:15:51 All right. I don't know how you find that, Leno. I actually have it. I'm just uploading it to my computer right now. We have the audio book, too, right? It's actually only on the audio book. Oh, it is? Yeah, I had to listen to it
Starting point is 00:16:05 and then this is a prediction well we're talking about a steam car yeah yeah yeah i make predictions true i know that it's my job you have a crystal brain well as we've aforementioned uh tucker carlson and don lemon by the way it's not a crystal brain. You just do the math. Listen, I don't watch a lot of CNN, and one could say I'm not a fan of Don Lemon, but I was familiar enough with him to know that he doesn't say anything or he doesn't have thoughts, not original thoughts. He has CNN thoughts. Right, right, right, right. Which is what CNN accuses
Starting point is 00:16:46 Fox of, except for they don't do it. You know, that's the whole thing. They always accuse the right. It's like... You know what's interesting? Let me tell you what's interesting. Candace Owens and Ben Shapiro are fighting right now. They're both conservatives. They're both Atlanta. You can't get the conservatives to agree
Starting point is 00:17:02 on the same things. Yep. Ben Shapiro was a big vax guy. Tucker Carlson wasn't a big vax guy. Yep. Half the conservatives are big Ukraine support guys. The other half are not Ukraine support guys. Half are big stand with Israel ones.
Starting point is 00:17:20 The other half are not. But what that suggests is an intellectual honesty or freedom of thought a freedom of thought but not everyone in hollywood and everyone on cnn and everyone msnbc became experts in ivermectin do you know what i mean like of course they're lying of course you could never why would they they? There's no diversity in thought at all. And you don't understand that they're lying. So Don Lemon doesn't have opinions. He has CNN's opinion.
Starting point is 00:17:52 That's what I'm saying. Yeah. An irrational. Now he's out of CNN. And when he left CNN, he left his opinion at CNN because he never had one. He had CNN's. opinion at CNN because he never had one. He had CNNs. You hear Don Lemon speaking out about COVID and how masks aren't effective or ivermectin could be effective or any, is any of that? No. Okay. He has no thoughts. So we don't have to hear what that dingbat has to say. He can start a podcast.
Starting point is 00:18:22 Nobody's going to listen because he doesn't have original, he doesn't have his own thoughts. He has CNN's thoughts. He left them at CNN. Okay. I saw somebody tweeting. Hold on. We got, oh, sorry.
Starting point is 00:18:33 You can do that. But we have. I saw somebody tweeting a thing about ivermectin today. And of course, it's deadly. Didn't they tell you that it's deadly? I thought, oh my God, what have we done to people? This is a commonly prescribed medication. Doesn't they tell you that it's deadly? I thought, oh, my God, what have we done to people? This is a commonly prescribed medication. Doesn't know.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Yes, we took dumb people and made them dumber. All right, so this is from Daddy Stop Talking, Chapter 6, to Sonny and Natalia on buying your first car. So I filled my warehouse with rare and vintage cars. And guess what? You're not getting any of them. I want you to have that hunger, too. I want you to want cars. More importantly, I don't want you to think you can get something for nothing.
Starting point is 00:19:14 I took you guys to a warehouse full of cars once and didn't like what I saw. Not one bit. The day after Thanksgiving in 2014, I brought you to the garage of my old friend, Mr. Jay Leno, who tragically died in a steam car accident in 2047. Do you remember walking around his hangar full of more than 130 cars? We had to take a golf cart to get around the place. It's that big. When we got there, Jay was out in, what else, one of his steam cars. He was doing exactly what you'd expect him to be doing.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Wearing all denim, tooling around in a car from over a century ago that only a millionaire with no kids can afford or have time to enjoy. He was living up to every stereotypical image you've ever seen of him in tabloids.
Starting point is 00:20:05 Well, he almost died in tabloids. All right. Yeah. Well, he almost died in a steam. I know what happened. I didn't hear about it. What happened? Honestly. This is not. This is impossible, Drew.
Starting point is 00:20:15 It's impossible. I know he flipped around in the Hemi underglass. Yeah. And I didn't hear about the steam engine accident. You didn't hear about him being horribly burned on his face?
Starting point is 00:20:26 Oh, Drew, you did. Okay. Sorry. This is the beginning of your demise. Okay, maybe. Maybe. He dominated the news. I wonder where I was.
Starting point is 00:20:40 A year ago? Oh, my goodness. Wowie. What? Has it been a year? Has it been over a year ago oh my goodness wowie what was it has it been a year has it been over a year he had a horrible he got horribly burned in a steam accident my goodness what happened this is exactly one year november 15th of last year no that's crazy but wow but what exact was the accident i, I for sure don't know that. I'm finding this impossible.
Starting point is 00:21:09 You could have been out of the country. I was in Portugal last year in November. See what I know, Drew? Yeah. You see what I know? Yeah. Now you got to figure out when you're in. Do you want me to look at my phone?
Starting point is 00:21:27 I do want you to look at your phone because there's only one explanation. Yeah. You are out of the country. Yeah. Right? That sounds like what happened. Well, how did I know you're out of the country? Because it seemed it must have dominated so much that I couldn't have been here. And, oh, yeah, I'm gone.
Starting point is 00:21:42 I'm gone. I'll tell you where I am on those days. It just says in Europe, out of the country. When did you go from when to when? And, by the way, you can access that on your phone that fast? Yeah. I could never find that. What are you looking at?
Starting point is 00:22:02 I'm looking at my calendar. Look at you. So I'm gone from like the 11th to the november 11 november 11th to the 25th so this is right in the middle yeah of that right in the middle right in the middle of that yeah so you're gone, sorry, the 11th to the 25th, and this is the 15th. Yep. Yeah. So you miss it.
Starting point is 00:22:27 You miss when it happened. And then by the time you come down or come back, it's over. Because it's about a two-week span after that. Yeah. Crazy. Who just said you're out of the country? You. Why do I know?
Starting point is 00:22:43 You have a crystal plane. Yes, but it's not a soothsayer that's what people people think it doesn't it's not tea leaves right it's logic it's all logic you couldn't have missed it and been here you had to be at sea yeah literally at sea i was that's what i'm saying i was on a ship literally that's what I'm saying. I was on a ship. Literally. That's what I'm saying. All right, we've got 40 seconds of explanation. All right. Comedian Jay Leno suffered some serious burns to his face and hands.
Starting point is 00:23:13 At a fire at his Burbank garage while he was working on his 1907 steam car. While underneath the now infamous car, Leno tried to unplug the fuel line. He asked one of his friends and colleagues, Dave Kielicki, to blow some air down the line. And suddenly he got a place full of gas. The pilot suddenly clicked on and Leno was on fire. Dave was thankfully just a few feet away from Leno and pulled his head into his chest, smothering the flames. The elephant man is here. A 911 call, some skin graft surgeries, 10 days in the ICU, a call from the president, a few pizzas for the hospital staff and patients,
Starting point is 00:23:42 and eight hours a day spent convalescing in a hyperbaric chamber. Has Jay looking better than ever? You have to laugh at it. What else happened during that week? I want to know what else I missed. Your daughter gave birth to her first son. Oh, my God. That's so wild.
Starting point is 00:23:58 All right. Look, I'm not here to talk about myself. Of course not. Deductive reasoning, everyone. Deductive reasoning. Please. Deductive reasoning. Please use your deductive reasoning. Only one way you couldn't have known about this.
Starting point is 00:24:12 You're a doctor. You're on top of the news. You're in the industry, so to speak. You know, this is what you do. You would have had you would have done podcasts concerning this subject. But yet yet you didn't know it right and that's only possible if you're in the hospital but you don't know you weren't aware of any
Starting point is 00:24:33 hospitalization of mine well that's that's the point you still you would have been in the hospital watching tv that's true and looking at your phone. Yeah, true. Right. So there, there you go. So now, now, you know, all right, what else did you want to get into? So I, I was thinking about the psychology of inflation, uh, in this country right now. Right. And we, and people are very, uh, upset about prices and there's, and I remember in the sevent 70s what that was like and how that psychology set in. And people, there was a lot of, if you don't buy this now, it's going to be worth a lot more later. That psychology has not set in.
Starting point is 00:25:16 And there's a different psychology, which I don't know quite what to make of, which is I want the prices back the way they were, which is deflationary. And that can't happen. That really is not going to happen, not without a depression. And people are sort of blaming the current administration, and the economy feels bad to them. And to me, it sort of means that wages haven't kept up with inflation. That's really what that means.
Starting point is 00:25:41 But that people are longing for a return to lower prices. I don't know what we're going to do with that. I've never really kind of that's a new thing for me. All right. I'll explore it first. I want to tell you about my friend Jordan Harbinger. You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger show about a guy born into the world of organized crime who spent much of his life as an enforcer for the Italian mafia. crime who spent much of his life as me. For whatever the reason, before she even said it, I had the gun in my hand. This guy gets up. What did I tell you, you dirty motherfucker? Your mother's going to have a close coffee. I'm going to blow your fucking head off. He opens his jacket, and I see the gun in his waistband. He puts his hand on it. I just picked up my hand like this and emptied the whole clip into him. Joe called him, give him a drink. He gives me a seven and seven. He goes, look at this kid. He goes, he just killed somebody. He's sitting there killing a cucumber.
Starting point is 00:26:43 For more with former mafia enforcer Anthony Raimondi, including the many creative ways mobsters have gotten rid of bodies over the years, check out episode 425 on The Jordan Harbinger Show. All right. So return to. Yeah. Lower prices that just will never happen. Well, maybe gas will. We can do that. that just will never happen. Well, maybe gas will. We can do that. I mean, we can affect markets in such a way as to,
Starting point is 00:27:09 in ways that we've adversely affected them, we could reverse course and make, you know, oil stateside and more profitable. Yeah, I don't, you know, I don't know. I mean, I do know that you're with me, but I, here's what I want. I want an administration, and I wish it was on a smaller level like the mayor of LA or California or even New York or something. But I want an administration in the White House that basically goes after the economy as if it affects everything, which it does. Which it does.
Starting point is 00:27:47 Which it does. Remember Clinton? It's the economy, stupid. That was his campaign call. Yes. When the economy was shit in the 70s under Carter, everything is bad. Yes. And it also causes a depression and anxiety and, you know, what is called a depression for a reason.
Starting point is 00:28:05 And we got to get out of the good vibes and the hugs and the treated with dignity because that's all Biden ran on is returning this country to some sort of moral compass. And he was going to be our guiding light. People were going to have a seat at the table, have dignity. And it just fucks everything up. It's just I just want one big economy push. And and then magically, when the economy push happens and the economy changes, then there are more jobs and people make more money and then they commit less crime and they have they're able to own homes. And it just it just affects it's the it's the rising tide that lifts all the boats
Starting point is 00:28:47 i just want a pure economy push i don't want a green economy push i don't want an inclusive economy push i just want a push for the economy people get that well if you got trump i think you would you would get that and just just somebody to treat it like what it was, which is the biggest issue there is. Yeah. And dignity is not the issue. But you're weirdly not allowed to talk about rising all boats. You have to say, no, no, no, you've got to distribute over here. You have to redistribute it.
Starting point is 00:29:20 And that's how we may get everything right. Equity, equity, equity, remember? Yeah, but that'll go out the window as soon as we get an administration that has it or has an interest in it i don't know that biden hasn't i don't know that the people i don't know that he personally or pete budaj or janet yellen i i don't know that they have an interest in this in helping people in the the... In whatever works. I'm not sold that this is their interest.
Starting point is 00:29:49 They may pay it some lip service, but it doesn't... You can't buy a house now because the rates are 8%. You can't buy a house. You physically can't purchase a home. You're going to have to wait a few years. You can't sell a home. You can't buy a home. You're going to have to wait a few years. Like it's not going to, you can't sell a home.
Starting point is 00:30:05 You can't buy a home. You just, the economy is bad and it's bad for a reason. It's not bad because of COVID. It's not bad because of Ukraine. It's bad because somebody, because an administration came in and said, we're not focusing on this. We're focusing on that. And in the meantime, we're just going to pump dollars in. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:26 Right. Because that'll fix everything. Right. And so there it is. But there's also no confidence that that administration wants any of this or can do anything about it. I don't know why. The fact that he would name it by nomics is all you need to know
Starting point is 00:30:41 about him. That is like a ship that already sunk and you want your name on it. Yeah, it is. I agree. That's the most. And you giving speeches about how it's working to people who can feel that it's not working is not going to work.
Starting point is 00:31:00 Right. And that's where we're at. Yeah. So I listen, here's, here's, I guess the long and the short of it. The Republicans are into the economy now. The Democrats go, well, they just want to help their friends or whatever. They want to help big. OK, fine. Granted, all of it. But they're still into it. And they seem it seems to work. You know, they just want to help the big oil companies. OK, they want to help big oil companies.
Starting point is 00:31:28 But gas used to be 250 a gallon in California and now it's six bucks a gallon. So I don't know. Who's that effect? I don't know. My whole point is, is fuck it. You just want to go Republican. They're just into the economy. That's it.
Starting point is 00:31:43 And the left, the lefts are into the they're into trans movement and abortion and stuff like that. I'm not really affected by that. So I'm going to be selfish and just go Republican. And let's see if we can fix this thing up. All right. Nashville, Tennessee, Zanies coming up tonight, tomorrow night for shows. Come on out. Say hi. Help my economy. Huntsville, Alabama. Stand up live there. Doing shows on Sunday. Two shows.
Starting point is 00:32:10 Just go to amcroll.com for all the live shows. What do you got, Drew? Drdrew.com and drdrew.tv. Check them out. So, until next time. Adam Crow for Dr. Drew saying, mahalo. Hold on to your jingle bells. Pluto TV has all your holiday favorites for free.
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