The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #2016 - Cigarettes and Super Sniffers
Episode Date: June 27, 2025In this episode of The Adam and Dr. Drew Show, the guys reminisce about the glamorous era of smoking, discuss the U.K.’s ban on autoerotic asphyxiation, and dive into new research suggestin...g that changes in body odor and sense of smell could help detect Parkinson’s disease early. They explore the science behind super smellers and drug-sniffing dogs—raising the question of why dogs sniff each other’s butts if their noses are so powerful. Adam and Dr. Drew also weigh in on the current Middle East conflict and whether any modern U.S. president has truly brought about lasting change.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Recording 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.
Yeah, get it on.
Got to get on the...
Dr. 457.
Dispatch...
DIGA-BOO!
Board fortified.
All right.
So, hey, I just want to finish the last thought about that Cruella thing.
You know, the Cruella character was an option for women for a long time.
You know what I mean?
For the narcissistic female, the borderline female, they would take on these affectations
that were reinforced.
Yeah, well... Your grandmother got it, my mom got it.
The affectations, let's see. Well, you know, it's kind of funny. No, it's interesting because
my, I was picturing Cruella DeVille, we said affectations and I was trying to sort of figure
out, well, it's exactly what he mean by that. I've pictured Cruella DeVille, we said affectations, and I was trying to sort of figure out, well, it's exactly what he mean by that.
By that, I'm picturing Cruella DeVille
with her cigarette extender.
Number one.
Right, which means basically,
I'm gonna take my cigarette
and get it nine inches closer to you.
Which is really what that extender is,
and then I'll blow smoke in your face.
And as you're saying that,
I was picturing my grandmother,
who, now, you couldn't call my grandmother a smoker,
because she wasn't really a smoker,
but she smoked these colored cigarettes from Europe.
Of course.
Right?
Of course, of course, right? And they weren't... first off,
you go into a 7-Eleven, there's 35 different choices for cigarettes, but not
good enough for hell. Not good enough for hell. No, because you, as a dumb
white person, would have driven a Chevrolet and smoked Marlboro's, not me.
I drive a Peugeot and I smoke these colored cigarettes
which taste shitty but they're from Europe.
And so I can now picture my grandmother sort of
with the cigarette thing on the coffee table
like reaching in, which color do I pick?
I didn't even know what they were,
and she'd smoke it at the table, at the dinner table,
and it was more about the...
The flavor.
Yeah, yeah.
The Jouadevive.
She didn't go, smokers who like smoke, Dawson smokes.
He gets a cigarette, he goes stands in the parking lot,
turns his back to everybody and just sort of smokes.
People smoke, they smoke by dumpsters,
you know, by the restaurant.
They go, I'm gonna run out the car,
and then they just go sneak a couple cheats,
you know, by the dumpster, they blow it up.
She was grand about it, you know what I mean?
Well, the grandness is the affectation, right?
It's bigness.
Right.
It's me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I'm smoking it. It sort of went down as glamour and
it had you know, it was a
An image they had and they just went with it. I'm gonna ask Andrew if you typed in
European brand colored
and colored, multi-colored cigarettes from the 70s.
Like what would come up? I have no idea what the brand was or anything.
It was just a thing.
It was special.
You had to get them for her.
And again, not even a smoker really.
Like, did it because she liked that.
Looking like that person with the cigarette.
Now where is it?
Yeah.
Oh, god.
I've never...
Oh, you're a pro, man.
During the 70s.
There it is.
Prominent European brand known for its multicolored cigarettes.
So brainy?
Oh, no.
Yeah.
Yeah, if you show me them, I'll know them in a second.
Oh.
Is that upper left? Is that it? Yeah, I don know them in a second. Oh, is that upper left, is that it?
Yeah, I don't remember the gold filter,
but yeah, probably.
Yeah, they were kind of that color, yeah.
Letterology, no, I bet that's not it.
Too non-your, too goy, too US.
Yeah, it was anything but what anyone else would do.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And it was never, like I said, you never, you know, if you went out of town with her,
you wouldn't wake up at midnight and see her stand out in the porch smoking alone.
No, it's for everybody else.
It's for you.
Yeah.
You needed to see her with her multicolored cigarette.
God.
Yeah.
That's really something.
That's funny.
Yeah, I never even thought about it.
And then did she have a fur coat?
That was part of the uniform.
Well, yeah, no.
Even though that's for voting now, they would have been.
Well, no, no.
We, but you have to. We have to realize this.
Ostentatious, yes, sort of presentation of this life
was met the reality of zero money all the time.
So it's like this.
She'd love to say I was in the south of France smoking my colored cigarettes
on a yacht, you know, but she couldn't get there.
You know, I mean, she didn't have, there's no money. So the coat, there was no fur coat because that
would have cost money. She would have liked it. You know, she had big clamp on earrings, you know,
big colored clamp and colorful things, but it was all worthless. She would love to be dripping in diamonds,
but she made $21,000 a year at the VA in Westwood.
There's no fur coats for her.
There's a little bipolar quality to all of it too,
that sort of hypomanic bigness and stuff.
And I saw a documentary with Faye Dunaway. A bigness and stuff. I saw a documentary with Faye Dunaway.
A bigness.
And she was, she had that quality, right? And she was talking about how that was all my bipolar
disorder. I'm sorry.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
It is funny. Part of it, the bigness is funny because I would always,
I can always sort of see her coming through the front door.
And this is an interesting thing,
the people that summon somebody
and don't give them a chance to appear.
You know, they go, she'd come through the door
and she'd go, Lotse!
And she'd wait a millisecond, go, Yoo-hoo, Lotse!
It's like, let him answer you. You know what I mean? Like,
he's let him get up and walk out of the den that he's in. Do you know what I mean? Like, let him
you summoned him now let him show up. It's weird. It's like I just but it was really an announcement
that I'm here. Right. I have entered the residence. And I need to do my whole ritual.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Daphne's given us a couple of stories today. One is,
UK is banning essentially erotic asphyxiation.
Oh, that type of porn.
Yeah. And I am, I don't like people, you know, the state telling you how to conduct your
life, but the fact that people don't know that people die with that, it happens.
We went to a funeral.
That was erotic, autoerotic asphyxiation.
Oh, well that's autoerotic.
People are aware of that.
But they kill each one another and it's a kind of manslaughter or murder.
They have to be very, very aware of this.
It also kind of opens the door to you essentially choking
your wife to death, collecting the insurance,
and then kind of going, she like rough trade.
You know what I mean?
Like it kind of opens the door.
Almost anybody could go,
I'm gonna choke my wife to death,
and then go, Mark Garagos.
Things got a little out of, you know,
we'd been drinking a little bit,
things got a little out of hand, she liked,
she, that's just what she liked.
Now I'm not saying you're Scott free,
but that fucking door's now open.
It also opens the door to somebody being accused of that
when they didn't do that
You know I'm saying being killed being accused of premeditated murder when they were just doing rough trade. Oh, that's yeah, I'm saying
Yeah, when the door opens it's a kitchen door
Yeah, it swings both ways. Yeah, and I would say the one thing against that would be is if you have evidence like
Texting and you know, let's do this and blah, blah, blah, lots of back and forth about it.
It's not, it's not a part time endeavor.
Let's put it that way.
It's a, it's a, it's a thing.
Right?
Right.
So, yeah, there's that.
And the other article that came our way.
I guess in it, so they say, I mean, it's like, it's like, I'm not for banning things, but it's like,
if he said like, there is a branch of porn
which they like to call ledge porn.
You climb out the window on the 10th store
and you have sex on a ledge, I'd go,
I don't think that'd be a good kind of porn to put up.
Someone's gonna do it.
Someone's gonna get hurt, right?
Someone's gonna fall off, right? We do shit like that, though. I mean, if somebody puts it in a search engine, they do it. Someone's gonna get hurt, right? Someone's gonna fall off, right?
We do shit like that though.
I mean, if somebody puts it in a search engine,
they do it.
I know, but I'm all right with certain regulations.
All right, fine. Yes, yes.
Oh, listen, I don't mind regulating it
or educating about it and that kind of thing,
but I don't know, anyway.
Cancer sniffing dogs.
Turns out there's some evidence that Parkinson uh, Parkinson's of course, the disease
alters a person's smell because it's altering all their neurological functioning.
But apparently you can, um, change.
You can smell them with Parkinson's that you could a dog.
Well, somebody or a dog or a person.
I mean, the dog would be what?
10,000 times better at it than a person?
Well, there's cancer sniffing dogs now just tell Andrew what year I announced there were going to be dogs that sniffed out
Cancer and venereal disease and other diseases. Adam asked the question why you couldn't
Have in an std clinic just a dog that walked through and diagnosed people just at this this chlamydia
This is when they danced around. I danced around look here's what i said tell them when 1970 1997 at 2000 i'm sorry
2000 what am i doing here true are you such an you know what you're doing is anytime I say to you drew do this
1997 yeah, okay
Okay, I said everything has a smell
Everything has a smell. Yeah
every biological event
Your ears wax smells like something
The pus is it you know that smells like something your toes zit, you know, that smells like something, your toes smell, you know,
taint.
Everything's got a smell.
Everything comes along with a smell.
Now not-
Your taint comes with a smell.
Not everything is perceivable to us, but a dog smells.
I heard that a dog smelled out pot that was packed in coffee grounds. Yeah. Okay, so I was like the dog will smell it
Yeah, so a a
Venereal disease a cancer or whatever the dog will smell you were talking about chlamydia and cervical cancer
We've you were talking about first chlamydia and then he said why can't you have you want a cancer and cancers every dog?
And then they had that then it happened. Yeah, you want to have cancer? Cancers every time. And then they had that, then it happened.
Yeah. They have cancer sniffing dogs.
Uh, and this is Parkinson's sniffing dogs, but the, uh,
and there will be a Tacros.
Yes.
Which will break up all this nonsense in the city with ice and everything.
And Tacros, you can fire water cannons or rubber bullets or pepper spray.
Tacro. everyone's going.
How many would you need?
A murder.
I would need three attack crows.
Well, hold on.
Go ahead, finish.
When I go up inflection wise, that's
how you know there's going to be more thoughts. Well, here's a good example. Ask me how many I would need.
How many are you gonna need? Three attack crows. That's how you know.
They're finished. But if I go, I would need three
attack crows for every
hundred intifa. Or just fucking
douchebag, unemployable shithead who's running around with a fucking skateboard
on a Tuesday.
Unemployable.
Okay, so I'm gonna go, I need about three for every hundred.
So you know, 500 will do the math.
You know what I mean?
Why not just out of curiosity, like, let's over murder.
Like create a murder square.
Like really, to keep it safe for everybody.
Like a big, just a show of force, crow force.
You take a group, let's just say,
let's picture it in a concert going type situation.
Let's just picture a stage in the middle of a grassy park
and someone's up there playing an acoustic set
and let's just say there's 500 people sort of gathered about. I've done enough comedy clubs,
you know, the Irvine Improv will hold 500 people. So I've been on stage a thousand times and I know
what 500 people look like. 15 crows, that's enough to break up that group. That
group's running. You don't need 50 crows. 15 crows on that group of 500, they're condensed.
They're out. No, everyone is running. You don't need a bullet for everyone. You need
one pistol fired in the air and everyone starts scrambling. Got it? Got it? Attack grows. It's coming. And there was a
there was a epilogue to your your chlamydia sniffing dog which was we
started talking about how much more sensitive a dog's nose is. I think you
said it was like a hundred thousand times. You brought some evidence in that was
was it a hundred thousand times more than a human or something?
I mean, I imagine it's breed to breed.
Like, surely beagle has the most sensitivity, right?
Well, sort of, a metaphor that I use all the time, but I really mean it. And I haven't used it a
long time, but it struck me as like a powerful metaphor, even though I came't used it a long time but it's a it struck me as a like a
powerful metaphor even though I came up with it but I I was watching a show once
you know Dateline 60 2020 something some numbers you know Friday Night TV and
they did a whole thing where they went oh we show you how we train these dogs
and these dogs sniff out the stuff at the airport,
and the gunpowder, and the cocaine, and the border.
And I remember sort of sitting there going,
well, they seem to be using all different breeds of dogs.
And I think we understand the bloodhound,
but I mean, you're sniffing out cocaine at the airport.
You'd think you'd have a breed that would sort of
be better at it than others,
because dogs, there's a breed,
Rex is always out there, sheepdogging everybody.
You know, I mean, it wouldn't feel
to just fall over in the middle of the sheep
or try to make friends with them or something.
It would never, he would never route them. He would hang out, you know what I mean? just fall over in the middle of the sheep or try to make friends with them or something.
He would never route them, he would hang out, have a good time. He'd wanna go have fun with
them. And so it's a different breed, right? But it became a really powerful metaphor for
me which is they talk to the guy who did the training of the dogs and it's interesting.
The dog thinks it's looking for its treat, its toy. It doesn't think it's looking for
cocaine. It thinks it's looking for its toy but the toy smells like cocaine and that's
how they start going nuts. So in a weird way when the guy's getting busted, it's the dog
like wagging its tail and shit, you know. And then they have to throw the dog the tennis
ball. Like when they pull him away from the suitcase from Columbia, they just hand him the little
greeting. The dog's happy. The dog thinks he found his treat. He's fucking this guy's doing
a hundred years in jail now, right? But it's funny that the dog had a good time because he got to his
treat, you know? Yeah. We got stopped at an airport last time we were in the country.
No, really? Because we had these Pileo Valley meat sticks
Oh meat stick. Oh, yeah, and it was an agricultural dog
We're in Miami and we had a cash sniffing dog stop us. They stopped Mike August had a bunch of cash on him
so
But here's the powerful image the powerful metaphor
The guy when they said what kind of dogs do you use, he said, enthusiastic dogs.
And it said, well, how's that working?
We go to the pound.
And when you go to the pound, you see the dog just sort of flopped over sleeping in
the corner.
You go, here boy, and he just sort of barely looks up at you.
And then there's the one yap, yap, yap, and then turning circles and jumping up and down,
you know, wagging a tail and stuff.
We'll take that dog.
We can teach any dog, but we need a dog with a motor.
And then I started thinking, oh, that's kind of how people are.
Yeah, I would like to hire, I don't want to hire the napper person.
What do we got to do this Saturday? This Saturday?
Not too high about it though.
Not that person. I like a little zippy.
Yeah.
I like someone breaks into a jog every once in a while and that kind of stuff.
They look for enthusiasm because in my metaphor, we can teach anyone how to do
sniff this stuff out, but we need it as a motor.
anyone how to do sniff this stuff out, but we need as a motor. And then you had the very important insight.
If the sensitivity of the canine sense of smell is a hundred thousand times more than
that of a human, why do they bear their nose in the ass hole of other dogs?
First thing.
I have an answer for that too.
Tell me.
We'll take a quick break.
I'll tell you right after this.
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Dogs in the asshole of one another.
It is chronicled in one of is, um, chronicled.
In one of my favorite movies that Drew's gonna announce he's never seen, even though I've
told him to see it 200,000 times, that it's gonna weeby some tail about.
When I was in medical school, okay, that was 1979, Drew.
Defending Your Life with Albert Brooks.
I've seen it.
Ah!
Yep.
In Defending Your Life. Meryl Streep. Thank you. With Albert
Brooks, Andrew will remember this because he's a movie aficionado. There's a great scene where
Rip Torn is like eating and like he's with his lawyer and Albert Brooks is like eating a sandwich
and Rip Torn is eating what looks like brown goo
You know what I mean? Do you remember this scene? I don't but I remember it being in the film.
And Rip Torn is sitting there eating this
Gruel, you know this sort of brown slop. I don't know kind of looks like pasty gravy, you know, and
Albert's like what is what is that you're eating and he
Rip Torn goes you you wouldn't understand.
And he goes, what do you mean, why not?
What's up?
And he goes, I use 62% of my brain.
You use 9% of your brain.
This is gonna taste different to you.
And he goes, and Albert Brooks is like,
well, I mean, let me. And he tries it and he spits it out.
And he said, I told you, you're not using...
You're processing this different...
Basically saying, I process this in a different way than you process this.
But it would be the same for Caviar and Brandy and a cigar to a seven-year-old.
Yeah. Well, is Brandy good? cigar to a seven-year-old.
They, well, is brandy good?
Not to him it's not.
He can't process it, you know what I mean?
I used to say that with the excessive canine ability,
the smells start coming around the other side
and it starts smelling good, like lilac.
Plus it's lots of information.
Lots of information.
This slop tastes good to
RipTorne because he's different. He's got a different sense. I mean, it's not, but that's my,
we'll show you the scene, but that's not my, you know, it's not apples to apples, but it's pretty
much what I'm saying is it smells different to them. Is there anything RipTorne did that wasn't
good? I don't think so. Same with Albert Brooks. He got really drunk and tried to break into a bank in his hometown
Yeah, when he was filming like dodgeball or something, right?
But he still did a great job in the film. Oh, no, I know but you asked me if he hadn't there's something
Oh, no, he did horrible stuff. All right, go ahead. Sorry. What about your chicken? How you like? Oh delicious. Yeah
What are you eating you would like this
What is it? What does it taste like?
You're curious, aren't you good? I like that that about you. You wanna try? Yeah. Looks so weird.
Pfft!
Oh my god. A little like horse shit, huh?
As you get smarter, you begin to manipulate your senses.
This tastes much different to me than it does to you.
Oh! this is what
smart people eat perfect yeah ace dead nuts on yeah once again
tastes different to him than it does to him that's what I'm saying about ass
well he actually said it tastes like horse shit horse shit to him. Yeah, or dog shit to him. That's what I'm saying about that dog assholes
All right. What else you got true? We have not spoken much about the Middle East conflicts and stuff
I'm just wondering what your crystal brain is doing with all that because I I
Am at the point I've mentioned before that I know not to believe anything in the media, period.
So I'm busy trying to understand what's actual information
and what's just bullshit, which is very, very hard now.
And I'm also realizing I don't know who's full of shit
and who's a good guy.
I don't know anymore.
I'm just, I'm lost by rudder.
When the media doesn't really know what to do, it's funny. You know what I've just, I'm trying, I've lost my rudder. When the media doesn't really know what to do,
it's funny, you know what I mean?
Because the media and the Democrats
are normally just shift into here's your talking points,
everyone's on the same page, here we go.
And with this one, they're sort of scattered,
which is funny.
Yeah, I like it.
It's when you don't really hear anything,
it's kind of how they know.
2010, RipTorrent, it's so funny
because I was trying to figure out, it's kinda how they know. 2010, ripped horn is so funny
because I was trying to figure out,
it's like when did ripped horn die and his name is RIP?
So he gets RIP and I'm like oh, he died in 2000,
no that's his name, ripped horn, or assumed name,
arrested after breaking into a bank while intoxicated
and carrying a loaded gun
That is drunk by that oh no, he was real deal alcoholic died in 2019 so
Here's here's my here's kind of my thing. I mean I have a kind of a default setting. Mm-hmm
That region only understands power and sort of punch and force and punch in the face.
Forget that reason.
This country is entering a similar kind of zone with our personality styles these days.
Yeah.
So anything you want to do at Iran is fine.
It's fine with me.
I don't know, there's a weird,
there's a kind of an interesting,
there's an interesting status quo kind of mentality
sort of thing that the left kind of has where you go,
look, let's make a move on this homeless situation
or these kids in the inner city or whatever.
This isn't working out for them.
And then you go, why don't we do this?
And they go, that's not gonna work.
That's not fair to the bubble.
And you go, what about that?
And they go, that's not gonna work. And then you go to the bubble. And you go, what about that? And they go, that's not gonna work.
And then you go, okay.
And then, you know, sort of 50 years goes by
and it's like, what are we gonna do?
We're gonna have a blue ribbon panel
and we're gonna break off into this guy.
It's like, okay, you guys are just okay with nothing.
And by the way, you're telling me this isn't gonna work
and that's not gonna work.
Meanwhile, another kid just got shot,
another homeless guy just OD'd, the border's wide open. Well, you keep telling me stuff's not going
to work, but then nothing? Like, what are we going to do with the border? Put a fence up, fences.
Don't stop people from it. Well, put more. You can't put the US military on it. All right, well,
then tell the governors to send their people. You can't ship
people around. It's like, okay, then, okay, so you, but I come from this group. It's a group of
nothing people. Well, not only that. So whatever in the Middle East, in perpetuity, or somebody's got
to do something. No, I absolutely agree with you. But there's an interesting thing I'm noticing
that there's a lot happening, like over at HHS and the DOJ, and there's a lot happening like over at HHS and the DOJ and there's a lot going on,
a lot of distinct change and new policy and stuff. And I thought this feels unfamiliar now.
Oh yeah.
But familiar to me. When a new president would come in, there used to be a lot of stuff would
happen, a lot of different ideas and policies. And just think about Kennedy coming in, you know,
ask, no, it just comes in,
does things differently.
We haven't done things differently,
like you said, 50 years.
Yeah, I like-
Clinton was last time things were
sort of attempting a change.
I like the enthusiastic dog at the pound,
you know what I mean?
Like, I like, it's so weird to hear talk
that's actual sort of policy, kind of nuts and bolts, you know what I mean?
Like, I sort of like, you close off the Nord Stream pipeline, you're going to be dependent on Russia for your oil.
You put all your money into green and renewable, winter's going to kick in.
You're not going to have solar. you're not gonna have wind, you're gonna be getting your,
as opposed to these baggage fees affect brown,
people of color, and the poor people are impacted
because they need a seat at the table.
It's like, okay, I love the fucking,
it's the funniest thing.
I sent a tweet out the other day which is like,
it was Karen Bass talking about you know ICE and people feel unsafe and people aren't safe and they
needed dignity and I was like can we have just a little permit talk just any
kind of permit talk or is it all just gonna be that's what I've been screaming
about for a million years we just left an administration that was nothing but
feelings everything was about race everything was about healing.
Everything, and Kamala Harris was probably,
well, she was just the female version of Joe Biden,
like even more good vibes and more stand up and cheer
and like more dance and more whatever.
And it's like, I want some fucking policy.
I wanna know, go blow up a bunker and I ran
and then open up pipeline,
tell me about taxes, tariffs, whatever. Let's talk about it. And that's all Trump does.
I told you, Drew, 30 years ago, I go, we just need a business guy running this fucking country
like a fucking business. I don't want any more talk. I want business. I want cut deals.
Let's fix this.
Deal with it.
And everyone's like, all right.
But I kept saying, just get a business guy.
Let's just do business.
Yeah, and the other thing you mentioned about him
and his subs, I thought that was a pretty interesting
insight.
Yes, he likes sub sandwiches like Andrew over there.
He goes to Quiznos.
He likes him Quiznos. He likes to like some toasty
He
had you
I'm letting you go out
You had said that the guys that do these buildings has to have to rely on subcontractors and you scream that he's got subs and he
rely on good subs and you have to find good ones right and find who do things under budget and quick, and you got to rely on them.
And if they aren't doing it, then fire.
That's it.
Goodbye.
Sorry.
It's a very, very specific line you must achieve.
Right.
But these guys, you have to understand, you go, okay, let's just do this.
Let's do this.
Are you ready?
No.
You ready? Okay.
Andrew, listen to me.
Put down the toaster.
Don't worry about the tweet. Just listen to me.
The Twin Towers are gone.
Okay.
And we must replace the Twin Towers.
Okay.
Now, Donald Trump is assigned to do one tower,
and Joe Biden is assigned to do another tower.
Okay, fine.
Trump, what's your edict?
Well, whoever rebuilds it the fastest,
and under budget or on time or whatever
is gonna win the competition.
Okay, Trump, what are your parameters?
I want to hire the hardest working, smartest, most experienced people I have experience
with who I know, who I've vetted, who can buy my lieutenants, my eyeballs when I'm
not here to build this tower as fast as we can build the tower. Okay. Joe Biden, what do you need? I need a woman of color.
Superintendent. Well, hold on. That'd be a woman? Yes, of color. Okay. I'm not even going to get
started with any of the subs until I get a woman of color. But speaking of the subs, they need to
represent the community they live in.
This is a very diverse community.
Trump's already done three stories.
Hold on, I'm not done talking about diversity
and how unfair it is.
Trump's at seven stories now.
Hold on.
Let me get my black female superintendent of the person that's going to run this job. My number one
lead foreman is a black female. Sweetheart, do you have any experience building high rent?
Oh, you don't. All right, but that's all right because we have the most diverse group of
foremans and subcontractors. All right, he's on his 26th floor now.
You're still talking about diversity.
Who's gonna win that competition?
Why would?
She isn't on a fucking bill or anything.
Why would she be good?
All right, I need a gay guy who does HVAC work.
I need drywaller guy to be trans across whatever,
represent that community.
We need black and Hispanic in the tile drywaller guy to be trans or cross whatever represent that community we need
black and Hispanic in the tile and stonework guys the steel guys we're gonna
really need Asians we need it we need to get we need to we need to get them
from this community a certain community a black community that is never not you
what are you gonna get how fast you gonna build this building? How much you gonna cost? Where you at? The answer is it
fucking won't work. It's not gonna work. You have your head foreman is a black chick who doesn't
know how to build. Okay. Well, how would this turn out? I guess if this was the example, how would this go?
Well, there's some black dudes who are good at drywall.
Yeah, okay, go get them.
But you're still, you're hampering yourself quite a bit
here.
You're telling me there's not Asians
who know how to do steelware?
Yeah, not as many, not as available,
and maybe not the best.
But yes, you could find some of them too.
But go ahead, see, you can find gay guys who do HVAC work.
Go find, it's gonna take a while.
But this guy's on his 33rd floor now.
You're still trying to find gay guys who do HVAC work.
Okay, good luck.
And we are just tenants waiting to get in the building.
Well, you're not getting a building if you're waiting on Joe Biden.
You want a bullet train?
Go get Gavin Newsom.
You want an aqueduct that's filled with water and fire hydrants at work?
Go get Karen Bass because she's not talking, she's talking about equity,
she's not talking about aqueducts.
Okay, Drew.
Does say it to the Lord.
Does say it to the eighth man.
All right, Irvine, coming up, that'll be July 10th,
come on out, Irvine Improv, and then Covina Laugh Factor,
that'll be the 11th, 12th of July. Go to mcrourl.com for all the live shows. I'm going to Road America.
What's that? It's in Wisconsin, also known as Elkhart Lake. Wow. Yeah, big, big track.
July 17th, doing a show at the Tuft, I'm guessing that's the Tuft Center.
Go ahead, Drew, what do you got? Dr. Drew.tv, Rumble channel, asked Dr. Drew,
I'm interviewing a guy you might find interesting.
He's got a theory about a guy named Venkin
that Michael Schellenberger interviewed
that has a theory about how our personality
constructs have changed.
I've referenced it here on the show.
Be talking to the source, check it out.
So, until next time, I'm Adam Crawford, Dr. Stan, Mahala.
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