The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #2050 - Grok vs. Google: Who’s Lying?

Episode Date: October 31, 2025

On this episode of The Adam and Dr. Drew Show, Adam and Dr. Drew discuss why the left seems so drawn to overly feminine male politicians. The guys then go down an internet rabbit hole trying ...to verify a supposed quote from former L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti about convicts deserving our gratitude — but get wildly different results from Google and Grok. Finally, Adam wraps up the show by sharing a little experiment he did using his classic interview with Gavin Newsom.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:59 head to bet online today that's bet online the game starts here recorded live at corolla one studios with adam carola and board certified physician and addiction medicine specialist dr drew pinsky you're listening to the adam and dr drew show yeah getting on got to get on and get it on. Dr. Drew's Board 45 Cisand Specialist. Hmm. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:31 So, controversy from our last show. I was explaining about our mayor of Los Angeles who was started to kind of, you know, and I will say this. I don't give Gavin Newsom's due very often, but when he says sort of California leads the way,
Starting point is 00:01:50 we do with fucking. retarded ideas that then end up fucking up other places that adopt these ideas. And the sort of chick think kind of leads the way. Bloomberg came here and the touted California is the ultimate liberal ideal state. Right. And then he disappeared. He's not been heard from since on that topic. So I was explaining that about 10 years ago, Garcetti, who's willowy and wispy and straight, by all accounts, just soft.
Starting point is 00:02:21 Super soft. Didn't we decide he probably isn't straight? Does that we sort of... Anyway. Who decided that? I don't know. I thought you and I had that conversation. Well, he's got a wife and kids.
Starting point is 00:02:30 I don't know. All right. I wasn't sure. Yeah. Wake up, Drew. No, you and I never had that discussion. But he's soft. No, no.
Starting point is 00:02:37 But here's the whole point. Gay guys have an affect that starts early and often. Straight guys have to conjure it later in the... their career. You know, it's not like he acted like a pussy in high school. He had to put on the pussy facade at 40. You know what I mean? So that's where the crossing your legs that way and sort of handling yourself a certain way and sort of think Obama. Obama kind of ushered in soft, wafy kind of deep leg crossy kind of guys. There's a sleeve roll. There's a kind of what you do with your hands when you sit. There's a definite leg cross. There's a posture.
Starting point is 00:03:21 to it that isn't much different than being gay and that as a gay guy, you sort of have your mannerisms, well, as a soft guy, you have your mannerisms. You have to signal to your constituency, the LGBT community. You have to bring up the LGBT community, like, constantly, always, right? And the black and brown, the LGBT community. You have to talk about how whatever affects this community all the time. And this community can be women of color, the LG, the trans community, but the constant Islamic community. You have to bring up communities constantly, and then you have to talk about how it affects them. And then you have to sort of de facto talk about how your heart breaks for those communities who are affected and impacted by these,
Starting point is 00:04:07 you know, that's what you do. So you care. You just get up and care. Now, you don't, you don't do anything. You don't have any plan. And you don't build anything. And you prevent people from building things. But you get angry. I want to bring up when they do build stuff. something you and I talked about yesterday, which is a neuropsychologist I heard talking the other day who said, you know, if you're going to do something, build something, do not talk about it because there's a motivational system in the brain that is satiated by talking whereby talking feels like having done it. Right. So we talked off the air. Sorry, you have to make that clear. Yes, it was off the air. You and I were talking about. And I had been wondering out loud for a long time.
Starting point is 00:04:50 I've been saying to Drew about this, and I would always use my ex-wife as an example, which is she said she called the cable company or she made a note to do this or did that, but nothing ever got remedied or fixed. But, and I would say to you all the time, this is like 15 years ago, she feels satiated. It feels like she did something. And as a matter of fact, she would present it all the time. Look what I've done. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Yeah. If I said your license to be inspired for six months, you've got to get your life. I went to the DMB. Right. When? Sunday. What happened? They weren't open.
Starting point is 00:05:34 When was that? That was four months ago. Like, she would trot it out. Yeah. As having been done. Yeah. Well, she would trot it. I'll tell you what she would do.
Starting point is 00:05:44 It'd be like if your wife said, when are you going to, clean those gutters. You keep, I keep telling you to clean those gutters. And then you, she said it like you, like you would say, look at the window right now. You see the ladder? See the ladder in the gloves at the bottom? I just came in for some lemonade. See the ladder? She would say that like she was saying that, except for she never did anything. Right. And it never got done. And I would constantly like say, you know, calling the cable guy or calling the whatever guy or telling the gardener or whatever who never did or whatever it is you said you're going to do it's the same as zero it is the same as not doing anything weirdly you know but they never
Starting point is 00:06:32 felt that way and I would say to you all the time I'd go she feels satiated like she feels like she did something so we need to talk about it we'd have a committee about it we need to discuss it we need to see the tail of it she knows we didn't get whatever done but there is is a satiation. And I've been screaming about this for a long time, and I've been saying, sitting and talking about the homeless and, you know, and dignity and a seat at the table, I say it's satiate. Stop talking about it. So you say, now what, with the brain? Go ahead. Well, now the insight that this neurobiologist was providing, which is that there's a motivational and sort of cessation, as Adam puts its system, that is lit up.
Starting point is 00:07:19 in the same way by doing something as talking about it. So talking about it and doing something. With women or with everybody? Well, you and I speculated. Because it's not, it doesn't work on me. Right. I would get frustrated. But would it work on Gil Garcetti? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:34 It works on women. Yeah. And it's a chick wiring thing. Correct. Which would, but it would not work on Margaret Thatcher. No. But it would work on Eric Garcetti. Yes. So it's not penis and vagina per se. It's a chick think.
Starting point is 00:07:48 Yeah. And now, he probably didn't want to drill down into the chick-think part of it, but I've noticed women talking about stuff in perpetuity. Yes. And for me, it would be frustrating to talk about something and not get it done. Not only that, but government takes that to another level. It's like we handed $300 billion to them. It's over. Right.
Starting point is 00:08:11 They never follow up. They never check. They never measure. Then it's just, it's done. We gave them the money. All right. So I was mentioning that Eric Garcetti is a pussy, and he ran Los Angeles, and he was one of the earlier onset pussy guys, although... Early onset pussy.
Starting point is 00:08:34 But Obama kicked open the door for those pussies, right? And so we got a bunch of super soft douchebags trying to run cities. And look, it's good for, you know, doulas and wet nurses. it's not an opening a floral stand, but it's not really good for running a city because it's like tough decisions and sorry homeless guys, you don't have a right to camp on the street,
Starting point is 00:08:56 and we're getting you out, we're sweeping you up. We're helping you. Yeah, but it's tough love. Yeah. And they don't do that. No. So, tough love is the idea? We are doing what's necessary to help you. And sometimes that requires work.
Starting point is 00:09:10 Right, right. And that's that. Doing things you don't want to do in your disease. Right. So I would, I harken back to a quote, I heard while I was driving about Eric Garcetti saying that when prisoners are paroled, we owe them a debt of gratitude, which is a real pussy thing to say. Now, I told Andrew to look for it, and then he went on, he Googled it, and Google it, and Google, which I'm interested in looking at again because I found this interesting.
Starting point is 00:09:48 They said it was a fabricationist. Google said it was picked up. Someone else said it, but he never said it. And I was like, well, there's computers and there's Google, and then there's me sitting in traffic listening to my AM radio 10 years ago, and I heard it. The one thing the scares me with that, Adam, is that your memory is pretty much perfect.
Starting point is 00:10:13 That is rare. Most people's memory is not. I don't want everyone now relying on their memories so much. No, no, don't rely on my memory, not your memory. That's right, that's right. Eric Arsetti. And I say that without sarcasmuch. According to Google, Eric Arsetti did not say we owe them our gratitude.
Starting point is 00:10:30 That quote is a fabrication that originated in 2019 open in the publication City Watch, L.A., which sarcastically attributed the statement to him. Okay. Okay. So Google says he never said it. So we went to GROC. So we said, well, let's check with GROC. And GROC quotes it.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Says the quote you're referring to appears, oh, sorry, let's see. Sorry, but I'm still reading the top, so you can give me the top. Appears to stem from a May 27, 2016 announcement by then Los Angeles. mayor, Eric Garcetti, about $9 million, blah, blah, blah. All right. So now we go down. When people have paid their debt to society, our debt of gratitude, sorry, our debt of gratitude should be just thanking them.
Starting point is 00:11:28 Not just thanking them for their service, being incarcerated and cost us 50 grand a year, for their service, but allowing them a pathway back in. All right. So he's soft. And I don't even know what the fuck he's. talk about. But that's what both of us remember. We remember that quote. I remember seeing it. Yeah. So, but Google says no. Now, what's Google doing? Scrubbing. They're just, you know. They're not scrubbing. They're fabricated. Yeah, yeah. Why? Lying. Yeah. Why? Because it doesn't look good.
Starting point is 00:12:00 For who? Aren't we interested in accuracy, Google. No, Google. You don't want to be accurate? No. He did not say we owe them our gratitude. All right. Well, that's what the quote is. And that's what I remember. To an audio. We got a link to an audio that Andrew thinks is AI. But if it's AI just reading it, then that's fine. That's what he said. Let's see.
Starting point is 00:12:26 All right, let's listen to what I remember it. I know what he sounds like and I know what he looks like. When we invest in people, we don't know where things will turn out. But when people have paid their debt to society, our debt of gratitude should be not just thanking them for serving that time, but allowing them a pathway back in. They will also have access to services from life skills. So why do you think that's AI, Andrew? That's what he sounds like.
Starting point is 00:12:53 I don't recall what Garcette. Oh, that's what he sounded like. But why do you think it's AI is what I'm saying? Sounds very masculine. Sounds like someone put a text to speech and point. Well, let's hear it again. I don't feel like some masculine. No, because it's so much him.
Starting point is 00:13:06 We're used to him. Yeah, we know what he sounds. You're from Philadelphia. But that's what he sounds like. I don't think he sounds masculine. But, I mean, you never know where they are. Who knows, right? I mean.
Starting point is 00:13:14 No, I'm saying who knows, so shut up, is what I'm saying. But play that play. When we invest in people, we don't know where things will turn out. But when people have paid their debt to society, our debt of gratitude should be not just thanking them for serving that time, but allowing them a pathway back in. They will also have access to services from life skills training to cognitive behavior therapy. All right. So this is Garcetti. It doesn't sound that masculine to me, but this is him.
Starting point is 00:13:42 saying what Google said he didn't say. And that is precisely how I remembered, although there was a part of this that bothers me, which it sounds like a radio interview. I remember him standing at a microphone doing it. Well, Drew, your memory is all over the fucking road. Yes, I heard it on the radio. I could have been a presser. There could have been a film footage of it.
Starting point is 00:14:05 So let's one more time. Is Google trying to beat us on a technicality where he said, He never said, you know how they do that a lot? They do a lot of like, he didn't say, I said earmarks of Russian collusion. I didn't say it was, I didn't say Hunter Biden's laptop was Russian collusion. I said it had all the earmarks of that's different than saying it was. It just said it had all the earmarks, Drew, lying person. Eric Arsetti did not say we owe them our gratitude.
Starting point is 00:14:46 That quotes fabrication. All right. Now, did he say we, the problem with all these guys is they're horrible public speakers. So when you read the transcript, it always comes out stupid because they're not good at it. They're not that concise. All right, I agree. All right. Let's see.
Starting point is 00:15:03 One more time. Let's see. He does a stumble before it a little bit. When we invest in people, we don't know where things will turn out. But when people have paid their debt to society, our debt of gratitude should be not just thanking them for serving that time, but allowing them a pathway back in. All right. Let's go ahead and say Google lied about this. So what's Google doing, everybody?
Starting point is 00:15:34 Why are you running interference for Eric Presidding? I have trouble with them all the time. I know, but you guys are partisan actors that don't people know, I guess we know that, right? Yeah. That's why I use GROC all the time. The large language model that Google is utilizing probably, the technicality is, I didn't hear him use the phrase, oh. Oh. O-W-E in that sentence. I can play it again, but he just said, debt of gratitude.
Starting point is 00:16:00 He did not say we owe them gratitude. Oh, oh. All right. Let's hear it again. One more time. when we invest in people we don't know where things will turn out but when people have paid their debt to society our debt of gratitude should be not just thanking them for serving that time but allowing them a pathway back in they will also have access to services from life skills well no we're playing oh them or our debt of gratitude
Starting point is 00:16:32 it's the same thing but yeah they may be doing a little technical work around the syntax is implied just with the words, but Google's LLM is disavowing it in this instance. Yeah, but are they disavowing it because he's a progressive? Because they're motivated. Are they motivated? Anyway, whatever. Okay. All right.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Why do they come up with the weird came from if they're so. They're motivated. All right. So, Drew. Yeah. I don't know. This is a weird experiment, but. This is a topic I want to get to.
Starting point is 00:17:08 So let's do our... What topic do you want to get in? The gyno-fascism biology thing. Oh, keep going. Keep going. So there is a woman. I've got to look up her name very quickly, if you don't mind. Her name is...
Starting point is 00:17:20 Be prepared for all the gyno-fascism stuff to start in. Yes. Because they will be following what I've been saying for years. I think gyno-fascism is going to be a substitute for chick-think. Yes. Okay? Yes. All right.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Dr. Danny, Silicon. This is a podcast, Female Psychology and the End of Empires. Female Psychology and it's subtitled Civilizational Collapse. And this is a evolutionary biologist from Australia, who is very much data and she has evidence for what she says. and she says that this cycle we are in happens repeatedly, anthropologically, through civilizational cycles, and it is ultimately the result of a reproductive strategy of women. That while men can go out and conquer and can impregnant as many people as they want, women cannot do that.
Starting point is 00:18:21 I mean, Cleopatra could have done that, but she didn't. She can only do one baby at a time. So she went for high-value males, Mark Anthony, James, or whatever. So that tends to be the reproductive strategy of the female. So how do you isolate high-value men for yourself from the reproductive market of other females? Well, you do that by discouraging other females from reproducing. How do you do that? Well, when they're very overweight, they don't produce very well, so body positivity.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Lack of families, do you should. What do you mean when you say body positivity? That's the movement that glorifies Lizzo. So every chick who's glorifying Lizzo is in a Peloton commercial while she's glorifying is Lizzo. And she's either a useful idiot or adopting a reproductive strategy. Right, right. And so there's that.
Starting point is 00:19:24 There is... By the way, you know it's a little weird sidebar to that? And I've always said it. Women love when women cut their hair short. They go, oh, she looks so good. I'm going to cut my hair. She looks so good. What they're really saying is, okay, she's off.
Starting point is 00:19:41 She's not part of this for a while. She cut her hair short. That comes up in her discussion. Right. They fucking love it. And I'm like, what do you give a shit whether her hair is short or not? Oh, she looks so good. And then they go to you like that.
Starting point is 00:19:53 She cut her, you cut your hair looks so good. It's like what they're saying is, all right, you're off the playing field. In the reint time, their hair is done. their ass. Oh, their hairs to their ass. Yeah. Right. Yeah. So, they're on a peloton with their hair caught in the spokes. But they love Lizzo and they love the Bob. Well, and just think about how the Bob goes all the way into trans. Right. So we're going to support that. Right. Right. Right. We're going to support the Bob and everything. Yes. Lesbian. We're going to support, don't reproduce, go get you, get your, you know, be, you know, have a career. If I don't do this reproductive
Starting point is 00:20:23 thing. Right. Right. Because I don't, I don't, I don't, I don't, I wouldn't abort a baby. But You should have the option to do it. All these things, if you put them, those are the ones that come to my top, you put them all on a list, and it causes women not to reproduce as a strategy, as opposed to, you know, diet, education, diet and Charlie Kirk, opposite of Charlie Kirk. Right, right, right. Because he's encouraging all women to go out there and have babies and have families and build. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:20:56 Do your, do your, he's the enemy. Yeah, do your, you're, you're. professional life for sure, train, whatever, but pay attention to this other part. And so it is something that she has documented in many, many, many civilizations throughout history. So it's not an unusual thing. No, nothing is new, really. Right. But it is new in that I always, whenever some bitch does something stupid as running a city, I go, we need more women in positions of power. That's kind of new. That's like, take them. You know, You know, we got Karen Bass running Los Angeles.
Starting point is 00:21:31 She's a dope. She doesn't know what the fuck she's doing. She's probably, I mean, I don't know if she's socialist or she loves Cuba more and she loves Encino. I'll put it to you that way. But we decided she's good. And we're dumb and she's dumb and she's destructive and we're idiots. But we decided we need more of this.
Starting point is 00:21:52 And if we can't find her, we'll find Zorheim, some dude who basically acts like a chick or Gil Garcetti, who's a chick, essentially, or Gavin Newsom. It's not good. It's going to ruin our fucking society. I've been saying it. Everyone hates me. Nobody likes that kind of talk.
Starting point is 00:22:11 Well, by the way, the other thing to do is to devalue high value men. Oh, yeah. So anything that is productive, is masculine. Oh, God. Stay away. Stay away. Right. Look at my husband.
Starting point is 00:22:25 Oh, well. Right. All right. We'll take a quick break. We'll be right back after this. Well, time goes. It goes along. We get busy.
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Starting point is 00:24:19 And I've always, as a biologist, I was trained as a biologist, and one thing I learned early and often when you're trying to explain biological, mechanisms, whether it's behavioral or behavioral proteins or behavior of mammals, you look at the evolutionary adaptation. You know, what is it doing from an evolutionary perspective in terms of moving the genes forward? That's always what it's about.
Starting point is 00:24:42 Always. All right. I did this weird little experiment where I thought, well, I started going down this road, which is I thought, you know, my conversation with Gavin Newsom's insane. to me, but I realize people hear my voice and they hear his voice and they don't respond. Or they might. What do you mean? What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:25:07 Well, it's me arguing with Gavin Newsom, but if they would just read the text, like really just actually transcribe what he said, he sounds like an insane person. Yes. So I grabbed this three-minute clip and I got with Joe, and I said, let's get rid of my voice and get rid of my voice and get rid of to his voice. And by the way, make me a woman who's interviewing him and just make him a dude. And let's hear what that would sound like. It's awesome.
Starting point is 00:25:36 But then he ran across Bert Reynolds' voice. Joey did when he was. Oh, you know, I never, I know, I'm looking at this picture. I never, he's got the state of Florida embroidered on his hat, doesn't he? Is that what that is? Yeah, he's a big Florida guy. I know he's a big Florida guy, but in this movie's in Georgia and smoking the ban of But anyway, I never noticed it.
Starting point is 00:26:00 I never noticed it. A Florida hat. Anyway, I know he's a big Florida guy. He was a movie called Gator for Christaic. So I said, why don't we just have Burt Reynolds' AI voice be Gavin Newsome? Yeah. And my voice will be like, I said like an NPR type of chick. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:17 Like a nice learner check. And it's a weird little thought experience. So this is, now none of the dialogue is altered at all. It's just transcribes. He's exact words. And I am the NPR check and he's Bert Reynolds. Here we go. We got to do this with everything.
Starting point is 00:26:34 Well, it might work. It might not work, but I found it interesting. All right, let's listen. Half of African Americans in the state of California, roughly half of Latino families have no access to a checking account or an ATM, things we take for granted. They don't have a checking account. What's wrong with them? Well, because they don't have the resources to sock those things away.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Why do we have them? A lot of different reasons, but roughly half those families don't. Why do Armenians have them? But where they end up is a check-cashing place. But I want to know why those groups? Why do those two groups not have access? Just happens to be that we can talk about... Are they flawed?
Starting point is 00:27:12 No, they're hardly flawed, but they're struggling. Genetically flawed? Hardly. Absolutely not. Do Asians have this problem? I mean, a lot of communities have problems. A lot of whites have these problems. So it's not just black and Hispanic. No, but it...
Starting point is 00:27:25 Well, why did you bring up black and... And Hispanic. Because the magnitude is ominous. But why so many of them? It just happens to be just the magnitude. That's the way God planned it? Not at all. Well, what happened to them?
Starting point is 00:27:36 There are a lot of issues and communities are struggling. Why are they struggling? A lot of different reasons. Hispanics have been here, blacks have been here longer than we have been here. Well, we can surmise. What about Asians? They were put in internment camps. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:49 We, in fact, it all initiated out of San Francisco. The Chinese Exclusion Act came out of progressive San Francisco. So are they at the Czech caching place? A lot of Asians certainly do. Oh, so why don't you include them? Because then the only reason why is the magnitude of the problem. But there's no way to figure out how that happened. We could talk about, you know what I'm dealing with?
Starting point is 00:28:08 I don't want to have a sociological debate. Sure. Why would you? Why would you want to do that? Because the person from the Times wouldn't write good things about you if you did that. No, that's not the case. Because I want to deal with reality. You want to deal with reality?
Starting point is 00:28:22 I can tell you what reality is. People are struggling. People are suffering. I want to deal with the problems in a pragmatic way. Why are they struggling and why are they suffering? We can hold hands and surmise about all these other reasons. I don't want to do that. I want to know why they're struggling.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Why are they struggling? A lot of folks are struggling because they can't find jobs. Why blacks and Hispanics? Across the board, all socioeconomics. So everybody is struggling? Everybody is struggling. So Asians are suffering just as much as blacks? The face of welfare is not an African-American family.
Starting point is 00:28:55 Oh, so it's Asian, Jewish, it's all of them? Caucasian. Okay, we're all struggling. A lot of folks are struggling. Okay. It's the best thing ever. It makes him, it highlights the fact he doesn't know what the fuck he's talking. He's not saying anything.
Starting point is 00:29:10 He, but here's the interesting, really anything, part of the fact that it's genius. I'm glad you appreciate. It's my genius. It's genius. It's genius. Yes, you're a genius. My genius. And the fact that Perth Reynolds randomly popped up when we were trying to figure this.
Starting point is 00:29:25 you to express that completely to you. Well, I said, I want a celebrity, you know, and the only celebrity that came up with the purpose of it. Well, I would argue, though. Why do you find that genius? Because, I tell you the part that really,
Starting point is 00:29:38 for some reason, brings it all the way home is the NPR check. That's the part that takes it all the way. I said, it can't be another dude and it can't be me. Yeah, that's the one that you go, and that makes you say, oh, fuck, right? So I want from now on, in fact, I want to, from this show,
Starting point is 00:29:54 I'd like it to be with an NPRJ from now on. Because people will respond so differently. Right. I want to hear your... Because you go, that fucking male buffoon doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about and she's just trying to do her job. I want to have a... Right?
Starting point is 00:30:11 Instead of... Shut up, Adam. Yes. I want to have a conversation with the NPR radio chick about chick think and see what that sounds like. You know what I mean? Like see if the term chickthink out of her mouths rings different. Right?
Starting point is 00:30:27 I'm sure it will. Yeah. So interesting. Andrew, do you have the same reaction I do? Did you? There were, the folks in the room are used to my genius
Starting point is 00:30:36 so they're kind of impervious to it or it's called a Tuesday for them. It's like the scene in a time to kill when Matthew McConaughey is delivering that impassioned speech
Starting point is 00:30:46 at the end of it. Drew doesn't know what you're talking about. I don't. Oh, you don't. He doesn't watch any women. Oh, no. But the point is is my conversation
Starting point is 00:30:54 conversation with Newsom, I realized was insane, but I realized that because of my voice and his voice in partisan politics and side taking, my mom would have listened to that and went, you didn't give me a chance to talk. You know, she would have taken Newsom's side and said, I badgered him or let him talk or I understood what he was saying or when he's trying to help or whatever. I realized that I had to remove myself. Yep. I realized had to remove him. Maybe it was a strategy for life here.
Starting point is 00:31:26 Yes. I realized I had to replace with an NPR woman. Yes. Now listen. Who would have thought of changing genders? This guy. Full respect. Because I said I need an NPR woman.
Starting point is 00:31:41 And by the, who's more masculine than Burt Reynolds? Yeah. So I need a very masculine sounding Newsome and a NPR check. who's me. And now you realize how insane Bert Reynolds sounds. But that's not Bert Reynolds is Gavin Newsom. And that's how nuts. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:31:59 Did he track? Was there anything that changed his idea? He actually sounded like a robot. You know what I mean? In terms of his maneuvering. Like he made no sense. It just sounded like complete, like the way a robot would maneuver, not a person. One more, just the first 40 seconds.
Starting point is 00:32:19 just because I can't get enough of it either. We've got to put this out somehow as people understand what it is. Half of African Americans in the state of California. And putting Bert's picture is funny. And then it was Andrew's idea to go tight on Bert. Half of African Americans in the state of California. Roughly half of Latino families have no access to a checking account or an ATM.
Starting point is 00:32:48 things we take for granted. They don't have a checking account. What's wrong with them? Well, because they don't have the resources to sock those things away. Why do we have them? A lot of different reasons, but roughly half those families don't. Why do Armenians have them? But where they end up is a check cashing place. But I want to know why those groups? Why do those two groups not have access? Just happens to be that we can talk about... Are they flawed? No, they're hardly flawed, but they're struggling. Genetically flawed? Hardly. Absolutely not. Do Asians have this problem. I mean, a lot of communities have problems.
Starting point is 00:33:21 A lot of whites have these problems. So it's not just black and Hispanic. No, but it... Well, why did you bring up black and Hispanic? Because the magnitude is ominous. But why so many of them... It just happens to be. Just the magnitude...
Starting point is 00:33:33 That's the way God... All right. It just happens to be. Well, that's a problem solver, isn't he? Wow. It just happens to be. That guy's going to solve that problem. I want to see... It just is, Drew.
Starting point is 00:33:44 I want to see a whole series of these. I got more. I want more... More. Every, we should have an episode every week, every show on this show, at least every week. First off, you understand, these are hardworking men and women in that other room over there. I know, it's a lot to ask, I know. And, uh, but there, I do want that one with him and Kara Swisher brought up as well that I've made people play a few times.
Starting point is 00:34:09 Well, first of all, I talked to them for an hour, so it can easily do more of me. But there is the one where he's talking about people leaving the state. Oh, yeah. the Utah, the Salt Lake City thing. Yeah, it's in the computer somewhere. It's three minutes long. He's talking to Kara Swisher, and that could easily be swapped out for NPR woman,
Starting point is 00:34:30 who basically cares Swisher anyway, and Burt Reynolds. I'm now in love with the idea that it's always Bert Reynolds. That's the conceit. Well, because my mom would hear that. Yeah. And my mom didn't know anything, she'd hear that. She'd go, Bert Reynolds is such a blow heart. He's such an asshole.
Starting point is 00:34:53 And that NPR girl, I don't know where she went to college, probably a woman's college, but she's bright. She took it to him. She stuck it to him. And that's good for her. Because Bert Reynolds, that guy, like, that's my mama do. My mom heard me in Gavin Newsom, she would take Gavin News. Of course. Of course.
Starting point is 00:35:12 All right. It's the insanity of the present moment. This is it. go to thank you Drew I'm glad you responded so positively Oh my God It's genius Boston Mass
Starting point is 00:35:23 Wilbur Theater coming up Thursday November 6 and then Friday off to Buffalo and Electric City doing stand-up shows there Go to Amcrowdecom for all the live shows What do you got, Drew? Everywhere YouTube XX probably your best place Ask Dr. Drew Tuesday and Thursday
Starting point is 00:35:36 at 2 Pacific Wednesday at 4 So until next time I'm Ann McCrull for Dr. Drew said Mahalo This October Fear. Fear is free on Pluto TV with horror movie collections from paranormal activity, The Ring. You will die in seven days. Scream. And from dusk till dawn. This is my kind of place.
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