The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #2089 - Happy Pride Month! | Part 1

Episode Date: June 4, 2026

Adam Yenser fills in while Dr. Drew is away on vacation, joining Adam Carolla for a conversation about companies whose brands outlive the businesses themselves, the concept of Pride Month, an...d how the self-esteem movement may have negatively impacted younger generations. The two also discuss ICE and the percentage of deportations involving individuals with criminal records before Adam gives an update on the rebuilding process in Malibu a year and a half after the devastating fires, inspired by a recent post he made on X.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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Recorded live at Corolla 1 Studios with Adam Carolla 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, get to get it on. No choice but to get it on. Dr. Drew is cruising now with his wife heading to France, South of France. Adam Jensers taking a spot. Damn, Drew is on his way to Monaco for the Grand Prix.
Starting point is 00:00:37 That sounds so cool. I know. I've been there, but not during the Grand Prix. I've just been to Monaco. You've been to Monaco. Pretty nice. It's beautiful. The streets are all, like, the hills where the streets wind down.
Starting point is 00:00:50 It's beautiful. I saw the Prince's Motorcade go by once there years ago. Oh, you did? Yeah, I don't know. Do we need the monarchy in this? day and age, I guess. I like stuff like that. I like that there's just symbolic stuff.
Starting point is 00:01:08 As a figurehead and as the ceremony of it, it's kind of interesting to see, but there's not really any power behind it. It doesn't feel. Yeah. So Drew's on his way there. He's taking a cruise there with his wife. And then I got him set up with McLaren and the guy runs the team, Zach Brown. So he gets to go to the actual race.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Nice. like a guest of McLaren. Yeah. Who is an interesting story. Bruce McLaren guy died in 1970. Built K&M cars and he died testing. A lot of guys died testing. I don't think a lot of people know that.
Starting point is 00:01:49 They didn't all die in races. A lot of them died testing cars. And he died in 1970 and he just built Can Am race cars. and then they were kind of unsure what they're going to do with his company and with the race cars and where they're going to continue on without McLaren the leader and so on and so forth. And they kind of went dormant for a while and then all of a sudden McLaren came back, which is interesting. You know, you take a company like Bugatti.
Starting point is 00:02:25 You know, they're like 100 years old. Yeah. And they were kind of gone for 20 years or men. many years, decades, and then they just kind of resurrected Bugatti, you know, and it's like, it's an interesting thing where there's intellectual property that has a name, but no place, you know, like what do we do with Playboy? Yeah. Playboy, all right, everyone remembers Playboy.
Starting point is 00:02:48 It's a brand. It's established, but they know the bunny and everything, but it's gone. Yeah. But what do you do with it? But what's, what's it's worth? Girls get a tattoo on their hip of it. Yeah, their hip. That's all that's left of it.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Yeah, I mean, people under, you know, it's weird. It's like, well, there's a value to something because everyone knows what the name. Yeah. Everyone recognizes the name, but there's actually no product there. So it's kind of interesting, this intellectual property from days gone by, you know. And there's probably a lot of them out there. It probably works that way in fashion and purses and stuff, stuff like that. by the way, the difference between a Bugatti and a fendi purse or some Prada bag or something like that.
Starting point is 00:03:34 I think women need to understand this and the gay population, too. To be inclusive. As we usher in, gay bride. I was watching. Did you put up your tree for Gay Pride month? Decorate the house. Yeah, I was decorate. I round up a bunch of neighborhood kids.
Starting point is 00:03:55 and I bring them over and I twerk and then I put my gay tree up because I want to make sure to freak out everybody all the time about my sexuality. They need to know about my sexuality constantly. So I'm always talking about to younger people, underage people, mainly pre-pubescent boys. I want them to know about my sexuality. It's important. I want them to kind of close their eyes and picture my sexuality, you know, eight, nine, ten-year-old boys. I want them to be exposed to this. In class, at political rallies, out and about at the library.
Starting point is 00:04:28 They have to be thinking about my sexuality constantly throughout this month and others as well. I'm going to go ahead and agree with, oh, God, Admiral Levine. I miss Admiral Levine. I say gay, the whole summer's gay pride, not just this month. Yeah. You know what I mean? That's very brave and bold of you. I'd like to extend this so that every month of the calendar, young kids were thinking about my sexuality because it's so important that they know how I roll sexually.
Starting point is 00:05:10 Exactly. Now, older folk, not so much. Young people need to be exposed to me and how I perform sexually, my proclivities. Otherwise, I'm not going to sleep well. that now. Yeah. Yeah. Because I really need the word to get out. Yes. You know what I'm saying? Mm-hmm. Yeah, like our forefathers. That's how they wanted it. Everybody wanted everyone to know about everyone's debauchous behavior. If you look at the Federalist papers, this chunk is about people's sexuality. That's right. And we need to get as many kids into the room so I can sort of express my
Starting point is 00:05:47 sexuality to them. Yeah. Scott Weiner's going to make sure that happens. Scott Weiner is wearing rainbow suspenders on Daisy Dukes with no shirt on right now and preaching to some seven-year-old about his sexuality. This is good. This is a good thing. And then he gets the tranny to go ahead and usher in his campaign. As many kids as you can into the room. You know what you're looking for?
Starting point is 00:06:20 You know, people are like, well, what age, Adam? What age should these young kids be exposed to your sexuality? And I'm like, it's really tough to put a grade on it. Like, how old are you in the first grade? How old are you in the third grade? But here's a simple rule of thumb. And I think Anthony Wiener may have picked this one off of me. What you're really looking for is cock height.
Starting point is 00:06:43 You know what I mean? Like, I don't know how old you are when you're cock height. But let's just say you're a six-foot tranny and you're in stiletto heels. figure on cock and ball height, figure about 36 to 38 inches in there. So you're looking, I'm not, don't throw tape on the kid, but just have him sort of walk up to the kitchen counter. Yeah. If his head's about, kitchen counter is 36 inches. I used to build.
Starting point is 00:07:11 36 is standard height for a kitchen counter, right? Yeah. Bathroom is 32. If he's bathroom, that's a little, little low for cock height. but you may want to be a responsible parent and in advance do a recon work. How tall is the tranny? Are they going to be wearing platforms, stilettos, are they wearing flats? Like how, what is the cock height of the tranny?
Starting point is 00:07:38 And then I'll do as a thing as a parent, you know, when my kids were younger. I'd call ahead. I might say to the weiner campaign, hey, could you go ahead and throw a tape on the guy's cock and balls? just so we can get an estimation of his height. And then I can throw a tape on my kid, and I can decide if they're too tall for his cock or too short for the cock. You want just that sweet spot. And then you want to bring all your kids.
Starting point is 00:08:06 Yeah. You want to bring all the kids down to the library. And you want to make sure when this guy is twerking or singing his song where he replaces God bless America with God bless Anthony Weiner or whatever he's doing, that your kids have a front row seat to his cock and balls, okay? For their future. For their future. And then you have some proud parents of the gifted kids that are like, well, my
Starting point is 00:08:31 kid's in fourth grade, but he's already learning about gay stuff at a seventh grade level. Very advanced in terms of sex and gender studies. Yes, yes. He's way ahead of the curve. Yeah, well, we got him a tutor, actually. He's already experimenting with drag. His name is Mr. Rainbow. And he comes over and he brings his Cassio and they sing songs about sodomy.
Starting point is 00:08:56 It's awesome. So, wait, what's Biden doing? Coach, I'm gay. I miss Biden. I miss Biden. I miss Levine. I miss Admiral Levine talking about gay pride. I miss Biden telling his stories about him and his dad.
Starting point is 00:09:16 You know, we'd be, 1951. Dad's driving me through Scranton. See, two fellas hugging. My dad says, Joey, that's the future. Okay. Yes, that happened. That definitely happened. And then Rainbow Fireworks went off in the sky behind him.
Starting point is 00:09:34 Yeah, okay, that happened. That's what happened. Yeah. That's exactly what happened. And the kids in the pool and his hairy legs swimming up. He has so many great quotes. Corn pop and he's a bad dude. I love it.
Starting point is 00:09:48 I love when Joe Biden paints a picture, like he goes, we sat down at the, we're always at the breakfast table. Yeah. They never left the breakfast table. Even at noon, they're still there. And my dad, he said, Joey. I love that stuff. But now, the thing about Joe Biden that was funny is I saw him.
Starting point is 00:10:12 He never spoke about it and nobody ever spoke about it. And he tries to do this Scranton, Joe. six-pack thing and his dad's a hard-working guy and, you know, always having these tough conversations around the dinner table. By the way, let me explain something. I was poor as poor could be my whole life, never had a tough conversation around the breakfast table. My family, they'd just go be miserable over there. I'd go be miserable over there. You didn't talk about economic and progressive social issues around the dinner table. We didn't have money. There was nothing. I don't think we even had a breakfast table.
Starting point is 00:10:49 We just had a table. But no, we didn't have discussion. My dad wouldn't take his hat off and hold it with two hands in front of me and go, Addie. So the thing that's funny about Joe Biden, think about this, Joe six-pack, regular dude. I saw him on an episode of Leno's Garage once, like 10 years ago. He has, like, the brand new, he got, for his wedding gift in 1916. 64, I think maybe it's a 67 or something.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Anyway, brand new convertible Corvette. Brand new convertible Corvette. So that was his wedding gift. Now, I got a toaster oven. Or actually, from my family, I don't think I got anything. But I'll go on a limb and just say, I got a fruit dryer or something, dehydrate or something like that. You got a brand new. He got a corvette.
Starting point is 00:11:43 He got a brand new Corvette. Now, look, you can go, well, back in 1970. A Corvette was only $5,500 or whatever it was. A Corvette was always a Corvette. It's a Corvette now. It's 110 grand. It was a Corvette then. It was half the price of a house.
Starting point is 00:12:02 It's still a Corvette. Who do you know who's regular Joe Sixpack, who comes from working class in Scranton, who got a brand new Corvette when they're 23? Brand new as a wedding gift at age 23. Answer, nobody. So don't give me this fucking Joe six-pack bullshit because I hung out with these guys and nobody's gotten anyone a brand new Corvette as a wedding gift. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:28 That's not a poor thing. No, it's not how poor people roll. Three second clip of bind. We got a. We got that. Oh, that's got. Well, get rid of the stuff you already got. That'll be helpful.
Starting point is 00:12:42 But speak of the Corvette. So what is the difference between the Bugatti and the fancy purse and the designer bags? This is why you're permanently going to replace Drew. And I'll bring it back around. Because when you see a Bugatti and you look at the interior and you look at the exterior and you see what it is, it's got a V12 or V16. Sure. See what a Bugatti Bayron has. Is it V16?
Starting point is 00:13:13 Anyway, the point is, is the engine itself is probably 350 grand, maybe 500 grand. whatever. You can see where the money went. And you can't build a Bugatti Varon or Shayron or they come up with different names. But you cannot build one for under two million bucks. You just can't do it. It's an eight-liter quad-turbo-charge. Oh, it's a V-16. All right. It is a V-16. So, you cannot do that. You can't. The Fendi purse is just leather. You can do it. The ingredients aren't that much. You can stamp that logo on any leather purse.
Starting point is 00:13:54 You could do it on a baseball man, right? Like, okay, it's high quality leather. It's high quality things of that nature, but it's still less than a hundred bucks worth of materials. And then you're going to pay, or she's going to pay $21,000 for it because of the name and the exclusivity and so on and so forth. But the Bugatti or the Ferrari or the Porsche, it's not like it's as much as a mini-Cooper,
Starting point is 00:14:27 but it's got the Bugatti name, and so you can rationalize $3 million. You can't build it for under $2 million. And that's kind of the difference. And I think that's the dude difference versus the chick difference. That makes sense, yeah. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:14:43 So it's Pride Month. Mm-hmm. We've got end voting day. Oh, that's right. Find out tomorrow how that goes. Do we need to celebrate everybody? That's my whole thing. We got ourselves into trouble when we started celebrating all people.
Starting point is 00:15:04 I've been yelling about it for a long time, but the self-esteem movement, not a good plan. No. No. absolutely not because society does not run off a bunch of people with high self-esteem. It doesn't work. And also, you know, the other thing where people go, they go like, they've done a test. It turns out people in prison have super high self-esteem. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:15:34 Because, you know, you have to really, like think about self-esteem for a second. Like for me to be, let's just say we're in line at the supermarket and we're in the 10 items or less line and you're in front of me with your 13 items, you know. I would never say a word ever. But it takes a kind of high self-esteem to like tap you on the shoulder and go, excuse you, I counted the number of, you know, whatever. And even if you counted those four nectarines as one, you're still over. The lot of the amount. Like, that's a high self-esteem move. For me to then follow you out to your car and knock you over and just take your laptop,
Starting point is 00:16:21 it's like super high self-esteem. It evolves into psychopathy and sociopathie. It's like I don't care about other people. I couldn't do it to someone because I would go, that's not your laptop. That's not your wallet. Like, you just knock that person over. You don't even know that person. That person never done anything.
Starting point is 00:16:39 to you, think about stabbing someone you've never met. You know what I mean? That is off the charts, self-esteem. Now, they don't call it that, but that's what it is. It's like you don't think there's nobody. If you can just stab a stranger, then you're really the only person alive. If you think about it, right? There's nobody else who's done anything or has a family or is married or there are people
Starting point is 00:17:03 who would grieve at their wedding or kids or funeral. You know what I'm saying. So I argue that this self-esteem thing is like when you see these battles in, you know, out front of the ice facility and it's like that 40-year-old chick who's yelling at the cop, you know, fuck you, you Nazi fucking killer. Go kill somebody else. You know, it's like, where'd you get all that self-esteem? I don't have that kind of self-esteem. That guy's trying to do a job. It's getting $80,000 a year.
Starting point is 00:17:35 Yeah. It's got fucking state. He's not making any policy whatsoever. It's got some fat wife at home and you're just going to stand in his face and scream Nazi. It's wild where they get that energy from. And rational sort of people with a realistic view of themselves are not generally out there interfering and protesting things. That Adam's right. All right.
Starting point is 00:17:58 We'll take a quick break. We'll be right back right after this. At first, I didn't think it was real. I woke up to this blinding light. And I was transported to another place. Pluto TV. Then I heard a voice. Come with me if you want to live.
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Starting point is 00:19:25 move with every bucket, every breakaway, every goal. This is where the action happens. where experience shows and where the smallest edge makes the biggest difference. Bet Online, the game starts here. All right. Yeah, I don't, it's, there's a lack of basic, a lack of basic logic, which is like flying, like, I was watching,
Starting point is 00:20:01 Katie Couric and she was arguing with Rand Paul or something. And everyone, so people have a bunch of arguments with the whole ice thing. Yeah. It's just like most these people are hardworking, you know, whatever. They commit less crime than, okay. First off, I have no idea where you get your statistics. So the people that are here illegally and not paying taxes commit less crime than people that are here legally. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:40 Okay. But here's what I'm saying. You go, all right, this group all came here illegally. And Americans murder statistics, you know, they commit 25 murders for every 100. 100,000 citizens. This group that's here illegally only commits 11 murders every 100,000 citizens. I'm like, well, how about no murders? Yes, it's still 11 murders that we didn't need.
Starting point is 00:21:14 Somebody's parents are still, they're less a daughter. Yeah. So what about zero? Yeah. And then also this thing where it's like, well, it's only, Katie Kirk's an idiot, but she's only like, it's only 14% are violent. It's like, all right, well, maybe the other ones are just drug dealers or drunk drivers. Or just here illegally.
Starting point is 00:21:38 They already broke that law. They're just here illegally. Like, we have them. What would you, Katie Kirk, listen, be honest, bitch. Would you argue that I could just move to Canada and just start doing my own thing? Would you be in support of me or would you be in support of the Canadian government removing me and citing that that's their right is a, government in Canada. You know she'd be on the side of fucking Canada. If Ted Nugent said, I'm moving to Quebec and I'm opening a guitar store, there's not a goddamn thing you got
Starting point is 00:22:12 Canadians can do about it. She would be screaming that he should be removed. So shut up, bitch. Sorry, here it is. Less than 14% of nearly 400,000 immigrants arrested by ICE and President Trump's first year back in the White House. that charges or convictions for violent criminal offenses, according to an internal Department of Homeland Security document obtained by CBS News. So isn't all this talk about bringing the country? All right. If you have 400 people or 400,000 people, she's talking about, 10% is 40,000. 14% is like 56,000 or something.
Starting point is 00:23:00 That's over 50,000 violent criminals. 50,000 violent criminals. All right. 14%. Fine. It's 14%. It's 14% of, you know, it's 40, let's say, 28, yeah, it's 56, it's 56,000, check my math, 56,000 violent criminals. That seemed like a lot of violent criminals to me.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Yeah. Let's get rid of them. Yes, exactly. Why would you protest that? Why would you stop that? Why would you say let's not get rid of them? All right, sorry. We'll play this.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Violent criminals, a massive overstatement. It less than 14% again of the 400,000 immigrants being arrested had charges or convictions for violent criminal offenses. Well, I think the facts make a difference. And so that's one of the questions we will ask. And so when you come to me, Minneapolis, if they have a policy that says, oh, we're not going to turn over from our jails, nonviolent prisoners, people who are, I don't know why you're in prison if you're not in violent, but maybe you have a drug crime that's a nonviolent.
Starting point is 00:24:13 I think there are plenty of nonviolent people in prisons. But the thing is, is that's not their policy. Their policy is we will turn no one over. So you can be, you beat somebody half to death, you get an assault charge, and you're in jail for a couple years and somehow you're getting out on parole and you're not going to be turned over and you're illegal. I've got a problem with that and so do probably most independents and Democrats. But that's what we have to ascertain. And the thing is, is that's not the policy of Mayor Frye. He did not come forward and say, we're not going to turn over nonviolent prisoners.
Starting point is 00:24:47 He just simply said, we're not going to cooperate at all. And if you do cooperate, and this is Ellison's edict to them, it's actually against the law for you to cooperate. So if you happen to have a Republican county and a Republican judge who wants to turn over people in jail once their term is expired to be deported, they've actually made that illegal. And so we should have a debate in our country whether that's advisable. And I think most people in the middle, I think most people actually hate what the use of force that they saw with Alexander Pready. But I think if you ask if a guy's committed rape and he's in prison and he's going to get out, do you want him to deport it? I think people would say, hell yes, he ought to be deported.
Starting point is 00:25:25 But if you're not going, though, what about the 14%? Such a low percentage. All right. Just goes right back to the same. Okay. This is dude think versus chick think, and this is the era we're living in, a bunch of dumb cows in charge and making retarded arguments. What about the 14%? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:45 I don't know. He's saying they won't allow ICE to deport anyone. What about? Okay. What about the 14% that Jacob Fry won't allow ICE to deport? She also, it's such a clear difference. He articulates himself perfectly. She won't address what he's saying.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Now, he will address what she is saying. Yes. But she won't address what he is saying. And by the way, she was supposed to be an independent journalist our whole time. Give me a fucking break. All right, let's listen with this. Dingbat has this. say.
Starting point is 00:26:25 A thousand people. If your daughter gets raped by the guy that gets back out and he's one of the 14 percent, I don't think you're going to quibble about whether it's 14 or 64, what I'm saying is if you're not going to. If you're not going to turn over anybody, then that's zero percent. What about all the other individuals who are not guilty? They're in prison. Yes, they've committed other crimes. They're here illegally in the first place.
Starting point is 00:26:53 They're here illegally in the first place. That's number one. Number two, they're in prison. They're not guilty. Maybe they were selling catalytic converters. Maybe they were selling drugs. Maybe they're not not guilty. They are guilty.
Starting point is 00:27:15 They're in prison, you dump shit. What about all the other people who are in prison for non-violet? things. Stealing catalytic converters is nonviolent. Occasionally it turns violent when the actor guy comes off as shift as a bartender two in the morning and sees you and then you gun him down in cold blood or the homeowner comes running out of the house and someone gets shot. But okay, so you're just generally pulling copper out of street lights or doing street takeovers or stealing catalytic converters or cooking meth. But you're not not guilty. You're in prison, dumb shit. All right. Go back 10 seconds. By the way, how do you get into these positions with these 10 cent heads?
Starting point is 00:28:05 Well, and she does her condescending liberal smile and voice. Every, every, he's talking, he's talking very respectfully, very. If your daughter, if your daughter gets raped by the guy that gets back out and he's one of the 14 percent, I don't think you're an equivalent about whether it's 14 or 16. What I'm saying is if you're not going to, if you're not going to turn over anybody, then that's zero percent. I don't think the percentage, it makes a halfway argument to how much efforts we have, but if Minnesota is not going to turn over anybody, the whole argument, whether it's 14 or 86, doesn't mean anything. So if they're not turning over anybody, then inevitably there are, and there are many emotional cases, you know, the, the Lake and Riley case, of a guy that had been arrested. should have been deported. He was a thug. He was arrested multiple times up in New York. The government paid to send this thug to look for a job in Atlanta. It was almost like,
Starting point is 00:29:04 we'll give you a bus ticket so your crime committing person, we'll send you to some other state. But to Lake and Riley's family, it was a big deal, and it is a big deal to people who care about what happened to her, that if that person had been deported. Now, you might tell me that person's an anomaly. He's only one in a hundred, but up in Lakin's Riley's family, I don't. I don't care of it's 100, the one in a hundred people who are violent, if that's a number, or if it's 14 and 100, we want them deported. And look, you're looking at someone who's moderate on this issue. I'm not, I don't appreciate what they're doing. I don't like the crowd control.
Starting point is 00:29:38 But I do want violent people who are in prison detained and given over to ICE. And if Minnesota's not doing that, they're part of the problem. I should point out, Senator Paul, that Lake and Riley's father has cautioned lawmakers on both sides. of the aisle to refrain from using her death as a political wedge. She's still dead, bitch. Jesus Christ. So she makes zero points. He makes all the points.
Starting point is 00:30:08 And then she does a gotcha moment. Yeah. Like he's just saying, all right, let's, let's forget Lake and Riley. Let's just call Lake and Riley Abe Lincoln. If an illegal kills Abe Lincoln, we would have liked to have got that illegal out before he was able to go to the theater that night. And there was several women that year that were killed. She's an example of a problem that's affected a lot of families.
Starting point is 00:30:39 Yes, I'm not sure. It's not like, oh, you said that name now I got you. Don't politicize that. Yeah, yeah, okay. Then swap out. Let's do Jane Doe. There's hundreds of Jane Does who were killed or raped or what have you'd by illegal. So there you go.
Starting point is 00:31:00 You happy? Anyway, I don't know what her plan is. See, that's the whole thing. Her plan is what? It seems like it always just leads back to open borders and let's not arrest anybody. Yes. That's where it all leads to. Her plan is no plan.
Starting point is 00:31:15 I don't know what her plan is. But much like when Gavin Newsom was in here. He did not offer a plan. He just was against my plan. I don't know what Katie Couric's plan is. He's saying, here's what I want. When we have you incarcerated, by the way, it's clinically insane that we're having this argument. This is only the kind of argument I've ever had.
Starting point is 00:31:43 You can only have this with women. Where you just stop in the middle and you go, I cannot believe we are having this argument. You know what I mean? Only women can really pull that one off. Yeah. I cannot believe we're having an argument about people who came to this country legally and then committed crimes and then got incarcerated. Then when they were released, we weren't pushing them back into the population.
Starting point is 00:32:11 But instead bringing them back, by the way, not putting them on a rack and stretching them in town square, just putting them on a flight and taking them back to their country of origin. You guys are against that. It's the most basic step you could take. Is there any, let's just put it this way. Let's just say policy. Let's just go, I was just explaining to you. Like, what have I said to Katie, retard currick, if I just said to her, look, hey, you know Mexico's policy?
Starting point is 00:32:51 Mexico's policy is if a guy from America sneaks over and wants to live illegally in Mexico, they'll kind of let him be. But if he actually commits crime or violent crime and they catch him, they're going to put him in a prison. But then once they let him out of prison, they put him on an airplane and they take him back to San Diego. Do you think Katie Kirk would go, that's outrageous? Or do you think she'd go, right? Of course, what do they do? And I go, well, I'm outraged as a white person because I think they should just let him back into Tijuana.
Starting point is 00:33:31 And then Katie Kirk would go, well, he's a criminal and they already caught him. Why are they just going to let him back into Tijuana? They're just going to take him back to San Diego, right? I'd go, that's an outrage. Yeah, and you go, Mexico asked that it not be politicized this way. That's right. That's right. Juan Valdez's mom said, Jesus Christ, you nutjob.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Okay, Katie Kirk, what is your plan? It sounds to me like your plan is just let them back into the general population to do what? Not pay taxes and roam around and take low-skilled jobs away from people that were born in this country. Yeah. Katie Kerrick, by the way, this is the part of the debate where you offer up your plan. This is what I would do instead. This is the, yeah, they don't have that. Which is a bizarre argument when you're making an argument.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Yeah. What? All right. So his plan, the most sensible plan on the planet, which is remove you, which by the way, seems like the least we could do. I mean, it's just fly you back to your country and drop you off. But okay, that doesn't even feel like punishment. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:45 But by the way, the people that are less. back out of prison and just went like, here's $50 and a Fuddrucker's gift card and a new shirt. They have to walk out confused. Yes. Like, where am I? You're just letting me back? They're in the same position that led them into this life of crime in the first place. Whether they committed another violent crime, they're still going to be either struggling
Starting point is 00:35:08 or committing petty crimes or getting in some sort of trouble. Right, because they're undocumented. Jesus Christ. But anyway, wouldn't, what even Katie Kirk would say? Like, if you really pressed her, oh, let me tell you something what dumb women do. When you press them on stuff like this? You know what the answer is? I'm not an expert on immigration, but anything's better than this.
Starting point is 00:35:28 That's their one. The one that I experience sometimes is they'll use an exception. They'll be like, oh, well, I know this one person. I know, well, there's this one example of this one person who did this. Yes. And it's like, no, that's not what statistics. She is now the Tamale queen of the Southwest. All right.
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Starting point is 00:36:43 See website for details and important. safety information. Sildenafil is the generic version of Viagra. Viagra is a registered trademark of Vietra's specialty LLC. Hymns is not affiliated with or endorsed by Vietras. Oh, God, are they dumb? But we're living in a land of non-logic now. And I've been discussing with the voting day today,
Starting point is 00:37:05 any time I make posts on Facebook, you know, for in favor of Steve Hilton or Spencer Pratt, all the comments are that same kind of thing. It's arguments against it with no solutions. They don't know what their side's going to change or what they're going to do different. They don't have a plan. No. It's just objection to, I don't like this person and I don't like that policy.
Starting point is 00:37:23 It's an emotional thing. And they do a lot of, well, you know what they do? Actually, somebody was, they don't like you. I mean, they get angry. And I get this stuff too. But it's mostly amusing to me. Yeah. which is, and there's a tweet.
Starting point is 00:37:45 I don't know if you can find it, Andrew, but it made me laugh. But it's perfect chick think. And dudes can think like chicks now because of the whole trans thing. I was covering the devastation in the Malibu fire with the vlogs and stuff like that. And I went back. And I sent a 22nd thing out just where they were trying to rebuild. They barely framed and it got a bunch of traction. I just filmed the first.
Starting point is 00:38:13 It's the first bit of framing that has gone up in Malibah. The first lumber drop, meaning from my construction years, the beginning of the job is like the lumber drop. A flatbed truck pulls up. It's got a stack of plywood, two by fours, four by, you know, it's a big stack of lumber. It's a flatbed, and it lowers down. and puts the end like a flatbed like you tow a car on. Yeah. And then it puts the bottom end kind of slides down.
Starting point is 00:38:46 And then the truck just pulls away. And the thing just plop. And they just called a drop. A year and a half and we got the first drop in. Right. Year and a half, first piece of lumber showed up. So I filmed this thing for 20 seconds and just tweet it out. And then somebody tweeted back to me.
Starting point is 00:39:08 Now this is what I'm talking. This is what you're talking about. Or they go, hey, instead of just walking around and talking about it, once you do something about it, smart guy. And I'm like, I don't work for the Coastal Commission and I'm not in plan check. They want me to do something about it. Like, I'm just going to grab my own bags from the old day, strap on my tool bags and barge on to an empty lot and go clear out. I'm taking over. Like, what is it?
Starting point is 00:39:39 angry person, what is it you would like, I should do something about it? And the answer would be then what? The best thing we can do is vote for people who are going to change the regulations and policies that are holding this all back. That's what... Right, but this is more of the retarded this is their gotcha moment. Why don't you go out there and build the house at him? Do you think you're better? Yeah. Why don't you draw up the plans and engineer it and then push it through plan check on behalf of the homeowner, who I don't think they'd sign off on me hanchoing their project. That's the guy doing it on my property. Out of the way.
Starting point is 00:40:16 I got this. I'm going rogue. Yeah. And the guy at Plan Check didn't like some of the engineering. So I jumped over the counter and took him out. Yeah. Yeah. Fucking going rogue.
Starting point is 00:40:28 Why don't I do something about it? Who are these people? I made some changes to the design. I think you'll like these more better. Yeah, these are adults. Yeah, I had this fast. I went, I paid off the Coastal Commission. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:42 And I fast-tracked your project. Instead of just chronicling it and showing it to millions of people and shining a light on it, instead, I physically strapped those bags on and started nailing sheer wall off. Yeah. That's what I do. I love that that's, by the way, some adult sat down and composed that argument. Got him. Got him. Got him. You should be doing something.
Starting point is 00:41:10 I don't know where it is, Andrew, but it made me last. By the way, keep them coming. I always repost them because I'm endlessly amused. I like a compliment. I enjoy a compliment. But a retarded argument is the best. And a retarded jab is the best. And it's sort of like I like a good.
Starting point is 00:41:37 movie. But a bad movie that's trying to be good is always, you know, Roadhouse is always, always going to, Con Air is always going to trump an actual good movie. Yes. For me. In terms of entertainment. It's just bad. I like it better than good. You know, like, I've seen Shawshank Redemption one and a half times, but I've seen Con Air 27 times. It's like that's my feeling with that. So like a that boy and a compliment is nice, but it's never as good is a retarded jab. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:16 Anytime I post about policies, I am always more curious to see. When you see the agreements coming in, you're always curious. What's the first person? That's the little keyboard warrior who's going to try. Yes. Anytime I've posted about anything with politics in the last six years or five years, anytime I post anything, I could start. to stopwatch for when is someone to go bring up January 6th. Oh, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:42:40 Any issue, any issue, whether it's homelessness out here, whether it's crime, whether it's tariffs, anything, it's always somewhere somebody goes, did you condemn January 6th? Yeah, they love it. That's their go-to. So now I got from, what's this name, Imrucus? I can't barely read it from here. So, you had a year and a half to use your power. to help, question mark.
Starting point is 00:43:09 Instead, post and make money. Great work, actually. I'm not sure what powers he's talking about, but also I don't even know what money he's talking about. That's fantastic. I basically did it at my own expense. I don't know who you think. It's one of these things where they go,
Starting point is 00:43:32 taking money from Fox to echo talking points. They don't pay you. Yeah. Fox has never paid me one penny. Yeah. When you go on Jesse Waters, you do it for zero money, and there are no talking points. You're 0 for two. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:52 Jesse Waters, here's what Jesse Waters does. He goes, no money. And here's what the subjects are that we're planning on talking about, say, whatever you want. Yep. Yeah. So talking points, no, money, no. But keep going. Yes, I'm getting paid to do this thing that I pay to do without compensation.
Starting point is 00:44:16 And then I could have used my power to help. Maybe he's talking about like a telepathic thing. Like maybe it's an emotional mental. Like maybe I'm like, like, Ockmoreman. Like I just communicate with the dolphins to bring in driftwood and make a seawall. make a seawall or something. Like, what powers would I have? What do you think he's saying?
Starting point is 00:44:41 What power? I think a lot of where that comes from, honestly, is there's this hatred of rich people and successful people. Oh, you have power because you're powerful. And they have this perception, everyone in Hollywood or everyone in politics, everyone, they have some sort of, well, you have the ability to influence everything and do things about this. Right.
Starting point is 00:44:59 Just because you have money, you must have the power to fix this. Yeah. Well, here's how good that is. rich person because you could do something about this. Yeah. Well, let me explain power in rich and buying off everybody and paying off these senators and these lobbyists and these people on the commissions and stuff like that. Okay.
Starting point is 00:45:22 Who is this retard? I want to see this guy is. Let's see. A bugger, a little fridual. He's got a picture. of a pug. All right, I have no idea who this. It is. All right, here's what I don't care. Here's my point. Here's my point. Here's how it works and here's how it doesn't work. The folks on the left, they think that the rich guys are just buying off everybody and lobbying and
Starting point is 00:45:55 getting what they want and we don't have to pay taxes or we don't obey laws and whatever. All right. That is untrue. true. Now, here's how work. Now, that's what people on the left thing. But I'll tell you what is true. What is true is the real buying off is the NGOs and the money that's given for the homeless and the money that's given to raise money after the concert to save the palisades. And it all goes into your PACs and your NGOs and you're helping kids and your hospice care. That's where the real money goes. But let's just do this thought experience. experiment. Oh, oh. I'm ruckus. Is back. He's replied to me. I didn't see this part. Oh, okay. So I guess all that fame, money, and connection through the years only works for the bad people. Got it. Okay. This is what we're talking about. They think because you're famous and you have money. You get stuff. And I think there's a meeting where all the rich people know each other and all the rich people.
Starting point is 00:47:04 It's a chef. You have to pay more. Here's what having money in California means. You pay more in taxes and you get sued a lot. Yes. How many times you've been sued? I'm not rich enough to have gotten sued. I've been threatened twice.
Starting point is 00:47:16 Chuck, how many times you've been sued? Zero. Andrew, how many times you've been sued? Okay. Add up everyone in this building, the amount they've been sued, and then I've been sued like 11 times. So that's how, that's what happens when you make money in live in California. You get sued. You get sued by everybody.
Starting point is 00:47:36 Anyone who used to work for you, any patent trolls, they all sue you. And if you went and worked on that guy's frame, you would get sued. I would get sued. All right. So I guess all the fame and money and connections through the years only work for the bad people. Got it. Yeah, it works for the NGO people and it worked for the Somalians in Minnesota. It doesn't work for me.
Starting point is 00:48:04 But I will say this to I'm ruckus, I'm ruckus. Here's a deal. Let's do a little thought experiment. The richest people in all of Los Angeles, and in fact, basically maybe in the world, save Monaco, live along PCH in Malibu. And when I say live there, they don't live there. They live in Bel Air or Orange County or whatever, but they have a property. They have a property.
Starting point is 00:48:42 The average cost of the property, I'll put to you this way. Maybe you can look this up, but it doesn't really matter. I'm a real estate expert. I'm going to tell you. The average cost of the property in Altadena, between $801.4 million. So it sounds like a lot around the country, but I'm talking about 900,000 square feet two-bedroom, no pool. That's pretty standard across the suburbs in that direction. The average cost of the place that burned down in Altadena is a million bucks.
Starting point is 00:49:19 One-five. Who cares? Those properties are well on their way being rebuilt. I'm not toured it, but they're building. Not at a fever pitch, but there's many properties being rebuilt. The average property along PCH is $14 million. And the average income, now here's what I'll do you. The average income of the person who lives in Altadena,
Starting point is 00:49:47 and those are school teachers and garbage men and PE coaches and stuff like that, is probably 80 grand, 90 grand. The average income of the person that had the home on PCH is probably $11 million a year. Yeah. Okay. They're rebuilding in Altadena. There is no rebuilding along PCH. So, Imrichus, douche, where's all the money?
Starting point is 00:50:13 Where's all the power? These are the richest people in Los Angeles getting fucked by the Coastal Commission and no, they can't buy them off. They would have bought them off a year and a half ago if they could buy them off. These are the richest most affluent people in America and they can't get a permit. So you tell me how this buying off and this influence and this rich upper crust shit works. Because the poor people in Altadena got a permit and are rebuilding. So shut the fuck up.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Thank you. All right. This Friday, Portland, He and I'm doing one show there. That's a last minute kind of thing I'm filling in. 7 o'clock show and then two shows on Saturday, Portland, helium, and then Oklahoma City on the 12th, and then Tulsa on the 13th. Just got on Crohn. June 20th, San Anna, going to be classic cars there, showing the K-Rock dock. What do you got Amienser?
Starting point is 00:51:14 I got J.R.'s Comedy Club in Santa Clarated June 6th, and I got Queen City Tavern in Scranton, Joe Biden's old hometown, on June 20th. Those two fellas hugging, Joey? We're going to sit around the breakfast table. That's your future. They're going to get their whole month. All right. Tell the next time, man, for you ends are saying. Mahala.
Starting point is 00:51:33 At first, I didn't think it was real. I woke up to this blinding light, and I was transported to another place. Pluto TV. Then I heard a voice. Come with me if you want to live. There were thousands of movies and shows, and they were all free. The truth is ours. It's just so beautiful.
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