The Broski Report with Brittany Broski - 124: Addressing The Heated Rivalry Concerns

Episode Date: January 14, 2026

This week on The Broski Report, Fearless Leader Brittany Broski addresses the Heated Rivalry concerns, updates the nation on her recent travel, and holds book club.ICE OUT OF OUR CITY / PROTEST RESOU...RCES:ACLU – https://www.aclu.org/know-your-rights/protesters-rights Immigrant Defense Project – https://www.immigrantdefenseproject.org/raids-toolkit Freedom for Immigrants – https://www.freedomforimmigrants.org/resourcesImmigrants Legal Resource Center – https://www.ilrc.org/community-resources/know-your-rights Immigration Justice Campaign – https://immigrationjustice.us/ Watch The Broski Report AD FREE: https://patreon.com/broskireport The OFFICIAL Songs of The Week Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3ULrcEqO2JafGZPeonyuje?si=061c5c0dd4664f01 👕 Get your merch here: https://broski.shop/ Follow The Broski Report:https://www.linktr.ee/broskireporthttps://www.tiktok.com/@broskireport https://instagram.com/broskireport Follow Royal Court:https://www.youtube.com/@royalcourt https://www.tiktok.com/@bbroyalcourthttps://www.instagram.com/royalcourthttps://www.twitter.com/bbroyalcourt Follow Brittany:https://www.tiktok.com/@brittany_broski https://instagram.com/brittany_broski https://youtube.com/brittany_broski CREDIBLE RESOURCES TO HELP FREE PALESTINE:Palestinian Children’s Relief Fund - https://www.pcrf.net/UNICEF - https://www.unicefusa.org/stories/helping-gazas-children-cope-traumaDoctors Without Borders - https://donate.doctorswithoutborders.orgWorld Central Kitchen - https://wck.org/World Health Organization - https://www.who.int/Headcount - https://www.headcount.org/IG ACCOUNTS FOR A FREE PALESTINE:@eye.on.palestine@aljazeeraenglish@palestinianyouthmovement@byplestia@motaz_azaiza@impactLGBTQ+ RESOURCES:https://Translifeline.org https://Glaad.org  https://Pflag.org https://www.thetrevorproject.org/ REPRODUCTIVE RESOURCES:https://aidaccess.org https://plancpills.org https://Ineedana.com https://www.reprolegalhelpline.org/ https://heyjane.com Songs of The Week: Rubberband Man by Mumford & Sons feat. HozierTV Dinner by Sam FenderBrought to You By: Shopify – Sign up for your $1/month trial – https://shopify.com/broski Seat Geek – Use my code for 10% off your next SeatGeek order*: https://seatgeek.onelink.me/RrnK/BROSKI2026 Sponsored by SeatGeek. *Restrictions apply. Max $20 discountRocket Money – Reach your financial goals faster – https://rocketmoney.com/broskireport CHAPTERS:0:00 – Intro2:14 – Heated Rivalry4:00 – (Not) Heath Advice7:55 – Content Updates16:49 – The Nutcracker21:10 – Holiday Travel25:03 – Dublin32:27 – Book Club53:32 – YouTube Recs55:30 – Tarot Recap59:21 – Exercise1:00:19 – Outro#brittanybroski, #broski, #broskination, #broskireport, #heatedrivalry, #probiotics, #calebhearon, #nutcracker, #ballet, #hotones, #newyorkcity, #dublin, #ireland, #books, #bookclub, #ireland, #nye, #youtube

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Starting point is 00:00:05 Direct from the Brozky Nation headquarters in Los Angeles, California. This is The Brozky Report with your host, Brittany Brozky. I think I'm going to die in this house. I think I'm going to die in this how bru! Guys, welcome back. Welcome back to the first, maybe half, maybe second episode of the Brozky Report in 2026. In the year of our Lord, 26. Red Bull flavor of the day, tropical.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Now, what is in this? Yellow. What makes up a tropical drink? Yellow, green, orange, mango. Now, none of this is of the earth. None of this is of God. None of this is honoring the body. The body is the temple.
Starting point is 00:00:56 My temple has been ransacked and destroyed. Every Red Bull I drink, I literally think of it like a cigarette, like how the air ball. ash comes off the end of a cigarette and it's like, what do you just blow it in the wind, okay? Every red bowl I drink, a little piece of my heart breaks off and like it's just ash through the chunnel of my body. Tunnel. Now that's actually going to be channel and tunnel. Channel. Welcome back to the grocery report. Today I have news. And I'm not sure what the news is because my manager just called me and left me a very cryptic message that said you're going to, and I'm kind of
Starting point is 00:01:30 freaking out and I'm trying to hide it in. Oh, that was just my door-dash driver talking to me right now. It's okay. I got a call from my manager and she said, you're going to get a call in the next, like, hour and a half, two hours, and I can't tell you who it is, but just, like, be ready and be excited. And I was like, that could mean anything. Like, the range and scope of what that could entail is, like, who knows? Like, is Oscar Isaac going to give me a call on my cell phone? Like, that could literally mean anything.
Starting point is 00:02:02 I don't know. Who's the flavor of the week? Guys, can I just address something off the bat? Okay, well, first of all, that's it. So if I get a call and there's like a weird jump cut, that's why. Second of all, I have heard you. Please, please, I've heard the heated rivalry requests noted, okay? Received.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Thank you. Message received. Working on it, all I can say. Working on it. Stay tuned. Okay? And let me tell you something. He is charming.
Starting point is 00:02:36 He is charming the pants off of Hollywood. Let me tell you something right now. That is a man. That's a charmer. Okay? Let the boy work. He's work in a room. Yeah, heard.
Starting point is 00:02:47 Okay? You don't need to keep commenting it on every single thing that I post. Every single thing that I post. Every single thing. Who does that sound like, Tigger? Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. A tigger is a special thing to do. Guys,
Starting point is 00:03:02 what the fuck energy is in the air today. Hey, hey! Also, sorry for the late upload yesterday. I filmed that episode. Filmed the whole episode. Like, what have I been up to? Like the last month? Wow, the new year, like manifesto, da-da-da-da.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Drives busted. Yeah. The drives are gone. So, this is two-parto. And I'm Jimmy waiting for you on the corner of your street that I'm not moving. Bring back train. Where is train?
Starting point is 00:03:40 Are they problematic? Are train Republicans? Are train Republicans right now? Are they doing right-wing Republican right now? Can someone let me know? Thank you. Get back to me on that. Guys, raise your hand.
Starting point is 00:03:54 Everyone take a moment. Pause. Broski Nation, pause. Lock in with me right now. Raise your hand if you've had diarrhea in the past week. Okay. Now, in my mind's eye, I'm imagining the majority of you just raised your.
Starting point is 00:04:06 your hand. 2026, I'm prescribing you guys something. Okay, I'm a doctor. I'm an MD. I'm a DMS. DMS. Is that what I think it is? Doctor of medical service. What's DMT? D. When you're a dentist, what is that? DDS. DDS. DDS. DDS, meaning doctor of dental surgery. Yeah, okay, I'm that too. DMT. Now that's a drug. I'm pretty sure. And what? Can I say something? When I was younger, thought TNT was going to be a much bigger problem than it actually ended up being. I thought there was going to be T&T everywhere. Like, do not fuck with the TNT. If you're smoking a cigarette, do not do it around the TNT.
Starting point is 00:04:49 Everyone knows this. If you're in quicksand, don't try to get out. It'll eat you alive faster. Okay. Now, the Bermuda Triangle, again, that's another one. A big issue for us as kids. Haven't really heard much about it, okay, outside of the average conspiracy theory. TNT.
Starting point is 00:05:07 Never seen it in person. Don't even know if it's like an old miner, like a coal miner and an old abandoned coal mine with T&T. I thought that would be a fixture in my life more than it is. Anyone else relate to that? Okay. Guys, your gut health. We need to talk about it. Stop having it.
Starting point is 00:05:25 You met me at a very diarrhea-centric time in my life. You met me at a very liquid shit time in my life. And I'm over that and I'm not who I was when I was having. having diarrhea, and I'm sorry for who I presented as, you know, who fronted. And we're going to get some probiotics going for you guys. Me with my doctor of dental surgery. What I can prescribe to you right now is probiotics. That's really actually helped me having diarrhea.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Because you know, I don't have a gallbladder. Yeah, we know. We know I don't have a gallbladder. I can't shut up about it. I'm missing an organ. Hi, hi, hi, how are you? I'm Brittany, I'm missing an organ. Guys, probiotics.
Starting point is 00:06:03 It's the future. it's the truth, it's the light. It's really helped me. I can't, again, I am a doctor of dental surgery. I'm not a doctor of gut health, DGH. I'm not a DGG, and I'm not a DGL. Dom, Dom, Dom, dentist, little gut, health, intestine, small intestine. Okay, going to finish this yellow red bull, and then we're going to get into business. How long have I been talking for six minutes about what? Okay? I'm, thank you guys for paying attention, and I'm going to get into it right here. Holy shit, happy new year. And with that also comes the B side of that, which is fuck ice. Fuck ice and fuck Donald Trump and all of the above. It's so sickening to like log onto the
Starting point is 00:06:49 internet every day and see some new atrocity and see how our government is literally crumbling. A fascist regime has completely taken over. Above international law, I guess, it's infuriating. So that's just kind of like off the bat, fuck ice, and like it's harrowing to think that this is like really the reality we live in. But on the flip side, I always want to lead with a message of hope that it can be changed and that there are things to be done. As always, I have, I know it seems cliche, but I have links in my description for organizations that I believe in and organizations that I think do good work. So check those out. If you feel, so inclined. Now, moving on to the third thing that I want to talk about, I have been traveling for like the last month straight, and I did a lot, and I feel like we need to dissect a lot. I went to Dublin. No, sorry, I went to London, and we filmed a Royal Court episode that is very exciting. We're doing this like Royal Court Abroad thing now, which is. is like we have a system now. So when we are called over there or when an opportunity presents
Starting point is 00:08:08 itself, we're prepared. And we go and I have a whole London-based crew. And we fly out there with all the props and all the capes and we do it. And that's what we did for the Palmuscal episode. And we just did it for this one we filmed. And it was, I think you guys are going to love it. It is about a lead of a show that I hyperfixated on about a year ago. And I'm sure you can guess. Like everyone's kind of anticipating this new season of this show, this very famous show. And we interviewed the leaders. I'm so excited.
Starting point is 00:08:40 They were a joy and it was a privilege to do it. So I'll be looking out for that in February. And what else do we do? In London, I flew to New York after that. And I saw, I did recess therapy with Julian, which should be out today, I believe, Wednesday. I love that man. I love that man. And he has such a way with, like, commanding a room and taming these feral children.
Starting point is 00:09:09 Don't know how he does it. Also, wow. To be in the mind of a child. I just like, these kids today, man, where's the whimsy? I came in there and they're like, what's your topic you want to talk about? And I was like, oh, obviously magic and fairies. And I like how they're real. Duh, because we're kids.
Starting point is 00:09:25 And also they are real. And we sit there and we're talking and the kids are like, I obviously don't believe in fairies. because they're not real. Unicorns are not real. And I was like, you're six. Hey, you're six. Maybe you should believe in fairies for like,
Starting point is 00:09:44 try it out, like try it on for size, and then become a cynic. These kids are like reading Camus. These kids are reading Kafka. I'm not getting it. Like, why are you familiar with Lovecraftian horror? You should be believing in fairies. Anyway.
Starting point is 00:10:00 That was fun sitting next to these kids being like, that's obviously not real. And I'm like, how do you know? Okay, how do you know? Who told you that? Anyway, recess therapy was fun. I also did a little offshoot of hot ones called heat eaters. I would like to say something into the mic publicly.
Starting point is 00:10:23 They're not acting on hot ones. I believe that Sean Evans is a genetic anomaly. He should not exist. in this timeline specifically, something is, I won't say wrong with Sean Evans, but he might be the most advanced of us. You know, like, yes, there's the Olympians and there's like the long distance runners and there's, you know, people who are agile of body and mind. We've got some of the greatest like thinkers and philosophers and scientists working
Starting point is 00:10:54 today. Yeah, sure, don't care. Sean Evans, the way that man can put back spicy chicken, he's, he is an angel among us. Mung Us Potion, the 3am Mung Us Potion? Sean Evans needs to be studied. I did heat eaters. And that shit, like, you know, they're using pepper X and cayenne pepper this and ghost pepper that. Okay, like those are the hottest peppers in the world.
Starting point is 00:11:20 But it's used in an artful way where I'm like, okay, I guess it enhances the flavor to a certain extent. But it gets to a point. It gets to a point where it is full on masochism. You bitches are masochistic. Why am I doing BDSM with this spicy gumbo? Like, I feel like I'm in bondage and I've got one of those, like, leather chokers around my neck. Like a dom, leather daddy. Like a bear and, like, leather bondage.
Starting point is 00:11:49 Like, what the fuck? That's how I felt eating this spicy gumbo that she had made for me. I was like, what the fuck kind of freak shit is this? I'm doing puppy play of the mouth. I felt so like, oh my God, this is not for me. And it was so, you know what sucks? Is it so delicious? It's very delicious.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And they do it based on your life. Like, this show is actually so amazing. Esther, the host is so good. The questions, the bits, all of it was good. The food was great. It's just like, why is it that spicy? Why is it that? It got to a point we wrapped, okay?
Starting point is 00:12:23 And they're, oh, yeah, you did so? Why? Yeah. And I'm like, uh-huh. It's that like ringing. have like tenetis in my ears and my eyes won't stop blinking and like everything's a bit damp. I'm like vaguely wet everywhere because I'm sweating but it's like a cold chill and everyone's like pretty pretty over here. We're going to do a thumbnail. We're going to do a TikTok. I'm going to do a
Starting point is 00:12:42 and I'm like like I can't take a full breath because it's supposed and I literally go, I need a second. And my publicist comes over and she's like, are you good? And I was like, I just need a second. And I went to the bathroom and I was like leaning on the door like this, taking deep breaths. And I literally turned on the cold water and I was just running my hands under cold water to distract me. Bitch, it was that serious? And also, was that the only thing I had to eat all day?
Starting point is 00:13:11 Yeah. And also, after that, did I go to the Marty Supreme Premiere? Yeah. I did. And did I have liquid diarrhea at the Marty Supreme Premier? Maybe. That's actually not to be disclosed at this time. Okay?
Starting point is 00:13:24 A-24, if I did, no, I did not. Okay, so I would actually never do that. that was it was a very you met me at a very um pepper x time in my life like truly but i don't think it my my system took a screenshot it was a lot but that was fun the whole experience i guess was fun but at the end i was like oh my god it felt like a war documentary um okay then after that i did Caleb's podcast now of course Caleb is an angel walking on this earth uh angel that also terrorizes me. I feel very terrorized by Caleb Heron. You know, we have a very tumultuous, very sexual relationship, as you guys know, and it's always, it's like seeing an old fling.
Starting point is 00:14:09 You know, I was like, get over here. What are we doing? We can't do this. Very mean, Caleb. After we filmed his podcast, the 100th episode, by the way, if you guys didn't know 100 episodes of So True starring Caleb Heron, he's an incredible host, he's an incredible, I'm so lucky to know him. I'm better for having known him. He challenges me as a friend should in all the best ways. And so after, you know, like to celebrate, we were like, let's go get dinner. Okay? Naturally, we go back to his apartment. Some edibles were ingested. We go out to eat this beautiful Thai meal. And we invite the twins, my writers for royal court, Annabelle and Sabina. Well, Annabel comes. And we're sitting there. And we're all kind of like violently high is what I would
Starting point is 00:14:57 describe it as. And we're sitting at this restaurant and Annabelle says something to me and I cannot remember for the life me what it was. But I like in that moment, like a that so raven moment, I shrunk up in my body and I was like a baby. Like laughing and like slapping my applesauce on the table like I had a bib on and I peed. I peed in my diaper. I like full on peed. So obviously the night was ruined. Obviously, we had a hundred different plans we were going to do that night. Go back to Annabelle's house. Go back to Sabina's house. Do whatever. Uh-uh. I said, you guys actually have to pay for this meal because I have to get in a car right now and go change my diaper. Like, I have to go hose off like a fucking zoo animal because I peed on
Starting point is 00:15:43 myself from laughing. What am I postpartum? What the fuck is happening? Why do I not have control over my bowels? Is this like a normal thing? You turn 28 and it just happens? Dude, it was a lot for me. It was a lot for me in that moment where I was like, oh my God, I just peed enough in my pants to like, I have to go. Now, that's the risk they don't tell you about having funny friends or about being funny yourself. It's like sometimes you get locked. You get locked into a flow state with your funny friends and it gets to a point like on a baseball bat.
Starting point is 00:16:19 When you do that shit on the baseball bat, like on the handle and then someone has to put their hand on top, when that moment happens comedically, I pee. Okay, it's just, I just pee. And I don't know. I don't know. And like, it's humbling, to say the least. So you're going to have diarrhea at the Marty Supreme Premier and pee yourself at a Thai restaurant? Like, do you need a diaper?
Starting point is 00:16:43 You probably should get a diaper. Fucking idiot. All right. After New York. Oh, my God, also in New York, I saw the goddamn nutcracker. I saw them nuts being cracked on stage. And many a bulge was seen. Many a bulge, okay?
Starting point is 00:16:59 God bless the New York City ballet. Many a bulge to be seen and heralded. Now, the nutcracker that I saw is George Balanchine's nutcracker. Okay, now this is kind of specific, and any ballerinas, any ballet enthusiasts in the comments or viewers otherwise, correct me if I'm wrong. But Balanchine's version of the nutcracker is a bit different. It focuses, half the cast is kids. It focuses on Clara and the Prince, or the Nutcracker, both as children. And the first act is, I guess, you know, the classic Nutcracker story of it's Christmas Eve and there's a big party at the house and all the kids, whatever.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And then Drosselmeier, Drossel, yeah, Josselmeyer comes and brings all the kids toys and gives Clara the Nutcracker. And then her bitch-ass, stupid-ass little brother breaks the arm. and whatever, and then she goes to sleep on the couch. And then in her dream, everything comes to life, right? So in her dream state, she gets shrunken down to the size of a mouse of the nutcracker. It's actually so cool how they do it. The tree grows on stage to this massive size. And it makes you, I mean, it like kept going.
Starting point is 00:18:17 It was so magical and whimsical. It was so good. The tree kept growing. And then all the little mice and whatever come out. it feels like you're that tiny, and then, you know, Act 1 is done. There's an intermission, and then they go into Act 2, where they're in the Sugar Plum Fairy Dreamland, and it's freaking awesome. That was really neat. And I feel like in the other version of the Nutcracker that I've seen, which I was like probably in middle school when I saw it, I really don't remember it. And I didn't
Starting point is 00:18:41 have an appreciation for it. Um, it's different. And, uh, in the whole second act of Balanchine's Nutcracker. It's just Clara and the Prince are up on this little like dace and everyone comes and just dances for them. Yeah, would you imagine the second act of ballet? Everyone's just kind of dancing.
Starting point is 00:19:01 But it was like all the different cultures and then they do like the marzipan girl and then the sugar plum fairy comes out. But she's not as big of a fixture in Balanchines as I guess other versions like the original Russian Nutcracker. So that was interesting.
Starting point is 00:19:18 And at the very end of Act 2, the kids just like get in this chariot and fly away. And then that's the end of the Nutcracker. And I was like, oh, because she and the Barbina Nutcracker, it's actually different because they have to defeat the Rock King. And also there's a curse on the land and the Nutcracker's sexy. And then they, you know, kind of bounce as the Nutcracker and then whatever. And then he turns back into a prince and he's ugly. And is he sexier as the Nutcracker? Yes, he is.
Starting point is 00:19:42 What are you not understanding? He's sexier as the Nutcracker. So, yeah, it was a bit different. And then I kind of went down this rabbit hole of who Balanchine was, and he was very centric to the New York City ballet. I think he co-founded it. And so his style is very unique. And it's a way to dance ballet that's very different from other styles. So that was cool.
Starting point is 00:20:04 I really, really enjoyed it. And oh, my goodness, the costumes were so pretty. And everything was very, like, vaguely Victorian, which, of course, I love. Like, all the costumes were very old-timey. It didn't feel, you know, modern or they didn't try to do like some weird 1930s, something or whatever. It was very, very good. But I do want to see the other version of the Nutcracker. Probably next year.
Starting point is 00:20:27 I'll go when it's Nutcracker season later this year. And I'll compare notes because I feel like I've seen the iconic one. Now I want to see other iterations. And I would like to see it. My dream is to see a ballet in Paris. I really want to go to the Paris, the opera. and like see, because I love Arlie Dupon, and I love all these, like, really famous French ballerinas. It's why I really want to go.
Starting point is 00:20:53 But also the Royal Ballet and Opera in London is world famous. And then, of course, eventually I'll make the pilgrimage to, like, Moscow and St. Petersburg and, like, see real Russian ballet. That shit doesn't fuck around. They don't fuck around about ballet and Russia. So, okay, so that was really, really fun. Then I flew to Houston for, like, 48 hours, saw my family, fluted Florida. for a week played laser tag. Let me tell you something about bonding with your family. If you have a tough dynamic, okay, maybe you and your siblings don't get along. Maybe you got
Starting point is 00:21:28 in a big fight with your mom. Go hash it out in laser tag. Right. Go to your local laser tag. And there's probably not that many left. You need to find a laser tag setting. You need to all get on it. Because guess what? There's different games. Sometimes it's girls versus boys. Sometimes it's tag. Like, it really is tagged. There's, like, a red team and a blue team, and you start out and you try, whoever, I guess, recruits the most team members wins. So if you're blue and you get shot by red, now you're red, okay? That's fun because then you get to team up. Sometimes it was like groups of three, and you got a, oh, my six, all my six.
Starting point is 00:22:06 Okay, I was, and of course, I had a strategy. Because if you're going to go in and do laser tag, guess what? My dad was in the military. My brother loves that shit. My mom's just there for the vibes. and my sister's like that tribute in Hunger Games. Fox, the Fox one, what did she, Fox face, whatever they called her?
Starting point is 00:22:23 Yeah, she's like that. She'll come and she'll wait till the carnage is over, and then she'll come and she'll pick all the shit and she'll go. She's very sneaky like that. Sierra's always been sneaky as fuck like that. Okay, so you've got to be careful, you've got to know the personalities when you're doing laser tag. And me, look, I'm an all-American soldier.
Starting point is 00:22:41 Me, I'm in there. Okay, I'm still Team 6 in there. And so we're in laser tag. And we're kind of, you know, whatever. I've scoped the scene. I found a foxhole. This is when my World War I and, you know, like band of brother shit comes in. Because I know all this.
Starting point is 00:23:00 Okay, so I found a foxhole. You get low. And I found, because it's separated by these like tarps, you know, like moving tarps or painting tarps. It's all that. So I got low. And I positioned myself in the back corner. I found a little hole and I stuck my laser gun through that. And then I, you know, peep, peep,
Starting point is 00:23:17 And you don't even know that you've gotten got because I am a strategist. You're not going to get me. Did I have the lowest score out of anyone yet? Yeah, I lost. By all technical standards, I lost. But it doesn't matter because strategy. Okay. One moment we were, it was like, and you know, you get a little bit too excited and you start running.
Starting point is 00:23:41 And it's like the pool. You shouldn't run. Don't run in laser tag. Well, no one told me that. At one point I got so excited. And my dad was kind of chasing me, and he makes these scary noises. And I was like, oh my God! And I was running.
Starting point is 00:23:53 Me and my brother collided. I mean full-on, like, college football. The back of my head hit the top of my back. The back of my head fully, like, hit the top of my back. Okay? And then I fell to the ground a la Peter Griffin, like at the bottom of the stairs, like, and then he was like, oh, my God, don't tell mom, don't tell mom, don't tell mom. You're okay.
Starting point is 00:24:20 Like, I was thinking, oh my God, we have to go to the hospital. And then I got up and I was like, now see, I'm the ideal laser tag player because no damage sustained. Plus, boom, you're dead. Plus, oh, you feel so bad for me because you got me. Boom. Now I tagged you. And then I run away. Man, we full on, like full body collided.
Starting point is 00:24:42 And my brother's like six foot four. And I'm five eight. And I, oh, full on my back, like a snow angel. Like, oh my God. Yeah, I thought I had died, but I didn't. I was still here to tell the tail. Get into Laser Tag. I really, I'm a fan of Laser Tag.
Starting point is 00:24:58 You guys are missing out on some group bonding opportunities. Okay. Now, after that, I went to, you guessed it. Dublin, Ireland. Okay. Guys, there's not, okay. If you get it, you get it. And do I feel like a middle-aged, chubby white guy with a neck beard and a fedora
Starting point is 00:25:19 who loves Japan. Yeah. That's how I feel about Ireland. I really am that when it comes to the... I have such a deep appreciation for the culture, for the language, for the people, for the community. I think the way that Southern Americans talk to each other in terms of, like, you could talk to anyone about anything. They're just kind. They want to talk, waiting in line at the grocery store or whatever. I think that that's a missing piece of Gen Z. And I think that that... that the art of small talk is really lost on people under the age of 40 for whatever reason. You know, COVID, blame it on whatever. Blame it on the rise of like Snapchat instead of texting and all that.
Starting point is 00:26:03 I mean, I just, when you hide behind a screen for every social interaction, you miss out on those opportunities to hone the skill of small talk. Irish people do it so well. And it's really like lovely. So I was there and I was there with the girls and then I, like, invited Drew and Caleb thinking, they're not going to book a ticket, but how fun would it be if they came? Bits stick came. Ah!
Starting point is 00:26:31 Oh, all my favorite people in one place in my favorite city? Sure. Sure, fuck it. Everyone came. Drew, Days, Caleb, we found this, like, weird ass event to go to for New Year's Eve that ended up being like a swingers party. Hey, what the fuck. And it was in this castle in the middle of nowhere. I was in County Carlo.
Starting point is 00:26:52 It was just like, what are you doing? The vibe was so wretched. It was so incredibly negative that we all kind of agreed as a group. Should we leave and go to just a local pub? Yeah, we should. And so we're all dressed in our nice dresses and boots. Me and Drew, because that's my twin and my sister, wore the same boots, unknowingly.
Starting point is 00:27:13 And so we all go to this pub nearby. Oh, my God, it was so magical. We walk in, because it was cold outside. We walk in and it was all warm. It was not really that busy. There was this special little nook, this table. We all sat out at fit all of us perfectly. We got guineas and this, whatever.
Starting point is 00:27:30 They had snacks, Tato, whatever. And then we all do the 10, 9, do the countdown. Fireworks go off. Oh, it was magical. God. There is a whimsy in that fucking land. I'm telling y'all. I'm telling you.
Starting point is 00:27:50 And I want to go to Dingle, and I want to go to Cork, and I want to go to Dalky, and I want to go to Dunleary, and I've been to Galway, and I've done the Cliffs of Moher, Moir, the Cliffs of Moor. It's just magic. So, and then with my girls, like, also, it was just insane. So, yeah, it was magic, and it was a magical, like, opportunity to make memories with my friends. We played Jackbox, Quiplash and Trivia Murder Party and this, like, place. that Drew rented. It was just truly magical. Like, I will remember it forever. And I hope to have many more moments and trips like that in the next few years. And y'all, can I just level with you? Brooskey Nation, we're really doing it. Like, what? Hey, when did this become not a joke? Like, when did the
Starting point is 00:28:40 bit become my job? I feel like that all the time. Like, Royal Court is, it is taken off in a way that I could have only dreamed of and we're getting incoming requests from people that I'm like, are you out of your mind? Are you out of your mind? We just film one today that was, it was a dream. Like, it was such a dream. And I think it's going to come out in February. He's one of my favorite musicians, like ever. And we got to talk books and philosophy and artistic references.
Starting point is 00:29:15 And I'm just, I'm addicted. And I can't tell you who it is. because I think I have a curse when I say, oh, this person's going on royal court. Something happens with the episode, and we, like, don't end up putting it out. So I'm not going to say who it is. But I feel like y'all will know because I've talked about this band very recently. So I'm so excited. I love him to death.
Starting point is 00:29:35 And I had him sign my copy of East of Eden. Okay, here's some things. Let's get into the, that's my updates. Let's get into the section of the shit that I'm on. The shit I'm on for real right now. What I've been loving, what I've been eating up, over. the last month, I finished four books. Everyone clap. Guys, stop. Stop. I read four books. I kind of want to start there. And then at the end, I'll talk about some channels that I'm loving on YouTube.
Starting point is 00:30:03 Book Club. Let's start now. By the way, I know I keep teasing this, but I'm just getting a temperature check. If we do, let's say, I don't know, a merch drop. That is book-centric. That is maybe a bit gothic. And maybe Victorian and like Dark Academia. Would you guys be rocking with that? Let me know. Broskineation, you guys let me know. And can I just, also, before I get into the book club, thanks for watching. You guys could watch anything.
Starting point is 00:30:33 You guys, your attention is something that I do not take for granted. Like, whatever you get out of this podcast, whatever you see in me, whatever this parisocial link is between us, it is tangible and it is not taken for granted. and I just want you guys to know that. But like I don't, this doesn't exist without you and you tuning in and you like engaging and creating a community. And I just want to do the best I can by you guys. So not to be earnest, but let me be earnest. Uh-oh, the earnest bug just bit me.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Uh-oh, the earnest bug is under my skin and I'm a-hicking and I'm fucking, I'm fucking, so let's do book club. I finished first, um, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Duh. I've been talking about this book for forever. It was a very short read. It was so good.
Starting point is 00:31:27 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. You've heard about it, I'm sure plenty. I think that it gets this incorrect connotation or, I guess, summary of schizophrenia, which is a very serious diagnosis, and this book is not about schizophrenia. It's about good versus evil. And I think I went into it with this understanding of like, oh, it's going to be like the movie split or whatever. No, no, no, no. And it was such an interesting angle on the concept of human nature. And are we inclined towards evil or are we altruistically inclined?
Starting point is 00:32:10 And the answer is radically both. We are evil creatures with a tendency to do good or we are going. good creatures with a very strong pull to do evil things. And wow, the way that this book dissects that, the way this book explores it in this almost science fiction way, really, really good. A very short read, it chugs along, you know, the narrator is good, and there's a letter at the end that is very, you know, almost like a how he done it kind of thing. Oh my God. Really enjoyed that. I think I gave it four, four stars. Next, I read Carmilla.
Starting point is 00:32:56 Carmilla, I've been talking about for a long time as well. Carmilla actually predates Bram Stoker's Dracula by about 25 years, give or take. And it is a sapphic vampire novel, meaning gay, meaning lesbian. It was amazing. I really enjoyed it. And I think also for a, Carmilla didn't kickstart the genre. but it definitely inspired Dracula. And I mean, Bram Stoker said that. Like, it heavily inspired. In fact, you can even take parallels from how the women are written to how the story, you know, chugs along. I'm very glad I read it because I have this understanding now of the history of the, I guess, vampire novel, the vampire story. And the first ever, like, popularized vampire book is actually called The Vampire, spelled with a Y. I can't remember who it's by.
Starting point is 00:33:52 But that was, like, 1816. And then Carmilla is like 1870s. And then Bram's Stoker's Dracula is about 1890s. So, I mean, just a great history there and to see how it's evolved. And then even, like, coming into Twilight, you know, into the modern age and the nosferatu and like all these interpretations. I love also, we're in the era of the monster. I talked about this probably a few months ago of how much I loved Frankenstein,
Starting point is 00:34:20 how much I, Nosephratu really kicked off the Gothic ship for me. Because it's always been there, maybe simmering under the surface. I've always been drawn to old-timey things and the embellishments and attention to detail and the beauty of Victorian things, even though the Victorians were fucking rotted. The care that went into making the things we look at every day beautiful I just watched this whole documentary on like lamp posts, just about lamp posts, actually.
Starting point is 00:34:50 And how everything in the modern, like, I don't know if it was millennials that kind of kicked off this gray, gray minimalism. But oh my God, I think in this era of overexposure and AI and just people are sick of it, we are going back to analog. We're going back to beauty for beauty's sake. There's a return to design and making things unique and extraordinary because that's what humans do. You know, we make beautiful things and we appreciate beautiful things. So that was interesting and it's, I guess, related to Carmilla because it's super Gothic and the way that everything's just, you know, the concept of a haunted castle and whatever. So I read Carmilla. I actually gave Carmilla about three and a half stars just because it's very simple.
Starting point is 00:35:37 I didn't really appreciate at the end. It was also this kind of like, and here's how I did it. Whatever. I mean, it was written in the 1870s. I guess that was like gag back then. But I did give it three and a half instead of four for that. So I was like, I wish there was more mystery surrounding it.
Starting point is 00:35:55 But the end really picks up. Three and a half. Then I read, what did I read? The Yellow Wallpaper. Another short story. This is by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. remember how I said I've been addicted to the theme of female madness and how dismissed women are? Throughout history, even in the modern era, when you talk about hysteria, a hysterical woman, a manic woman, a woman who suffers from melancholy, all of these old-timey terms for a woman who is depressed, anxious, ignored, dismissed, told she's crazy.
Starting point is 00:36:34 Oh my God, this idea of like, she's crazy. My ex is crazy, the crazy bitch. Like, I could write an essay on how that is almost this umbrella term for women have such complexities within them that men are too simple of creatures to understand. They're too simple. Everything is very black and white. And I feel like with women, there's just a whole universe in our own universe in our own. all of us that is so specific and it's so misunderstood. And that, how it links to female madness, is kind of touched on in the yellow wallpaper. The yellow wallpaper is an interesting story because
Starting point is 00:37:20 it's about a woman who is a mother who's married to a physician. And the physician, which is also an interesting dynamic, right? If you have a wife coming to her husband being like, I feel sick. not of body, but of spirit and mind. And the physician, only being educated and instructed in how to cure ailments of the body, that's not his milieu. That's not his, you know, expertise. But because he's a man and because he's a husband, he's going to exert his will and his, quote, unquote, expertise on his wife. She doesn't really have a choice because this was the early 1900s, late 1890s.
Starting point is 00:38:02 So it's just, you know, power dynamics versus gender dynamics versus gender roles, versus mental health versus, you know, lack of communication and belief and understanding between a man and a woman. All of this is explored in the yellow wallpaper. It's a very easy read. Like, you should read it. And the setting is very, it's described very well. It's about a woman who moves into this old, old, old house. and they move into the top floor.
Starting point is 00:38:34 And it's clear that this room used to be like a children's room. It's very wide and, you know, there's windows everywhere and there's this yellow wallpaper on the walls. It's been torn off in places and all around the bed frame. It's been scratched off. And it's kind of just like, oh, this house is dilapidated. Is that the word I'm thinking of? Delapidated in a state of disrepair or ruin as a result of age or neglect. amazing. It's all dilapidated and it's very basic furniture in the room, just the bed, maybe some chairs.
Starting point is 00:39:08 Well, she's sick. You know, she's maybe a bit drowsy and weak and she's exhausted, like fatigue of the mind. And I think probably like reading this, it's so interesting because I'm not a psychologist, but I'm sitting here reading it like, oh, she probably has postpartum depression. You know, like she just had a kid, but she's kind of unable to give the child her full attention. because she's suffering, like something emotionally and hormonally is wrong. And her husband doesn't give a fuck. Her husband's like, ah, sleep it off. I don't know. Go sit in the sunlight. I got to work. Bye. Leaves her, which also doesn't help. Isolation, right? So she's in this room. She's laying in bed, hours, days on end, day after day after day. No stimulation. She can't even read. She's so tired,
Starting point is 00:39:57 but she's staring at this wallpaper. And the pattern starts to piss her off. She starts to get so mad because it's like, why would they fucking pick this? This dumbass color. And the pattern is shit. And it's also like not the way that they pasted it on the walls. It doesn't match up and whatever. She starts to see a figure in the wallpaper.
Starting point is 00:40:16 And she's like, oh, it's a cage. It's a cage. And this figure, like, I'm looking at her as the sun light, as the sunbeams hit the wallpaper and move across the, she sees a little figure. you're escaping the wallpaper. She sees it outside. She sees it in the trees. And then, you know, in the morning, it's back in the wall.
Starting point is 00:40:33 She becomes obsessed with this wallpaper and this figure that she's like, I have to capture it. I have to show my husband, of course. And then he'll understand that this picture, you know, we have to change the wallpaper because she's in there. She's in there. And then her husband, I mean, her condition, she deteriorates rather quickly. And the husband's like, oh, you're fine.
Starting point is 00:40:55 See, you're getting better already. And she's like, yes, yes. Towards the end, it's she spirals out of control. And I love how it ends. I love how it is. And I'm not going to ruin it. So you can read it. In this, I read a collection of short stories by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
Starting point is 00:41:16 And she was just like a feminist, you know, just your average, like, feminist that was ignored and not listened to. But her stories were very diverse. And her stories tackled. lot of things. She has this story called, I wish I could remember, maybe like mother or my son or something like that. And it was the last story in this book. And it's about a woman who does her best. She's a single mom. And she raises a son that ends up becoming like a terror, like a womanizer, an abuser. And the guilt and shame that the mother carries for the son's actions isn't that
Starting point is 00:41:55 poetic. The son gets a woman pregnant, really young, and then runs off, takes no responsibility for it. Move cities, doesn't give a forwarding address. It's just like, it's not my problem. How is that my problem? Well, the mother feels so responsible, she can't reach her son, so she dedicates her entire rest of her life to helping those young women who are vulnerable, who are exposed, who have no place to turn, and who have been violent. Their innocence has been stolen from them. And now they have to carry this child to term. And the husband is not even a husband.
Starting point is 00:42:33 The man is gone. And so she dedicates her life to this. And then there's a crazy twist at the end where she ends up running into her son again. And she's really, she has like a police badge. She's fucking cool. And she has dedicated her life to taking down men like her son. And it's a crazy twist at the end. So I really enjoyed those short stories.
Starting point is 00:42:55 And then the last one I read was, oh my God, I read The Silent Patient. Okay, so there was this period of time. I guess, wait, it's still happening. There was a period of time where when you would go into a bookstore, it literally would be martyr, that book, martyr, James, Demon Copperfield. Demon Copperhead. What is David Copperfield, the magician, demon Copperhead. the housemaid and the silent patient. These books were everywhere, everywhere.
Starting point is 00:43:32 And I'm sure they're fantastic books and that one by the creator of normal people. Sally Rooney, Intermezzo. That book was everywhere. Like these are all the kind of like, oh, I guess I'll, you know, if you're not looking for something specific at a bookstore, that's what they put out in front because they're bestsellers. Well, I kept seeing The Silent Patient. And on Goodreads, I kept seeing people like raving about it. And I was like, I don't really read thrillers like that, but let me lock in because the whole. book. If you've read it, please tell me what you thought in the comments. The hook of this book,
Starting point is 00:44:01 a woman kills her husband does not say a word, not through the police questioning, through the trial, through the sentencing, through being sentenced to an insane asylum. And this all happens in England, somewhere in the modern day. She doesn't say a word. And that's interesting, right, because it's kind of got this silence of the lambs thing here, of like, who's the psychologist, who is the psychotherapist that can help this woman, or at least get the story. You know, and there's a selfish thing there of like, well, I just want to know why she did it. And so it takes you on this journey of the psychotherapist that gets a job purposefully at the asylum, the, I guess, institution that she's in for the sole purpose of talking to Alicia.
Starting point is 00:44:53 That's the name of the patient. And through all this, he crosses so many, you know, patient provider boundaries and, like, legal guidelines, I guess, to get to the bottom of it. She's calling family members. She's doing deep dives on her record, notes that other therapists have taken on her. She's going into, she's talking to friends of friends and aunts. And, I mean, it just gets to a point where it's like, dude, dude, is this really to help her? Or is this just because you're a nosy fuck?
Starting point is 00:45:26 And it just gets it spirals out of control. Well, it gets to a point where she starts talking. Of course she starts talking. And the twist at the end, it was, I will say I predicted it. Okay. I had an inkling. But for people who don't, if you are looking for a simple, thrilling read, sure. I gave it three and a half stars just because at the end I was like.
Starting point is 00:45:49 And I also, I can't, I'm going to be honest, this author. the way he wrote about, you know, people with mental, like, it felt very insensitive, and it also felt very like he just read a psychology book. Like, Bro took Psychology 101 and was like, I shouldn't write a book about this, which is fine. You could get inspiration from anywhere. But every single character, I'm not joking, every single character, the narrator would be like, and I can tell he's like that because of his childhood trauma.
Starting point is 00:46:24 every character. And look, say what you will. Childhood trauma doesn't have, like, it's not always relevant. Some people are just like that. You know what I mean? Like, you can have the best upbringing, you can be whatever, and something can still go wrong. So yes, I understand. But every single character that was introduced, it was like, and he acts this way, and I can tell that he's like that, because he was probably abused. And it's like, okay, I think that that's simplifying how complex trauma can be on the human mind, which I almost wish that he had gone more into depth in that. That's more interesting than just like, you act this way because of your childhood.
Starting point is 00:47:05 Okay? Yes, generally, what else do you have? It just felt very simplistic. So for that reason, and there's a cheesy cliche twist at the end where the narrator kind of like, looks at the window and smiles. And I was like, bra, we're going to be in the office? Are you Jim from the office? I'm pissed off.
Starting point is 00:47:25 So, three and a half. I will say I finished it in like two days because I was, what the fuck? The chapters were really short, which I like. And yeah, it kept it moving. And it kept introducing characters in a way that kept the story, you know, it propelled it. So those were the four books I read. Probably the standout was Jekyll and Hyde.
Starting point is 00:47:44 I had been wanting to read that for a long time. I finally got to it. I have a whole list of books that I'm going to get to. I'm going to do metamorphosis by Kafka next, just to say that I've read a Kafka. And it's also been on my TBR for forever. Then I'm going to read, finally, I'm going to start East of Eden. Then I'm going to read The Great Gatsby. We had to read The Great Gatsby in high school.
Starting point is 00:48:05 I'm sure y'all had to as well. And I remember basing my understanding of it off of the movie with Leonardo DiCaprio. I want to go back to basics. I want to read the text. and I want to picture it outside of the, like, I guess, visual world of Bazlerman, because I love Baddlerman, but, like, that is so, it's such a specific sensationalized telling of it. And I also think that the copy I have has discussion questions at the end. I'm trying to do those.
Starting point is 00:48:34 I'm trying to find texts or versions of the text I want to read that have discussion questions at the end that I can journal. That keeps my mind engaged. It keeps me sharp. It keeps me thinking critically because. oh my God, I go through these periods of where I'm like, I'm actually doing good. I'm not been on my phone that much. And then other times, I'm in a slump right now where every single night, I'm on TikTok for three hours.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Three hours. Just horizontal. I haven't moved my body in three hours. And I'm just, you have to get up. And in that vein, here's some channels I've been watching recently that are really good. They're really good, okay? Sometimes I'm like, sometimes I'm like, the phone is too much. Let me switch to the big screen.
Starting point is 00:49:16 YouTube on my TV. Sure. I love Gazoo Studio. Guys, if you are looking for something that is, I guess, visually stimulating, doesn't require any brain power and is like a relaxing, nice thing to do, go check out Gazoo Studio on YouTube. She does air dry clay. She does polymer clay. She does shrinkie dinks. She does illustration. She does a whole bunch of stuff. She makes these beautiful and so cute trinket boxes,
Starting point is 00:49:51 fridge magnets, whatever. And it's a skill level that in my head I'm like, I could do that if I tried hard enough. But then the other side of me is like she is a master. She has completely mastered the art of air dry clay. It's like watching Botticelli.
Starting point is 00:50:08 I am in completely. A complete awe. So I love her. Go check out GoZoo studio. Another channel that I love, I think I've shouted her out before, Madeline Wu. She's my favorite ballerina on YouTube, other than Luna Montana. I do love her. But Madeline's like, she has her own, she's got cool tattoos, which I know it's kind of taboo to have tattoos as a ballerina. She also has her own line of leotards and like active wear or like whatever. It's like dance wear. She's cool. I really like her. She used to dance for the Swedish ballet, the royal Swedish ballet, I believe. and now she's in San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:50:42 I don't know, she's so cool. I also have been loving, I'm back on my National Geographic shit, lots of stuff about like Aztecs, Mayans, the Mayan astrological charts. Let me Google this. Mayan astrology is fucking tea. It is tea. I looked at my reading and I was like, like, like it's. scary good, really scary good. Oh my God, I'm also into tarot. You know, I've been scared of tarot. Okay. I got my dragon oracle cards. I pulled that shit. I was having a really tough
Starting point is 00:51:20 night the other night to like level with you guys. I was really feeling heavy. And it was the first time I had been truly alone in a long time because I had been traveling for a month straight. Like, I wasn't home for a month. And I was visiting all these people, you know, like I'm young. I'm able. I'm, I'm, I will go to the people I love. I'm not going to make them come to me. California is really far from basically everything. And so I was traveling a lot and I was finally home. And I've been working all week.
Starting point is 00:51:50 We've been doing royal court all week. And it takes a lot of mental energy to lock in to, you know, you're researching this person's whole life. And you want to do good by the guest and you want to make them feel seen and heard and valued and listened to. While at the same time, as a host, and I think Conan does it best. of like, and Amy Poehler, where you have to also be willing to catch them, you know, like you're steering the conversation, you're steering the ship, it's your show, but ultimately I'm highlighting this person. So that balance, it just takes a lot of focus. And at the end of
Starting point is 00:52:24 filming, I'm like, oh, I'm tired. So I finally came home. I was alone. And I just, like, started to cry. Like, I felt really heavy. And I was like, what in this, also in the vein of, like female madness. It's like I can't explain why I'm feeling like this, but the feeling is real and it's tangible and it is a weight on my body. And I was like, what can I do? And I didn't want to call anyone because it wasn't that kind of like, I need to talk this out. It was just like, I had a feeling. And so I got my tarot cards because I got them from Etsy for Christmas. And I did a reading and I did my little book and I did, I flip through, you know, because there's so many different readings you can do. And I did mind, body, spirit, tea, by the way. And I just said, what do I need to hear? Like,
Starting point is 00:53:13 for my mind, for my body, and from my spirit. And the reading I got, bitch, how can you say this shit isn't real? And I just cut the deck and I just, you know, I did the thing where I, like, warmed up my hands and then I whatever tingled over the card and then I pulled it. It was crazy. All of them were reversed, which is scary. And then the reading was just exactly what what I needed to hear and it helped me make a decision about something that's been heavy on my heart. And yeah, it's going to be kind of incorporated into my business and like my approach to how I do this, you know, and it's it was just great. And I feel lighter and it's amazing. Terro really is like, if you treat it with the respect that it deserves, it can really be a functional tool in your life.
Starting point is 00:54:02 And then after that, I made some decisions. I sent some emails, I whatever. And I was like, Okay, new era. And then I pulled an Oracle card. And the Oracle card basically said, you're on the right path. Like, trust yourself to, even if it's hard, like, do it. And I was like, damn. Like, why is it hard to do the right thing? You know, more often than not, it's hard to do the right thing. It's easy to be like, I'm lazy. I'm going to avoid this. This is complicated. You know, I just don't want to conflict. I don't really do well with conference. that's easy to shy away from it. What's hard is to tackle something and be like, I know this is the right thing to do. And I owe it to myself right now and my future self to set this right. So it was amazing. And I'm literally just like alone. And in that mindset, it's amazing what if you open yourself up
Starting point is 00:54:55 to the universe, the universe will send you a message. So 2026, guys, be open to when the universe speaks to you. I would say 2026, less screen time. That's a big one for me. I'm back on my bar method shit. I love bar method. It's the only workout anything that's ever made me feel like, okay, I can do this. It makes me feel good. And it incorporates ballet, which I like. I'm back on that. I want to feel strong for 2026 in my body. I have never felt strong. And that is so much farther than the physicality of it. You know, I've felt strong in terms of like I'm stubborn or, you know, I'm a Taurus. Like I'm bullheaded sometimes.
Starting point is 00:55:40 But physically and when you're in this mindset of, you know, decentering men and I don't need a man and I've never needed a man. Like, I don't know why I bought into that propaganda so bad. Like we all do. I don't need a man. I am strong and I can do everything that a man can do. And I'll actually probably do it better because there's more attention to detail. And I care. And I'm meticulous.
Starting point is 00:56:07 So that is kind of where I'm at right now. Thank you guys for listening. Okay. This was kind of a reset. I will have more kind of like topical things to talk to you about next week. This was just kind of my, hey, I'm back and I'm alive. And I hope you guys are doing well and are taking care of yourselves. And remember to keep your chin up.
Starting point is 00:56:28 It always gets better. things can feel very heavy, but it will always, it will get better, and you have to believe that, because it's true, and things will always work out. So, with that being said, I would like to plug a few things if you don't mind. Royal Court is actually, we upload about once a week. And I'm taking requests for your favorite celebrities, because at this point, the show's getting bigger and bigger. Nothing is an impossibility. Like, I truly mean that. that nothing is impossible with this show. I have such plans and dreams for what the show is and what it's going to become. So go check it out if you haven't seen it. If you enjoy the Bro Ski report,
Starting point is 00:57:12 but you hate the ads, I get it. We have a Patreon. We have a Patreon that's ad-free. And about once a month, I will post on there almost like a little substack of some things I'm thinking of or whatever. And that's it. I want to manage expectations. There's no bonus episodes. There's no anything. It is literally just ad free and then like an essay from me. And this is the first month we're kind of doing the like just a touch base with me. So that's, that's exclusive. In the future, I really want to utilize it more of what are some topics that are on y'all's minds or things that, you know, you think I would enjoy, whatever.
Starting point is 00:57:49 I want the Patreon community to be built up a bit more. So just whatever, you know, join if you want, if you don't. no skin off my back. I love you guys the same. What I love about YouTube and about any of this is that it's not behind a paywall. You know, like you can, everything I upload, I always want it to be accessible. This is the only thing I've ever put behind a paywall and it was because it was requested. So, anyway, if you want merch, go to broskey. Shop. We've got Moos. We've got classic brosky merch and also, you know, the book club shit. Just kind of, you know, give me a second. Give me a second. Okay, I'm working on it. I'm going to perfect it. So just give me a
Starting point is 00:58:27 I want to plug the playlist. We have an official Bro Ski Nation playlist, and then an unofficial one that a loyal Bro Ski Nation Soldier uploads every song that I mention to that playlist. Also in that vein, here are my songs of the week, Rubber Band Man by Mumford and Sons, plus hosier. I'm back on my Sam Fender shit, TV dinner by Sam Fender, and then I've been loving Olivia Dean. I listen to Olivia Dean every fucking day, like literally every day.
Starting point is 00:58:56 She's just my, it isn't working. I'm a tired away from that's a-da-da-da-da-it-so-k. It's so crazy. Haley. I love her. Who else have I been really bumping? You know, I love K-1. I love that lesbian.
Starting point is 00:59:13 I do. I love K-1. I love her a lot. Those are kind of my songs of the week. I want to officially announce. Okay, guys, get excited. I'm back on YouTube. We're uploading YouTube on the main channel. The main Britney Brosky channel, we are back to filming videos that will be coming out very, very soon in a few days. So keep
Starting point is 00:59:37 your eyes peeled for that. And what a video it is. Okay. We're going to be uploading probably once a month, maybe twice a month. And the videos are fun. We filmed a couple and they're fun. I'm so fucking back. So with that being said, I love y'all to goddamn death. I will see you next week. be nice to each other, be good, and be safe. And I'll talk to you soon. Okay, bye.

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