The Daily Zeitgeist - EVERYBODY TRENDS NOW! 11/12: Epstein Emails, Breaking Rust, GTA VI, RIP Pennies
Episode Date: November 13, 2025In this edition of EVERYBODY TRENDS NOW!, Jack and special guest co-host Pallavi Gunalan discuss those new Epstein emails, Trump being unpopular for some reason, Rockstar Games busting unions?, the de...ath of the penny and much more!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Robert Smith, and this is Jacob Goldstein, and we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History, about the best ideas and people and businesses in history.
And some of the worst people, horrible ideas, and destructive companies in the history of business.
First episode, how Southwest Airlines use cheap seats and free whiskey to fight its way into the airline is.
The most Texas story ever.
Listen to Business History on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What do you get when you mix 1950s Hollywood, a Cuban musician with a dream, and one of the most iconics it comes of all time?
You get Desi Arness.
On the podcast starring Desi Arness and Wilmer Valderrama, I'll take you in a journey to Desi's life, how he redefined American television, and what that meant for all of us watching from the sidelines, waiting for a face like hours on screen.
Listen to starring Desi Arnaz and Wilmer Valdarama on the IHard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And she said, Johnny, the kids didn't come home last night.
Along the central Texas plains, teens are dying, suicides that don't make sense, strange accidents, and brutal murders.
In what seems to be, a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people.
There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to Paper Ghosts, the Texas Teen Murders,
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, the internet, and welcome to this episode of Everybody Trends Now.
My name is Jack O'Brien that over there is, today is a very special guest,
co-host, Pahlavi Gunala!
Hello, Jack O'Brien.
Hello.
You mischievous chap.
I like this character.
Polvi, how are you doing on this fun Wednesday, November 12th?
I'm good.
I'm good.
You know, things outside are bad, so I stay in.
You know, and that's how I, that's how I handle.
I don't, I have dumb.
That is so smart.
I love people telling each other.
That's so smart.
Oh my God.
You know what?
That's so smart.
That's like, that's brilliant.
I just like don't let reality in.
And like that just helps me protect myself from, you know, just like bad vibes.
Yeah.
I am, I had a friend who never listens to this.
And she one time, one time she was talking to us, she was like, you know, I'm like thinking
all the time. Like, even when I'm on the treadmill, I'm still thinking.
Wait, what? We were like, that's crazy.
Damn. Are you like a fucking genius or something? That's nuts, dude. Your IQ must be
870 at least.
All right. We got some news today. We're going to dig into it a little bit more on tomorrow's
episode, but suffice to say,
some emails
have dropped from both
Jeffrey Epstein and Michael Wolfe.
Oh, never mind. No, no, not those ones.
By the way, wildly
offensive, but
received. And I had to do it.
So there's an email
from Epstein
basically being like, you know, in
2011, as he's being investigated,
being like, I'm essentially shocked
that they're not bringing up Donald
Trump because he did all these
crimes that I'm being accused of with me, called him the dog that hasn't barked yet.
I love that even, like, Epstein 15 years ago was like, somebody's got to arrest this guy
about Trump.
Somebody's got to stop him.
Nobody's going to stop him, not even this email in the future?
No way.
We'll get into the exact text.
There's also another one where Michael Wolfe is basically telling Jeffrey Epstein to, like,
blackmail Donald Trump, which, um,
has always been one of the theories of the case of like what Epstein's whole shit was about,
was like that he gets compromise on people and then gets them to do,
gets powerful people to do him favors.
And then there's one where Epstein like, you know,
seven months before his mysterious death is saying,
yeah, of course Donald Trump knew about the girls,
which is real creepy to hear him describe people that way.
says, you know, of course he knew about the girls because he asked us to stop doing
what we were doing, which was sourcing the victims of his crimes from Mar-a-Lago.
So Trump has specifically said, like, he didn't know what was going on.
He just told them to stop.
He's like, whatever, you know, whatever the stuff they were doing, I was like, don't do that.
When in actuality.
So what were they doing?
It's impossible to say.
And why were you so closely associated with him?
like being buddy, buddy with him years after this.
What was, what was that about?
Too hard to say.
So, Paul, V, the thing you have to understand is this guy's dead.
Oh, okay.
This guy's dead.
So why are you bringing up old shit is essentially their response?
The two non-denial denials that we've gotten so far, my two favorites at least.
And this is front pit, like 12 point font headlines on everywhere from like the New York
Times to drudge. Fox News even wrote about it, but only wrote that like, Freudian slip banning
the political spectrum. They don't want us to say the truth. Am I right? But one person said,
okay, well, these are cherry picked from, so these are like three emails from a trove of like
10,000 documents. Why aren't you reading the emails that aren't about Trump? Why aren't you reading
those? Why didn't you release all 10,000? Why don't you look at the words on the
page that aren't his name.
Why are you so focused?
Cherry picking is such a funny, like, as Brian
the editor put it, the cherry is still
there. Like, that's not a denial.
You're not, just saying that
they picked the best ones, the most
incriminating ones. Here's the thing, though.
Yeah, they found the evidence of the
crime. Okay, fucking,
but the thing with the cherries you picked is put them
the fuck back. Put them back.
Could you not? Could you not pick those
cherries? What if you didn't do that? You're picking
all the best stuff from an abundance
of good stuff. That's not cool
to us. Trump
is also saying, like, smart Republicans
won't fall into the Epstein
trap. I can see
how it looks like a trap. In the sense that, like...
Trump literally fell into the Epstein
trap, so is he calling himself stupid?
Yeah. It's like kind of too late
to be like, don't you fall for this thing?
Don't make the same mistakes. I did, kids.
When you're being a pedophile,
make sure there's no cameras or email.
In the sense that,
it's going to be bad for you and a trap would also be bad for you. I see the similarity,
but it's, it doesn't, I have not been fully convinced. It's hard to imagine how this doesn't make him
look more and more guilty. And it's not common at a time of peak popularity for him.
I just really wonder, like, how is, like, I want to know Marjorie Taylor Green's response. I want to
know the people like because it's the fisher that's like really interesting to me of like the cult of
personality people and like the people who are looking beyond Trump and like how they're going to
move because I feel like they're kind of the canary in the coal mine of like oh is Trump going
be installed as dictator in 2028 or is he going to are they going to find like a puppet for him
or are they going to go in a completely different direction and is that something we need to
be prepared for yeah it's it'll be interesting to see
I don't know, like, other than just creating a conspiracy theory that this is like all,
that the emails are fake or something, you know, which I'm sure they'll do.
The Charlie Kirk Shooter wrote them.
Right.
On his bullets.
I just feel like it's going to be, like this does seem to be one place where they're like, no, no, no,
we make up the conspiracies about like the other people.
You're supposed to be the good guy in this, but then this keeps making it.
hard for us to keep making up the conspiracy theory where you're like doing everything you're
doing to catch the bad guys when there's emails from before Q&N was even a thing where the guy
who's like the, you know, mastermind of this whole vast conspiracy is like, you know, it's weird.
They haven't caught the Trump did all this stuff.
They haven't caught him.
So that's bad.
We'll talk more about it tomorrow and continue to, you know,
But again, these are only three of the documents.
And I don't think it's like three out of a huge trove of ones that are, because like, how are there going to be later emails from Epstein being like, psych that last one was jking about that one?
I feel like the FBI is going to find them if they aren't there.
Right.
But he's also, so another thing, the Epstein thing has seemed to cut into his popularity and into his.
support in a way that nothing else really has been able to do before.
Another thing that seems to be ticking people right off for some reason is that everything's
really fucking expensive.
Like, what, eggs cost, what, $100 now?
I don't know.
I never been to the grocery store, but I'm sure it's fine when you make $50,000 a week,
right?
Right.
Yeah.
Well, what could bananas cost?
Jelaine. But he ran on this. Like this, you know, very real issue of everything costing way too much as a way to
attract voters, you know, like prices will go down on day one, essentially. And I guess he didn't
realize that it would require him to betray his capitalist oligarchic instincts and that he was
going to have to tell corporations to make less money because the public is now fully in
fuck Trump. This guy's a liar about rising costs zone of the polling.
Shit has been really troubling for like white business owners who didn't realize it was bad
before. Yeah, also costing them money in that way. But so the White House officials
have been cooking up a way to steady those numbers.
And if you're asking, wait, so are they going to ban price gouging?
Are they going to ban dynamic pricing?
Are they going to, you know, start demanding transparent pricing for consumers?
New stimulus checks, perhaps?
No, they're going to do a speaking tour where he will just gaslight his cult members.
Blame immigrants, I guess, for infiltrating the C-suite of our food-producing corporations.
I'm not sure exactly what the messaging is going to be,
but they've always been able to be pretty creative in their blaming.
I have a feeling Cash Patel is going down and he was a patsy this whole time.
Yeah.
It was actually his fault that prices that...
No, I just mean like the Epstein stuff and then that's going to, like, distract again.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like, I feel like they're just going to toss, like, some...
They're just got a chum...
Oh, somebody's getting fired, for sure.
I don't...
Like, his speeches haven't been...
I don't know.
if you'd notice this. They haven't been great. He, like, sort of has contempt for people that point out
that the prices are high and claims they're not real MAGA if they get frustrated with him.
If people say, you know, MAGA, like, your supporters seem frustrated. He's like, I am MAGA,
like a fucking movie bad guy or, like, just not, not answering the questions or, you know,
addressing the concerns. Yeah, it just gets agro and says,
I'm MAGA. There's no MAGA without me.
I am the law. I am the one
who blocks.
I don't know.
Yes.
I was trying.
That is good. It's good.
Senator Mark Wayne Mullen,
aka Senator,
Fight Me, Bro.
posted a picture over the weekend
talking about how they were getting work done
for the American people in the Oval Office
when it comes to prices.
And people looked at the picture
because he's like Donald Trump is being handed
a piece of paper
and then there's like paper scattered
across his desk
and people looked a little closer
and noticed that the papers on his desk
are just his own tweets printed out
and Trump is just handing back
a colorful bar graph
that he signed for some reason
and that's all just
and the only other thing on his desk
besides his own tweets printed out
and a bar graph that he has autographed
is a bowl of caramel popcorn
Like it's a third grade sleepover.
You've got to stop making him relatable.
All I do is watch my own Instagram stories over and over again and snack.
That's all I do.
That's right.
But he needs them printed out for him, which is pretty great.
Which I like.
That's pretty old school.
It's like different to have a real book of tweets versus on your Kindle.
But yeah, it feels like he's incapable of doing the most basic parts of being the president.
he falls asleep in public, has no idea what math is, and is now trying to explain to people
why he can't get prices down.
And, like, as we, like, my, my theory is just that as we are still in this, like, you know,
corporatist oligarchy era, the economy is going to continue to.
I hate this part of the era's tour.
It was the worst section.
She only did like three songs from the capitalist, corporatist oligarchy era.
Like things are going to be bad and people will get increasingly mad at whoever is in power
and people will just vote back and forth for the other party.
He is more unpopular than he's ever been now in the history of his presidency,
including the day after January 6th.
So nowhere to go, but up, you would think.
I also wonder, like, people are getting, like, physical in this.
Like, we're literally fighting the government in the streets so that we don't get, like, abducted or to have their family members disappear.
And it's like, you're going to keep doing this.
You're going to keep applying pressure.
And then you're going to create this, like, pressure cooker of, like, anger.
There's going to be people potentially getting, you know, standing up for themselves and in order to end doing that by getting more violent because they're attacking us.
and then it's going to be like military rule and we're going to be North Korea.
Like, what is the end game for all of this?
Like, I don't understand how you expect people to stay quiet or silent or not fight back.
Like, it doesn't make sense to me.
It does remind me of the second Bush administration where people were like, man, this is going to be bad.
And then it was bad, like, right away.
And his popularity just kept going down and down and down and down.
And, like, I don't see where he turns things around unless he's, like, somehow willing to stop just giving corporations everything they want.
I, but the way I see it, him spinning it or the Republican spinning it is the Democrats give them reason to blame the Dems, which they just fucking did.
So, like, that's, that's my biggest thing is, like, it's not, it's like, it's on us to fuck up and the House Dems are going to do that, you know?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. But, like, people generally blame the president for the economy and he, he doing bad.
Let's take a quick break. We'll come back. We'll talk about Grand Theft Auto 6 and other stuff. We'll be right back.
I'm Robert Smith. This is Jacob Goldstein. And we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History about the best idea.
and people and businesses in history.
And some of the worst people, horrible ideas, and destructive companies in the history of business.
Having a genius idea without a need for it is nothing.
It's like not having it at all.
It's a very simple, elegant lesson.
Make something people want.
First episode, how Southwest Airlines use cheap seats and free whiskey to fight its way into the airline business.
The Most Texas Story ever.
There's a lot of Mavericks in that story.
We're going to have Mavericks on the show.
We're going to have plenty of robber barons.
So many robber barons.
And you know what?
They're not all bad.
And we'll talk about some of the classic great moments of famous business geniuses,
along with some of the darker moments that often get overlooked.
Like Thomas Edison and the electric chair.
Listen to business history on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
What up, y'all?
It's your boy, Kevin on stage.
I want to tell you about my new podcast called Not My Beard.
best moment where I talk to artists, athletes, entertainers, creators, friends, people I admire
who had massive success about their massive failures. What did they mess up on? What is their
heartbreak? And what did they learn from it? I got judged horribly. The judges were like,
you're trash. I don't know how you got on the show. Boo. Somebody had tomatoes. I'm kidding.
But if they had tomatoes, they would have thrown the tomatoes. Let's be honest. We've all had
those moments we'd rather forget. We bumped our head. We made a mistake. The
still felt through. We're embarrassed. We failed. But this podcast is about that and how we made it
through. So when they sat me down, they were kind of like, we got into the small talk and they were
just like, so what do you got? What? What ideas? And I was like, oh, no. What?
Check out Not My Best Moment with me, Kevin on stage on the Iheart radio app, Apple podcast, YouTube,
or wherever you get your podcast. What do you get when you mix 1950s Hollywood, a Cuban musician with a dream,
and one of the most iconic sitcoms of all time.
You get Desi Arnaz, a trailblazer, a businessman, a husband,
and maybe most importantly, the first Latino to break prime time wide open.
I'm Wilmer Valderama, and yes, I grew up watching him,
probably just like you and millions of others.
But for me, I saw myself in his story.
From planning canary cages to this night here in New York, it's a long ways.
On the podcast starring Desi Arnaz and Wilmer Valderrama,
I'll take you in a journey to Desi's life,
the moments it has overlapped with mine,
how he redefined American television
and what that meant for all of us
watching from the sidelines,
waiting for a face like hours on screen.
This is the story of how one man's spotlight
lit the path for so many others
and how we carry his legacy
today. Listen to starring Desi Arnaz
and Wilmer Valderrama
as part of the MyCultura podcast network
available on the IHart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
And she said, Johnny, the kids
didn't come home last night.
Along the Central Texas Plains, teens are dying, suicides that don't make sense, strange accidents, and brutal murders.
In what seems to be, a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
Drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people.
There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to paper ghosts, the Texas teen murders, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your.
your podcasts.
And we're back.
Apalvi, are you a country, are you a country fan?
I love Beyonce.
Yeah.
Okay.
So great.
That's good.
So you know how Beyonce made country album?
Uh, well, may I introduce you to the future of country music?
It's the number one song on Billboard's country digital sales chart by an AI generated
country artist and I'm out
called breaking rust
ew what
that name sucks
what was that even mean
that imagery is like
dry and cracked
yeah like gross
and like rust
old rust is easy to break
like rub like
I mean Alec Baldwin did it
is that bad is that a bad joke
I'm so sorry I really feel bad
he broke the
financial viability of that movie also
yeah
Um, but the name of the song is walk my walk, which sounds like a lazy AI trash, uh, the lyrics are, um, been beat down, but I don't stay low. Mud got on my jeans still ready to go. It's like, it's just like, you know, uh, satire of a country song. Yeah, but it's gonna like, like, but that's why you're like, oh, they ate this the fuck up, you know? Yeah, yeah. It's, it's, it is like,
A very, I mean, that's the thing.
I've always been like, I feel like music is one place where AI is going to be useful for
people to like shit out music that is listenable, not good music, but like music that could
be a hit because a lot of times the songs that do really well, like you talk to musicians
and they're like, well, that song fucking sucks, but it's like very simple and hummable, you know?
Like the songs that like get stuck in our head are the ones that are easy to.
who sing and easy like the notes are like close together and there's like a formula to it.
I still feel like there's like a human like spontaneity of like vocal like riffs or
whatever like Brianna's famous for like nah nah nah in there.
You know what I mean?
Like it is formulaic and I've seen people do it with like Taylor Swift songs or whatever like
recreating a formula for her.
But I'm like there's still something human about it.
And also I don't want my fucking patriotism.
not only, like, boosted by bots, but now created by bots,
like this white American patriotism.
Yeah.
It's, I don't think it's going to create a sustainable, like, oh, man, I love this artist
who is an AI algorithm.
The song, like, sounds like, an even simpler version of Old Town Road, which itself was,
like, a very simple song.
And I will just say, it's nowhere on the top 100 most played songs on Apple Music today.
United States, which is the only place it would show up.
It's not going to be like on the world.
That's robot on robot hate, which, you know, they don't want to see it win.
But it does make me, like, a little suspicious.
And I've been waiting for AI companies to start, like, doing a better job propagandizing
AI, you know, like, by being like, this song is actually incredibly popular.
And everybody says this is the best YouTube clip of the day.
And it was made fully by AI art.
All my friends are here laughing with me.
They're just standing outside the picture.
Yeah.
There's just, like, so much money at stake in proving their technology can create good art.
Kid Rock should be fucking trembling in his boots right now.
Yeah.
Breaking rust is coming for you.
I think it will do a good job of, like, recreating formulaic bullshit, which some popular music is.
But I don't know.
So we'll see.
We'll keep an eye on that one, see if anybody ever, like, kind of looks.
into how real those numbers are.
We do want to talk about Grand Theft Auto 6.
It was announced last week that GTA 6 will be delayed yet again.
It was supposed to come out this year.
Then it became next May.
Now it's supposedly releasing in November 2026 should humanity last that long.
Just this week, its trailer overtook Avengers Infinity War to become the most viewed trailer
in YouTube history.
So the hype is massive, which,
not a huge surprise considering that Grand Theft Auto 5 was the most profitable piece of media ever.
The upcoming game even became a talking point in Polish parliament after a far right MP suggested that the recent delay was disturbing in a huge scandal and suggested that people take to the streets and protest the far right has a great sense of humor.
Why are Groyper's in Polish Congress right now?
That's crazy.
It's a great question.
One good reason to be pissed off about the delay.
The news of the delay came two weeks after Rockstar fired 30 developers in the U.K.
They claimed the companies were fired for gross misconduct related to allegedly sharing company secrets online.
The workers are like, no, that was like on a forum that we created that is a private discord for Rockstar employees.
And we were talking about unionizing.
And that was the gross misconduct.
Yeah.
The independent workers' union of Great Britain announced that they're planning legal action against the company,
claiming the firing as constitute trade union victimization and blacklisting.
But the people who were involved said that they were fired without warning evidence or a chance to speak for themselves.
And they were talking with colleagues in a private union chat, not leaking information outside the company,
but because they were trying to understand our workplace and make it better.
That's actually the one thing you can't do in Grand Theft Auto5 is like,
you try to unionize, and then they kill you.
So you can't. That's the one thing that's illegal.
They delayed it to, like, add side quests where you just break.
Yeah, where you union bust?
They're like, go to the Starbucks.
Just drive through that crowd out there next to the giant inflatable rat.
Another anonymous source claimed that some of the fired workers had been with the company for
nearly two decades and had no history of infractions or poor behavior during that time.
and they were unionizing around crunch, pay, and flexible working arrangements.
Wait, what is crunch?
So that's when video game developers are forced to work within, like, working 100-hour work weeks
in order to finish games.
The 100-hour work week is a real thing that was happening in 2018 as they were trying to
finish Red Dead Redemption.
The company's founder openly talked about throwing out a vast array of
completed work, like, as they were doing that crunch.
It just seems like it's, like, a really bad process where they're just, like,
people have to work amounts that will make them, like, ill in order to, you know,
in order to get these games out.
Like, lucky enough to keep their jobs.
Yes.
So, Rockstar hasn't confirmed that the recent delay was due to the firings, but people
familiar with the employees who were let go said the people let go recently helped
key positions that could not easily be replaced.
So it didn't help.
This is not the first time video game developers have struggled to unionize,
including one studio that, you know, was union busting.
And that company was literally named Proletariat Inc.
Oh, my God.
The aesthetics of politics.
It is also worth noting that the first game or the last game was the most profitable piece
of media ever.
Like, profit, that's the profit.
That's the difference between what it cost to make it and what it brought in.
And these are, like, all they're asking is, like, I don't know, to add workers, so they
don't have to work 100 hours a week.
And they're like, actually, because you ask that, you're fired.
They're so terrified of people advocating for their rights.
Like, they're so scared shitless.
Yeah.
Which is, it's just so wild.
Because, like, that is how things are set up, is that, like, you can't just be like,
well, that was, like, super profitable.
And now this next one, we're going to do it in a way that, like, doesn't, you know,
make our workers, you know, have breakdowns and just make it slightly less profitable
because the way that Wall Street operates is just like, okay, well, how do you increase
profitability over the last thing you did?
It's just like, yeah, okay, so it needs to do better than the last thing you did no matter what,
even if the last thing you did was like
we like hurt people
to get to make things as profitable as it was
you know which means like
the last product you made has to do
better than like the people who made
it like right yeah
the next generation has to eat shit
for for us to
meet our numbers yes
and finally we want a bit of fond farewell to
the penny the federal
mint in Philadelphia struck
its final penny today
we've talked about
before about the true cost of making a penny is now 3.69 cents because literally everything
is getting more expensive. And you know, you might notice that as 2.69 cents less valuable
than what the penny actually represents. So it just seems like now we'll just have to round
transactions to the nearest nickel from now on because like people won't have. They're going to
take more money by the cent from us. Exactly. It's definitely not going to be rounded down.
It's going to be dollar stores instead of 99 cents stores.
I know.
Yeah, literally.
They're not going to go down to 75 cents stores or 95 cents stores.
That's for damn sure.
Everything is bad.
This is the opposite of the Lego song.
The cost to consumers of rounding transactions to the nearest nickel is estimated to be around $6 million.
The cost to round to the nearest dime is closer to $56 million.
So watch out for that.
But nickels also cost more to produce than they're worth.
And so people are thinking that they're going to phase those out,
at which point they start rounding to the nearest dime.
Gold bar.
Start rounding to the nearest gold bar.
Yeah.
But just like how many gold bars you got on you?
Yeah, we'll take that.
My purse is going to help me a lot in walking to my car,
but I will be mugged more frequently.
That's right.
Just whacking people with bags of nickels.
I mean, one way or another, we're headed towards a future where we have to weigh our money, like on a scale.
You know, that's where it's, that's where it's headed.
So that's the good news.
That's the good news for today.
We are back tomorrow with the whole last episode of the show.
Until then, Paula, where can people find you, follow you, see you, all that good stuff?
I'm at Paula Viganalan P-A-L-L-A-V-I-G-U-N-A-N-A-N everywhere except for Blue Sky
where I'm just Paula Vee.
We have facial recognition comedy on November 21st and 10 p.m.
At the comedy store, it's going to be really fun.
And I also have second screens with Madison Shepard and Brandy Posey, December 1st at the Elysian side room, the skunk room.
Bring your phones, your iPads, your projectors, anything you want to bring to.
look at this show is for
ADHD heads who don't want their phones
confiscated at a comedy show. You will not be
considered rude. We will also be on our phones
and you should come through and buy a
ticket. Unless it's like temporarily
confiscated because you're like, whoa, what is
that? That looks so good. Let me look at that.
Yeah. Let's look at
YouTube videos like
after a party.
You've seen this YouTube video?
Yeah. That sounds super fun.
Can't wait to check that out.
All right. That's going to do it for us.
On this Wednesday afternoon, we're back tomorrow with a whole last episode of the show.
Until then, be kind to each other.
Be kind to yourselves.
Get your vaccines while you still can.
Get your flu shot.
Don't do nothing about white supremacy.
And we will talk to y'all tomorrow.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye-bye now.
Abba.
The Daily Zykeyes is executive produced by Catherine Law.
Co-produced by Bay Wang.
Co-produced by Victor Wright.
Co-written by J.M. McNabb.
and edited and engineered by Brian Jeffries.
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To beat the champ, you got to knock him out.
The Dodgers stand tall and win back-to-back titles.
I'm Richard Parks III.
My show Dodger Blue Dream captures all the drama,
tension, and ecstasy of the best world series win of all time.
In our new episode, Game 7.
No way!
Out now.
Listen to Dodger Blue Dream on the IHeard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Robert Smith, and this is Jacob Goldstein, and we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast called Business History about the best ideas and people and businesses in history.
And some of the worst people.
Horrible ideas and destructive companies in the history of business.
First episode, how Southwest Airlines use cheap seats and free whiskey to fight its way into the airline is.
The most Texas story ever.
Listen to business history on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What do you get when you mix 1950s Hollywood, a Cuban musician with a dream, and one of the most iconic sitcoms of all time?
You get Desi Arness.
On the podcast star in Desi Arnaz and Wilmer Valderrama, I'll take you in a journey to Desi's life, how he redefined American television, and,
what that meant for all of us watching from the sidelines, waiting for a face like hours on screen.
Listen to starring Desi Arnaz and Wilmer Valderrama on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
