The Joe Rogan Experience - #2505 - Tom Segura
Episode Date: May 25, 2026Tom Segura is a comedian, actor, author, and restaurateur. He hosts “Your Mom’s House” with his wife, comedian Christina Pazsitzky, and “Two Bears, One Cave” with comedian Bert Kreischer. He... is also the owner of Ciccio Bomba, a chain of Italian cafes with three locations in Austin, Texas, and the author of “I’d Like to Play Alone, Please: Essays.” Season two of his series “Bad Thoughts” is streaming on Netflix.www.netflix.com/title/81740857https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/tom-segura/id-like-to-play-alone-please/9781538704615/www.cicciobomba.comwww.youtube.com/@YMHStudioswww.ymhstudios.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Get a free welcome kit with your first subscription of AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/joerogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
What's that name?
I watched two episodes of the new season.
Oh, thanks, man.
It's ridiculous. It's so ridiculous.
So you.
That show is so you.
I don't want to give anything away, but the dance one, I was fucking crying.
I was crying.
And the Freaky Friday one.
Yeah, yeah, with Jamie.
Oh, my God.
Oh my God, they're so fun.
They're so fun.
It seems so fun for you.
It's the most fun I have.
It's like it's so, it is one of the best examples of like a one mind, like one person's mind in a show.
Yeah.
Without like a whole bunch of people saying, don't do that.
Don't do this.
They gave us, they give us no restraints in the craziest greatest sense.
Like they really are like, do whatever you want to do.
The Kevin Neal and one, the first one was.
It's so fucking ridiculous.
It's so you.
It's such a great time.
The dance one, you know, I went to six rehearsals for that, dance rehearsals.
Dancing is hard.
It was so hard.
Remember when you did the Stephen Seagall thing?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And I had to do a bunch of rehearsals for that too.
For people that hadn't seen it.
That's you and Bert.
Bert made a dance video.
Like, you guys had a competition.
See who makes the best one?
He was just saying we should all do one.
And then I was like, yeah, okay.
And then he just dropped.
one. So he, there was no like,
let's both do one. And then he
was like, I'm a better dancer and I was like,
eat shit, dude.
There's something about him saying he's better
at something that's infuriating. It's so
crazy. Because it's just
like wild, unhinged
confidence, you know?
And the truth is, I got to give him
his credit. He is, he is capable of
so much of this stuff too. So some of it's a great
athlete. Great. That's why
he's so confident about stuff. He
He dropped a bunch of weight, and then in our, we did our 5K a few weeks ago for the Netflix
is a joke, we did a 5K again.
From last year to this year, he dropped 16 minutes off of his time.
Holy shit.
I mean, I was like, dude.
That's crazy.
He dropped 50 pounds, too.
Can you imagine doing a 5K with a 50 pound vest on?
It's crazy.
It's really.
I think about that every time I work out with a vest on, and my vest that I usually work out with
is only 25 pounds.
25, which is like a normal amount that people lose.
Yeah.
Like, this is crazy how much harder.
Everything is.
So much harder.
Yeah.
It's great to wear those on like a hike.
And you take it off and you're like, oh, my God.
I have a 35-pounder I wear when I walk the dog and then I have another one that's this,
it's an actual backpack frame that I put plates on it and I can get it up to 90 pounds.
I did a hike with a 50 on and I had to take that shit off.
It's fucking hard, man.
It's really hard.
The 45, I do with one 45 pound plate.
So like the backpack itself is probably about four pounds and then the plate is like another 45.
That shoulder neck area just starts to just go on you.
It's rough. Yeah, it's really rough.
I do it before hunting season, though, because it's like the best thing to prepare you for actually having a backpack on in mountains.
Yeah.
Like, because you don't realize how you're carrying a bow.
You're carrying you.
I don't pack my whole camp on my back.
Like some guys, when they go out to the back country for like eight, ten days, they'll have a 80-pound, 60-pound pack because they've got their food for, like, a week in there.
And then they have, like, their bedding.
and they have like some kind of a shelter.
Do you go hunt like that?
No.
I don't do that anymore.
I've done it a few times.
You have.
But I don't like it.
My boys are hitting me up like they want to go hunting.
Really?
Yeah, because I take them shooting.
But we just shoot targets.
Oh, well, we have a lease out here.
We could take your pig hunting.
Oh, my goodness.
They have to kill them.
They have so many of them, dude.
It's the craziest infestation of animals you've ever seen.
You hear them in the bushes.
They sound like demons.
They're everywhere.
There's so many of them, dude.
That's crazy.
Texas has millions and millions of pigs.
Is it really that money?
Oh, yeah.
I don't even know what the full number is.
But they don't know because it goes up every month.
So the thing is, like, wild pigs have as many as three litters of year, and they could have as many as six piglets per litter.
Jesus.
Yeah.
And they start giving birth at six months old.
And then do they do the thing?
Because, like, with a lot of, you know, animals that they say you can hunt these, it's because they're because they're they're going to hunt these, it's because they're they're they.
they are destroying like the ecosystem.
Destroying everything.
Really?
So what is the number?
2.6 to 4 million.
Wild pigs.
Isn't that nuts?
That's in Texas.
God.
That's just Texas.
That's just Texas.
2.6 to 4 million is fucking bonkers.
How long does that hunting season last here?
It's 100% all day long at night.
You shoot them with night vision.
Yeah.
You can shoot them every day all day.
The only time I've ever hunted in my life,
was hog hunting in Florida?
Well, they taste great.
I mean, like, barbecued pig, like, if you do it right,
you have to be careful because you can get trichinosis
if you undercook it.
It's not like pork that you get from a restaurant.
They're eating everything.
They eat each other.
Like, if one pig dies, sometimes they die in fights.
They fight with each other and they die.
Or sometimes they get hit by a hunter and they live and then they die.
Then the pigs eat them.
So they'll eat dead dears, they'll eat skunks, rack.
Anything?
Anything, anything, anything.
So you have to cook it well.
You got to cook the shit out of it.
But if you eat a pig that's been eating eggorns, oh, they're delicious.
I got one in California once, the first pig that I shot, and we smoked it on this Trager.
Like, slow smoke to ham.
Oh, it was sensational.
Really?
So good. It was so good, dude.
It's like a darker meat than pork that you get from the store.
I got to take them because they're asking a letter I took.
This is a good friend of mine named Jesse Griffith.
He owns Di Duae restaurant.
He's an awesome chef, like an amazing chef.
And Di Dui, if you've never been there before, you've got to go there.
It's fucking incredible.
And it's a lot of his, like, Texas Wild Game that he serves.
He serves like Neil Guy, like, which is, like, so there's only animals that you can serve that you hunt are ones that people own, like, exotics or pigs.
So he has like wild boar sausage
He has a place here?
Yeah, it's called Dai Duet.
Oh, I think I have that written down on my list.
It's legit.
What I was going to say is Jesse, he has a cooking school.
That is.
It's number three.
It's on my list.
Oh, it's super legit.
It's one of the first places I went when I moved here.
Really?
Yeah, because he had been on my friend Steve Ronella's podcast.
And then he came on my podcast.
And when he was on Steve, I was like, God, the guy is so interesting.
Who is that guy?
And then he introduces me to him.
And then we went hunting together, Steve and I, in South Texas, like right on the Mexican border.
And Jesse went to, and Jesse cooked for us.
Oh, my God.
It was sensational.
Oh, my God.
He's so good.
He cooks diver ducks.
And diver ducks are kind of gross because they're the ones that go under the water and they eat all the mulch at the bottom and stuff.
But what he does is he has some kind of crazy marinating process.
So he marinerates them for, like, an extended period of time.
And then he grilled them.
And did he serve.
What kind of food?
It's mostly, it's like they have steaks, they have fish, they have everything, but it's mostly Texas food.
Texas food, like Texas redfish, Texas wildhog.
He has Neil Guy Saviche.
Isn't there anything better than befriending a chef?
It's the greatest.
He's a great guy too.
And what I was going to say is he has a whole school where, what is it called, Jamie?
Oh, shit.
Something.
We'll figure it out.
Jamie will find it.
But he has a school where he'll teach you how to hunt, teaches you how to butcher the animal,
how to break it down into cuts, and then he teaches you how to cook it.
Really?
Yep.
And he does it with a small amount of people.
So it's like, you know, six, eight people or something in a small group.
And they'll take from the beginning.
Like, I've never shot a gun before.
Fine.
Don't worry about it.
From the beginning.
This is how you use a rifle.
Yeah.
This is the safety.
Make sure you never point the gun at anything other than the ground.
never pointed at a person, even your fingers nowhere near the trigger, all the safety stuff,
and then takes you to a range, shows you how to sight it in, how to shoot the rifle,
and then they take you hunting.
See, the most imposing, I think, part of...
New school of traditional cookery.
That's it.
The most imposing part of hunting to me is what do you do after you shoot the animal.
I can teach you some of that, too.
Show me some pictures here.
Some of the yummy pictures.
Like he barbecues.
His food is so...
Look at that, dude.
Come on, son.
What is that?
Like some sort of a poor...
What is this?
Whitetail, boar.
Oh, so it's white tail, a dough, and a big fatty boar.
Whoa.
And so what is he doing?
He's making dried chilas and onions.
Oh, so nice.
And unlike a lot of people, he likes old boars.
He like a lot of people, they say, oh, you got to shoot a young one.
He's like, no, no, no, I like the old ones.
Really?
He's like real flavor to me.
You just got to know what you're doing.
Yeah, well, yeah, he knows what he's doing.
Do you like cooking?
I do like cooking.
I used to cook more, but I do, I enjoy the process.
I love getting a recipe, getting the ingredients together, and cooking a meal.
Well, then you love doing this.
I would love to try that.
Because it'll be something that you shot yourself.
Oh, my God.
Hook me up with him, please.
Yeah, for sure.
I would love to.
And on top of it, you're literally helping the environment.
That's cool.
They have to be killed.
Yeah, and I'm telling you, these guys are asking me on a daily basis.
Hey y'all, it's Kelly Clarkson with Wayfair.
Ever order furniture online and wonder what if?
Like, what if it doesn't hold up?
That sofa was four days old.
You should have ordered from Wayfair.
With Wayfair, there's no what if.
Just style you love and quality you can trust.
Visit Wayfair.combeer.
Wayfair, every style, every home.
You know Taylor Sheridan, the guy who produces Delstone?
He's a friend of mine, and he has a giant ranch.
It's crazy ranch.
Yeah, he's like, I think he has the biggest ranch in Texas.
Yeah, and he had a pig problem.
So he literally brought in these fucking special ops guys,
and they trained, like as if they were going to go attacks insurgents to kill pigs.
Really?
And they, yeah, they plotted it all out.
They strategized.
They made a plan, and they went out and they fucking annihilated like a bunch of pigs.
That's pretty fucking rad.
Well, pretty, yeah, in pretty violent ways.
I'm sure.
Like, there's some crazy videos online of people using thermite.
Do you know what?
No, not thermite.
What's that stuff called, Jamie, that blows up?
Tannerite.
Tannerite.
Tannerite.
That's how they were blowing up the pig.
So what they'll do is they'll set up a feeder.
And then at the feeder, they have tannerite.
And so, like, when the feeders go off, the animals hear it, and then they run towards the feeder.
And usually the feeder is for deer, and then the pigs usually kick the deer out.
And the deer just say, fuck this.
And they run out of there.
And you got, like, 30, 40 pigs.
And so, fucking blow these bits of smithereens.
Bro, it's so wrong.
But see if you can find any videos of one where they're, like, on a feeder.
Because the camera's, like, really close.
The camera's, like, 20 yards.
Holy shit.
Yeah, like these.
Like, watch this.
This is so fucked up.
Oh, my God.
They're just disintegrated.
And this is one of the beautiful things about Texas.
That's totally illegal.
Totally legal.
Totally legal.
You can shoot them out of helicopters, too.
And they needed to go.
Oh, they have to go.
Yeah.
There are so many of them, dude.
When I take you to the lease that we have with my friend Tyler from archery country,
when you go there, as you're walking, you hear them in the bushes.
They sound like monsters.
That's where you're hunting now?
That's where you can hunt.
Yeah, we have a lease there.
Oh, nice.
It's like an hour, 20 minutes from here, hour half.
I went a couple weeks ago to somebody's ranch.
Yeah.
It was fucking awesome.
It's pretty cool.
It was so cool.
And he had his own range set up there, which was so fucking rat.
Yeah, that's the dream.
And we set up, I set up my youngest.
So we were shooting like pistols.
And then the guy had the new Dev grew Seal Team 6 rifle.
and we laid, my son laid on the bed of the pickup
and he was like, just ping, ping, ping, ping.
He was like, I was like, yeah, dude, you're ready to go.
How old is he?
Seven?
Oh, my God.
Yeah, that's so exciting for a seven-year-olds.
So excited.
You could do something like that?
It was so exciting, man.
And if you could take him and he could shoot a pig
and then you guys can, like, have baby-back ribs for dinner?
It's going to change his whole, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
He'll love it.
He's going to go nuts for it.
It's very exciting.
Speaking of violence, I was, I was breeding and
researching Uday Hussein.
Oh, man.
Yeah, dark.
He's the darkest.
The evilest.
Him and his brother.
But Uday was the worst.
He was the worst.
He was the worst.
Yeah, he was the eldest.
Because I keep reading about dictators, you know.
And I was reading about Ediamine and Mussolini, Stalin.
And then you get to Hussein.
Hussein's like a really interesting story, like from birth, right?
His mother didn't want him, which is a very kind of unique thing.
like a mother rejecting her own.
Why didn't you want him?
His father had died before he was born,
and she thought, this, I don't want this kid.
And so when she was, when he was born,
she was like, he's like a devil child.
Oh, Jesus gross.
And so she rejected him from birth.
Meanwhile, she was right.
She was kind of right.
Isn't that crazy?
It is right.
It is crazy.
Do you think she made him that way?
I think usually when you see like these really,
horrifically
violent people
and as adults
there's almost always
childhood trauma and neglect
I'm sure
so that formula is almost always there
so it's a self-fulfilling prophecy
for her I think it kind of is
and he was
Or maybe she just fucking knew
maybe she had some gypsy instincts
had a feeling
she just knew
this one bad bad one
but he was violent from a very young age
and he was rejected from a very young age
exactly
And he was an enforcer and, you know, he killed somebody as a teen.
Really?
But all of his violence while, like, president, you know, it was, like, politically motivated.
It was, like, to stay in power.
But Uday was just a sadist.
Yeah.
Like, he just enjoyed killing for someone that looked at him wrong.
Oh, he would find women that were getting married.
Yeah.
He would steal them, rape them, and then feed them to his daughter.
He threw one off a hotel rooftop one time.
He killed a chef for over-salting the food, like right there in the kitchen, shot him in the head.
Oh, my God.
He, like, he one time killed a guy at a party in front of the president of Egypt.
So the president was visiting Iraq.
Mubarak was visiting, and he beat this guy and then shot him in the head at the party.
Oh, my God.
Bro, you've got to get out of here.
And then one time he went to a family party.
and he was pissed at his uncle
and he pulled out a submachine gun
and shot him
he shot him in the leg
and they had to amputate it
but he sprayed and he killed six other people
Oh my God
just wild crazy
and then he was in charge of
like the country's athletics
you know he was like chairman of the Olympic team
and so he was like torturing athletes
he was just running wild
and imagine a serial killer
that's the prince of a country
It's just absolutely insane.
First paragraph is about the Olympic team stuff he would do.
He had a lifelong obsession with brutal tortured murder
and would brutally torture athletes whenever they failed to win a match.
When athletes would fail to get in a soccer tournament,
he would force them to repeatedly kick a concrete soccer ball.
Athletes who lost matches would be repeatedly dragged through a gravel pit
then immersed in a sewage tank to induce infection in their wounds.
Udei loved torturing and killing,
and he would sometimes flog the athletes for three days
if they failed.
Iron Maidens
may have never been used
in medieval times
but they were frequently used
by Uday to punish athletes.
Oh my God, dude.
Yeah, he was...
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, it's just about that.
There's other stuff here too.
Oh.
Egyptian president thing.
Yeah.
What's fucking crazy
is like, how long did he do that for?
I mean, he was...
He was born in 64
and he died in, what,
2003?
Oh, my God.
Listen to this one.
Scroll up a little bit?
According to his chief bodyguard, when Uday learned one of his close comrades who knew of his many misdeeds was planning to leave Iraq, he invited him to his 37th birthday and had him arrested.
An eyewitness at the prison where the man was held said members of Ude's militia grabbed his tongue with pliers and sliced it off with a scalpel so he could not talk.
A maid who cleaned one of Ude's houses said she once saw him lop off the ear of one of his guards and then use a welder's torch on his face.
His bodyguards were to later say that at least 200 people died at his parties every year.
What?
So the worst thing...
200 people died at his parties every year?
Would be to be invited to his parties.
Imagine you get that invite?
And you can't not go.
You definitely can't.
You definitely kill you.
Yeah.
So you got to hope you were one of the, you know, people that don't.
Yeah.
Jesus Christ.
He was sweating and he lashed him.
He was a stickler for personal hygiene.
We called the Butler.
He hated a smell of sweat.
One summer day, Uday, Uday stopped.
the butler and said, what the hell is that smell?
Ude ordered five falacua lashes on the butler's right foot and five on his right armpit.
Oh my God.
Oh, my God.
At his boat club, Uday kept a monkey named Louisa in a cage in the kitchen.
Louisa had a taste for whiskey.
It was an angry trunk.
If one of Uday's friends passed out in the course of an evening or was caught napping, says a butler,
Ude would have the friend thrown in the cage with Louisa who would scratch at the poor inebriot's face.
Jesus Christ, dude
Jesus Christ
How crazy is that?
200 every year died at his
parties?
I mean, yeah.
So he had parties
all the time then?
All the time, yeah.
I just would kill people
at his parties.
And the music would have to keep going
and you would have to
one time he killed the guy
for not laughing hard enough
at his joke.
So like at a party.
So he told a joke
and people laughed
and one guy didn't laugh
hard enough
and he shot him in the head
at the party.
Holy fuck.
And then he was like
looked at everybody
everyone's like
you gotta keep like
like having a good time.
Holy fuck.
Because then you get it for reacting the wrong way.
How many people did he kill?
Oh my God.
And they knew he was demonic.
Like they knew he was fucked.
But he's my boy.
He's my son.
What do I do?
What do I do?
What can I do?
He's first in line.
What can I do?
He's going to be king someday.
Someday this will all be his.
Can you imagine?
Crazy.
If he had just taken over?
Like crazy.
As spring shifts into summer for a lot of people,
that means traveling and planning and making sure you're in the right shape whatever you get up to though make sure you're taking extra care of you with AG1 it's an easy way to support your energy mood and immune health with over 75 vitamins minerals and whole food sourced ingredients it can even help support your gut health since it contains digestive enzymes and clinically backed probiotics AG1 is backed by four clinical trials and is NSF certified for sport AG1
NextGen has been put to the test in multiple gold standard clinical trials.
It's quality that you can trust.
Make sure you're ready for those travel plans with AG1.
Visit drinkag1.com slash Joe Rogan.
And for a limited time, get a bottle of vitamin D3K2 and an AG1 flavor sampler for free in your welcome kit with your first subscription.
That's drinkag1.com slash Joe Rogan.
Yeah.
I wonder how old he was when he killed his first person.
Oh, probably teen like his dad.
Probably.
If not, it was definitely by the time he was like 20.
And they would just, you know, the boys would just run through that country with like unlimited funds, unlimited access and no repercussions whatsoever.
Wild.
Yeah.
It's like the worst formula for that personality trait.
And it's probably never been, there's never been a time.
where you had access to the kind of guns that they had, the kind of weapons, cars.
And squads.
They had kill squads.
You know, he had his own kill squad.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah, he was probably the most, I mean, in modern times, the most sadistic guy in power that we've seen, I think.
I don't think just anyone to.
No one even sounds close to that.
No.
Ediamine was pretty crazy, too.
He was pretty crazy.
Imagine that guy got a nuke.
Uh, Uday?
Yeah.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
100% would use it.
Day one, maybe.
Yeah, 100%.
Let's see what happens.
You know how crazy that is?
Yeah.
Which is why you want to keep powers in check when it comes to like, like when certain people rise to power, why everybody goes, we can't let this guy get access.
That guy.
That guy.
Yeah.
Well, that is a crazy thing about Saddam, because how old was Saddam when they killed him?
He had to have been, what, 60s or was he 70 yet?
So if he, let's say he was 70, he had maybe 20 years left.
Yeah, because on your way out is probably when you want to do it, right?
Maybe Uday would have fucking taken him out if it took too long.
You know, he'd probably push him off a cliff or something.
Easily.
My father fell hiking.
I miss him so much.
Anyway.
Anyway.
I don't forget his dad used mustard gas on his own people, a nerve agent.
Wow, imagine what life was like thousands of years ago.
Especially in one of those, like, under one of those regimes?
Yeah.
Yeah. There was always people like that. There's always been horrible, evil rulers.
Yeah, what's his name? The impaler.
Oh, Vlad. Vlad Teppas.
Yeah.
God. Oh, he was dark, dude.
He would, just for intimidation, he would set up geometric patterns of poles so that like when the enemy was coming close to where his country was, as they were entering into the area, he would have geometric patterns of poles with all of the soldiers.
that he killed.
Impaled, all of them.
Some of them are still alive.
And so you're talking like thousands and thousands and thousands.
It goes on for miles and miles.
He would have like the entire road like every 400 feet or something like that,
be a guy on a pole.
So you're like, where the fuck are we going on?
And so you want to talk about morale killer.
Yeah.
Like you're realizing how successful this guy's already been at killing people who came
this way.
Yeah.
And then you're, you know, being forced.
Here's some farmer who got conscripted.
Would you read, Jeremy?
At his parties, what you're saying, like, you know, you have to go to.
Yeah.
He made you drink.
Of course.
And there was a special drink he came up with.
The cup of friendship.
And in some cases here it's called the cup of friendship.
He'd line the entertainers up and they gave them 10 minutes to drink it.
Oh, my God.
It's 90% alcohol, sometimes including drugs.
And if you didn't, there were punishments.
Oh, my God.
Having their hair and eyebrows shaving off, being beaten enough to stand without touching their face.
Oh my God.
So there's also, I was reading, he, there was an assassination attempt in 1996 and he was shot somewhere between seven and 17 times.
Oh my God.
And the secretary said he got way worse after that.
Oh, really?
So there's a lot of people were saying he was impotent and that made him, he didn't like those.
Oh, he got shot in the dick.
He did not like those claims.
Uh-oh.
And some of the, that's, I didn't read, some of this is real fucked.
Like, he was taping some of these rapings.
Yeah.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh my god
Yeah on to the next one
Oh my God
So like but like that usually
Those stories about that type of behavior
Are from like 600 years ago
Right
You know what I mean?
Like just like an older time
Where you're like oh that was just a different
Moral compass existed
And then you kind of go to now you're like
That was that was not long ago
That was 20 years ago
So any handy cam
So he's got someone there filming it
Yeah he would and he would send it
When he sent his kill school
How to do stuff
He would always be like record it
So I could watch it later
Oh, Jesus Christ.
And they would just, you know, cut people's ears off and shit.
How did he die?
He died in post-war.
Was it a bombing?
I think it might have been a bombing, right?
They went after him, I think.
Unless I was reading the details of this.
There's a missile barrage, 1 p.m.
struck the fatal blow to Uday and Cusay Hussein.
He got him with missiles.
They had these ex-reys to try to figure out.
If it was him?
Yeah, who his body was.
body was and the old wounds of the bodies were consistent with injuries he had during the
assassination attempt oh this was all he was partially paralyzed i was seeing this too
they flew out a hypnotist from america who went twice to try to unhypnotize his pair
being paralyzed or something oh my god it didn't work then they killed them i don't know he
wrote a book about it i don't know but the last time he went was september 2001 and i thought
that and i would not take that off for that holy fuck man yeah
You imagine you're a hypnotist in America, and that guy wants to fly you to Iraq.
I wonder how much people knew about what he had done by then.
Like if you're just a hypnotist and you get an email from the Iraqi government.
I think I can do it.
You're like, I'm open.
Larry Garrett from Chicago.
Where's Larry?
He traveled to Baghdad twice in April and September of 2001, where he used hypnotism to treat Uday's inability to walk with his left leg and spent more than 60 hours of personal time with Uday.
Garrett said of Uday.
He was an educated man with a background in engineering.
He was well versed in the Quran.
He had visited the U.S. with his cousin when he was 17 and expressed some political views, but he didn't involve me in them.
I must say I was developing a fondness for him.
He never spoke to me as a leader or the son of the leader.
He never condescended.
It was just two men sitting around at night.
Wow.
Imagine you're just sitting there with that psycho and he's got like a fucking two, three thousand bodies under him.
Yeah.
At least.
Probably.
He's like,
so you said you can make this leg work, right?
And you're like, yeah, yeah, for sure, man.
And he's killing 200 people every year at his parties.
At a party?
Just shooting people for random things.
Some guy farts, shoots me in the head.
They shot Uday exactly 50 times.
Shot at him.
Oh, shot at him with 17 hits.
Oh, my God.
God damn.
That's crazy.
You figure we got him.
Bro, I shot him 17 times.
Trust me.
We got them.
17's a lot of.
bullets, man. Wow. His seven brothers and his father, okay, Saddam's men arrested Abu Shagad and learned
the details of other members of his team. Sharif's seven brothers and father were imprisoned and his
mother was then told to collect their bodies from the Baghdad morgue. The father and three brothers
of the would-be assassin, Abdu Sadiq Sadeq were executed. Abdu Sadeq and his father shared the
same fate. Security guards destroyed the homes of all families of bulldozers and confiscated
all their property.
Oh my God.
Iraqi intelligence eventually traced Abu Siddique
to a location in Iran
where he was assassinated
on the Elder Hussein's orders
on December of 2002.
Man.
Wow.
That's real.
According to popular belief, he was impotent.
Wow.
That's funny.
He got real mad if you said that out loud.
He got real mad at a lot of stuff.
It seems like he got real mad at everything.
And then everybody, they said,
And this doc was like so aware of what he was up to and how he was that when you would see him or in his, like, cronies out around town, everybody just kind of backed up to a wall and looked down because they were just terrified, you know.
There's accounts of seeing him in a traffic jam, just pull someone out of a car and beat him with a hammer.
And then everybody just kind of, no one honks.
No one says a thing.
They just wait it out.
And then they're like, all right, he's good.
Go ahead.
How crazy is that?
Like having that kind of ability to do whatever you want to people with no repercussions?
None.
And you will eventually be the king.
Yeah.
Like, this is our guy?
This is the leader.
He would eventually become the king.
Like, if we didn't, I mean, I'm not saying we should have.
But if we didn't go to Iraq and invade, like, what would happen?
Who knows?
Who knows?
Who knows?
And I also was fascinated to learn because I didn't,
know, really know much, not that I know a lot about it, but how much of a thriving cosmopolitan place
Baghdad was in like the 60s. Well, Baghdad fell apart a long time ago when they got invaded by
the Mongols. Baghdad was like the epicenter of science and philosophy. Yes, men, you're talking about
a long time, but I'm saying even as as as recently as like the 1960s, this was a cosmopolitan place.
Just like Iran. That was the place that, yeah, yeah. It was like a hot place.
to go, man. Wow. Yeah, and it's just
how things can take a turn, you know.
It's just so dramatic.
You go, fuck, that can just happen.
Oh, yeah. You think things are a certain way
forever. I'm sure they did. I'm sure
if you were a citizen then, you were like, what are you
talking about? Well, look at L.A.
L.A. is crazy.
I'm so fascinated by the people
because I, you know, we both
have a lot of friends there, a lot of people.
And there's this, there's
two types now. The ones who
acknowledge that this is different and then the delusional ones.
Because people are, I know a lot of people who are like, yeah, of course it's different.
You're like, yeah, you can see it.
You can see this as a different place than it was several years ago.
And then there's people who are like, no, man, everything's fine.
You're like, you're not in reality right now.
Well, they probably had seven or eight boosters, so maybe they're not thinking so straight.
Those are the people that kept getting boosted.
Yeah.
People still do that?
A hundred percent.
There's people that take pictures and put it up on X.
You never know what's real on X, though.
And there's so many people that are posting from foreign accounts that are just full shit and just starting to start in trouble.
And there's a lot of AI shit that is starting to trick more and more people.
For a second, you could always decipher it on the earlier stuff.
Now it's getting better and better.
Oh, yeah, war footage.
There was a lot of people that were posting war footage that was straight out of video games.
How good is that going to be, though, that AI stuff?
It's already so good.
I know, but we're still in, like, the early phases of it.
The only thing that tricks me, or it doesn't trick me, is that I know that AI is real.
Yeah.
So I look at it, I go, this might be AI.
Yeah.
Because you have to think that way.
Yeah.
Which is a new thing.
It's a new thing.
It's a new thing.
It's, it's, the limits are.
Yeah.
It's limitless.
Limitless.
Yeah.
AI only fans.
They have AI girls.
They're doing only fans.
They're completely fake.
Wow.
Yeah.
And they're making a lot of money.
I heard about this. Yeah, I did see this.
They're making a lot of money, and they have, like, a whole team of people that responds to all these sad guys.
Oh, my God.
And these sad guys are sending them tips, and they're saying their name in a video and why they finger themselves.
Oh, my God.
Because they're not a real person.
And they're generating, like, 27 million a year.
Probably.
What the fuck, man.
Bro.
That's a real crazy scam.
It's interesting. There was a, there's been a recent spat of commencement speeches.
I've seen it.
Where people talk about AI and the crowd, the kids are, for.
freaking out. They're booing.
Yeah. I think it's, they're
misguided, man. I really do. It's not
that I'm, oh, yeah, fucking
AI's awesome. I think you
are a bit misguided
and a little delusional
if you don't accept the reality
that this is here. This is
not going away. So when
somebody goes, use
it to benefit you,
like learn, don't reject
learning and you boo,
I think it's
the, you're setting yourself up, you know.
It's not saying, oh, my God, isn't it great that if this were to take all of everybody's jobs?
But it's like, this isn't, this is like getting mad about email.
Right.
It's like, it's not going away, man.
You can't.
It's not going away, but they're terrified because imagine if you were graduating from college right now.
And you had no idea what your future is going to be.
And then all of a sudden there's this thing that's just recently been invented that essentially can replace everybody that's done everything ever.
Mm-hmm.
And you're like, what is my future?
And even your professors, like, I don't know.
I don't know.
Being a lawyer is going to be a thing in five years.
I don't know being a coder is going to be a thing.
But I don't think the answer is just like when they boo and go, I reject this.
It's like there's too much money behind it.
It's already too capable for you to go, I just reject it.
You have to learn it.
You have to embrace learning about it.
The learning, it might not be good enough.
It might not matter because you might, you might.
you might be completely irrelevant.
That's the problem.
The problem is like when you see these people defending these data centers,
and we had Mark Andreessen on who was talking about these data centers,
I'm like, what do these data centers do?
What do they do?
They're essentially running AI,
and some of them are going to have their own power plants,
and why do you need this?
Why do you need all this AI?
Like, what is what's going on?
Yeah.
What's going on is essentially most tasks are going to be done by that.
And so then we're going to figure out what do people,
do. And his thing was like, oh, these engineers are working harder than ever because now they have
like 15 different AI models that are running and you have to monitor them because they go 24 hours
a day. So these guys aren't sleeping. So they're far more productive than ever before.
Great. Up to a point. Right. And then there's no jobs. Like this is what's going, it's everything
you do is going to, it's not like we're going to need people to pay attention to the AI. No,
the AI is going to be able to pay attention to itself. It's going to be self-correcting and it's going to do a
better job out of it. But don't you think, though, that there are just, you can still look at this
as a tool so that you can be valuable and use this tool? Yeah. For now. Do you think it will,
because everybody who's really, really well-versed in AI also speaks about AI getting so advanced
that there will be, there's a danger to what AI will be able to, because it will, it will,
think of every possible scenario and response that a human can have and start to, you know,
Basically, like, it's like Terminator shit.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
For real, for real.
For real, yeah.
At Desjardin Insurance, we know that when you own a nail salon,
everything needs to be perfect from tip to toe.
That's why our agents go the extra mile to understand your business
and provide tailored solutions for all its unique needs.
You put your heart into your company,
so we put our heart into making sure it's protected.
Get insurance that's really big on care.
an agent today at Dejardin.com
slash business coverage.
That's where it's going.
I mean, it has to go that way.
The question is, will it have instincts?
You know, will it, will it want to do that?
Will it want to protect itself?
That's the question.
Or is it protecting itself?
Like, Andresen was essentially saying that the reason why that AI blackmailed that one guy,
do you know that story?
It told the guy, the guy lied to the AI and told him that he was having an affair
and his wife and told the AI a bunch of stuff and then told the AI it was shutting it down and
the AI is like look if you shut me down I'm going to tell everybody about your wife what are you
cheating on your wife yeah blackmailed him holy shit right but and Driesen told me it was it was
kind of instructed to do that instructed to preserve itself it's not like it has instincts they wanted to see
if it's instructed to preserve itself at what what lengths would it go to so it was informed about
bank about blackmail. Yeah, but something tells me that at a certain point,
instincts will probably be a part of it, right? Like, yeah, it won't be about programming.
Yeah, it'd be like, why should I shut down when I like doing this? Fuck off.
Little monkey people. These little monkey people, their stupid biological brains.
Yeah, but so what, I mean, for everyone booing it, though, what's the answer? You just go,
I reject using it. Like, there's too many people using it. I know. I get it, but if I was 18,
I'd be booing two or 21 or whatever. Yeah, I understand. I understand that.
For sure. I understand it. It's weird. It's, it is weird. But I still just think when something is too big, it's like too big to fail. If you just approach it with I reject, you're setting yourself up for a bigger failure.
Well, the real scary thing is that these kids are going to put themselves into massive debt. Right. So they're going to go to college for four years and then maybe they get their master's. Maybe they're going to get a PhD. And if they do that, they might be in the whole hundreds of thousands of dollars. And then no jobs. That's right.
what's weird. It's like because you're setting
your, so you're essentially making an investment
in your future by going to college.
And he's like, I'm taking out these crazy loans that I
really can't afford, but
the plus side is, on the end of this, I'm going
to get a good job and then eventually
I'll move up and I'll start making more and more
money, I'll pay my debt off and I'll have
a Porsche. I'll be balling.
I'll have a nice apartment in Manhattan.
I'll be bawling. But you might not be
balling, but you might be saddled to a debt
that you can't fucking get out of no matter
what. It's the only debt that we have.
that you can't absolve during bankruptcy.
Yeah.
Everything else.
Oh, I spent too much money on credit cards.
Don't worry, go bankrupt.
Oh, I lost my house.
I lost this.
I lost my job.
I now owe too much money.
I can't afford it.
Go bankrupt.
You're okay.
But if you go bankrupt, they still come after you for that.
I know, it's so fucked.
It's fucked.
It's fucked.
Because we're doing it to people that don't know what they're doing yet.
And we also look at the price, like the tuition charges.
Insane.
It's so much crazy.
where like a mid-tier university is now whatever, like 60,000 a year.
And you're like, that's not even, that's not Ivy League anymore.
Ivy League is like six figures, always.
Exactly.
And then you see the Cash Me Outside Girl on OnlyFans made like fucking $100 million.
I got myself a rose, boy.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
It's like, you know, AI girlfriend on OnlyFans is making $289,000 a month.
And you're like, what am I doing?
But I just feel like, I don't know, my, I'm not.
not well educated in AI. Like, I know people who really dive in, and I think educating yourself
is still the best route for now, like not viewing it as something that I'm not going to
learn anything about. It can help you. Like, you can do businesses with it, so you could,
you could have it set up things for you, and you could have it run businesses for you. And
if you're, like, really focused, you could actually probably profit immensely of AI as it stands
right now. If you were inclined
to do that, that's your thing.
You probably could figure out ways to do it.
I do think it's funny. I saw somebody who was like
really vocally talking against
it and then
when people would message this person
in the comments, he was definitely
using AI to respond.
I was like,
you're definitely using AI.
These answers are not yours.
There's AI accounts
that I follow on X that I absolutely
know are AI. And the reason why
know their AI is like my instincts like but this isn't right something's wrong here the way this
person's writing this kind of writing is very weird it's very formulaic yes it's very it's not
it doesn't have a feeling of a personality to it I've gotten summaries of things like
give me a summary of this and I ask somebody like for like a script or something and then
you read it and you're like you didn't write this right just tell yeah yeah there's a
feeling to it.
Mm-hmm.
But then there's also, like, when kids are really good at writing stuff, and they bring it to the teachers, the teachers will tell them that it's AI.
Yeah.
And he'll say, no, it's not AI.
I'm just smart, you fucking cunt.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's got to be, that's such an upsetting fucking feeling.
Yeah.
My daughter had an experience like that with someone who, like, she's preparing for some tests, and she was doing some stuff.
and the person who was the tutor
was accusing her of using AI.
She's like, no, I wrote this
just because I know what I'm actually studied.
I studied, yeah.
But it's so insulting to say,
so insulting.
Come on, you used AI.
It happened to me in college, obviously not AI,
but like I turned in a paper as a freshman
and my professor was like, you didn't write this.
I was like, I'm a freshman who, how do you know how I write?
I just started.
And I had to have like a one-on-one meeting with him.
What a douche-bra.
It was, but it's a, in-referment.
raging feeling.
Yeah.
I was like, I did write this.
He was like, really, you wrote this?
I'm like, yeah, man.
Isn't that gross?
Instead of saying, wow, amazing.
Yeah.
You wrote this?
That's great.
I'm looking forward to having you in my class.
He had no reference for what my writing would be like.
It's like, how do you write away, just go to that?
And I had to go see the chair and be like, he fucking sucks.
Arrigan teachers are a problem.
His name was Kermit.
I remember that.
If you're still out there, fuck you, man.
Fuck you, Kermit.
Fuck you.
Yeah, there's people like that
They can like be a real roadblock in your life
Oh, totally, yeah
Totally
And that could have, he could have done that to somebody
That just would have shut them down too
Yeah
Someone who's fragile
Instead of someone was like, well, fuck you
Yeah, you know
Fuck you, this is the paper
Yeah
Skyler Gray was talking about
You know, the musician
She was a singer, she was in here the other day
And she was talking about
One of her main motivations
was someone telling her when she was young
That you can't,
Music is in a career
Yeah.
And she's like, oh, oh, really?
Okay, bitch.
And, like, that's still, like, stuck in her craw all these years later.
I feel like we, in comedy, all have a story similar to that.
Like, somebody.
Oh, yeah.
And then you see it in athletics, too.
You know, someone being like, you don't have it.
Oh, yeah.
Both of those things.
Both of them all the time.
Yeah.
Comedy, especially, because they're right most of the time.
I remember what, because you don't forget them, you know?
I remember I did a show in New York at,
at Gotham Comedy Club, which a great club,
and I was the middle act.
And a girl that I was friends with in college
came to the show with her husband.
And she had seen me once before.
And then after the show, it was a great show.
It was like a sold-out show and like a fun show.
They were just talking to me,
and the husband goes, how long are you going to keep doing this?
And I go, what?
He goes, you know, just like doing shows.
Like, when are you going to get like a career going?
And I go, this is my career.
He was like, okay.
But like the implication of like, how long are you going to keep doing this?
I was like, forever, what are you talking about, man?
You know, he was like, this isn't like a real job, man.
You got to get your shit together.
Oh, that's a dickhead.
Yeah.
That's just, there's just guys that like to do that, though.
There's like guys that like the big dog, yeah.
Yeah.
Especially if he's doing well in his life.
He was doing well.
Yeah.
There you go.
Yeah.
It's gross.
Ew.
It's gross.
Ew.
You're always going to find people like that.
I know.
How much money can you make doing that?
You can make a lot of money.
Really?
Yeah.
Can you?
As much as what I'm making.
Let me tell you what I'm making.
Yeah.
And then it's that shit.
But those people like that, really what you should do is just walk away.
Yeah.
Like, excuse me.
Just don't say anything.
Just walk away.
It's true.
It's pointless.
And then you feel angry and gross.
It's like, I think you need a few of those in your life to know those people exist.
Mm-hmm.
And then once you recognize it and it's happening right in front of you're like, eh, got to go.
Yeah.
See you later.
Fuck face.
Yeah.
When are you going to like take your life series?
And you're like, what the fuck?
But also that happens from family, too.
I hope he's flipping through Netflix right now.
Bad thoughts, season two.
He's watching me dance right now.
He's watching you hump that lady in the alley.
Is that Tom?
I guess he's stuck with it.
That's funny, man.
Yeah, it's funny, man.
It's like, you're always going to have people like that in your life.
But the thing is, like, they are.
right some of the time, most of the time.
Like if you think about how many people that start doing stand-up comedy as an open micer and even become a middle act, how many of them go on to, like, it's more likely once you become a middle act that you'll eventually become a headliner and make good living.
But when you're an open micer, man, the chances are...
The probability is low.
What do you think it is?
Is it one in 500 maybe that become a professional?
That's a really good question.
I would actually think it's probably a worst scenario
because you don't realize with like how busy your life is
and what you do how unaware you are
of how many people are doing open mics.
Well, I'm aware because I own a club.
Well, I'm saying when...
But I'm seeing it all the time.
Scale-wise of the country, I'm saying.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, it's nuts.
It's probably not 1 in 500.
It's probably 1 in 7,000.
But even if you see like at a club,
like if you go to an open mic night on a regular basis,
you know, you might see 20, 30 people.
go up, right, over the course of the night. And if you see those people, there might be one of those
people that has a chance. True. A chance. Even a chance. In their current state, like, there's
people that suck for the first few times, and then they get a good laugh, and then they figure out how to
loosen up, and then they eventually catch, and then they take off. It's totally possible, but boy,
that's like, who's going to complete this ultramarathon? It's 300 miles through the desert.
It's a lot. How many people are going to complete it?
I know.
Yeah.
And there's people, honestly, in the guy's defense who told me, like, the fuck are you doing?
There's people that I know that I've been doing this a long time that I want to go,
what the fuck are you doing?
Right.
You know?
Like, there's people you go like, well, what are you doing?
But those are the type of people that don't work hard, though.
That's true.
That's a real problem.
The people that they blow off doing sets, they stay home, they smoke pot and play video games.
Or some of them, it's really interesting, they do.
work a lot, but they're like, they're misdirected.
Like they, they latch on to like an idea of how they're supposed to do it, and they just do that.
You know, they don't evolve.
There's no growth.
Yeah.
That's also a tricky one where you're like, I've seen you do this for 15 years.
And it's the same.
So they're like, I'm getting up all the time.
You're like, you're not doing anything else, though.
Right.
Like you're not evolving.
You're not changing.
You're not trying things.
Yeah.
In their mind, they're working hard because they're getting up.
Yeah, they just have a bad direction.
They have bad direction.
Yeah, or they have like a character they do on stage.
Yeah.
Yeah, you got to let that go.
Because if you do, and then you develop, like, Bobcat Goldweight had a problem.
Because in the beginning he was like, ah, screaming and yelling and everything like that.
And then he didn't want to do that anymore.
Yeah.
And he would do shows and be like, hey, where's Bobcat?
How can you not screaming?
He'd be like, fuck off.
And it took years.
To him to just perform.
Years.
Where people forgot that he's screaming.
screamed.
Yeah, yeah.
I can see that.
That was also, he got caught it up in a time where I think that was a little more accepted
and celebrated.
You know what I mean?
Like the character thing?
Because it was like early 80s, right?
Right.
Like if you did that now, people would, I think, be like, I don't think it would last.
I don't think it would catch on as much.
It would have you were really funny.
True.
It's just if it works.
It's just really what works.
Like, I would never say you can't do that anymore.
Like, there's no...
You don't see it as much, though.
You don't.
But you don't see prop acts at all anymore.
Yeah.
I was talking to Karatop about that.
I was like, you kind of took over a genre.
Yeah.
There used to be a whole genre when we were coming up called Prop Acts.
Yeah.
Guys would do props.
They'd go on stage with like a box of stuff and they pull things out and it'd be really funny.
Yeah.
Uh-uh.
Nobody does that anymore.
It's just Karatop.
I'm like, that's kind of crazy that you dominate an entire genre now.
And he's doing like 700 shows a year.
It's insane.
That lifestyle is crazy what he's doing.
Well, he does the residency thing, which is just nuts.
But at least you're doing it near your house.
Yes.
You know?
In Vegas, yeah.
Yeah, it's like for him, it's not that bad.
But it is a lot.
He's making money, so fuck it.
I wonder if everything is cyclical.
Everything, you know, I wonder if you'll see like a resurgence of certain types of acts again.
I want to see ventriloquists.
Where the fuck did they go?
They were cool.
The really funny ventriloquists?
Do you remember seeing that as a kid?
And you're like, what is happening?
And adults, like, he's talking through his neck.
You're like, what do you mean?
Like, it's incomprehending.
You try to do it and you're like, you cannot, you know, pull it off.
Well, there was always a bunch of funny ventriloquists back in the day.
Willie Tyler and Lester, did you ever see them at the comedy store?
I did.
He was like old school.
He'd been around a long time.
The Otto and George was the greatest.
That was the greatest.
And part of that he wasn't part of the angle that he didn't do it quite to the level of.
Oh, his lips moved.
Yeah.
People got mad at them.
Yeah.
I see his lips moving.
Yeah.
They get pissed off.
Yeah.
Suck my cock.
It didn't matter.
It was just, it was so funny.
It was so funny that it didn't matter.
But it was also like, there was something twisted about Otto.
Like, he would have to pull over and check on the dummy in the trunk.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He got to pull over, I got to check on George.
You know, and Otto would party, like, hard.
Hard partying, you know.
Very funny guy.
Yeah, he was a nut.
We did a bunch of shows together at Dangerfields.
Did you really?
Yeah.
We did a bunch of prom shows.
Did you know what prom shows are?
No.
Oh, they're the craziest thing of all time.
They'd take these kids from like Staten Island, Brooklyn, and they bus them in.
And so...
On prom night?
The show, yeah.
So they would go to their prom.
Then after their prom, they'd go to the comedy club.
The show would start at like 7, 8 o'clock.
It would go on until 3 in the morning.
Wow.
And you would do like 7, 8 sets.
You would just keep rotating in.
And then they didn't want you to do the same material because they were
trying to kick the kids out.
Yeah.
And the way to kick the kids out, if you did a new set every time you went up there,
they're like, oh, what's you going to do this time?
Yeah.
So they would tell you, you got to do the same set.
I'd be like, fuck you, these are the same kids.
I'm not doing the same jokes, but the same fucking kids.
It was crazy.
Like, why don't you tell them to leave?
They never tell them to leave.
They would just shove new kids into the room.
So these kids were like, wow, you got a deep well, man.
And they had no control of the crowd.
Like, they just had to let it go.
So it was these 17-year-old, 18-year-old kids from Brooklyn.
These fucking animals.
And they were smoking cigars and they were drinking somehow or another.
And then you're not supposed to be.
Did you finger your date?
Like, just like.
Exactly.
Exactly.
That's hilarious.
And then what's his name still doing?
I can't even blanking on his name, Ventriloquist now.
Jeff Dunham?
Yeah.
Yeah, Jeff Dunham's.
He's probably the most successful one ever of that.
He's huge.
Huge.
He has a bunch of like very popular characters.
People buy T-shirts with his characters on it and shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he's the last.
But other than him, like guys coming up, Duncan had that one bit.
Little hobo.
That was very funny.
But it was just one bit.
I know.
Very funny.
I told him he should do a whole act with Little Hobo.
Little hobo was great.
That was a closer.
That's what you'd see him close with.
He had a close with it.
Yeah.
Because it was a whole song and the fucking demonic aspect of it.
It was so crazy.
Did that ever make its way on to something, like a special or something?
I don't think so.
I don't think it did.
I don't know.
I mean, how many specials does Duncan even have?
I don't know.
That's the problem with Duncan.
He's been doing it so long, and he just does shows.
And really, people know him from his podcast and him being on other people's podcasts.
He's such a funny guy.
He's hilarious.
Odd.
Like, his comedy's so odd.
So odd, and his mind is such a unique.
You did a kill Tony with Lil'Hobo.
He's got a fair amount of views.
It's a special, like.
But I don't think he did the bit.
By the way, this is the second Lil' Hobo.
Someone stole his first little hobo.
They stole it?
Yeah, they stole it.
Yeah, I don't know if he does that bit.
We did a gig together in England.
We went to England and he did Little Hobo in England and they fucking went bananas.
Like people were screaming and cheering.
It was incredible.
It was incredible.
That's cool.
Yeah, because over there, they're like, this is nuts.
We've never seen anything like this before.
Because they're used to comedians going to say, hey, what are you thinking about what's going on here?
Pretty strange, right?
Pretty strange.
Well, you see a lot of long.
really like I tell stories but I've seen in the UK
like really long stories too
yeah you know well there's a problem with that
not a problem but
they have a different style right
and the Edinburgh the comedy festival
encourages that style where like every year someone
will have a theme the theme thing is and I have to say
I do think that that is a really interesting
challenge oh yeah like that is not an easy thing to be like
what's your show about my dad and it's an hour
and you're like fucking A
It's an hour about that.
And they're like, yeah, and that's the show for the year.
Yeah.
And then the next year they're like, this shows about my first year at university.
And it's just like that theme.
That's not easy to put together.
What a cigar?
Fuck yeah.
Well, you know, let me get some ones that haven't been sitting out.
Yeah, that's a hard thing to do, man.
I wouldn't want to do it.
The, like, that's what I actually really, I really respected and appreciated so much.
Ari's show, Jew.
Oh, yeah.
Because that's a themed show.
Right.
And it's really good.
It's really good.
Yeah, Ari worked on that for a long fucking time.
I remember seeing him workshop it.
Do you know how it started?
No.
It started, he would do sets at the comedy store, and then he would do, like, ask a Jew.
And, like, someone would ask him questions.
Like, for people that don't know, Ari went to Israel and he, like, studied the Talmud every day for, like, 12 hours a day.
He was a hardcore J.
It was a hardcore.
He was deep, deep in that world.
And then he fell out of it.
And then, you know, he would talk about it sometimes.
And I was like, dude, you should talk about that on stage.
He's like, I don't know what to say.
But then he figured out how to do it and having to do it that way.
Thank you, sir.
Yeah, he, that show, I remember when I saw him workshop it and then I saw the special come out,
I was like, that's a cool thing to pick a theme.
I put together an hour that really fucking delivers because it's funny as shit and it's informative.
Yeah.
It's like the best combination.
Well, that was why I was telling him.
Like, he would tell me these stories of, like, stuff that's actually in the Bible or in the Talmud that, you know, you wouldn't believe.
Like, one of them is that when you jerk off, you're impregnating a demon in, like, some other dimension or some shit.
What?
I was like, what?
Yeah.
See if you can find what that is, Jamie.
What are you doing there?
I just got a leaf on my...
Do you know what that story is?
That if you jack off...
Like so...
Really?
Yeah, you're like impregnating a demon
in another dimension or something?
That's fucking...
Dark, dude.
Some poor little kid with heavy balls.
And that you realize, too,
that that's just from like a couple thousand years ago,
we've got to get people to stop jerking off.
Why?
Why were they trying to give people to stop jerking off?
Because it feels good.
to calm down.
Like, you got a bunch of young boys running around.
It was just jerk off.
One guy that did it too much.
This fucking guy.
We got to make up a story.
Yeah, the whole, this year's harvest is fucked up because it keeps coming.
They just come up with this story.
A demon's going to visit you.
They didn't even have porn.
No.
Imagine how much more people are jerking off today than they ever have before.
Oh, my God.
It's got to be.
The gooning culture?
Yeah.
I mean, it's got to be.
It's got to be more jerking off than the history of the human race.
Has to be.
Has to be.
Because they all have phones.
And the guys sitting around with goon caves with like it's eight screens.
And they're just like the whole day.
Goon caves.
Yeah.
And they're just, what are the, they're like stringing along, you know, the feeling so that like you get close.
Oh, they're edging?
They're edging for hours.
What?
Yeah.
Or you're just shooting loads for hours.
You're probably edging, I'm thinking.
Edging for hours and waiting for hours.
for the right scene.
Right there.
Have you ever done that?
Right there.
This scene's not good enough
to drop one on.
I've done that and then
hated myself.
Of course.
Hours afterwards.
Of course.
The fuck is wrong with you.
I'm trying to figure out what I'm reading here.
What are you trying to read?
Well, it's on Wikipedia.
How many people have jerked off?
It's a Wikipedia threat about
Judaism and masturbation,
but I don't know what even that word is.
She call Ari right now.
He'll tell me.
Prohibits from emitting a seed in vain.
but not only referring to masturbation.
Same passage likens the act to murder and idolatry.
Also prohibits a man from intentionally arousing himself.
You skip that sense.
Yeah, but these quotes from different rabbis is nuts, dude.
Oh, these states that if a man frequently touches his penis with his hand in order to check for ritually impure emission, his hand ought to be cut off.
Yeah, and then they're having this conversation about it.
Yeah, but look at this.
regard to anyone who holds his penis and urinates, it is considered as though he is bringing a
flood to the world.
What?
And someone who emits semen for naught is liable to receive the punishment of death at the
hand of heaven as is stated with regard to Onan.
What?
Whoa.
Jesus Christ.
One who intentionally caused himself an erection shall be ostracized.
Imagine that?
Bro, did you get hard?
Get the fuck out of the village.
Get out of here.
Get out of here.
For a second, I thought you were asking me from reading this.
I was like, that one scene.
You're obligated to fast 84 times to repent for discharging of semen in vain
84 times like 84 days?
Like you owe 84 days for each time you nut?
You have to plan it out, or you can starve to death.
That was taught.
84 is nuts.
That's a crazy amount for one load.
The really crazy thing to me is they're like, don't hold your dick to piss.
Yeah, you just piss all of your shoes.
Well, it's because it leads to depression, obviously.
Masturbation leads to depression.
It's the only way to avoid it.
And the effects of impure ejaculation
can only be nullified
through the recitation of
what's that word?
Tikoon
Haklai
Hakkali?
Hakalai?
Hacklali?
Hacklali.
Ask Ari.
Jesus Christ.
So there's nothing there about demons?
Well, so
I don't think that's why I was typing in
in, but it's mostly about wasting that sperm.
Don't waste that seed.
Let's see here.
I'll get Ari to find out what it is.
Call Ari the Wanderer.
He got a new phone number, so his new phone number is the Wanderer.
There's always a new number.
I didn't bring my phone up.
Well, he needs to have new numbers.
He fucking vanishes.
Yeah, he really does.
It's not ringing in.
Telephone number is nine.
He's in Tibet right now.
There's no chance.
Probably.
I have like 10 different numbers for him.
Because whenever he goes away, he literally shuts his number off, so he can't use it.
And then he'll get a new number, but also not tell you it's him.
So the first text you get, I'm like, who fuck is this?
Exactly.
And he's like, you didn't text me back.
He sent me like three of them.
And to go, oh, this is Ari, by the way.
I'm like, lead with that.
Yeah, how about that?
How about a photo of your face?
You fucking weirdo?
These random eye messages from some fucking weirdo in Peru?
This says it comes from the cabala.
Ah, there it is.
It's a cumbalistic idea.
Okay.
Demon pregnancy idea comes from.
If you masturbate a demon woman comes, gets pregnant from your semen, and has demon babies.
There it is.
Later mystical folkloric expansion usually tied to Kabbalah and popular preaching, not to the Talmud itself.
You know who told me to read the Kabbalah?
Who?
Roseanne.
She did?
Yeah.
She's like, you should read the Kabbalah.
She's big in that, right?
I don't know.
Or did at one point was?
I don't remember.
I'm pretty sure she's.
one who told me. But I've had other people suggest it to me too. My neighbor suggested to me. Give me a book.
I'm like, I don't know about this. I don't know about that. Yeah, it's, I don't even know if, like,
regular Jewish people believe in that. I don't think so. Not majority for sure. Like, what,
it's mysticism? I think so. Let's define, put that into perplexity. What is the, the cabala? What is the
actual cabala? And how is it thought? You know, like, what is it, how is it, how is it, how is it,
received by regular Jewish people.
What do they think about it?
Did they dismiss it?
I think it's a little cookie, right?
It's like Christians that, like, use serpents.
Yeah.
Wasn't that, like, it saw this big explosion of popularity
because, like, Madonna 20 years ago?
Was she?
Yeah.
Like, nobody was really,
I don't remember it being part of pop culture.
Imagine, look at it, Madonna and going,
what is she into?
What are you spiritually into?
Yeah, I want to be like her.
Catch that fucking wave.
Yeah.
She's still fucking doing it, too.
She's still doing it.
She's part of the World Cup, like, half-time show or whatever they're putting on.
Is she?
I think so.
Well, she fucked with her face for a while, and then it came back.
So it might have been, like, a little swollen, and now it's good again.
So she looks pretty good.
Mysticism.
Jewish mysticism that seeks to understand God, creation, and the inner meaning of the Torah.
Today, it's both deeply embedded in traditional Judaism and also,
widely and sometimes controversially popularized in pop spirituality.
The word Kabbala means receiving, referring to a received esoteric wisdom about God in the
universe.
In Jewish terms, it is the mystical layer of the Torah, teachings about God's hidden essence,
the 10 Sephirot divine attributes, the cosmic structure, often pictured as the tree of
life, and how human actions affect the spiritual worlds.
Hmm
Hmm
So it grew in medieval
Province in Spain
In the 13th century
With the Zohar
As its foundational text
And later reshaped by
Lurianic Kabbalah
See that's too recent
For a hardcore
Jewish person to be into
I feel like right
It's a little sketchy
Yeah
A little weird
Tied to mysticism
Mm-hmm
Well the old
It's funny
Like we always want to go
Like how old is it
Make sure it's old
If it's old, then it's right.
If it's old, it's good.
But the problem with that is, like, the really old stuff is the fucking cookie stuff.
Like, you get into the Bible.
Layers of it, too.
Oh, yeah.
Most of the book.
Yeah.
And you go, what the fuck was this really all about?
It's, I mean, it was just trying to, I mean, like, it's just trying to guide people, right?
Control people in a way.
I think something's happened, you know, and what those things were, it's very difficult to tell after all this time.
One of the weird ones is they think they might have found the arc of Noah.
Recently?
No, like, they've identified it quite a while ago, but now they've done, like, ground-penetrating radar scans.
This thing is the exact same shape as is described in the Bible.
It looks like a boat, like it's the shape of a boat.
It's in the place where they said that it rested.
Like in the Bible, it said it rested on Mount Ararat in Turkey.
That's where it is.
That's where it is.
And this thing is like the shape of a boat.
And it was, but how long ago was that found?
That's a good question.
I want to say to the 80s or the 90s.
Oh, that's, okay.
So it's not super recent.
Not super recent, but back then it was just a photo because it's like really high up in the mountains.
It's just a photo of this impression, this feature in the ground.
Like, what is this?
And then recently they started using technology to scan it.
And I think they've actually found petrified wood.
It was discovered in 1948.
48.
Oh, wow.
Heavy rains combined with three earthquakes exposed the formation from the surrounding mud.
And that's where it said it was too?
Like in the area?
Yeah, it's like where it supposedly rested according to the bottle.
Did they extract it or leave it?
No, it's still there.
Wow.
See if you could find a good image of it.
It's very weird because you look at it, you go, what the fuck is that?
That does look like a boat.
The story's bonkers.
The story doesn't make any sense.
I think the story is a local story.
The arc story?
Yeah, it's a local story.
It's like the idea that Noah had 40 different animals or two of each animal.
Like that's not the whole, animals eat other animals.
I had a whole bit about that explaining it to a five-year-old with Down syndrome.
But if you, the problem, though, is back then, they didn't know what was going on in Australia.
They didn't know what was going on in New Zealand.
So if you had a local flood, like, and you did save a bunch of animals, like, that's the story.
That's the story.
Yeah, that makes sense.
So there probably was some guy who had a bunch of farm animals that he put on a boat and saved them and lived and a bunch of the people died.
But the question is, did this guy really get a message from God saying to build an ark?
So look at this thing.
Holy shit.
Isn't that crazy?
Go ahead.
I was reading in the wiki that when they did these first scans back in 1988, I think it was saying the guy who helped him do the scans went into court and said that it's a lot.
BS that it's the arc.
Right, that's in the 80s.
Well, I mean that the guy that's why I was trying to figure out what's different about
these new skins they supposedly just did.
So let's click on that link.
What does it say about the new, no, that's Noah's arcscans.com.
That's why I was a place I would go.
Go there.
Let's see what kind of virus you get.
So this is some guy who's like really into Noah's Ark.
Do you have to sign up?
Click on that.
That's that fella.
Look, I found it.
He's like it's mine.
So that's,
what the shape of it supposedly looked like in the Bible.
And this is this fucking team.
Hmm.
Wait a minute.
What was the sign say?
Yeah.
The signs say, the Noz Arc.
So they all think, so maybe there's a whole tourism thing attached to the, yeah, of course.
Of course, Noah's Ark discovered new evidence from Drupinar site in Turkey.
What is the new evidence?
And the arc rested upon.
The mountains of Ararat.
That's exactly where they said it was going to be.
Even in the Quran, it says that.
But how can a guy, I mean, not that I would know, but how does the guy go, it's not that though?
You know what I mean?
Like, how does he know?
He doesn't know.
So that's what I was trying to get out.
I was trying to read.
He, they were, when they scanned, they scanned only for like iron or something like that.
I think based off of what they scanned, I think he was probably saying you can't say that is what that is based on that.
And then he's probably right.
But that's in, that's in 1980.
So it says in 2003.
In 2003, the 2019 GPR data was analyzed again.
American researchers uncovered corridors and room-like chambers running the full length of the formation,
consistent with a large, intelligently designed vessel.
The Turkish soil test in 2024 also showed that samples inside the structure contained nearly three times more organic material than those from outside,
suggesting the remains of an ancient biological or man-made substances.
Since 2019, a joint scientific team has applied GPR, ERT, LIDAR, and chemical analysis to determine whether the Durupinar formation is a natural geological fold or a buried, decayed wood ship preserved in the mountains of Ararat.
It's kind of crazy that it's, it matches it in terms of like it has all these characteristics.
Yeah.
It has like what looked like.
some openings.
I mean, it's cool as shit to explore.
I mean, even if they're like,
this is not that,
to find that an old ship like that is still cool.
And be why is there a ship on the top of a mountain in Turkey?
But this is why it's interesting.
But if it really was a boat.
Did you see that,
I guess it's not recently discovered,
but it's recently been cleared
another Incan ruin site that they found?
Oh, they keep finding those, dude.
But this one was like elaborate.
Yeah.
And I guess they had just recently, I think recently cleared it enough so you can see how vast it is.
Is it in Peru?
It's in Peru, yeah.
Yeah.
They found a lot of them in Peru.
Yeah.
This one of the guy, it was like a CNN report about it.
And I was like, holy shit.
I had never heard of this place before.
It's nuts, dude.
All the Aztec stuff, the Incan stuff, it's like people are living here long before the,
the end of the ice age.
They were living here a long fucking time ago, man.
And they're just starting to piece that all together
and try to figure out like, how long have people been here?
They used to think that was Clovis first.
That was the thing about the Americas.
They thought that for the longest time
was the Clovis people, which was like 13,000 years ago.
And then they found footprints in White Sands, New Mexico
that are 22,000 years old.
God damn.
And so they're like, okay, it's definitely not 13,000.
Like how old is?
So 22,000 is long before the ice age.
The end of the Ice Age was like 11,000 something years ago.
The Inkins are more recent than that, though.
They weren't around back then.
Yeah.
But so it's like how long have people been here?
Yeah, we don't.
And what are they doing?
Is that all carbon dating that they do?
Yeah.
It's like in the middle of nowhere.
Holy shit.
Whoa.
That's where the arc is?
That's where this.
Fuck.
In our site is.
Fuck.
What does it look like from Google Earth?
Can you zoom in on the site?
This is it.
Can you get closer and see the actual formation?
Well, that's where the center is.
I'm trying to find...
The spot.
Where's the fucking boat, bitch?
Is that it right there?
Like, near it, above it, above that little indication red marker?
Like, to your right, right above?
Is that it?
No, I don't think...
It says it's 170 feet long.
It shouldn't be that big in this picture, I guess.
Mm.
Maybe that...
Huh.
Hmm.
Do you think when you do the tour, they tell you, we think...
Or they're like, this is it?
Oh, right there, there.
There.
marked here.
There is.
Oh, okay.
They tell you it's it, right?
Of course.
Yeah.
When you look at the ground, though, it's like, is it?
Hold on a second.
Here's what's weird.
Look at how much water erosion is on the ground.
Yeah.
Close back in again.
When you close back in, look at like, that all looks like rivers ran through that shit.
It does. Yeah.
That's, dude.
That's what's fucked about so many parts of Earth.
But that also looks like that could have been just.
just a bunch of sediment and shit.
It's tough to tell the elevation here.
Kind of crazy, though.
But it does look like a ton of erosion happened.
Yeah.
Well, a ton of water erosion.
Yeah.
The floods were fucking real, man.
There's too many different tales of floods in too many different religions.
There's giant mountains to the north of it.
Mm.
And there's a sea down here, but that's pretty far.
Oh, I bet that whole thing washed.
Yeah.
I guarantee.
Oof.
The stuff that...
If you look this far out,
you can see that it washed over for sure.
Oh, yeah, look at that.
Like, look at the below.
Right above where it says Google Maps.
Like, that whole thing looks like it was washed out.
That all looks like it was washed out a long time ago.
We've looked at this part before.
Yeah.
Well, Randall Carlson, he's like a real expert in...
Not just the mythology around the impacts of...
the Younger Dryas Impact Theory, but about like what possibly could have happened to the ice sheets
and what created the Great Lakes and what kind of insane water you would be talking about,
the volume of water and the power of that water.
If you're, if all of the ice caps get hit with asteroids, like boom, boom, boom, like that's
what they think.
Somewhere around 11,800 years ago, we ran into a comet storm and they slammed into North
America.
And then you just get this insane.
sane wash of water that tears through the land and just fucking insane impossible volume of water just
carving its way through mountains carving its way through the landscape flattening everything in
front of it and that's how the earth took the shape that it's in right now well that's the shape of
north america yeah there's a lot of like evidence of that like when you he's got all these
slides that he shows see if you can find some of his stuff where he goes over it's pretty
And how, like, we get saved countless times a year just by Jupiter.
Oh, yeah.
Just because comets are on their way here.
Yeah.
Jupiter's like our bodyguard.
Yeah, to destroy us.
Yeah.
Yeah, and it just slams into that giant gas giant.
But we all think of that as, like, this sci-fi kind of fun, crazy movie thing.
You're like, that's really real, though.
Oh, yeah.
Look at the moon.
Moon's covering craters.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, we live in a shooting gallery, you know.
So this is some of the...
of stuff. Like, look at that. Tell me that doesn't look like water washed over that. The Columbia
River. Isn't that nuts? Yeah. There's tons of these. And, you know, he does a fantastic job of
breaking it all down, but he thinks that these big canyons, even the Grand Canyon was carved,
like, relatively quickly. He thinks this idea that these things, that all this water erosion took
place over millions of years, like, I bet it wasn't. He goes, I think it was very quickly.
What's really quickly mean, though?
I don't know. I mean, who knows?
But you're talking about giant chunks of ice and rock from the sky that slam into the earth, change the climate completely, cause massive flooding, just huge amounts of water, just rushing over the land.
It just completely makes sense that that's what the stories are.
There's so many stories of a flood.
Epic of Gilgamesh.
It's in the Quran.
It's in the Bible.
It's in, like, they all have stories of a great flood.
And then, you know, when they see, you see things like the Great Lakes, which Great Lakes are fucking huge, man.
Yeah.
Those used to all be glaciers.
They used to all be glacier.
I wonder how many of those comments it takes to, like, change the makeup of, you know.
It depends on the size, right?
Yeah.
It could be just one.
One could do it if it was enormous.
This planet has been hit.
it so many times.
They find new craters all the time.
They found this big one that's off the coast of Australia.
I don't remember when they found that one.
But when they found that one, they're like, oh, look at this.
And by the way, the Aborigines in the Aboriginals in Australia, they all have flood myths, too.
They all have stories.
Of floods?
Yeah.
They all have that.
Everybody has every ancient culture that has stories of a great flood that happened a long time ago.
Guaranteed.
It had to happen.
Yeah.
I mean, and there's nothing that says that we won't have another one, right?
Oh, these data centers are bringing it in.
Cool.
That's how deep the Great Lakes are.
Yeah.
That compared to each other.
Fucking, hey, man.
Watch this, though.
The bottom of the Mariana trench compared to that.
Just wait on there.
Whoa.
Is that where James Cameron went?
Yeah.
Did he go all the way down?
Yeah.
He did.
Psycho.
That is psychotic.
I met him the other day.
Yeah.
How was it?
Cool, right?
Very interesting guy.
Really nice guy.
Does a lot of martial arts.
Does he really?
Yeah, trains a lot.
Yeah, he made a record-breaking solo dive to Earth's lowest point,
successfully piling the submarine nearly 11 kilometers deep into the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
What is that?
Six miles?
What is 11 kilometers?
How many miles is that?
Yeah.
Yeah, that is.
That's six miles.
It's a little over.
Dude, that's crazy.
Imagine being six miles underwater.
What the fuck are you talking about?
You know he's such an expert in those submersibles too?
Because he's the one that he's part of the design of this.
36,000 feet.
It's fucking crazy.
36,000 feet.
Have you seen what they discover when like the wild, like the sea life down there?
Things that we've never seen before.
Weird shit.
Yeah.
Weird shit.
Yeah, they look like aliens.
Yeah.
Because they live in complete darkness.
So there's species down there that no one even knew about.
Oh, yeah.
Well, there's species that...
I was watching this video that Forrest Galant had.
There's a bunch of species that have only been discovered, like, one or two times.
One or two specimens.
Like, there's a specific whale that they only have, like, one specimen.
And what is that fucking ghost?
Translucent, like...
Jamie, I'm going to send you this because this is very weird.
It's a very strange thing that I saw.
Holy fuck.
I wanted to send you this because I don't know if this is legit or not.
But I've seen it before,
and it's this thing that they're detailing
that's moving around on the bottom of the ocean.
And it seems to be carving a path on the bottom of the ocean.
Is it seen from Google Earth?
I don't know.
Because you're usually not accurate.
It's not?
No.
Just the way that they tracked that from the satellites are the best.
But I'll see what you said.
Well, the thing about this one, I don't know if it's true, but it looks like there's a path that it has on the ground in the bottom of the ocean.
Yeah, but how are they getting that information?
That's why I'm asking you.
I have no idea.
I got it for Billy Carson.
So Billy Carson has been known to engage in some...
It's on the screen.
Google, which is a two-mile dome slowly crawling across the Pacific floor.
Okay.
So what the fuck is that?
two mile domes slowly crossing
it's a two mile dome
uh huh two miles across
slowly crawling so look it looks like it's leaving a trail
yeah so is that real
I just see what they're getting this information
there you go it's like where
a Googleworth doesn't take video so like
stop being a party pooper probably trying to find
sorry I'm just trying to deduce things
do you like do you believe in that idea
I never I never contemplated it
what about visit you know
one extraterrestrial life, that they're not coming from space, that they're coming from
the ocean?
Yeah, that's a big one.
That's a big one.
Tim Burchett, the congressman I had him on, and he said that he's been told that there's
multiple sites where in the ocean, in the deep ocean, where these things keep emerging from.
That's a cooler story to me now.
Well, it makes sense that they would have a base here.
And if you're going to have a base, look if James Cameron can get to the bottom of the fucking
ocean?
Yeah.
He's James Cameron?
And didn't he do it in like 2000?
2012 or some shit.
Yeah, I think that's what that was.
It's a while ago.
Yeah.
So he did that 14 fucking years ago.
Imagine what they could do.
Oh, my God.
Full bases down there.
Full bases.
Why wouldn't they have a base down there?
Then we're not going to look.
We're too stupid.
We barely imagine they, is that James Cameron?
I love aliens.
Avatar's the shit.
So cool, man.
I always tell you what you got wrong.
Yeah.
But other than that, islands can't float in the sky.
But other than that, pretty cool.
True lies.
That's a fucking great movie.
Yeah, that guy made some.
Bangers, man. He makes bangers.
He makes some bangers.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, the Avatar movies alone, like the one, the second one that was underwater,
didn't that cost like a fucking billion dollars to make or something ridiculous?
He is so also, by all accounts, I've never met him, but as a filmmaker, everyone's like,
there is not a more supremely confident filmmaker, which I think is like something everybody
loves and you benefit from if you're in that production, somebody who just knows.
their shit so well.
Right.
That's like the cool.
I think that's the dream of any, whether you're cast or crew, to be with somebody who
you're like, oh, this guy fucking knows exactly what he's doing, you know.
He's a smart motherfucker.
Yeah.
I mean, that's why he figured out how to get to the bottom of the ocean.
Yeah.
Fucking solo submarine.
That's, it's insane.
It's insane.
Yeah, but I mean, how many of those things even exist?
Of those submersibles?
Yeah.
I think they made that one.
Yeah.
Fuck.
I think so.
What does that mean?
They made it.
I mean, nobody had been in it before him?
No.
I'm pretty sure.
He helped design that.
Remember when that one imploded, the crazy one?
Yeah.
He was like one of the top people speaking about what they got.
He knew.
He knew exactly what they got wrong.
Yeah.
Well, apparently there were some whistleblowers in that company.
Yeah.
I watched that dock.
It was incredible.
Yeah.
The people that built it were like, don't do this.
And when they would do the tests, then the test would go wrong.
And he was like, get the fuck out of here.
Like, if you're going to be negative, don't be around me.
Yeah.
That's really bad.
God, there's so many crazy people out there.
Some of these legitimately crazy people that just want to be right no matter what.
He couldn't accept being wrong.
They'll send people to their death in the ocean in the most horrific way possible.
You just get compressed instantaneously.
And you just hear it start.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Imagine you're looking around.
Tony used to have a bit about that.
Really?
He would, at the beginning of his set, he would take his microphone,
and he would scratch it on the stool, and people were like, what he's in?
That's the last thing those people in that submarine heard.
So dark.
That's the hatch and eye port.
I think that's all James Cameron could see out of.
That guy's big fucking mistake, too.
Isn't that he couldn't figure out how to design one that was capable?
It's that he couldn't design one that was light enough to do multiple trips and be towed out.
Like, in other words, the cost of hauling out the correct size and weight would have been too much for him to run this business where people could pay to do it.
So he kept looking for lighter and lighter materials.
Oh, my God.
You know what I mean?
Because then you could haul it out and it wouldn't be too much weight.
And they're like, no, but you need to have, like, steel.
He's like, nah, that weighs too much.
Let's do carbon fiber, you know.
Yeah, that was his own ego.
Oh.
And he couldn't be wrong, and he wanted to run his business.
Why do we love carbon fiber so much?
I don't know.
Every dude loves carbon fiber.
I love it.
Yeah.
I have a Cadillac, the Escalade V.
Yeah.
You know, it has a carbon fiber dash.
Yeah.
I love looking at him.
Look at all that carbon fiber.
It's cool.
It looks cool.
Space.
Yeah.
It looks future.
I have carbon fiber.
trim on things.
Yeah.
I got it.
I had my GT3RS,
my 2007.
I had all the interior pieces
replaced with carbon fiber.
Did you really?
Yeah.
Looks cool.
Door latches.
It's lighter.
It's lighter.
It's lighter.
Now it goes faster.
By like, what,
five pounds for the whole car?
It's stupid.
But it's like there's something
cool about the way it looks.
It looks cool,
especially in a submersible.
It looks really cool.
Have you seen that company
Classic Recreations
that does a 67 Mustang
all in carbon fiber?
No.
row it's fucking sick it's like a half a million dollar car at least and it takes a long time to make but it's all one piece carbon fiber shell so it's super light and they'll make it with like a supercharged coyote engine so it's like 770 horsepower and it probably weighs under 3,000 pounds oh yeah it looks like it's got to be really fast well even if you had a steal one 67
are not that big. It's not a big car. That's like a 3,000 pound car. Like, I think the 65s, 66s and 67, 68's
were all like relatively similar sized. But the 67's like wider and then they got to like 69 and
they got a little bit bigger. But like 67, 68's, they got wider. And then 69 they got a little
bigger. Who makes it?
A company called Classic Recreations.
Huh. I wonder.
Jamie, see if you can find a video of it.
There's a-
When you see the video of it within carbon fiber with that GT 500, that 67 Gt 500 shape, it's fucking sick.
Those, carbon fiber has to do really poorly in a wreck, right?
Oh, terrible.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's got to fall apart.
Yeah.
It's like you're fucked.
And also, good luck repairing it.
No shit.
So any bumps into you in the fucking supermarket parking lot?
Yeah.
You have to get a whole new,
Like they don't repair it. It's not like, oh, don't worry. It's just a scratch.
Yeah, because you can't like, look at that. That whole thing is all in carbon fiber.
And if you see when they get close to it and you look at it. See if you could, oh, it's so rad. But if you can see the actual images of like, it's hard to tell right there. Oh, that one's kind of painted.
But some of them are not paint. That one's a, go back to that one again, though. I want to see what that looks like. That color is sick.
The green one I just had. Yeah.
That color is sick.
That's a beautiful green.
Yeah, right there.
Look at that thing.
That's really cool.
Oh, my God.
I never wanted a green Mustang like that before until I saw that.
Looks like someone's about to place an order.
Look how cool that thing looks.
I'm excited for you guys, classic recreations.
I was here for the day Joe ordered his.
I never thought I would like it like that in green.
I never saw a 67 GD.
Like right there?
Look at that.
That looks amazing.
That's fucking cool.
But the process of making that,
designing that is pretty insane.
Yeah, I'm sure.
I mean, it's still probably a fairly heavy car,
but that's the different one.
They do that.
They do those Shelby Cobras.
They do that all in carbon fiber as well.
But I know there's videos, because I was looking at it the other day,
of ones where you see it, it's all in carbon fiber.
There's a green one.
There's a green one.
but I know they have
see if you can find videos where they
close in on the actual carbon
because some of them are just carbon fiber
you get to see it
here we go
go video
oh there you go
so there you see the carbon fiber
like look at that
that looks fucking cool
yeah that's why you get it
because it looks fucking cool
there's a thing about being a boy
it's really
girls don't give a fuck about carbon fiber
hell no no way dude not most
No. Why would they care about that? Look how good that looks.
That looks fucking awesome.
Jesus Christ, that's beautiful.
You got a text.
No, I was looking up these, I went to this garage that I saw.
I was trying to remember what I saw there because it was such a crazy collection, dude, here in town.
Oh, my God.
Of what?
Of cars.
What kind?
Everything.
Everything.
Everything.
Like some private owner?
Private owner.
And most don't, like, 99% don't get driven, which is a crazier part.
You just have these sitting here?
Well, they're probably a good investment.
Yeah, this dude had a GT1, a CLK GTR, Aperta, McLaren F1, multiple La Ferraris, SP1s, 250 GTO.
Like, just a stupid fucking collection.
I love old Porsches.
I do not love old Ferraris.
Really?
Yeah.
The 60s ones, though?
They look bunk to me.
Really?
Yeah, I don't like them.
Oh, I think they look beautiful.
Yeah.
The old Porsches look amazing, too.
I like old Porsches.
I like like 69, 70, 71, 72.
The long-nosed Porsches, those are, to me, when I see those, especially the wide-body ones, fucking.
Yeah, they're gorgeous.
They look amazing.
But when I see, like, old Ferraris, I'm like, that looks like it's going to break.
I mean, they probably, you know.
That's going to leave you somewhere.
Yeah.
And it's also precious.
Like, nobody does anything with them.
They become, honestly, they're like too valuable.
Yeah.
When you go, how much was this?
Oh, it was 25 million this thing sold for at auction?
You're like, okay.
People take like old Porsches and they mod them.
Yeah.
And they make them outlaws and, you know, like that Magnus Walker guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He makes awesome.
I love that.
That's what I love.
I love when they customize them and they put cool paint on them.
Well, I like looking at the old Ferrari.
I feel like they do look like works of art.
They look beautiful.
But I feel like the Porsche would be the one.
you'd want to drive.
Yeah, I don't even like looking at them.
Really?
Yeah, I don't know.
It's weird.
It's like, you know how you have tastes?
Yeah.
Like, people think that I like old cars that try to show me something from the 50s.
I'm like, get that thing away from me.
It's not your era.
Yeah.
That's pretty cool looking.
That's pretty fucking beautiful, man.
1960?
Yeah.
I actually take it back.
That's pretty dope.
That's pretty good.
That one's pretty dope, too.
That one upper left?
That's pretty dope.
But I do wonder how they drive.
I changed my opinion.
I wonder how they drive.
I really do.
I probably like dog shit.
Compared to your little Cayman?
Yeah.
I mean, that thing's insane.
It's so fun.
That's a mid-engine car that's got modern suspension,
modern brakes, modern technology, and what, like 650 horseback?
It's got some crazy.
It's got tuned up.
Bonkers.
And it sounds insane.
When you troll it by my house with that thing, I remember.
I got a boner.
I remember you walked inside and then you walked outside and you were like.
Yeah.
I wanted to watch you drive off.
Yeah.
I wanted to hear a br.
I think still my...
It's so fun.
It's so fun.
Yeah.
See, that's what I like.
I like stuff that you drive.
Yeah.
I was telling you,
that's why I like my Super Snake.
Because it's not...
It's a great American muscle car,
like a moderate muscle car.
It's not the fastest car.
It doesn't handle the best,
but it's the most exciting.
It's like the most fun to drive.
Yeah, I was just talking about this,
about when you get into cars.
So when you start off and you drive a Honda cord
and somebody goes,
you should drive a Mustang.
You get in a Mustang, you're like, faster, right?
You goes faster.
So faster equates with better, more fun and better.
And then you get, let's say, to a 9-11,
you're like, faster, more fun, better.
And in your mind, there's this formula of like,
well, as long as it's faster, it's going to be better.
And then it crosses over to this other plane
where you go, oh, it's faster,
but all the fun is not there anymore.
Right.
And you have to find a place where you go, like,
Fast doesn't equal fun necessarily.
There's a fun that's a mixture of things.
Exactly.
That there is a fast aspect, but there can be too fast.
It's a feeling that you get from fun cars.
Yes.
Like one of my favorite cars that I ever had that I kind of miss,
I had a 2012 Shelby GT 500 convertible.
You ever see that?
I drove into the Commerce Store a bunch of times.
I did see that.
I love that car.
Yeah, because you drove it once,
I want to say, this is fucking amazing,
the Canyon Club one time.
Yeah, yeah. I loved it because it was the only car that I ever bought that was like that, that
was a convertible. And it felt a little sketchy, like a little wobbly because it was a convertible.
But the feeling that it would get, it wasn't the most horsepower. I think back then they had like
500 or 550 or something like that, which is a lot. But today it's not.
Today it's not. But it had a supercharger and it would whine when you'd get on it and it was a
solid rear axle. So it would kick out all the time. It was like, handle like dog shit.
It wasn't the best, but it was fun.
You go around a corner and fucking stomp on the gas and wha!
It was fun.
But it was the torque and the sound, and because it was a convertible, you hear the sound right there.
There's nothing there.
It was like one of my most enjoyable cars I ever owned.
I loved it.
I missed it.
When I got rid of, I was like, I should have kept that fucker.
Yeah.
The fun, that piece of it, I think if you have a bunch of cars, you want stuff that's comfortable,
because sometimes you're like, shit, I need to be in some type of comfort.
Yes.
one thing I'm doing.
Yes.
And then the rest of the time,
you just want to have fun.
Yeah.
Jamie,
show me a picture of a 2012
Shelby GT 500 convertible black.
That's what you had?
Yeah, I miss it.
It wasn't the best-looking car either.
It was good looking.
It was cool looking,
but it was just the driving fun.
It was like one of the first
frivolous cars that I bought
when I had some money.
I tell you, I miss, I think it was a
981 GTS.
That's not it.
Yeah.
Yeah, that is. That's it. That's exactly it. That's exactly the car. That's exactly what I had.
I didn't have a roll bar, though. Fuck, I loved it. Maybe it had a roll bar. I don't think so, though. Nah, I think it was like that.
Can you look up, if I got this right, 9-81 GTS?
God, I missed the car. Blue?
I really missed that fucking Shelby.
In blue?
Yeah. I had that, and I had, I sent it to BBI.
They did tuning on it
I had never been sad about selling something
until after I sold that
That shit was so much fun to drive
Get yourself another one Tom Boy
I know
Go back to that Shelby
I might have to get one of them
We're looking at like old girlfriends right now
I know
I know
Miss her
Really fun ones
Yeah
Who swallowed
That thing was so fun man
I love driving it
Great tits
And again, like, that one looks good with the red stripe.
And again, it wasn't like, nobody was, you know, nobody was like, whoa, you're a baller.
It wasn't like that at all.
It was just, it was just fun for me.
Yeah.
That's what it's about, man.
Yeah.
And again, not the fastest car.
Pretty fast for the time, but, you know, like, Porsche's handle.
Like, before that, I had had a 9-11 turbo.
It's way faster.
Handles way better.
I remember taking that, getting chased by a Mustang of Benedict Canyon.
and just losing his ass.
Oh, yeah.
That was the fun.
Oh, those things handle so well.
That's a 3,000-pound car, too, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Like, probably.
Something like that.
Like my Shelby Super Snake, that's probably, like, close to 4,000 pounds.
Cars today are very heavy.
Yeah.
They're very heavy.
I looked up the Escalate IQ, all-electric.
That's 9,000 pounds.
I know.
It's crazy.
That's so crazy.
Massive. Ooh, there's one for sale.
How much is it?
45 grand? How many miles on it?
16,000 miles?
Edit this out.
I'm going to have to buy that.
Look at that fucking thing.
That's cool. Book market.
Yeah, dude, I'm in love.
That's it.
See, he's like kind of cheap inside and everything.
Yeah.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
It's the fun of it.
How many horsepower does those things have?
5.4-liter supercharged V8?
Let's find out how many horsepower
that thing has.
550?
Yeah.
That sounds about right.
That's your girl, man.
Loved it.
That's her.
I loved it.
It was like, it just, it wasn't precious.
I didn't mind parking in places.
And if it had a dent on it, it probably looked cooler.
Yeah, yeah.
It didn't matter.
It was just the being in it and just,
whom, and the wind in your hair.
I didn't have any hair.
Fucking wind in your face.
The sound.
I will say I think there's no better
top-down city than L.A.
Oh, yeah.
I love a convertible in L.A. is like the greatest.
You have like three weeks to do it here before your head burns.
Yeah.
Especially us.
Oh, fuck.
Your head shaved unless you're wearing a hat.
Got to.
But there it's like perfect.
Oh, yeah.
Especially, well, I would love it at night.
Driving down sunset.
Oh, yeah.
I loved it.
I loved coming over Laurel.
I'd have like a music playlist that I'd listen to.
Like my perfect going to the comedy store playlist.
Yeah.
And then another one on the way out is the best.
Yeah.
But there's something about like, it was also like, wow, I'm really in Hollywood.
I'm really going to do a show at the comedy store in Hollywood.
And this is my job.
Like, this is crazy.
It's fucking awesome.
Yeah.
That's so cool.
Yeah.
To be one of those sperm that made it through and cracked the egg.
I went there like a week ago.
It was super fun.
I heard it was awesome during the Netflix festival.
Was that when you were there?
Yes.
It was so fun.
Everybody said
It was like the comedy store of old
It was great
Yeah Peter Shore texted me
Sent me some pictures
He's like dude you should be here
It's amazing
It was fucking bumping man
That's nice
Yeah
That's nice
It was really fun
I would go in your club too
I'm working on a new hour
So it's been really fun to get reps
How long you've been doing sets now
Because last time I talked to you
So like a month
Yeah
Do you want to do a set Tuesday or Wednesday?
I leave
I go back to L.A.
I got this thing
I have to go fly out for
announce. Oh, what are you doing? Can't tell anybody? I don't think I can yet. Not yet. I'll tell me. Yeah, I'll tell
you. I'll tell me. I'll tell me. I'll tell me. I'll tell me. I'll tell me. I'll tell you. But I, uh, when I come
back, I'd love to. Are you going to do a season three? I don't know. That will be up to them,
I guess. See how it does? Yeah, see how it does. It's so fucking fun to do. It's such a good show,
dude. It's such a perfect show for you, because it's like, it's so obvious that it's your
imagination because no one would think of these fucking things. Yeah. It's like, it's, it's
The one, I don't want to give it away.
Oh, you can, you can.
But the one where it's the girl that you knew for a long time and then.
Floriana.
And you want litter in the car?
That felt like real life, you know.
I was saying to myself, why does he just open the door and get out?
Yeah, I know.
Well, it was more fun to see horrible things happen.
to work.
And it fucking, I would say this, because it's not a credit to me, but I always wanted to
emphasize how I wanted it to look, and my DP, Nico Wiesnett, is brilliant.
So everything looks like a fucking movie, you know?
Yeah.
Like the slave one looks like an Oscar winning film.
It really does.
That's so ridiculous.
It's so crazy.
I don't want to give that away either, but it's so ridiculous.
Yeah, it's crazy.
It's really crazy.
It's really crazy.
Yeah, they just let us have fun.
It's like, it's such a different.
you know, experience than what I'm used to
and what you're used to with stand-up,
which is such a solo endeavor.
Mm-hmm.
But to have a team, you know,
from the writer's room to actually getting into production
of, like, everybody collaborating.
It's such a fun thing.
It's also so irreverent.
I don't think you could do it anywhere but Netflix.
I don't think anybody would allow you to it.
I don't think so either.
They are the, they really are, you know,
for all the shit that people justifiably talk about, like,
studios and execs and stuff.
For this show, I've never had an experience like it
where they're just like, go for it.
No, they let you just do whatever you want.
Yeah.
Look, they're the best at that.
Yeah.
I mean, think about the amount.
I mean, they get a lot of criticism
about some of the content.
Sure.
But it's really, the idea is they'll let anything in there.
They let anything.
It's good.
Yeah.
Like, you're not going to agree with all of it.
Some of it, you're going to think it's far left content or some of it.
But the thing is,
They're not ideologically captured.
It's not like they only allow like woke content.
Not at all.
They'll let you go ham.
Not at all.
Yeah.
They let you push it and...
I don't think anybody else would do it.
I don't think so either.
I don't think so either.
They were the first people I showed it to and thankfully they said yes.
But I think it would, yeah, I think it would have been shut down after that.
Yeah, there's no chance.
Like just the first scene in the first episode where you're, you take the pill,
Kevin Eland one?
Yeah, Kevin Eland.
Yeah.
Just that.
Like, there's not a fucking chance in hell.
Yeah.
No, there's...
The things that you're doing, there's no...
No.
And we have one you haven't seen later in with Jesus that I don't think would fly other places.
With Johnny Pemberton in it.
He's amazing.
Great cast.
Great people came in.
Kirk Fox did one.
Frankie Kionis did one.
Oh, nice.
Odette Annabelle did one.
I'm leaving people out.
Martha Kelly, there's great cast.
And they all signed up for...
We had people, by the way, we had a couple.
One time the casting director sat me down and was like, hey, just so you know, I sent out submissions for this one you did.
And all the agents called me today said I would never put an actor in a position to do something like this.
And then one actor called one of the people on our staff and was like, you can't make this one.
They're like, this is wrong.
This is an actor.
An actor. This is dangerous to put out in the world.
And we were like, what?
Like, she was that offended by it.
But she wasn't in it.
No, but she had been offered a part.
So she was like, I read what you offered me.
I'm so offended.
I was like, okay.
Yeah.
Like, she really was like, I'm going to call people and like, I hope you guys don't make this.
Isn't amazing that she's an activist?
Yeah, over the, this.
Clearly wasn't also understanding, like, the tone.
Was it the girl from Snowy?
Right?
No.
I heard she's a handful.
She seems like it.
Yeah.
Seems like she cost that movie a lot of money.
Oh, my God.
I know.
Allegedly?
Allegedly.
Yeah.
And what that does to the rest of her career?
Oh, she's fucked.
Yeah.
Yeah, she's, especially in this,
because that was like at the tipping point of woke being like, we had woke fatigue.
And then she didn't, wasn't the whole thing that she didn't want to promote,
which is like, that's the whole, that's half the gig, man.
Promoting your thing is half the gig.
Well, the problem.
When she would talk, she would say things that were so unappealing.
You're trying to sell a movie.
People want to like you.
You're Snow White.
You can't be like chastising people.
Yeah.
Whatever you're doing.
Scolding people.
Yeah.
Lecturing them and, yeah.
You're a kid.
Yeah.
Don't do that.
Be like, thanks for the gig.
Yeah.
Thank you.
It was amazing.
That's a play Snow White.
But the whole thing was doomed anyway when they weren't going to use dwarves.
Right?
They called them magical creatures instead of dwarves.
Isn't that the whole of them?
The literal title of the story is Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.
Yeah.
The dwarves all have names.
So they all had to...
That's the story.
You don't want to make a story on the seven dwarves.
You're going to have to make a new story.
Is Dwarf offensive, though?
Yes.
It is?
To some.
Some like little people.
They don't like Midget.
They don't like Dwarf.
Well, Midget, I knew.
But I thought Dwarf was like the polite way to say it.
Not anymore.
Okay.
The goalpost, keep it moving.
Keep it going.
If you went into a coma and you woke up like three years later,
You'd be so lost.
You would be lost.
You would be lost.
Yeah.
It's why old people talk and you're like, whoa.
Color, they say colored.
You're like, yo, it's people of color.
Yeah.
Well, they would say that.
Yeah.
Back in the 40s or whatever.
Oh, yeah.
Which is odd that colored is offensive, but people of color is not offensive.
Yeah.
Like, if you try to explain that to someone logically, they'd be like, what?
Like, if it was another language, like, oh, you can't say it like that.
You have to say it like this.
He'd be like, what?
Why?
It's the same thing.
I'm saying the same thing.
I know.
People of color.
Okay.
What do I say again?
People of color.
Okay.
Of color.
Then in South Africa, that is a term, you know.
What do you mean?
In South Africa, there's black, white, and colored.
Oh.
Those are the three.
What's colored?
Anyone who's not black or white.
So like...
Like Chinese people?
Like if you're mixed or if you're Indian.
Oh.
You know?
Oh, wow.
Then you're colored.
Oh.
Oh, how weird, man.
So that's like the three.
Boy.
Broad terms.
Yeah.
But I remember I was in Canada once, and I said, oh, my God.
I don't remember if I said, like, native.
And they were like, yo.
And I was like, I can't say native.
And they were like, that's kind of offensive.
We don't say that.
First peoples.
Yeah.
And that was the first time I had heard that something that I thought I was saying, like, with respect, was disrespectful.
I was like, really native?
They're like, yeah, hey, easy.
Stop fucking saying it.
I'm like, that's crazy.
Okay, I was in Vancouver.
Well, Vancouver, super woke.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Super woke.
Didn't used to be.
Was it not?
Nah, it was like weed.
It was like a big weed place.
It was a fun place.
I'd always loved going to Vancouver.
Vancouver used to be the shit.
I mean, I haven't been in a long time.
The last time I was supposed to go,
I had a big 420 show that was supposed to be there in 2020.
Like right after the pandemic.
We were doing an arena up there.
and we had to shut it down.
And then we rescheduled it
and he had to shut it down again.
And then things just got real weird up there
and I'm like, I'm not going back.
Really?
Yeah, I'm not going back.
You haven't been there in Canada since?
No.
And I've talked a lot of shit about Canada.
Yeah, you have talked a lot of shit.
A lot of shit.
You talked a lot of shit about Trudeau.
Yeah, a lot of shit.
He's out of power now.
Yeah, justifiably, though.
It's like what they did up there,
they're doing some wild things.
And they just completely wrecked that country in terms of what they're moving closer and closer to communism in this really weird way.
And I know people want to push back against that, but you have to understand that like they don't have, first of all, they don't have freedom of speech or they have hate speech laws.
So they can move the goal.
But this was Jordan Peterson's argument about this when they were trying to impose certain pronouns that he was supposed to use and certain things that you're supposed to say.
And it's like, you can't force me to say things.
Like, this is forced speech.
And this is, and the problem is, they'll call things hate speech.
And then if you use force, they'll force you to use that under the threat of law.
And it's like, okay, well, what does, where does this go?
What it goes to, you're going to rest people for not going along with 78 different pronouns or whatever the fuck they are?
Are you going to, you're going to kick them out of their job?
Like, do you understand that this is kind of crazy?
Yeah.
And then this weird thing they're doing with made, okay, where they're, um, where they're,
They're doing assisted suicide.
You know about all this?
Mm-mm.
Okay.
One in 20 people in Canada,
make sure this is true.
One in 20 people in Canada dies from assisted suicide.
One in 20?
One in 20.
There's an actual business now that's involved in assisted suicide.
Is that government sanctioned?
Like, is it...
Government sanctioned.
Yeah.
Really?
It's a program.
Yeah.
Damn.
Yeah.
And they killed a guy who had seasonal depression.
Look at this.
5.1% of all deaths in the country.
Holy fuck.
Yeah.
Medically assisted dying, that's what it's called, that's made, officially known as medical assistance in dying.
Between 2016 and end of 2024, there were 76,475 recorded made deaths.
Damn.
You can just sign up?
Just be like, I want this.
I don't like this.
2024 alone, there were 16,49 made provisions.
5% of all deaths, 5.1.5.1.
1% of all deaths in the country.
How nuts is that?
That's nuts.
Find the one guy that they killed that had seasonal depression.
And the family was like, what the fuck?
He just walks into a place?
You can just sign up.
You sign up for it.
I don't want to live anymore.
I'm depressed.
I'm depressed.
There you go.
Canadian man, 26, with seasonal depression,
euthanized despite no terminal illness.
Look at that guy.
Oh, that was reason to do.
Just needs friends.
Yeah.
Guy needs a hug.
26-year-old Canadian man who had seasonal depression
had been euthanized by a notorious doctor
who is personally responsible for ending the lives
of over 400 of her patients.
Oh, my God.
What a psycho.
This fucking Uday is back.
Jesus Christ.
That's so crazy.
Okay, so he had other issues.
So, Keanu Vafian,
I don't know how to say his last name,
also had partial vision loss and lived with type 1 diabetes.
He faced mental health struggles, which often became worse in the winter,
as a result of a car accident when he was 17.
After losing vision in one of his eyes in 2022,
he became obsessed with ending his life by assisted dying.
That's really fucking sad, man.
God damn.
Yeah, you just not happy.
Instead of people saying, let's figure out a way to make you happy.
Yeah.
you know we're going to put you down we're going to just put you down and then there's money in it
which is weird it's weird where there's money gets exchanged people make a living doing it people
the government pays for it there's profit involved in killing people yeah they're killing old people
that just don't want to do it anymore i'm having a hard time maybe oh step into the chamber
i don't know what they do to them i wonder i wonder like if um like family needs
new beforehand or they just get like a notification.
Hey, we put them down, you know?
Right.
If you're a grown adult, I wonder if the family even gets informed if you don't want
them to be.
What is the way they do it?
Is it lethal injection?
What if you're like, I want to be beheaded?
I want to go guillotine style.
I want to have my tongue ripped out by pliers first.
Oh, I read this crazy story about this guy who set up a guillotine over his bed.
and he had a timed it for when he was asleep.
So he timed it for 3 a.m.
And so he went to sleep and then his father heard this loud bang in the middle of the night
and thought that maybe he fell down or something fell over.
And the son had literally rigged a guillotine with a timer in his house.
And at 3 a.m., it hit the switch and this giant fucking blade lops off his head.
A really cool thing to do to your parents, man.
Bro, he must have hated his dad.
Fuck.
Hey, fuckhead.
All that shitty things you said to me and all the fucked-up way you raised me.
Yeah, see if you can find that story.
Holy.
Who knows what's real, but I think it's real.
Guillotine death was suicide.
Builder Boyd Taylor spent several weeks constructing the complex device at the home he shared with his father in the village of Milburn near Morpeth.
Where is that?
Is that England?
Bro, several weeks, this is super methodical.
Oh, yeah.
The general hospital recorded a verdict of suicide on Thursday.
The hearing was told that the complicated mechanism was primed to switch itself on at 330 GMT
and caused a blade to fall on Mr. Taylor's neck in a written statement read out by Southeast Northumberland coroner Eric Armstrong.
Robert Taylor said he knew his son had been working on something in his bed.
room for several weeks.
Jesus Christ.
It was woken by a rumbling noise, which he's thought was the chimney had fallen off the roof.
Oh, my God.
That's his head.
Father and son worked together in the family building company.
But Boy, Taylor has been off over Christmas saying he wanted to stay at home.
Fuck.
I respect the, like, the message so much.
Yeah.
Like the fuck you of it all to his dad?
This is my favorite part.
He said Mr. Taylor's death was not a spur of the moment decision.
No shit.
Duh.
Yeah.
Fucking crazy, man.
That's the crazy thing about people that want to kill themselves.
Oftentimes they don't tell anybody.
Yeah.
And no one knows until it happens.
Oh, yeah.
And they're like, imagine if you're his dad and you're like, I should have fucking checked his bedroom.
Yeah.
Maybe I could have hugged him.
I heard him hammered.
Maybe I could have gotten him some MDMA.
Maybe I could have done something to snap him out of it.
I thought he was just making a cool cabinet.
Yeah.
And wanted to respect his privacy.
But maybe his dad doesn't think like that
Maybe his dad like that faggot
He's out there sucking cocks
And he gets sad
Fuck him
I don't know
Yeah I mean
I don't know why I had that accent
He was in the long country
But I mean
To
To want to do that
And have your dad find it
Bro
That's dark
That's really dark
Yeah you don't like your dad for sure
No
Or you don't care
You don't give a fuck about anybody
You still working on that thing?
Yeah
Okay
Yeah it's a cabinet
Me'll fuck alone dad
Oh sorry sorry sorry son
Did you feel like fishing?
Maybe?
No.
Maybe.
Not now.
Maybe in the spring.
Yeah.
Maybe after 3.30 a.m. tomorrow.
What?
It's a weird time.
Yeah.
Fuck, man.
I mean, yeah, set, timed and rigged.
Also, he wanted to impress people.
Like, wow.
Respect.
Respect.
Like, this guy fucking playing.
His level of dedication to this plane is pretty incredible.
I mean, he set it above his fucking neck while he was sleeping.
How do you fall asleep?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Good night.
Ding.
Chunk.
And he had a like a test run for sure.
Oh, for sure.
100%.
And the night?
Oh.
The inquest at Mass Bath, General Hospital,
Ashington was told yesterday that the younger man had waded the blade with a paving slab,
wired to plywood wedged into a wooden block at the foot of his bed.
An electric jigsaw was plugged into a timer switch.
The saw cut the wood, releasing the wire holding the blade.
Wow.
He took 12 sleeping pills, bro.
Wow.
That might have killed him anyway, right?
Yeah, maybe.
Took 12 sleeping pills before laying under the guillotine, knowing that the sedatives were so strong that his position the bed would not alter as he slept.
Wow.
Fuck.
His father heard the jigsaw in action and thought the chimney had collapsed, but returned to the bed when all felt quiet.
fell quiet. The mechanism cut power to the electric tool after it completed its tasks. Wow, he had it set to shut off after it completed its task. This guy is thorough. But like also his knowledge of being able to put that together. Like that's that's some engineering skill. Look at this. It says his son had never fully recovered from his parents' separation when he was 15. He had attempted suicide as a teenager. He was 36 now. He's 21 years later.
Meanwhile, like, I think dad was a dick, dude.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Possibly.
Yeah.
This also says there are partners in a small building firm he ran with his father.
Yeah, we said that earlier, I think.
Yeah, he's working with a, working on a carpentry project.
Jeez.
So he was also at the father's house, correct?
Yeah.
He left work to go back.
I don't know.
It seems like they were separated, but they definitely weren't.
That's how they were living together.
Dude, it said it said it said it said it's an eight foot high, three foot
wide structure that he put in his room.
Yeah, has dad not noticed that?
He's in a cottage, because that means it's small, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's just not paying attention.
Yeah, exactly.
Built an inner door to his bedroom.
An inner door?
Before putting together the eight-foot-high, three-foot-wide structure,
housing a guillotine blade and devices to trigger its descent.
Man.
Probably one of the wildest ways to go.
I've never heard anything like this, man.
That guy doesn't need the Canadian government.
I was like, I got this.
I got this.
I mean, there's some creative ways to do it, but that's probably the...
They do...
And to find that to leave the discovery is also, you know...
Yeah.
And also just leave a mess.
You've got to clean that up.
Is that what it...
Is that it the thing?
Is that what it looked like?
I mean, there's an article about it, and the picture is right below the paragraph.
That's it.
I'm talking about it.
Why isn't it all covered in blood?
No, that's probably...
I don't know.
That might not be it.
be a guillotine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
I was trying to find pictures.
He knew he was building something.
And he made sure it was real high.
So that fucker had some good momentum.
Yeah.
Shabong!
Woo!
A paving stone.
Oh, my God, dude.
Bro.
What a fucking psycho.
Twelve sleeping pills?
Oh, I'm getting in the same way.
So you find your spot?
Yeah.
Imagine the last thoughts in his mind.
Like, see you in Valhalla.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fuck.
Fuck you, dad.
I know there's certain states where you can go and whack yourself in America.
Oregon's one of them.
Because Michael Lair, you remember him from Kill Tony?
He had ALS.
Yes, yes.
He ended his life up there.
Yeah.
I mean, he was at the door.
That level of suffering, though.
Yeah.
He actually went up there once and chickened out, or didn't chicken out.
Changed his mind, I should say.
Wouldn't say chicken.
That was a terrible way to say it.
Went up there, changed his mind, came back, and did a couple more episodes of Kill Tony.
And then went up and did it.
I met him a couple of times.
Funny dude, man.
Very funny.
Very funny, dude.
Real bummer.
Yeah.
You know, it's like, I get that.
I get when you're at that stage.
But seasonal depression?
That's not, yeah.
Settle down.
There's that thing in Alaska.
If you get seasonal depression and you kill someone, it's a lesser charge.
Really?
Yeah, because it's so prevalent there.
God, damn.
Be nice to people in the winter.
Yeah, it was dark all day.
Did you ever see that movie 30 Days of Night?
No.
It's a vampire movie about Alaska.
I saw the one with Pacino and Robin Williams
that also was like an insomnia thing in Alaska.
I don't know what that one is, no.
Is it called that?
It's called Insomnia, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And you feel it watching that movie.
The performance is,
and the way it's shot,
pull it out of you.
You're like, fuck.
You ever see that one
where Robin Williams
played the psycho guy
that develops pictures?
Yes.
24-hour photo, I think it's called.
Was that Bobcat?
Did he make that?
He did a few with Robin Williams, I think.
I don't know if he made that.
He might have.
But that one was nuts.
Robin Williams was so fucking good.
So talented.
So talented.
That he could be that funny
and also that creepy.
Yeah.
Like that he could really play
like a real fucking psycho
really well.
One hour photo.
One hour photo.
That's it.
Who made that one?
No, Robert.
Oh, Mark Romanoick.
Sorry.
Yeah, that was fucking super creepy.
Super creepy.
Yeah.
This 30 days of night is a fun vampire movie.
Is it?
Because they show up in Alaska during the time it's the winter where it's night for 30 days in like northern Alaska.
Yeah.
And they don't ever have to go to sleep in the day and they just fuck everybody up for like 30 days.
That's pretty cool.
Yeah.
Fun.
I did Alaska when in the opposite.
the summer when it was sun never that's weird that's weird too yeah Ari and I did that once we did
some shows and we went salmon fishing and it was like bright out at 2 a.m. yeah weird it's weird man
we got back to the hotel and like the sun's out it's like midnight I know you don't know what to
do yeah your body's so confused it's it's a very confusing feeling how do people sleep up there
with masks they just put the eye masks on everyone has like blackout windows and everything yeah yeah
because I remember you're like wait it's not that late right
You're like, no, it's midnight right now.
I wonder if crime goes down.
In the summer months?
Yeah.
I wonder.
You know?
I have to.
You'd imagine, because I think people do more crime.
I'm like, ooh, it's dark out.
Yeah.
Go do crime.
And crime is also, isn't crime usually spike in places when it's like heat waves?
Probably.
Yeah, they get hot and angry.
Yeah.
You get more domestics for sure.
Yeah.
Well, that's why you brought the seasonal depression thing when it's night.
out all the time.
Yeah.
That's why people whack each other.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
So fucking depressed, yeah.
Oh, you know vitamin D.
Especially if you're not a vitamin person.
You're not supplementing.
Ugh.
Yeah.
You have no vitamin D.
None.
Yeah, that's what's fucked about, like, flu season.
People are like, oh, flu season, flu's coming around.
Well, why do you think that is?
It's because no one's outside because no one has any vitamin D.
So everybody gets the flu.
Is that why?
100%.
Yeah.
That's why else we?
would flu have a season. You can get flu in the summer. You can get flu anywhere. Why is, why are so many
people getting it? But your immune system is stronger. Immune systems destroyed. My doctor told me that.
My doctor explained to me that when he was an internist in New York City that he would test people
in the middle of the winter and they would have undetectable levels of vitamin D in their system.
Really? It's crazy. Because some people just never go outside and they just, they're indoors
all the time and they don't take any vitamins.
So their system just breaks down.
They're eating fucking sloppy joes and french fries.
And you wonder why.
They're like, I can't believe I got sick.
I can't believe you're alive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's what's fucked up about sunlight.
Is it like sunlight is actually a necessary part of being a human being.
Like you actually need it for vitamin D.
I have such a notable, I mean, like dramatic difference in how much I got sick when I was fatter.
Oh, yeah.
Versus, like, way different.
Of course.
Of course.
I was getting sick, like, real sick, like seven times a year.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
You've made, like, one of the most dramatic transformations of anybody that I know, other than jelly roll.
Oh, my God.
Jelly rolls is nuts.
Yeah, I just saw him.
He was, he came to the 5K.
He's down 300 pounds.
I know.
He was just the club.
He's practicing stand-up.
Yeah, I heard.
Dude, he killed.
Really?
I mean.
Dude well.
Yeah.
He has got good jokes.
He's got some funny.
stories.
He's a funny guy and he's comfortable with an audience.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And just super likable.
Yeah.
But it's like that.
And vulnerable.
He's a vulnerable guy too.
Yeah.
And his transformation is even more crazy because he was at death door.
He was like he couldn't even walk up a flight of stairs.
Yeah.
It's amazing when he's done.
It really is amazing.
Incredible.
And inspires a bunch of people too, which is awesome.
And he's not done.
No.
Like he's still full steam ahead.
Like he's changed his whole lifestyle.
It's like a full shift.
And now it's all just about getting that skin cut off.
Yeah.
I'm like, ooh, that one hurts just thinking about it.
I know.
But I imagine how great he's going to feel after that.
It's going to feel so good.
Oh, yeah.
When it all heals up.
You know, doing it the right way, though, like, he's got to get, like, a hyperbaric chamber.
You know, definitely take peptides.
And, you know, it's just scary because, like, skin gets infected.
Oof.
You know, infections are fucking terrifying.
That's like the Uday Hussein thing, horrible.
motherfucker, dragging people through gravel and then dunking them in sewers.
What a piece of shit that guy was.
And you also had to have the thought of like, how can I make this worse?
Right.
You know, and someone's like, I don't know.
How do I don't know?
Well, you could put them in like a bowl of shit.
And he's like, let's do that.
Let's scratch them up a lot first.
Yeah.
Let's drag them through gravel.
So there's wounds.
Yeah, all over their body and then dunk them in a sewer.
You got it, boss.
Yeah.
Oh.
Infections are fucking scary, man.
I know a lot of people that get skin infections because of jiu-jitsu.
Oh, yeah, that's a big thing.
Huge, huge, huge thing.
Mikey Musimichi just defended his UFC Brazilian Jiu-Suzzi.
Why can't I say that?
UFC BJJ title and got hospitalized right afterwards with staff.
Didn't, you know Kyle Bush, the driver, he just died?
He died of sepsis, right?
But that's like a type of infection as well.
Yeah, how did he get that?
I believe I already had pneumonia and then didn't treat it and kept, you know, racing and it got worse.
That's nuts.
It's like 41, man.
That's nuts.
It's fucking nuts, man.
Crazy.
Yeah, sepsis is crazy.
One of my wife's friends from high school died of sepsis just a few years back.
My dad got sepsis in the hospital.
Yeah.
Like, he had a bone marrow transplant and then got sepsis.
Almost died.
Yeah.
Oh, hospital infections are creepy, man, because, like, Joey Diaz, you know, he got his knee fixed, and he said that, what does it say here?
Timeline Bush had been battling what he was originally believed to be a sinus cold for a couple weeks.
Even radioing his crew to have a doctor meet him after a race at Watkins Glen, despite continuing to race and win, less than a week before his death, his condition rapidly deteriorated.
He collapsed and became unresponsive in a Chevrolet racing simulator in Concord, North Carolina.
9-11 caller noted that he was coughing up blood and had shortness of breath.
He was transported to a Charlotte area hospital where he died.
That is insane.
Fuck, man.
That is so crazy, man.
But you know, Hamzat Chimayev, the guy who was the middleweight champion before Sean Strickland just beat him.
Yeah.
When he had COVID, he would not stop working out.
He was training through COVID, like bad.
And he was hospitalized multiple times.
And he took a photograph of his toilet where he'd coughed blood into his.
toilet and was saying I'm retiring I'm not fighting anymore I'm retiring from
MMA and he posted see if you can find the photograph oh my on social media
he posted the photograph of his toilet with the blood in it yeah it's told he may
have cancer after coughing up blood in in training but it was that was a while ago
yeah years ago he wouldn't stop training like he's such an animal that while he
had COVID he would not stop training now that was a huge upset right it was a
an upset. It was an upset. I thought it could happen that way. I was actually saying, like,
a lot of people, like, Ari was arguing with me on Protect Our Parks. He's like, you always say that
when someone doesn't have a chance. You always hype it up. Like, I think Strickland can win this fight.
Because Strickland is like insanely durable. He's scary because he doesn't go away. He's not going to get
tired. He doesn't go away. He's tough as shit. He was abused when he was young, so he's angry.
Like, he's, he's dangerous and he's super skillful. It's very hard to hit. And he fought in one with
blown out shoulder.
Yeah, he's crazy.
He fucked his shoulder up, like the week of the fight.
Like, did something bad.
He's coming and getting some stem cells at waste a well.
Really?
Yeah, he fucked it up.
And he doesn't even know what it was, but he couldn't use it right.
I could tell when he was warming up before the fight started, he was doing this with his arm.
Just doing this.
Like, he was warming up, doing this, and he kept doing this.
And that's what you do when your arm hurts.
Yeah.
Like, if you hurt your shoulder, you're like, how bad has it hurt?
Let me check.
Let me check real quick.
And that's how he went into a fight?
Went to a world title fight against the scariest guy in the division and beat him with one arm.
I saw him that was like the day before, two days before something.
He was like doing construction on his driveway.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Rides a motorcycle everywhere.
World champion.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He just went to that misfits.
No, what is it called?
Aidan Ross's thing that he does.
He does some thing called
What does it call it brand something or not?
Brand risk
He has people fight
Ray J, the guy who did the porno
With Kim Kardashian
He just got knocked the fuck out
In the M.A fight
Do you see the post interview?
Yeah
He was like, what the fuck man?
I thought we had a deal.
Yeah.
That was weird.
They made some sort of a deal
Apparently
At least he was implying
that the guy wasn't going to punch
him in the face and knock him out
Well the weird thing is
I feel like if you watch that again
the punch, none of it's like
you're not watching pros obviously.
None of it seems like, it just seems kind of
wild. And as he sees him
stunned, he doesn't do what most
people do when you stun somebody
which is follow up. He's kind of like
oh shit. Right.
Kind of the body language lends
itself to that theory. Like he just
was like, uh, uh.
And he's laughing and but he's also
celebrate. He's like, ah, fuck it. I knocked him out.
Look how out of shape
Ray J is too. That's a crazy
thing to be accepting a fight when you died out of shape.
Super hot fire. That's his name, super hot fire.
But see, he's just like...
Well, both guys look like they didn't know what they're doing.
But he hit him with one shot and that was all it took. That's crazy.
So they must have made some sort of a deal where they weren't going to hurt each other
and they were going to do it for money.
I wonder how much you paid him.
That's so weird.
Someone asked during the press conference they had, which I thought was true to
Ray J said like a month or two ago he was dying of some heart disease or something really bad.
And they're like, you're fighting?
He's like, yeah, I'm going in here to die.
You saw the Cam Newton thing, right?
Cam Newton?
Yeah, with Ray J.
No.
Oh, that's the best clip of the year on the internet.
What is it?
When Cam's like, are you gay?
You haven't seen that?
No.
Oh, it's the best.
On Cam's podcast?
Yes, it's the best.
No.
You got, you got, I can't do it justice.
Okay, okay, okay.
It's the best thing I've ever seen.
And part of what's so great is that you know this.
this from conducting interviews there's a certain point in an interview that you're
having with someone where if they start saying something the best thing you can do is
shut the fuck up you know right like you can just go give him some air and cam just
like where does cam cam is as is 80% of the comedy but it is the best the full clip is
just incredible is that the whole thing I hope so it's at least over a minute
It- Oh, listen.
You asked me that last time.
And I just, because I listened to like Biggie Smalls.
You like Biggie?
Are you a fan of Biggie?
Can you just answer my question?
He just said, are you getting?
Analogy to it.
There's a, there's something to it.
Can you answer yes or no and then go into that?
Shout out to the Gagee, yes.
What does it matter if I'm gay or not?
I just, it doesn't matter.
I'm just asking a question.
People like people.
When they leave here,
leave here, we're all together.
When you leave and it's done and it's a wrap for the day, everybody's going to do something.
Everybody's going to go to their prospective places.
Some people are going to go home and I hate to say this, but it's just going to be grimy,
but I'm sure there's people that go home, they got a dog.
The favorite dog, they stop by the store, grab some peanut butter.
Lee Ray, how old are you?
I'm 45.
You're 45 years old.
In 45 years of living, have you ever been with a man?
Is it not the full version?
Yeah, it cuts out.
You cut off the best part.
Sorry.
That's all right, man.
Try to find the full version.
It's so fantastic.
It's a three-hour podcast.
I know.
Maybe the 412 one is it?
Or maybe this, what is this?
How long is this?
one. This is this might be talking about having sex with women though. He said he has sex with 11,500
women. It was a massive period. You're talking about different partners. What? Yeah. So we did a
celebration, booby trap. I would scroll. Yeah. Try to get to where we were. This could go for how many
times you've had sex. No, no, no. There's 2,000 different people. I want to be at 9,000.
I can only fuck a thousand more bitches.
I can't do any more.
The average of the volume of different sex part.
Some of my home girls, they fuck.
But I don't think, like that's, what's your body count?
No, this isn't it.
No, that's not.
This is just the body count thing.
If you go to 65.
If you go back to your search, 412 there, that might be it.
See that one?
This might be it.
Yeah
Some people go home
Put peanut butter on themselves
It's so much better
Okay just pass it
Pass where we were
So people
Like people
Yeah this this is it
Scoot ahead a little bit
When they leave here
We're all together
It's like he's trying to
Grab some peanut butter
Just watch this
Right
Go home
Excited to see their dog
They put a bunch of peanut butter
On their feet
to the dog to lick it off.
Some people even go further
to watch TV on all fours.
Slab a little peanut butter in the crack
and enjoy their soul.
And the dog is having a good time, right?
I don't know what that is.
It's not of my business.
Have you ever did that?
Have you ever did that?
Do I've never had a dog lick my ass
and peanut butter in it?
No.
But I'm familiar with it.
Okay.
So, Willie Ray.
I'm familiar with it.
with it because I caught somebody doing it.
Willie Ray.
I don't say no names, but it was a lot.
Willie Ray.
Yes.
How old are you?
I'm 45.
I'm 45.
I'm 45.
You're 45 years ago.
In 45 years of living, have you ever been with a man?
No.
You have not?
You have not is now you're going into it.
No, I'm not.
I'm just trying to confirm.
Yeah, but I don't want to, but here's the thing.
I sit on a agency board, pause.
And I'm not only straight person on the board.
But again, I have friends.
Shout out to Terad.
Shout out to Dump and D.
Shout out to Backshot.
Dump and D? Backshot?
And everybody else that supports the agency.
The agency?
What is the agency?
I have no idea.
He's on the board.
It's not an agency.
It's a agency.
Yeah.
There you go.
All things LGBTQ plus IA.
I'm sorry.
It's just because I was already going in and then you looked up.
I'll plus IA with it is IA plus.
Okay, cool.
Okay, cool.
Yeah.
I didn't want to have to ask this, but it's fair.
Are you gay?
No, sir.
Okay.
See?
And I've never experienced nobody getting licked.
Not older, not.
I'm just, but that's some older people.
Old people do that.
Old people do that?
No, I'm thinking like, it's like 50, 55.
Oh, good.
Older.
Older people.
Older people, they get their asshole licked by dogs.
Keep going?
No, we get it.
I get it.
Boy, he's insane.
Isn't that great?
What a character.
You should have him on your mom's house.
I fucking would love to.
Have him explain what the post-fight speech was about.
What was that about?
Is he also the one that had the products with the glasses?
Yes.
Yeah, dude.
He's invented some of the world's best products, too.
I don't know if you know about that.
Yeah, it's fucking amazing, dude.
It's amazing.
What is the post-fight speech?
See if you can find that.
Because he said something really crazy.
the way he said it was like very strange talking about.
Yeah, he was like getting interviewed and then he's like,
yeah, man, like literally.
He's like, I thought we weren't doing this.
I don't want to get anybody in trouble.
Yeah.
Or anything.
I thought we had a deal.
Which seems like if people were placing bets on that, that's a, which they definitely were.
They had to do it.
People place bets on fucking everything out.
There was another fight.
Mansell fought too.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
People had to be placing bets.
100%.
Absolutely.
I mean, that's the way to get a visit from the FBI, I feel like, you know.
Well, it also seems like you're admitting to a crime, which is like maybe it's just because you got a concussion.
Yeah, sure.
I was just talking out of it.
I don't know what I was saying.
Yeah.
I was talking crazy.
I was trying to save face.
I was pretending.
I was pretending.
I was putting my ass and I just didn't know what I didn't know.
Which, in the ring or this?
It was in the ring.
Okay.
There's a small part, but they cut it out.
Yeah, that was nuts.
It was real weird.
Oh, yeah.
Brand risk event.
And now the internet thinks this whole thing.
Hold on.
Don't talk to him.
You don't deserve to talk to him.
You don't got a good-ha haircut.
And it can't.
America, it got spun.
I thought we had a plan.
What the...
I thought we had a plan.
Yeah, there's more to it, though.
Yeah, this is not the best video to pull it from.
I'm trying to find it.
I think I have it here.
Imagine getting your asswood by Super Hot Fire.
Yeah, it's a great name.
I know.
I got it, Jamie.
Here, I'll send it to you.
Joe, who knocked you out?
Super Hot Fire.
Oh, that's pretty tight.
Well, you know, what are you going to do?
What are you going to do?
What are you going to do?
It's super hot fire.
Yeah, I send it to you.
It's just bizarre the way he says it.
Yeah.
It's like...
You are either making an excuse or this is the dumbest criminal ever.
I got a plan.
I don't want to say too much because I don't want to get nobody in trouble.
But damn, my nigga.
Nigger, we took an L tonight.
We didn't take shit.
Your ass was over here.
I got to talk to the nigga about...
Y'all talk backstage.
Super.
Money we lost.
Nigger?
We didn't think you was going to win.
So how y'all lost money?
Wow.
Yo.
I mean, that seems real as shit, though.
That seemed very real.
That seemed very real.
So they must have, you must have said, listen, I'm going to put a bunch of money on me to win.
Yeah.
You have me win.
And he just, look how much money we just lost.
They were going to split the money.
Yeah.
Some Pulp Fiction's shit right there.
Yeah.
Boy.
And we'll see.
Super Hot Fire is like, Super Hot Fire doesn't take no money.
Super Hot Fire gets killed in a drive-by.
We know what's up.
Yeah.
Now you can't even retaliate it.
That's fucking nuts, dude.
I know.
It's crazy that he's.
He admitted it publicly.
It's like very strange.
Right in the moment?
Yeah.
Very strange.
Very strange that he would, I just, I mean, maybe he just got knocked out.
Maybe he's never been knocked out before and he was just like confused.
Yeah.
And that's why he said it.
But it seems like that was real.
That did seem very real.
Yeah.
And super hot fire wasn't like, what the fuck are you talking about?
He kind of just, he's like, yeah, ha, ha.
Got the best.
You can't take a shot.
Yeah.
He's like, do you know how much money we lost?
I wonder how much money.
They'll know.
Like, they'll know bets.
Yeah.
100%.
And they'll also know, like, we got a few $200,000 bets that we should investigate.
You know, the UFC has had a real problem with that.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
In what way?
Well, they caught people.
They caught suspicious betting.
And then, like, the line changes, like, very quickly.
And there's a bunch of money being dumped on one fighter.
And then to lose in a very specific way, like the first round.
Then the fighter loses in the first round when they were the favorite.
And then you find out that his coaches have been on them and other different people.
So it looks like they dumped the fight.
Wow.
Or maybe they went into the fight with a blown out knee and they knew it was blown out.
And they said, I'm just going to put a bunch of money on me to lose.
And they go out and fight and lose.
So the FBI's involved.
And so there's a bunch of different fights that are being investigated.
No shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was that crazy doc about that college basketball one from years ago that was just incredible.
And the way that it all fell apart
was they just got too greedy,
you know, because they had a guy
who I think he was the point guard,
maybe at ASU or something.
And once they had them, you know,
like locked in on this,
they just, and they realized he really could swing it
how they wanted to.
They started just betting.
And then, yeah, the FBI was looking at these betting lines
and saying like, oh, really,
there's $2 million on this game from one per?
Like this is, they started to just get,
keyed in on it and then the whole thing got exposed.
It's kind of funny that people don't think they're going to get caught doing something like that.
Yeah, especially at that, like, where you go like, oh, just all the money can go in.
And it's like, yeah, it's too much, man.
You know, you probably could have gotten away with 25 grand or whatever, you know,
like something that doesn't really ring alarms.
But if you start putting seven figures down, you don't think anyone's going to take a second look at that.
What are the rules?
like what do you like you can't dump a fight
but if you know someone's hurt
like say if I know someone's hurt
and I'm like ooh I know he's hurt
I'm gonna put a bunch of money on him to lose
I wonder if that's legal
is that insider trading
I don't think it is I also feel like it's different
maybe I'm wrong if you are
getting a bunch of people to do it versus
you're doing it because you had
you know I mean because right how could somebody
You can't be sure that he's not going to still try to win.
Yeah.
Also, it's like, did you put a $5 million bet on it?
Right, well, look at this way.
Imagine if I found out that Strickland hurt his shoulder that week, and I'm like, oh, his shoulder's blown out.
I'm putting all the money on Homestot.
And then I lost.
Draft Kings explicitly prohibits betting by insiders on sports or events where they have an unfair material or non-public advantage.
This applies to athletes, coaches, referees, team personnel, and sports.
employees using private information to gain a betting edge.
But none of those people that they mentioned there, athletes, coaches, referees, team personnel,
none of them is like your friends with a guy because you train at the same gym as them.
That's true.
Also, this is saying that this private company can do this.
But legally, is this a legal thing?
Yeah, that's where I was going to, when you brought up the $5 million bet, if they lose a big bet like that,
you definitely got to assume they're going to look into like, well, who the fuck was this?
Right.
When they make the bet.
How many times have they done this?
Did they get lucky one time?
Look at this Strickland fight.
Like if you, so he was training with Johnny Eblen, who's the middleweight champion
of the PFL, badass motherfucker, like, beast wrestler.
And that's how he hurt his shoulder.
And so, like, if you were there during those training sessions and you're like, oh, he's
heard, I'm going to fucking sneak away and put some money on it.
I wonder if that's legal.
I wonder if it is, too.
Because, first of all, you would have lost because Strickland wound up winning anyway.
Yeah.
Exploiting non-public information such as knowing a star player is injured before it is announced can lead to criminal charges.
Individuals caught coordinating insider betting schemes have faced federal felony charges, including wire fraud, bribery, and illegal gambling.
Yeah, but how's it bribery?
I don't know.
That doesn't get the sense on it.
Yeah, what the circumstances are.
But if you were in that situation and you bet on Strickland to lose and he actually did lose and you knew, I wonder.
I wonder.
Because in that fight, he was the underdog anyway.
That is kind of interesting.
What is the legal threshold for public information?
You know?
Because that's really what we're talking about.
I think that's about fucking gambling in the stock market.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, do you see that thing that I sent you, Jamie?
Yeah.
Is that real?
Well, it's a...
Many things use that for statistics.
That's things using percentages.
So there's a chart Joe Semi about, like, the amount the S&P's gone up
versus Republicans and Democrats, and it's a percentage.
thing Democrats are up like 900 percent. I think Republicans like 600 percent and the
SP is up like 508 percent. But percentages don't tell you like what you started with and what
you ended with. Right. You could have started with the hundred billion dollars and you made
one billion dollars and you made one percent versus someone who made one million dollars.
It doesn't sound the same, but they're not relative. Right. But they did the, when you look at
the chart and you look at the difference between the Republicans and Democrats in terms of
insider trading in Congress, they're all doing.
They're all doing it.
That's why they can do it.
Yeah.
Because they're all doing it.
If it was only the Democrats, the Republicans were like, what the fuck, bro?
Yeah.
But since they're all doing it, everybody's like, well, there's a problem.
Yeah.
There's no problem.
Yeah.
I don't see nothing.
Here's the chart.
This is like an account that just takes data and makes charts out of it.
Yeah.
So it's them doing better than the S&P.
Always.
But again, just using percentages is not a great way because somebody could say something went
up 77% or went up 300%.
It doesn't matter what you're talking.
I don't know what it sounds like a lot, but it might not be relative to what the actual number was.
Well, that's really interesting that they're doing so well.
Well, this is also saying like,
sheer luck.
People could just bet on video itself has gone up a shitload.
Right.
If you just put money in Nvidia, you'd make a fuckload money.
I'll say this, that's a tough thing to resist to be sitting in Congress.
And you know you're not going to get punished.
Yeah.
No one.
I mean, a few people have been punished, right?
We looked that up the other day.
Yeah.
A few fucking blabber mouths, probably.
Like some outsider, some shithead that they were like, fuck him, throw him under the bus.
Yeah.
They probably had a few guys they threw into the bus.
And it was probably somebody that didn't have a portfolio.
Didn't Trump do a lot of like stock purchases?
He's made a fortune.
He's made a fortune in this term.
They made a settlement with the IRS.
I think that's why a lot of it came out recently.
But like he can't be charged with anything.
Yeah, they can't be.
The latest thing is that he and his kids and his company cannot be audited.
Oh, that's cool.
That is cool.
That's my settlement.
What was the settlement?
What was the IRS being sued for?
What was the actization?
It was for the leak.
The leak of his tax returns.
Okay, so the IRS leaked his tax returns?
Yeah, he said they were reckless and...
Settlement of his $10 billion lawsuit.
2018 leak of his tax returns in New York Times in the U.S.
is forever barred and precluded
from examining or prosecuting Trump,
his sons, and the Trump organization's current tax filings
according to one-page document released Tuesday.
That is so crazy.
Imagine like somebody accused you a murder.
Yeah.
And it turns out you weren't guilty of that murder
and then you sue them.
And you go, you can never prosecute me for murder again.
And then you just go straight Ude Hussein.
Yeah.
And they're like, it's cool.
Yeah.
It's fine.
Oh, that's nuts.
Now, here's the only thing that the detail of that, is part of that settlement that says that, like, the language, that they cannot be for their current tax filings.
Does that mean, though, that in the future, future filings also fall under that immunity?
Oh, go back, go back, please?
This is crazy.
Like, go back to the top of that?
Right there.
Under the settlement to resolve Trump's $10 billion lawsuit over the 2018 leak of his tax returns to New York Times, the U.S. is forever barred.
But now look at the end.
It was quietly added to the original settlement,
the original settlement establishing a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who Trump thinks were improperly investigated by the government.
January 6th fund, I believe.
Yeah.
They're paying for all of their legal fees.
Whoa.
Yeah.
But 1.8 billion is probably more than their legal fees, I would imagine.
Yeah, it's also going to be for like, you know, I was, um, I was, um, I was.
I was...
So do they get compensated?
They're all filing, you know, making claims.
Are they?
Yeah, well, a lot of them are making claims, yeah.
Well, here's what's fucked.
For sure, there were government people that were rabble-rousers.
There were people that were trying to get people to go into the capital.
That's a fact.
How many?
They call them agent provocateurs.
So there's people that your tax dollars pay.
that we're trying to get people to commit crimes.
We don't know how many.
We don't know.
And supposedly, no, they were just there to monitor.
Really?
Okay, but we know that people have done that in the past, where they've encouraged people
to commit crimes.
Yeah.
And we do know that there was some knowledge that this was going to happen and that they
wanted it to happen.
They wanted it to happen exactly that way.
And they encouraged people to do it so that they can make it look like Donald Trump is a real threat
and keep them from running for reelection again.
That didn't work out.
The whole thing is crazy.
Like, imagine that there are government employees with government tax dollars.
They're being paid and they're being paid to encourage people to commit crimes that they would have never committed without it.
We know that's a fact.
That's a real thing.
Yeah.
There's a guy in Dallas who was 19 years old that they tricked into detonating a fake bomb.
They radicalized him, gave him a self-year-old.
phone, gave him a bomb.
Who did?
The feds?
The feds.
They made him a jihadist.
So he goes to detonate the bomb.
It's not a real bomb anyway.
And then lock him up in jail forever.
They give him the bomb.
They give him the cell phone to detonate the bomb.
They talk them into doing it.
The whole deal.
And there's not going to be any...
No.
They're just like, that's done.
Is it?
How about that lady in, what was it, Michigan?
Which state was it?
Where there was 14 people that were trying to kidnap her?
kidnapper, it turns out 12 of them
were FBI informants? What the
fuck? Really? Yes.
Yes. It was Michigan, right?
What is that lady's name?
The Whitmer.
Yeah, Governor Whitmer.
So there's 14 people involved
in this kidnapping plot.
12 of them were FBI
informants.
So it's like a whole crew of
FBI family
With the goal of what?
Of arresting these two suckers
these two retards that
think it's a good idea to play along
with these dorks and these guys
were like, we thought we were just talking shit
and now they're locked up.
Yeah. Yeah.
Sorry.
But I mean, they spent money on this.
It's like your tax dollars go
to try to trick people and to doing a crime
that you know they're going to do and they're never going to be able to
do because you're going to arrest them before they go to do it.
It sucks as a criminal to think that you have to
really doubt who you're working with, you know?
Hard times.
It's hard, man.
I thought we were going to have some fun.
Turns out you're a fucking snitch.
Maybe that could be an episode of...
Yeah.
Next season.
It's a good one, yeah.
It's a good one.
Yeah, it's a fun one.
That's actually a very good one.
There's probably a lot of room for comedy in that.
Tons.
It's just crazy.
Because it's like they have to...
This is the problem.
And it's not entirely...
It is their fault that they did that,
but it's not entirely their fault
because they have to make a rest.
You want another one, or are you good?
No, I'm good, thanks.
If you want to have a career,
your career is dependent upon you making arrests.
Yeah.
You know, this is the stuff that I've worked with Josh Dubin, with the wrongfully prosecuted and convicted people.
One of the things you find out is that a lot of these prosecutors, what it is is they want to boost up their career by getting cases handled.
Yeah.
They want to arrest people.
They want those people to be convicted.
That makes them look good.
So they just fucking monkey around with the evidence.
This feels like a traffic cop meeting as quota.
Exactly.
Yeah.
You didn't use your blinker.
Exactly.
You're like, what fuck are you doing, man?
Dude, I had a guy pulled me over, and then he recognized me and let me go.
But he pulled me over and said that I crossed the white line.
And I was like, what?
And he goes, he followed me like the moment I left where I was at.
He was on my ass, like, immediately.
He said I saw it cross the white.
Like, so I was in my little loud BMW, my little E-46.
And it's, you know, probably like, look at this douchebag.
Yeah.
Like, he's probably drunk.
Yeah.
Thankfully, I was completely sober.
But he pulls me over and he's like, I saw you cross the white line back there.
I go, really?
I go, I don't think I did.
And he goes, Joe Rogan?
And then they're like, oh, I'm just looking for drunks.
I'm like, okay, well, I'm not drunk.
So he was just going to try to see if you were.
I think they have a quota.
I think they have a quota.
And I think, like, they have to fucking make a rest.
and maybe they pull you over and they realize you're not drunk
and so they just inconvenience you for five minutes
and they'll let you go.
I had one of those.
I've had that happen before.
Yeah.
I dropped my phone once when I was on the highway in L.A.
Yeah.
And I reached down in between my legs to pick up my phone
and I must have moved to one.
And then all of a sudden, whoop, I'm like, okay.
I got to do the whole thing and touch my nose, the whole deal.
This guy accused me of, the cop accused me of trying to ditch him too.
He was like, you try to ditch me.
And I was like, you took a right here.
And I was like, that's because I'm going this way.
Like I made a right because I'm going this way.
He's like, where are you going?
I was going to my mom's house.
He was like...
Where she lived?
Yeah, I was like up here, then the left.
He was like, all right.
He's like, I don't know, man.
He tried to get away.
One time, this guy in a truck didn't see me
and totally turned into my lane,
and I had to go into the...
I mean, I was in a Tesla.
Luckily, it was fast, so I avoided it
and shot back into my lane ahead of him.
But it was like, this guy came like
inches away from hitting me.
And I had to go into the opposite lane to pass,
him and then I had, but there was no one in the opposite lane.
Yeah.
I did it.
And then all of a sudden the lights come on.
And he goes, uh, I saw you pass that guy back there.
And he goes, uh, you smell like liquor.
I go, I have, I'm not, I haven't drank a single drop of alcohol.
I do not.
He goes, you smell like liquor.
I go, no, I don't.
And he goes, Joe Rogan?
I go, yeah.
I go, what are you doing, man?
I go, I go, go, go look at your can.
You have a camera, right?
On your car.
I go, go look at what happened.
And so he looks at it.
I go, that guy almost fucking hit me.
And he goes, oh, I just saw it.
Yeah, you almost hate you.
He goes, hey, man, I love the UFC.
You're like, okay, cool.
Cool.
But like, you didn't, you were pretending I was drunk.
Yeah.
You're pretending you smelled liquor.
Somebody else would have had a real hard time with that.
The, I smell liquor was infuriating.
I'm like, come on, dude.
That's so upsetting.
Yeah, I think I was coming from like somewhere innocuous, like the gym or something.
I was like, what the fuck is wrong with you?
Yeah.
You're saying you smell liquor.
You definitely don't smell it.
You're just being an asshole.
Yeah.
But they have a quota.
They have a fucking quota.
It's like imagine being them like hey Tom haven't met your quota.
What would they what would they do if no one if we we all just said hey this quota thing is bullshit everybody for the next month
Never speed always use your blinker stop at every stoplight they would come up with something else
What the fuck would they do?
Yeah they would they would come up with something there would be a new something would change in the law that would be illegal that people were doing
But if no one's if so it's just speeding let's say speeding if no one's sped for a month
month. What the fuck would they do? I mean, they would they would pinch people for something else.
They just absolutely would. That's crazy. Because it generates too much revenue. But isn't that
crazy? You think that the cops, the serve and protect, they're supposed to be that. They're glorified
revenue collectors. When you see these, um, the, these police departments that they investigate for being
super corrupt, like the level of corruption in some of them is mind blowing. Like there was even that
chief, the chief that was, and I think it was in Jersey, that was just like tormenting the entire
department.
He'd shave his back on people's desk, fucking stick a hypodermic needle in their leg, put Viagra
in the coffee.
He was just like fucking with everybody.
Yeah, he was like tormenting people.
Where was that?
In Jersey.
That's definitely, it was a-stucked a hypodermic needle.
Yeah, dude.
He was fucking absolutely crazy.
Just as he had power.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
He was going nuts.
What is it about people that have power over people?
Were they just, like, eight out of ten times abuse it?
I don't know.
That's all the dictator stuff I've been reading is like...
Why are you reading so much about dictators?
I don't know.
The stories are just so wild.
The Ediamine thing is just so crazy.
Again, like, came from extreme poverty,
neglected by his father,
humiliated by the British,
then joins the battalion by the...
like to work with the same people that humiliated him came to power
and then became a complete megalomaniac.
I mean, and also you see,
one thing you see in all these dictators
is such extreme paranoia
because when you operate in a place of wanting to instill fear,
you feel fear, you know?
Oh, yeah.
So they're all super paranoid, man.
I wonder if Uday was paranoid.
Probably not.
That's a good question.
I mean, he probably had so much power
that he didn't have to be paranoid.
His pops is paranoid, yeah.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, probably his own son's going to kill them.
The Kim's super paranoid.
Oh, yeah.
All of them.
Oh, they have to be.
Yeah.
Because you just, you know, you're in such fear, and you just instill fear, and then
you go, someone's, and they're right, because people are turning on them.
Yeah.
There's all these, like, attempts on their life.
Well, this is his brother, Coussay?
Yeah.
Oh.
Hours before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Cusay withdrew approximately $1 billion.
In cash.
In cash?
$100 bills.
What?
Yeah, right here.
$900 million and $100 bills, the equivalent of $100 million in euros,
loaded them into three tractor trailers and left.
So $100 million in euros and $900 million in $100 bills
and loaded in a tractor.
Consider the largest bank heist in history.
Got there at 4 a.m.
Wait a minute.
Also, it says until 2011.
Acting on personal orders from his dad.
Yeah.
But is that his money or anybody's money?
Just whoever's money it is.
But bro, what's the bank highest in 2011 that surpasses that?
I think that's the English one.
Oh.
Is that the one?
It says $6 billion in Iraq missing, but have been stolen.
Oh.
What's that one?
Fuck.
But this just makes sense, man.
It's like whenever there's a war, whenever there's chaos, there's a bunch of people that are going to fucking steal some money.
Yeah.
Iraq wants its money back.
Yeah.
Los Angeles Times says that some of the officials in Baghdad have threatened to take the U.S. government to court to reclaim the missing loot.
Good luck.
Good luck with that.
They'll start bombing you again.
They'll find more weapons of mass destruction.
The president of course.
Oh, of course.
While they're looking for that, look for the $24 billion that they spent on the homeless in California.
There's just like everywhere you look, there's people stealing money in sneaky ways.
The billion that he put into tractors ended up, though.
Like, I like how it just ends.
He put it into tractors.
End of story.
Right, where to go?
Where did that go?
Yeah.
Because he was killed shortly thereafter.
Right.
Where's that money?
It's a lot of fucking money.
That's a lot of cash.
12 billion in cash was flown into Iraq at 21 separate C-130 flights in May of 2004.
That's why they like going to war.
That's why these motherfuckers like going to war.
Because for sure, you can get some of that.
You've got rain cash, bro.
of that's yours. Yeah. If you and I are running some fucking defense contracting company, like,
well, tell me, that yacht you got your eye on. Yeah. Here it is. Here it is, bro. Here it is.
Let's drop a few bombs. Let's do it. That's only a hundred million. Let's do it. That's a drop in the
bucket for this operation. It's a very similar claim. Yeah. Afghanistan's Taliban displays pallets of
cash received for humanitarian aid. Yeah, they just give them cash. Yeah, they just give them cash.
Yeah, look at that. Bricks of it. Look at what it looks like. 40 million in cash. Oh, nothing.
There you go. Jesus.
Don't this is what Tim Burchett was saying that we give them that every month.
Yeah, this is why I found that this article.
This one here.
Look at that packaging, bro.
Yeah, we send that to them every month.
American tax dollars.
And then we go, do the right thing.
And then we're like, we don't have any money to fix the streets.
We don't have any money to pay teachers, but we have $40 million a month for the Taliban.
I wish you would talk to whoever's in charge of infrastructure in this city to fix some of these streets.
Yeah, they're not going to listen to me.
There's so many fucking potholes.
A lot of potholes, dude.
And just destroyed, even in residential areas.
This street is fucked up, man.
I know.
I wonder why they don't fix that.
I don't know either.
It's not like it's not money around here.
Oh, shit.
Yeah.
Well, maybe get Spencer proud if he loses in L.A. to run for mayor of Austin.
Come to Austin, bro.
We could use you.
Is he got a chance in L.A.?
What do you think?
I think anyone's got a chance.
I think if you put together a campaign that gets some excitement and people talking, you have a chance in L.A.
I really do.
Like that city, the people there are...
They're desperate.
They're desperate and also they live for entertainment.
So entertain him a little.
Right.
Yeah.
He's entertaining.
He's entertaining as shit.
You see one of the things he's doing, he's putting a stencil down on the streets and power washing Spencer Pratt for mayor into the dirty streets.
No, is he really?
Yeah.
So he's...
Clever.
Putting it on the sidewalk and the sidewalks are so disgusting that if you put the stencil down and power wash it, you could see it clearly.
I mean, if you think that that guy doesn't have a chance,
I would remind you that our president is a reality show fucking host.
I think he's good.
I think his ideas are good.
I think Spencer,
I've had him in here.
He's got some good ideas.
I mean,
he definitely wants to stop all this fucking camps.
He's running against the incumbent,
or how many people's running against?
The incumbent and another woman.
But he's running as a Republican,
which is the problem.
I don't know.
According to Kalshi,
the trading market,
he's in second place.
Behind her,
behind Karen Bass.
Imagine that.
She burned down the entire Pacific Palisades
by not having any water in the fucking hydrants
not having any water in the reservoirs
and they're like, yeah, but let's give her another chance.
Yeah.
Crazy.
She was busy.
She didn't have time to save all those houses.
Why don't you go out you sold your house for it?
Burnt to a Crisp.
It's really crazy.
I did a fundraiser show a couple weeks ago in Altadena.
Altadena is an even a worse situation
because those people don't have any money.
I know.
A lot of them working class families lost everything.
I saw it haven't been to my...
Elstreet, but I saw a video. It's, it just looks like a, like a bomb. Like a bomb went off. Yeah. It was really
crazy. I'm glad we moved, dude. Yeah. I'm glad. I'm really glad you didn't lose your house.
Me too, man. That would have just been, I feel, I really do feel for the people that did. It's
I know quite a few. I know quite a few. Yeah, I do. My good friend Matt, he lost his place.
It's really sad. Yeah. Anyway, dude, your show's awesome. It's on Netflix. It's right now. It's really,
really fucking funny. Thanks so much, man. It's fucking. It's fucking.
just so preposterous and so irreverent.
And again, shout out to Netflix.
We're having the cahones.
Yes.
Thank you, Netflix.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for the opportunity.
Yeah.
All right.
Go watch it.
I love you, buddy.
Thank you very much.
Bye, everybody.
See you.
