The Nateland Podcast - 133: #133 Insects

Episode Date: January 25, 2023

Who would win a fight between humans and ants if ants were as smart as humans? That's just one of the topics the guys debate this week as they learn about insects.  Podcast produced by Nate & L...aura Bargatze Recording & Editing by Genovations Media https://www.natebargatze.com https://www.genovationsmedia.com Email - Nateland@NateBargatze.com

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello folks and hey bear Marty's smiling too much Yeah, Brian Bates Aaron Weber and Dusty Slay Hey All right What you upset about this week? I got a lot of things Brian Bates, Aaron Weber, and Dusty Slay. All right. All right. There it is. What you upset about this week? I got a lot of things, Brian.
Starting point is 00:00:31 The state of America. It's wild out there. It is. That's for sure. Yeah, yeah. You think anybody noticed? I'm not Nate. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:45 Surprise, the middle brother. All right. That's Derek. Well, we'll miss you. All right, we'll miss you, Derek. Miss you guys. Yeah. I think so.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Thanks for having me. You brought some good energy onto here for the three minutes. Yeah. And I appreciate that. Appreciate you guys. Thanks for letting me come. Yeah. See you, man.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Have a good one. All right. That was Derek. I think we all see why he's the middle brother. I probably sound a little different, but I think people wouldn't notice when they see him. Visually, I was just looking up in my peripheral vision. I'm like, God, he looks like Nate.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Yeah, yeah. He goes, when he walks around, like when he's at a show, if he goes out and walks around, you see everybody kind of looks at him and they're like, you know, they think it's me walking around. Yeah. If it's not Nate, it's somebody. It's a Bargetzi.
Starting point is 00:01:37 Yeah. It's a Bargetzi. Dead gum Bargetzi if I've ever seen one. Welcome, Hey Bear. Alright, that was it. again, Bargetti, if I've ever seen one. Welcome, Hey Bear. Alright. That was it. That was fun. That was fun. I was very excited. Added a little something to it. Just trying to make this podcast
Starting point is 00:01:55 listenable. With a visual gag. Yeah. If you're listening at home, yeah. Yeah. Maybe they thought it sounded like T. I wonder if they thought something like, God, Nate's on the road, man.
Starting point is 00:02:10 This is struggling. I believe this will be the last episode before your special comes out. Oh, yeah. Oh, man. Yes, it will be. I think I would have done the Tonight Show. How'd it go? In Good Morning America.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Went good. Went to the playoffs. All right. There it is. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Special comes out. I will be – because I'll be gone, so it's like – yeah, yeah, because it'll be – special will be out.
Starting point is 00:02:42 And then what else is – is Oh I'll be at the Doing the Pebble Beach Pro-am So make sure you If you want to watch that See how good it goes Is this the one that
Starting point is 00:02:53 We read last year On the show No no That's Lake Tahoe Okay That's in July Okay But this is the
Starting point is 00:02:59 Bill Murray One Bill Murray's always out This one's on TV Yeah What Do you know what network it's on? It's on the main ABC or something or Golf Channel. That's cool.
Starting point is 00:03:11 4.3. Yeah. Circle TV? Yeah. Circle Network. Yeah, it's on the main. Bill Murray does it every year. They do it at Pebble Beach, and they have the celebrities play with pros.
Starting point is 00:03:27 And so if you're a pro, I do not know who my pro is, as speaking right now. And I won't know until, I don't think, that week. But Derek is going to be my caddy. And if the guy gets in, like the Tahoe one is awesome too, but it's just all celebrities. And then the, that might be on NBC, but in the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, maybe it's on CBS. Just keep going up the dial. Keep going and go.
Starting point is 00:04:02 I think it's Fox. Maybe YouTube. But if you're on it. Ooh, Jason Baker. This is fun. The lineup on here is crazy, dude. Oh, yeah. Darius Rutgers.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Scott Eastwood. Steve Young. Eric Church. Larry Fitzgerald. Yeah. Scott Eastwood. The bad Captain America. Remember that?
Starting point is 00:04:23 Carlton. Fresh Prince. Alfonso Riviera yeah he plays in all of them uh yeah it's uh macklemore buster jason bateman i i signed well uh you can do a practice round so you can sign up so you play a practice round i signed up with will and our aunt jason bateman we're uh playing the first group out on a practice round, and I put my name in there with them. Yeah. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:04:47 See what happens. I'm going to get there, and they're going to just be in a different group. They're like, yeah, yeah, we're just trying to play alone. Have you seen Arrested Development? Yeah. I mean, it's one of the best shows ever. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:02 So, yeah, it'll be. Don't agree? No, it's good'll be don't agree nah it's good I don't know best ever it's good though alright you think one of the best ever I think it's just so funny
Starting point is 00:05:11 I mean the last couple of seasons not as much but the first three I have a hard time with a show where a guy's like always trying to lift
Starting point is 00:05:19 the family and the whole family is just tearing it apart every time hit a little too close to home yeah and the whole family is just tearing it apart every time. It'll watch a lot of home. I mean,
Starting point is 00:05:35 I would like to know the other shows that you watch that are like that. Well, I don't know right off, but sometimes, sometimes I can see them and I go, oh man, just one guy trying to pull it together. Yeah. Everybody else.
Starting point is 00:05:44 One guy trying to build a career in comedy and the rest of the family. I go, oh man, just one guy trying to pull it together. One guy trying to build a career in comedy and the rest of the family I mean, I feel like that's every sitcom in the way. Living in a dead gum trailer. Yeah, I don't think you like Jason Bateman. I do like him. I like him in that and I like him
Starting point is 00:06:02 in Horrible Boss as the first one. But I can't think of anything else. Ozark. I never watched Ozark. It's great. I never watched it. Teen Wolf 2. Ozark, Pray About Your Life.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Yeah. Yeah, Ozark. Ozark is, yeah, and that's where he moved to your life. Yes. Yeah. I did not watch. I watched the first season of Ozark, and I was kind of done. It's my, it was kind of my Michael Jordan Kobe
Starting point is 00:06:25 thing where it was like Breaking Bad, then they went to Ozark and I was like, I can't do this again. It was like too much. There's no comparison between the two in my mind, but. Yeah, well, I mean, they moved to town to start selling drugs. A guy that doesn't sell drugs or launders money then moves to a place to launder money.
Starting point is 00:06:41 I mean in the quality of the show. Quality of the show. I get the idea, but it's the same. Breaking Bad worked, and so they go, we're going to make this other one that's kind of like a laundering. They just laundered money, right? Yeah, for the car show. Yes. What's the better quality show to you?
Starting point is 00:07:00 Breaking Bad. Breaking Bad to me is like top five show all time. Yeah, it's my favorite. Really great. And it went out on top five seasons it was great it hit it's stride Ozark was three seasons
Starting point is 00:07:11 I think three or four I can't remember Breaking Bad was only five yep oh wow the last season was split into two
Starting point is 00:07:16 okay it's something to be said for not milking it to death right you go out on top yeah that's why
Starting point is 00:07:23 this will be Nate's last special coming up. Yep. Retiring. I hope I have new stuff here and this. Just so they're rambling. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, yeah, people love Ozark, though.
Starting point is 00:07:39 I need to get into a mood to watch, and I just haven't been. I think it got better as it went. I mean, it was pretty good out of the gate,, I think it got better as it went. I mean, it was pretty good out of the gate, but I think it got better. If I would have watched it first, I would have probably been like,
Starting point is 00:07:50 Oh, I think it jumped the shark. Okay. All right. Different opinions. Uh, yeah, I think it's like,
Starting point is 00:07:57 uh, breaking bad was like, it was like, that idea was like so crazy. And then Ozark is, you know, you're like, all right. I mean, you come up with that idea if Breaking Bad doesn't exist. You're like, I don't know. Right.
Starting point is 00:08:12 And then so you just end up going kind of like, but it's like one of those. Like, I wish I would have watched Kobe. I mean, I watched Kobe, but I wish I would have enjoyed watching him more. But it was like, you just got done watching that. Yeah. And then you're he was like, you just got done watching that. Yeah. And then you're kind of like, okay, well, and that's with that one, you're so like, well, they're trying to say he's better than my guy, Michael Jordan, and then you're, you know, so.
Starting point is 00:08:34 Yeah, there's room for both. Oh, yeah, there is. But it hits, it just hits the different ages. You know, Larry Bird guy. Probably exactly right. Yeah, I mean. Yeah, saw him play in college. I think Larry Bird guy. Probably exactly right. Yeah, I mean. Yeah, saw him play in college. I think Larry Bird's the best.
Starting point is 00:08:49 Just graduated college, and you went back, watched him. They go, here we got a freshman over at Indiana State. He's doing pretty good. I was right on the edge of remembering that. I do remember Magic's rookie year in the NBA because they won the championship. Yeah. And Kareem got hurt, and Magic played center. Really?
Starting point is 00:09:09 Yeah. How crazy is that? That's crazy. Yeah. Different time. Would you listen to it on the radio? What games would you listen to? Baseball?
Starting point is 00:09:21 I've listened to some baseball. Yeah. Baseball is tough on the radio. See, I think it's not bad I think it's like people like it because it's like kind of calm it's very just laid back
Starting point is 00:09:28 they just hear you hear a lot of people believe radio is actually the best medium for baseball they actually prefer it to watching it on TV
Starting point is 00:09:38 yeah Dusty's very wrong see I can't see how that I mean you know I don't know baseball is pretty boring to me even watching it on TV I like it at a game See, yeah, I can't see how that, I mean, you know, I don't know. Baseball is pretty boring to me, even watching it on TV. I like it at a game.
Starting point is 00:09:54 I can get into it here and there, but on the radio, it's tough to me. People like the rocking and rocking chair. That's what you're thinking. It's like just the game's on. It's a few hours. It's not a lot of excitement. It's not about constant entertainment. It's about you have it on you know
Starting point is 00:10:06 have a conversation they would take a pencil when the guy hit the and they would hit the desk to make the sound of the bat hitting the ball are you serious yeah
Starting point is 00:10:14 oh I like that was that your first job in the media that's it yeah that's how Whisper Bates
Starting point is 00:10:21 finally made it up to channel five yeah sit in your rocking chair get an old knife out Yeah, that's how Whisper Bates got – finally made it up to Channel 5. Yeah. Sit in your rocking chair, get an old knife out, do some whittling. Just waits for it. Yeah, and he's going – he does it wrong. Outside, ball outside.
Starting point is 00:10:40 I'm sorry. Angle I was at, I thought he got it. I thought he got a piece. I would listen to, the reason I know how to say Nate's last name is because I listened to Vanderbilt basketball, and it was Charlie Alexander and Ron Bargatze. And I would listen to the games on the radio, and I would keep my own little scorebook of all the players.
Starting point is 00:11:00 You related to this guy? Mm-hmm. Yeah, I'm related to every Bargatze. I would guess so there's not it doesn't seem like a ton of no
Starting point is 00:11:07 if you meet a Bargettzi they're in alright yeah I mean I think that's first question I asked you probably first question a lot of people ask you
Starting point is 00:11:14 yeah oh yeah my whole life in Nashville you Ronnie's boy still I mean it's still very much it's funny because you would
Starting point is 00:11:21 just try to be that's all you were asked at the beginning and I still get asked that now. Anybody's older, they all go, you Ronnie's boy? Like they wouldn't know him now. They kind of know me or they know my dad's a magician. Like there's other Bargettis.
Starting point is 00:11:37 But it was, I mean, it was all Ronnie. Ronnie knows everybody. Nate Bargetti at Bridgestone? Who's that? Is that Ronnie's boy? Is that Ronnie's boy? Wow, we buy tickets to go see Ronnie's boy. Are you related? I mean,one? Who's that? Is that Ronnie's boy? Is that Ronnie's boy? Wow, we buy tickets to go see Ronnie's boy. Are you related?
Starting point is 00:11:47 I mean, I know you're related, but how are you related? Is he your uncle? He's a second cousin. Okay. Yeah, but he's who my dad moved down here with. My dad's story, which he's got a great story of him upbringing. My dad got when he got saved, and he moved from – his dad called Ronnie, and my dad was always kind of in trouble a little bit.
Starting point is 00:12:06 And then my dad moved down to Nashville and lived with Ronnie and his wife at the time. And then they—Melinda—they lived together. And my dad lived there, and Ronnie was like, look, you're going to—made him kind of act straight and uh took him to church he got saved and uh you know and here we are wow and so ronnie's a big ronnie's the best man in my dad's wedding ronnie's so he's my second cousin but it's it's a lot more like yeah yeah uh it's he's like family yeah he's like yeah yeah but it would be like it'd be an encore yeah like but uh he's the family. Yeah. But it would be like it being on course. He's the one that told me about two-thumbs Bargetzi. Ronnie's the one that knows a lot about Bargetzi.
Starting point is 00:12:52 He's the one when I said 23. Dusty doesn't know about two-thumbs Bargetzi. When I did 23 and Me, and it said we were 0.0 Italian, I told Ronnie Bargetzi that, and he goes, that's not true. And I was like, maybe it's not. And maybe it's not. I don't know. Like, you know, it is kind of weird that, because we are families from,
Starting point is 00:13:13 like, Italian Switzerland, like, there's, like, up there, kind of towards the top of Italy. What's he saying is not true, that you're not Italian at all? He was saying I had no Italian in me. Oh. But it's like, we do. Our family. I think 23andMe.
Starting point is 00:13:30 Is 23andMe, who knows how accurate? Yeah, I don't know. They go, whose spit was this? I don't know. Just mail it out, man. Yeah. This is an interesting question. Who do you trust more? The geneticist
Starting point is 00:13:44 or your second cousin? I trust Ron. I trust Ronnie. Well, you go look at Ancestry, we're over in Italy. Yeah. So it's – So something went wrong at the DNA company? Well, I mean, there's a chance.
Starting point is 00:13:59 I mean, it's a – they're just sending – you're spitting in a tube. I totally believe that. I'm just – that's what you're guessing happened. Yeah. I mean, I think, I don't know. Maybe it didn't swab it all right. I mean, we have to. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:14:13 We have, you know, the way we look is definitely more Italian look. I get very, like in the summer, like I get very dark. I get very, you know, some hair on my back. Little orange hands. Little orange. I have orange hands. I get very, you know, some hair on my back. Little orange hands. Little orange. I have orange hands. It's Italian. You know, I don't like tomatoes and onions.
Starting point is 00:14:31 That's the American part of me. I don't care for the vegetables. I was born here. Kevin Nealon said. What are you, from Lebanon? Your family started in Lebanon? 100% Lebanon. I did it. They just said, yeah, you've from Lebanon? Your family started in Lebanon? 100% Lebanon.
Starting point is 00:14:45 I did it. They just said, yeah, you've always been here. Yeah, there you go. Before Columbus, way before Columbus, and you were specifically even at Lebanon. It was not Lebanon, but your family started here at Lebanon. Yeah, when they made it to Lebanon, your family was already there. I had one...
Starting point is 00:15:03 Hey, hello, folks. Come on in. Brian Bate. Kevin Nealon has a joke that someone spit on his car and he was so furious about it, so he went and bought one of those 23andMe kits to send it off to find out who did it. Turns out it was a bird.
Starting point is 00:15:21 Bird poop. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's funny. I hope to meet Ron Bargetze someday. That's my dream. Yeah. Oh, yeah. We need to meet Ron.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Yeah, he would love to talk to you. You go and throw out some names in his heyday. Oh, I would. Yeah. Yeah. So here we go. Well, can I ask this, though? When you met Nate for the first time, were you like, are you Ron's boy?
Starting point is 00:15:47 Yeah. I think I asked. He said it. I don't know if he worded it like that. He's the age group that would have. I mean, I felt it coming before it even got over to me. You're Ron's Ken? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:59 He just, he made, you know, we were both in the same open mic. Bates bought a ticket to it, still went up. You Ron is boy? Mill kit. Mill. I don't know if I say that right. Like mill. Mill.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Mill kit. They're making the kits at the mill. Yeah, mill. That's because of kit to make a mill. At the meal mill. At the meal. What are y'all making that meal? Meals?
Starting point is 00:16:25 Other meals to make meals? Yeah At the meal mill. At the meal. What are y'all making that meal? Meals? Other meals to make meals? Yeah, making meals meals. And they have to, you would think to make a meal, you would need a place that does make meals. Yeah, a mill. Right? A meal meal. A meal meal. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:16:44 They've been trying to shut that meal meal down forever why well people don't like meals and then so we go we can't shut all these meals down so i go what about the place that makes the meals okay that's a pretty good idea the meal meal uh this week y'all don't have to, we pre-recorded this. Y'all ain't been doing nothing. Comments, Paul Bickle. Recently, I played a board game with family and friends called Confident. My wife became less and less amused when I would have correct answers and continually cite my source, Nateland. The categories included the Olympics, physics, the universe, decades,
Starting point is 00:17:29 eras of history, and even how many Oscar nominations Meryl Streep had. Even after the game was over, my wife asked me if I had heard of the new movie Cocaine Bear, and again, you received the credit. Look at that. How about that? That's what we're here for. That's why we're labeled an educational podcast. You will pick up
Starting point is 00:17:47 stuff. I mean, it is educational. That guy learned something. He remembers more than I did. Yeah, I mean, Paul Bickle's testimony is that's what we need. That's what we need. And when trash goes out of space, Paul will have known about it first. Yes. He'll know about it first.
Starting point is 00:18:03 He goes, yeah, I know where I heard that idea. Yeah. And he will know that it's cheaper to shoot it towards Jupiter than it is towards the sun. Yeah. Yeah. Go to the Jupiter side. Yeah. Is all the planets, are they just in a straight line?
Starting point is 00:18:20 No. They're all in their own orbit. They're all over the place. I would guess at some point they could be all lined up, though. Some of them are. That's when you have eclipses and stuff, right? That's like the moon. The entire history of the United States has happened.
Starting point is 00:18:35 There hasn't even been a full Pluto orbit since America was founded. Because it's slow and dumb. It takes hundreds of years to get all the way around. We're almost back to a full revolution for pluto wow so which would be one year for them this would be their one year yeah for all those people on pluto one of that's what if that's the uh the ages like you know in the bible what if that's they if it if it was age like that it'd have to be the opposite way, though, because people were living much older. They'd have to be, yeah, closer to the sun, faster.
Starting point is 00:19:10 But they were like 900 years old. Yeah, on Pluto, you'd be one years old coming up. Yeah, but what if it was you spinning? Back then. Now we're talking. There you go. They spun, and the Earth was, and that's how they counted it. You know, there's a picture of the planet Pluto, or whatever they call it,
Starting point is 00:19:31 and it looks like the cartoon dog Pluto is on the side of it. Oh. They might have put that. Yeah. Someone else might have put that. Because, I mean, Pluto went away. They got it. They got it, though. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:48 Yeah. So this is the real picture. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it looks like the dog. Would you have seen that if somebody didn't put the picture of Pluto next to it? We would want, yeah. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:19:59 I'll be honest with you. So if you're listening, there's some discoloration on the planet Pluto. Oh, there you go. Vagu on the planet Pluto. There you go. Vaguely the shape of Pluto. It looks a lot like Pluto. That helps our listeners. It looks more like Mickey Mouse. But look at the ear.
Starting point is 00:20:13 It looks like Pluto. Yeah, I mean, I'd say it looks like Pluto, and I think... You could talk me into Goofy. I think it's all a game. They're playing a game on us. Now, this is the picture that first popped up when I Googled it. I was like, Dusty, that might be a Photoshop. When did they?
Starting point is 00:20:29 It's official NASA photos here. Yeah. When did they? Because Pluto went away, and they said it's not a planet. And then now it's a planet. We have a picture of it now? Well, it never went away. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:40 It was always there. They just said it's not a planet. They just said it's no longer classified as a planet. Because it's a dwarf planet. That's right. Yeah. It didn always there. They just said it's not a planet. They just said it's no longer classified as a planet. Because it's a dwarf planet. That's right. Yeah. It didn't meet the criteria. And I just know this because I had a joke about it.
Starting point is 00:20:53 And that was from 2022. That was from last year. Playing jokes on us out here. Noyel Jones. Noyel, right? Yeah. I like that name, Noyel. What's your name, Noyel Jones. Noyel, right? Yeah. I like that name, Noyel. What's your name, Noyel?
Starting point is 00:21:09 Is that what you're saying? You're definitely going to go, what are you trying to say? Yeah, yeah. Noyel. Noyel? Noyel? Noyel Jones. I thought you would have said Noly.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Noly. I bet it is Noly. I don't know, but. Noly Jones. Noyel. I like Noyel. Yeah, Noyel. I hope it's Noly I don't know but Noly Jones Noil I like Noil I hope it's Noil Noil Noil
Starting point is 00:21:30 Noil Maybe just trying to Maybe Noel Yeah they got to call him something else Noel Noel Could be Noel Noel
Starting point is 00:21:38 Noel Jones N-O-Y-L-E Noil Noily In Nate's defense Thanks Noil N-O-Y-L-E. Noyle. Noyle. In Nate's defense, thanks, Noyle, Texas is bigger than any individual country in Europe, which I believe is probably the fact he had likely heard previously and slightly misremembered. Noyle, I'll tell you what. Someone gets it, Immaturity gets it, Noyle.
Starting point is 00:22:03 Well, that's what I said that day. That was nice, no oil. Texas is probably bigger than England. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Here's a picture of Texas compared to some of the larger countries in Europe. Yeah, I mean, we're half of them in there. Yeah, we're –
Starting point is 00:22:19 You're halfway right. Well, some space left over, honestly. Yeah. We got plenty of room plenty of room I like how hungry is there at the bottom almost like it's got
Starting point is 00:22:28 like a pot belly coming out of Texas and the country's hungry you know what I mean that's what you bring to the show yeah Ben Rosser
Starting point is 00:22:42 the news of Nate meeting Tiger is unreal add Michael Jordan that is my dream foursome golf group to play with curious
Starting point is 00:22:49 curious curious as to what Nate's dream foursome would be probably those two Tiger and Jordan you got one more Tiger
Starting point is 00:23:01 Jordan bring baits I would say this foursome right here. Yeah, this would be a dream foursome. I mean, just, I could get my own cart. Us three have to ride together? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'd need, no, I'd want everybody to have their own cart just to. I'd just come along. You guys would need another golfer, but I would come along. Yeah. Well, someone said you could do the pesticide for the green.
Starting point is 00:23:28 Yeah. I think Ben said that. Yeah, you'd go to work. Yeah. Yeah, I would say Tiger, Jordan. I'm trying to think who else would be. Those are golfers. I'd want to be a golfer.
Starting point is 00:23:39 I mean, you could. Tom Brady? I feel like he's like the same age as you. Yeah. That lady who held up the sign about America's team? Yeah, yeah. Trying to think like football or like another – OJ?
Starting point is 00:23:54 Yeah. I mean, he'd be – He plays golf. He'd be the most interesting. That would be like a crazy one. Henry Cho told a story on stage this weekend about playing and a guy in his group
Starting point is 00:24:07 hit into OJ oh OJ comes down you know the story yeah and very angry and Henry said
Starting point is 00:24:15 he didn't really hit into him it just kind of rolled up kind of close OJ came down very angry and laid into him and as he
Starting point is 00:24:22 walked away got to his cart his buddy said oh yeah you didn't kill anybody yeah yeah and laid into him. And as he walked away, he got to his cart, his buddy said, oh yeah, you didn't kill anybody. It's a very funny story. That's what I always think.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Like when people lose their mind like that and you're famous, like it would be enough, like that's enough to go like, I just wouldn't yell because you just don't, they're going to go like i just wouldn't yell because you just don't they're going to be like was that and then you're the guy who people think killed someone now i think this is the fresh off of this is in the mid to late 90s yes yeah just happened so this was literally all anybody in the world was talking about imagine just seeing oj
Starting point is 00:25:02 he just out of court yeah imagine seeing him on the green while you're waiting to tee off. Yeah. Oh, gosh. Trying to think. If you had Tiger and Jordan as your foursome. You need another greatest of all time. You need another. But then you have to be an athlete, though.
Starting point is 00:25:18 Yeah. Yeah, I would think I would throw it, like, not throw an athlete in there. Bring your dad or somebody. Well, I mean, yeah. Who's trying to suck the fun out of this? Bring Laura. Yeah, Derek was just here. I mean, Derek golfs.
Starting point is 00:25:32 He's going to be the caddy. I think he'd probably enjoy it. He'd go, oh, yeah. Yeah, I guess it's Laura, Harper, and my dad, and me, and Holly, our dog. And my dad and me and Holly, our dog. I was thinking about an interviewer, someone that's a good talker and can get stuff out of them. I guess I would try to be that, but I'd have to be the one trying to get out of it. Is this living?
Starting point is 00:26:03 Living or dead? I'm saying living. We'll have to? Living or dead? I'm saying living. Yeah, I'm saying living. You know, like a Bob Costas there or somebody? Just to facilitate? Yeah, someone that's like, just keep it moving. Let's keep it. All right, Tom Cruise could be fun.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Or the complete opposite. Well, I think Tom Cruise could pull it all out. I think we'd all be believing a few things afterwards. And then we'd all be very close. You'd be on a spaceship. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe I would throw in Tom Cruise.
Starting point is 00:26:31 But Tiger and Jordan are going to at least – like if you're talking about playing golf where you're going to like, all right, we're going to get through this. Yeah. You're worried about like the quality of the game? You almost need a balance though. Cruise is slowing us down. Tiger and Jordan are such great athletes that they're going to be bonding over being great athletes.
Starting point is 00:26:51 You need someone else to mend. That's why you need me. You know you're not getting in the cart with them. They're in their own cart. They're in their own cart. I would be leaning in their cart being like, Tom is killing me. He goes, I wish I had rode with one of of y'all if y'all want to switch y'all want to talk to him you want to talk to him a little bit no we're not they're like no no we're
Starting point is 00:27:11 not doing that yeah i'll be like do they have to talk to me uh michael jordan would be good i bet michael jordan would be tough though to like meeting tiger was like i think you could get a lot of like it seemed like he he was awesome when I met him. So Tiger would be fun to deal now. I think Jordan would be, I think it'd be a lot. Jordan would be a lot. You'd have to bet like a hundred grand a hole. Yeah, it would be, Jordan would be a lot, I think, to play with.
Starting point is 00:27:38 Like you'd be like, it's exhausting. And you'd want to talk to Tiger. If you had them two, they might be pulling each other away. So then you're like, all right, well, who do I want to? So I'd probably choose Tiger. And then I don't know if I'd bring in Jordan, because if I'm trying to get the most out of it, maybe I'd do Tiger and Tom Cruise.
Starting point is 00:27:59 And then I'm a comedian. I'm me. You've got an actor, an athlete, a comedian. I'll be the talker. And then you need a musician. You don't care about musicians in that way. I'm not going to. That doesn't mean anything.
Starting point is 00:28:11 Mick Jagger. I don't know. He goes, what? I'm like, I don't know, dude. I didn't listen to the Beatles. Yeah. All right. Meryl Streep. Meryl Streep. yeah alright alright
Starting point is 00:28:25 Meryl Streep Meryl Streep it's a fun question Ben you can get a Tom Hanks in there yeah Tom would be nice Tom would sit Tom Hanks would be
Starting point is 00:28:37 someone that's like I'll sit wherever you guys want me to sit yeah you go yeah you go sit in another movie Tom I go right Tiger and he goes what I go I got more let me ride with Tiger for, Tom. I go, right, Tiger? And he goes, what?
Starting point is 00:28:47 I go, let me ride with Tiger for a little bit. I was just telling my whole Tom Hanks thing. I go, this dude is everything. Tiger's the only reason he might watch this guy. He's the only existence of God. I go, right, dude? Don't you think he's too much everywhere? Tiger's to Jordan's like, that's the Hello World guy.
Starting point is 00:29:05 I don't tell him he rides me write him I named my special after you I'm in the car behind him every just he's like I don't even remember saying that
Starting point is 00:29:12 he goes I don't even he goes I think I met a he goes who names a comedy special after a golfer
Starting point is 00:29:19 that doesn't even makes no sense that doesn't make sense hi you guys having fun out there? Talker. MJ. Sarah Sweeney.
Starting point is 00:29:39 Just to clarify, do you prefer the hay bear, let's go folks, and yee-yees in the beginning, or can they be thrown out in the middle of a set if it applies? No middle. I like a yee-yee about mid-set. I mean, you're asking for it. I'm starting to drag a little bit. Yee-yee. At 47 minutes?
Starting point is 00:30:00 Yeah. When you're trying to get to an hour? Yeah, when I'm about halfway through. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I like it when you walk out, and then after that, let's just do the show. Did anybody yell that when you were at the Titans game? Hey, Bear?
Starting point is 00:30:17 I think so. Yeah. People said they yelled it. They didn't know if you heard it. Yeah. I think I heard a couple. Yeah. Yeah. Nice. We were playing the Bears, so they didn't know if you heard it uh yeah i think i heard a couple yeah yeah nice we were playing the bears so i don't know
Starting point is 00:30:28 a lot of let's go bears let's go bear just waving you're like oh they combined oh my goodness look at this look at this waving just going. Entire Chicago Bears football team is behind me trying to get out of the tunnel. I never imagined it'd be like this. MJ! MJ! Remy Veristrati. Veruchstri. Veruchstri. Veristrati Veruchstri Veruchstri Veristrati
Starting point is 00:31:09 I was impressed with the first one Then you went a totally different route Remy Remy They go That name Remy Yeah Remy They go Remy
Starting point is 00:31:16 They go Remy They go alright I got it That's tough Alright give me your last name Verochstistate Verochstate T E is there at the end E-T-E Give me your last name. Varroxtestate. Varroxtate. T. E is there at the end.
Starting point is 00:31:29 E-T-E. It feels like one too many E's in there. I mean, there's 40 other letters before that. But the E's seem jumbled up there at the end. Sprinkles things out. Yeah. Varroxtrate. Varroxtrate.
Starting point is 00:31:44 I recently watched a few seinfeld interviews where he talks about the importance of a daily writing habit and he shows some of his early early jokes handwritten on a yellow legal pad do you write all your joke do you write out your jokes you write every day or just jot down ideas when they come to you interested to get a little behind the scenes insight into how the magic happens. I write it just as they come. I'm kind of all day just mining for stuff. And so you kind of just put it in your phone, and I'll think about it.
Starting point is 00:32:17 I think I need to start a writing habit now. I don't ever do it. But you just got to look up know, just stuff that ideas. I don't know if I don't have a system. I wish I had a system. You have a system? I write mine down. Yeah. What do you write every day?
Starting point is 00:32:33 I try to. What do you do? You just sit with the paper or computer? Type it out. I find though the drawback is, that's just what works best for me. It's harder to get your career going somewhere. The drawback is you're not going to go anywhere. You're so conversational and it sounds like you're hearing it for the first time,
Starting point is 00:32:56 where when you write stuff out, if you're not careful, you're memorizing it and then it becomes like a play. You're reciting, you know, lines from a play. You don't feel like you're in the moment. That's what I find that I've got to be careful about. I was never a big write it out word for word. I find that if you
Starting point is 00:33:14 write it out and then it doesn't work the way you want it to work on stage, that it's hard for me to change the way it's worded because I wrote it down and it's like it cemented itself in my brain.'s i like to just go up and just roll because at this point i got enough jokes to where i can do some jokes throw a new one in if it doesn't work say we're having a good time move on and go into some jokes
Starting point is 00:33:36 that do work yeah yes yeah yeah that's when you want the yese-yee. Yes, exactly. And then, you know, just keep working on it on stage until it works. Yeah. Or it doesn't. And then I record it and put it on TikTok. Do you sit, and when you go write and try to come up with ideas, do y'all just do the free writing or do you do the, did you ever do that? Does anybody know? Free writing is you just supposedly just start typing your thoughts.
Starting point is 00:34:00 So the idea, I don't know if people know this, but it's like you would be like, I'm sitting at this table talking about writing. I can't think of anything. I don't know if people know this, but it's like, you would be like, I'm sitting at his table talking about writing. I can't think of anything. I don't know what to, and you just keep doing that until you something. Do you remember the scene in the sixth sense where they make the kid do free writing and it's just horrible, crazy stuff written all over it. That always scared me from doing that. I don't know what's going to come out. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know what's going on in my head yeah enough
Starting point is 00:34:28 i used to write out stuff word for word like a speech and let me tell you you could tell when i was up there yeah i was just reading it from my head hello everybody and they go what's up baron you go oh yeah't. I went to the store today. Yeah, you got to. Hello. You can find out. I use the same Notes app. I've been using it for seven years.
Starting point is 00:34:52 And you can actually scroll. If I scroll all the way down here, just look at how I was writing stuff. I mean, word for word. Yeah. Heart attack scare. This was a little alarming. I had a heart attack scare recently. Had to rush to the ER. Hooked up the EKG. Listen attack scare. This was a little alarming. I had a heart attack scare recently. Had to rush to the ER, hooked up to EKG.
Starting point is 00:35:09 Listen to this. Is this true? Effective advertisements. I watch a lot of TV commercials. A lot of them I don't think work on me. Home Depot, look, you're not going to get me excited to do yard work, okay? That's how I'm writing it. It's a good joke.
Starting point is 00:35:24 Dennis Miller in there. It's a good joke. Yeah, in there. It's a good joke. Yeah. That's the, that's the, the, the hard part with writing out word for word. It's anytime I would do it, I have a hard time remembering it if I do that.
Starting point is 00:35:34 And you're actually going to punch it up more than you, if you do it the other way. And so it works in like monologue style or like that kind of stuff where it just can become too punchy because you're, it out so you have time to punch it up. And when you do that, you're like, well, now you're kind of not talking like how people talk. Yeah. And so even if you write yours out, there's got to be some, you got some leeway. But I mean, I noticed when I would do it, it was like, well, I don't even talk like this.
Starting point is 00:36:04 Yeah. And then you're also just throwing in so many jokes. It's the, yeah. Right now I have trouble with like, it's like just ideas. I think I have trouble with right now's ideas just because it's like, I've been so busy. And it's like, I'm not going to get to really do anything. That's been my problem. Yeah, you got to like live life to be able to talk about things.
Starting point is 00:36:27 You got to live life. Could you ride by your butler or your driver? Yeah. Like that? Yeah. A lot of comics are doing that kind of stuff. Yeah, they are. And you don't want to do that.
Starting point is 00:36:40 I don't have a butler or a driver. But I have a wife, and that's why you get married that is right and she's the driver uh that is right my wife's coming to pick me up later oh yeah yeah uh how'd you get here aaron but you don't want him to take you out no we're going we're leaving we're getting out of here okay where are you going i'm going to alabama just to hang out you know yeah visit the family i'm gonna try to cram in some you know i'm gonna try to go i got one day yeah so i'm gonna try to like get my mom and my dad and my sister all together and my mom my parents aren't married but they've been divorced for like 37 years
Starting point is 00:37:20 yeah i think they'll be all right yeah yeah have they been together before yeah yeah yeah we're gonna try to get a little hang in with the granddaughter you know yeah get you know really put her in there see which one she likes the best yeah put it between the two yeah like the way they do the dog on who's gonna win a game yeah yes the end of air bud that's what they did too has your parents met parents met the granddaughter yet? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. And I travel a lot. So my wife will have her friends over and it'll be a bunch of girls.
Starting point is 00:37:52 And so my daughter doesn't really like a lot of men, right? She likes me. But if my dad comes around, she won't like to be around my dad, my daughter. So I told my dad, I said, well, she's not around a lot of men. My dad always wants to make jokes was like, well, she's not around a lot of men. You know, my dad always wants to make jokes. I'm like, she's not around a lot of men. He goes, well, you don't know that. You don't know what's going on here when you're not around. And so, so then I'm like, ha ha ha. And then a little while later, you know, she like, he tries to hold her. She's crying. I go, I'm telling you, she just doesn't see a lot of men.
Starting point is 00:38:20 She's not used to seeing men. I'm trying to help him. And he goes, well, you don't know what she sees when you're not around. I go, okay, well, she just doesn't like you then of men she's not used to seeing men i'm trying to help him and he goes well you don't know what she sees when you're not around i go okay well she just doesn't like you then i don't know what to tell you i'm trying to help your feelings yeah you're like your wife's a hoe you know yeah yeah yeah geez man take it easy dad yeah trying to help you here yeah glad you got it out here before you got down to them yeah yeah i need a little outlet yeah uh so mike what's got one to read oh yeah i'm outside 80 at gas stations that is i did the math one time between gas, and I was buying a lot of my groceries at gas stations. It was a real dark time in my life.
Starting point is 00:39:09 Wow. I was spending more at gas stations than rent, like for sure. Good thing you don't live near a Buc-ee's, huh? That'd be a problem. Yeah, that'd be fun. Eating at a gas station, it's not bad, though. You get okay stuff there yeah especially they got the little rack with like sandwiches and yeah there's no rules when you go in there
Starting point is 00:39:31 you finally you know you didn't get one with like mcdonald's or something inside of it i'm gonna get something like that it's just like a little family marathon by my old house i go there every day yeah uh. David Biggs. We were at Nate's special, and at one point, we saw Aaron standing in the row in front of us, in front of his assigned seat, talking to people.
Starting point is 00:39:53 When he went back to his seat, instead of walking around, he climbed over the row of seats, seemingly putting his whole weight on a chair. My wife commented that she is happy he's lost enough weight to feel confident in such a maneuver.
Starting point is 00:40:06 It appears no chairs were harmed in the taping of Nate's special. I think we have video of it. No video. Do you remember this? Well, I do that a lot now. It's a confident move. It's fun to do. You don't want to have to go, because the worst, literally,
Starting point is 00:40:23 one of the top five things I hate doing the most is having to get out of an a row oh somewhere and be like sorry guy and then they have to stand up i hate it i hate it i hate it so much so if i can just jump over yeah and there's nobody up there i'll do that any chance i get they have chips on the ground on the chips on the chips. I can, yeah. I mean, I'll go two rows to go out if it's empty. Right. Yeah. I'll sit there and, yeah. Yeah, I'm with you.
Starting point is 00:40:50 Well, you're nimble now. Yeah, that's a good word. I'll get that. Floating around. William Byrne. I could listen to an entire episode of Aaron just riffing on what kind of person he thinks Dusty is. So far, he has mentioned that Dusty seems like the type of guy who uses the wind to tell direction, wears full pajamas with a sleeping hat, and eats sugar cubes now and
Starting point is 00:41:12 then instead of candy. Now and then instead of candy. I've not even heard these descriptions. Oh, I've said them right to your face. Yeah. I've got a few more if you want to hear it. I got a few thoughts on who you are. He's got some other plans.
Starting point is 00:41:24 Yeah. I bet you always use a broom instead of a vacuum. I do like a few more if you want to hear. I've got a few thoughts on who you are. Let's get some other plans. I bet you always use a broom instead of a vacuum. I do like a broom. I do like a broom. I used to, when I waved tables, we had to sweep the carpets. And I like to sweep carpet. It is fun to sweep carpet. Kind of hard, though, and it kind of bounces up.
Starting point is 00:41:44 Well, you know, it's all about the technique. You do smaller strokes with the – Yeah. I think – yeah, I don't think it's like carpet at your house. It's like that carpet like, you know, play basketball. It's not like a shag rug. Yeah. Yeah, you don't – yeah. It'd be tough to sweep shag.
Starting point is 00:41:57 You said carpet. You play basketball? Yeah. Parag B. Shaw. My name is pronounced Parag. You nailed it. I said it. Parag. Parag. Yeah. Parag B. Shaw My name is pronounced Parag I said it, Parag Parag When you watch other comics, do you translate the joke
Starting point is 00:42:12 into something clean? Do you think that it could have been clean just as funny if it was done like this? And there are times where you would suggest a clean version to a close comedian Are there times where you would suggest a clean version to a close comedian friend? there times where you would suggest a clean version to a close comedian friend i realize that your objective is not convert is not convert other comics but i am interested but i'm interested to see if you have
Starting point is 00:42:34 any thoughts about other people's bits the only one i would say are not someone specifically but there's times where you can tell you're like well the joke would be clean if you just didn't curse in it so there's you definitely see comics where you're like i the joke would be clean if you just didn't curse in it so there's you definitely see comics where you're like i mean they could just that would be a clean joke and they're just cursing for no reason or you know for whatever maybe that's how they talk but it's uh yeah you could do that i actually was listening to a friend's uh he sent me some jokes the other day asking what i thought and one of them i i, well, there's no reason for this to be dirty. Your joke, you just said a bunch of things that made it dirty.
Starting point is 00:43:09 And then he had another one where like the punchline was, you know, dirty. And I'm like, well, that's funny. And you can't change that to make it clean. You know, I feel like that's my, I guess I'm saying the same thing you're saying. If there's no reason for it to be dirty, don't have that in there. But sometimes dirty is the only way it's funny in a certain joke. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:35 I mean, yeah, it's, yeah, I would, you know, I think there's been times where people were where it's like, you're, yeah, if you're close enough some of it i mean look uh you know the specials we're gonna be putting out uh which uh i i'm not positive but they should be they're becoming i'm hoping to come out something in march the vecchiones and uh but i'll give you a big big letter by no one he's gonna but like vecchiones was like you know it's like vecchione's was like you know it's like vecchione's already basically clean you're like you could you know and when he comes on the road with me it's like yeah you can just be you know he was not that dirty but he's got dirty he does have dirty stuff but he was basically clean and it was like so you is that he had plenty to be
Starting point is 00:44:19 like yeah you could do a special you're not gonna lose much just you're not gonna to lose much. He's not going to lose anything. And then so it's – there's that aspect to it where you can just go, yeah, that doesn't need this. Or you can – you know, yeah. But it's – there's times where I've seen jokes where you go like, that's basically a clean joke. They can make clean, and I don't know why they're cursing. You know, unless it's just the way they talk because some guys just some guys curse you go to new york i mean they just you know not all new yorkers but when i was you know a lot of people in new york i mean they just yeah they curse and they don't even everybody's current they're not
Starting point is 00:45:00 the parents are cursing they're like even if you, the curse is going to be that much more powerful when you really need to use it. I agree. Yeah. But it's, you know, people are getting so conversational now that it's like they use a lot. It's when they use it, when they're cursing just to be, you can tell it's like they're trying to think of the next thing, and then you're like, I mean, there's no, you're just using it as saying like.
Starting point is 00:45:26 It's like saying, uh, or something. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. New York, especially. I mean, like we got a friend, I guess everybody here knows Jordan Jensen and she is very funny. And I, she opened for me one time and it was like, I told her, I was like, you know, just try to keep it relatively clean.
Starting point is 00:45:40 And she cussed so much, but it like it really was like you didn't even really notice it because it just kind of seemed to come so natural to her that it i don't know if i were to cuss a bunch on stage it would be like whoa yeah take it easy but with her it just kind of flowed out in a way that i don't know you don't really notice it. Yeah. Yeah. Kyle Boynton. I just want to make sure. Huh? I'm sorry, there's a photo that goes with this.
Starting point is 00:46:12 I just want to make sure. Kyle Boynton. Noyle Boynton. That'd be a fun one. I just wanted to make you aware that I'm an instructor and baseball coach at a college in Indiana. And I placed this question on one of my quizzes for my team sports class. I'm not sure if this is more of a bash on Tom Brady or if this student truly sees the impact that Nate has had on the game of football. Either
Starting point is 00:46:38 way, he missed it. So if you're listening, it says, it's a quiz. Which one of these individuals is not a person who has impacted the game of football? The choices are Tom Brady, Jim Brown,
Starting point is 00:46:51 Jim Thorpe, or Nate Bargatze. And this student chose Tom Brady. Boom. Wow.
Starting point is 00:46:56 Boom. This student gets it. That was loud. MJ. MJ. I'd bring this up. Golfing with MJ and Tiger Woods.
Starting point is 00:47:09 Yeah. I've impacted the game of football. More than Tom Brady. Absolutely. Tom Brady's too good. There's no impact on it because you can't. It's too, you can't even catch him. I gotta think Kyle Boynton here
Starting point is 00:47:28 is maybe not a great teacher. I mean it's like he's teaching a sports class here, right? And he, I mean come on. Yeah. I like it. I mean no offense to your impact on football, but I mean, you know, you would think you would miss the Jim Brown or Jim Thorpe before Tom Brady.
Starting point is 00:47:44 Yeah. My guess is that Stu did not read that question close. think you would miss the Jim Brown or Jim Thorpe before Tom Brady. Yeah. My guess is that Stu did not read that question close. He did not. I've never heard of Jim Brown. I think they read it. Yeah, he probably read it. Probably dyslexic. Read it backwards.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Which in these visuals had the biggest impact on the game of football. They still got it wrong. Heather Waldridge. I feel Dusty's pain in terms of pocket knives being denied. I always have a knife in my purse. While I was in the restroom, there was a lady that had not taken the tag off her dress. It was one of the cotton string tags, so I couldn't just pull it off her. I said, hold on, I have a knife and pulled my crazy,
Starting point is 00:48:29 and I pulled my crazy knife out of, no, I pulled my knife out of my purse. Her and her friend's eyes got real big and they looked at me like I was crazy, but I was able to cut the stranger's tag off her dress. Heather Waldridge. All right, my kind of woman here. Yeah. Hold on, I got a knife here. I just ran into you in the bathroom i just got that tag off she's
Starting point is 00:48:45 like oh i was gonna return the dress and then she walks out to you standing out there waiting for her and then they're like oh we shouldn't have done that yeah mad like you're almost like no that was a nice lady then she comes out and you're waiting for you go hi honey you're like you got that knife that's the family you got that knife yeah uh it was funny you went to pulled my crazy. You just jumped down a line. Yeah. It's like your brain got to the end of that line.
Starting point is 00:49:11 It just reached out for anything. It's all crazy. It's crazy, but I went back to knife. Like it was almost maybe it's a little bit longer, so I thought. You start on the outsides and work your way in. Yeah. I like adding it in. It adds an impact to the story.
Starting point is 00:49:25 I pulled my crazy knife out of my first. Yeah. You don't read left to right or right to left. You read left and right to center. Yeah. Just kind of yank it. I grab what I can grab. I'm like a planet.
Starting point is 00:49:38 That's how planets were made. Yeah, just pulling stuff down. Just pulling stuff in. Gravitational pull to the center of the paragraph. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yeah, just pulling stuff down. Just pulling stuff in. Gravitational pull to the center of the paragraph. Maybe I'm picturing her. And so then I thought, pulled my crazy knife out.
Starting point is 00:49:51 Yeah. Prince Starnes. Since Dusty spent the entire man versus bear discussion, throwing out random Eddie's. There's a lot of reading today. I can do okay. You've been killing it today, man. Well, you can go, but then it gets, yeah. I start getting tired out.
Starting point is 00:50:12 I'm like an old man that you sit down and go, that's a big day. You're like, what did y'all do? You're like, we got the mail. Let's sit down. Let's do a little radio. We walked down to the mill. Went to the mill mill and head on back. He goes, cut the game on. He goes, it's not a little radio. We walked down to the mill. A little baseball on the radio. Went to the mill mill and head on back. He goes, cut the game on.
Starting point is 00:50:28 He goes, it's not even baseball season. Well, just. Still a little NASCAR on the radio. He goes, yeah, it's just me rocking. Bates just sitting there just every now and again hitting the pencil. Is that a thing, NASCAR on the radio? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:41 I've listened to it. It's very boring, too. Yeah. That seems, yeah, that'd be tough. I'd listen to it. It's very boring, too. Yeah. That seems, yeah, that'd be tough. I'd listen to it. Throwing out random 80s era WWF stars. I'd be interested in knowing who he thinks would be on the Mount Rushmore of WWF. Not WWE.
Starting point is 00:50:57 Now WWE. He said now WWE. I mean, wrestling's so popular now that it's even hard to even say. But, I mean, you know, you got Hulk Hogan, Stone Cold. The Rock. The Rock. There's your three. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:13 And then you probably throw in, I'm not throwing in Ultimate Warrior, but it's like you probably throw in The Giant. So Jim Ross was on The Herd, Colin Coward, and he asked him his Mount Rushmore. And those three, The Rock, Stone Cold, Hogan, and Ric Flair. Oh, Ric Flair. Yeah, for sure. For sure.
Starting point is 00:51:34 A lot of people like to act like Hogan is, you know, they try to like downplay him now, but he was like mega star. No, he's it. He's the one that made it. He transcended. It became mainstream. Yeah. He could maybe, he's it. He's the one that made it. He transcended the sport. It became mainstream. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:48 He could maybe, he's impact like Jordan. Yeah. Truth in wrestling? Yeah. You don't think, like. Maybe. Let's get Kiel to do another multiple choice question for his class. In what way? As what he did for the sport.
Starting point is 00:52:01 What Jordan did for. Oh, you're saying like Jordan. Yeah. I thought you meant he impacted Jordan like. No, no. Hulk Hogan, you don't get him, he does get mentioned, but Hulk Hogan is like
Starting point is 00:52:09 Jordan, Tiger. Like if you talk, you never think about it because you just don't think about wrestling. Yeah. But if you went down and said,
Starting point is 00:52:16 all right, who are the most famous people or whatever? And it would be, you know, you could be like Babe Ruth, Hulk Hogan.
Starting point is 00:52:24 Muhammad Ali. I mean, Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali, could be like Babe Ruth, Hulk Hogan, I mean, Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Hulk Hogan. Hulk Hogan is,
Starting point is 00:52:31 I mean, I mean, yeah, as big as you get. Yeah. He was in movies. The whole world knows him. It's just a name.
Starting point is 00:52:39 It's so much that you know him that I don't even know if people might even think if he's a real thing or not. It's just like a word, you know. He even had a reality show for a while. Seemingly ruined his life.
Starting point is 00:52:47 It spiraled out. But I mean, that's the most famous. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's interesting. You could, like, you don't really think about Hulk Hogan, but Hulk Hogan is, he could sit at a table with all of them and be like, y'all don't even, he's Elvis.
Starting point is 00:53:03 Yeah. I mean, it's i mean you know cold really probably you compare him to elvis probably more than the other ones i had a hulk hogan alarm clock when i was a kid you know i had a little alarm i don't think i don't think stone cold reached hogan's maybe not maybe not you could say the rock is as famous as him now but it wasn't because of re Rex. Hulk Hogan was the most mainstream. I mean, he was, it was, it just didn't get bigger than that because every kid, I mean. And the greatest like heel turn of all time.
Starting point is 00:53:37 Yeah. For Hulk Hogan to go bad, unbelievable. Everybody loved it. Yeah. Because all the little kids that used to eat vitamins and watch him are now like teenagers and we're like, oh, yeah. Now he's like bad boy Hogan. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:51 It was the best. And he came back and then it's like, yeah. Joe Tuonin. My son and I have an ongoing argument. I think that if ants were as intelligent as humans on average, that the ants would be able to take over humans and kill them all. There are 2.5 million ants per one human, and they are strong. My son disagrees and thinks humans would be able to take them out.
Starting point is 00:54:22 What do you think? I think humans still win. I don't know. If they're as smart as we are. Two and a half million to one? Yeah. Your entire body. I mean, like, that means, let's say it takes,
Starting point is 00:54:39 I don't even know if it would take half a million to cover your whole body. How many do you think it would take? Just say if it's 500,000 ants covers your entire body, like they could crawl on your body. That means it's out of every human, there's four kind of things that go. Well, I guess it depends like where are we starting from? Are the ants where they're at right now and then all of a sudden they get smart?
Starting point is 00:55:04 Because we already got chemicals. So if the war just began, we could just start killing them. Yeah. Just massive, everybody kill all the ants. Yeah. Well, what does it mean for them to have human intelligence? Can they all of a sudden talk like human beings and communicate with each other? I think it's like a father and son having fun, and y'all are not.
Starting point is 00:55:27 And that's a part of it. But the son disagrees. The son agrees with me. No, I think they had to fight right now. I think the ants win. We're all equal. We're equal now. They've learned as long as we've learned.
Starting point is 00:55:42 And tomorrow's the ant versus human war. So we're just talking humans versus humans the size of ants. In a way, but there's 2.5 million to one. To one human. But they're the size of us. No, no, no. They're just them. Yeah, I mean, they're the size of ants.
Starting point is 00:56:00 They're just ants. But just like how many ants you think it takes to cover your entire shoe up? But how many can I? A thousand? Yeah. A thousand ants? So I'm saying like, so 500,000 ants. So if there's one, if there's whatever the math of that is.
Starting point is 00:56:14 So two and a half million ants to one person. Yes. But it only takes 500,000 ants to cover one person. So that means it's like, it's actually. They got five times more. They got five times more. They got five times more. Yeah. So even if 2.5 million ants covered you, I mean, I don't know if you could even get them
Starting point is 00:56:30 all. But if you ever- It would be out to, it would be two feet thick. Spray gas on ants? Mm-hmm. How much gas you're going to have? Then you're going to start poisoning you. But you would lose a few humans.
Starting point is 00:56:40 But, you know, 2.5 million covered Brian, and then I doused him with gas, and then it killed them all. Then we're down 2.5 million covered brian and then i doused him with gas and then he's and then it killed them all then we're down two and a half million yeah but i mean when you're they're on top of each other it's not gonna be like it's a single layer i think i think it's like a thick layer on top of you and then they're and they're just and they get inside of your head like they they could sacrifice two million ants they They could sacrifice on a person. It doesn't matter to them. Even though they have the intelligence of a human, they don't have the morality of a human. So they'll just go in there and just.
Starting point is 00:57:12 They just get inside of your body and like, what are you going to do? Gash your body? So what if you lose 100,000? You never know where they're at. I mean, you could have 10,000 of them just underneath your bed and you wouldn't know. But could they survive in your body if they went in? They're going to mess your body up. Their point is they're just trying to end us.
Starting point is 00:57:30 But I just think that we would get, you know. They sacrifice for their queen. So if the queen's like, go get these persons, then they just die. But I think if we were all out war against the ants, we would get really vigilant with it. And every ant you saw, we would. But even if you go spray a garage, you were in this business, you can't get rid of them. They don't just go, that's it. They're still, they get everywhere.
Starting point is 00:57:51 But we would go, you know, we wouldn't just be spraying the garage. We would go big time war on these ants. Yeah. But they're as smart as us. And some of them are just little small, non-biting ants. Yeah. But they're as smart as us. So they're going to know, all right, I know what they're about to go do. And you just can't see them. You just can't see them. I like this conversation.
Starting point is 00:58:12 Yeah. That's a photo that was recently taken of an ant up close. This is an award-winning photograph of an ant's face. And I got to tell you, it looks terrifying. It looks terrifying. Now, just think if that thing had the ability to think like a human being. And they can lift your, I mean. That's the other thing.
Starting point is 00:58:32 Yeah, they're exceptionally strong. Yeah. I just think if we were like, all right, we're at war with the ants. You believe in the human spirit. Yeah, we got to turn it up and we got to go AWOL on these ants. I don't know. Now, the only. spirit yeah we got to turn it up and we got to go a wall on these i don't know now the only without leave we you'd have to yeah we got to go you know wild on these ants i just don't think
Starting point is 00:58:56 you would ever know where they're at yeah i don't think you'd ever know where they're at like it'd be hard to they get underground they get they can just hide and then they can be planted. The other thing is too, you could go to the water, you'd go to the ocean, but then if they get on your boat, it's bad news. But you would go to the ocean. I guess you'd have to get out on water. But I think your saving grace if you're a human being is these ant colonies are not going to be, there's no central organization with the ants.
Starting point is 00:59:23 These colonies are going to be acting independently because they have no way to communicate with each other. So an ant colony in India is not going to communicate with a fire ant colony in Alabama, right? So they're just going to be these sort of independent groups moving around trying to take out humans. We have the power of communication with each other. We can coordinate, we can combine our efforts. I like our chances. I mean, there's just two and a half million to one. I mean, do the math on that. What's how many people are on Earth? It's just past eight billion, right?
Starting point is 00:59:51 So do eight billion, and then what's times two and a half million? I have it here. It's like 40 quadrillion or something. I mean, where are they dispersed across the globe? But you can pour gas into an anthill and then light it. 20 quadrillion. They're all gone. It's a number that's unimaginable.
Starting point is 01:00:11 Yeah. But we can relocate to an island. These ants can't swim across water. 8 million people can't go to the island. What about anteaters? We would train anteaters and they would be on our team. There you go. This is like Infinity War and Avengers.
Starting point is 01:00:24 But there were so many of those creatures that they overtook us, remember? But anteaters would be on our team. There you go. This is like Infinity War and Avengers, but there were so many of those creatures that they overtook us, remember? But anteaters would be on our side. I think it just never stops. It's just the sheer numbers for you. That seems to be the thing holding you back. Well, 20 quadrillion is not even a number. It's so much that it's not even – and it's just the sheer force. I mean, just think if you had to fight 2.5 million ants.
Starting point is 01:00:44 Yeah. Could you beat 2.5 and a half million ants. Yeah. Could you beat two and a half million ants? I could. In a room. With all the resources of the U.S. government? Yeah, I think I could. No, no, no. It's got to be.
Starting point is 01:00:52 I'm breaking it down just one on one. Okay. You in a room with two and a half million ants. I'll fix the room. It also depends on the type of ants. Airplane hanger, I hope. If it's these little sugar ants easy i win yeah but if it's army ants fire ants army like the army answer that you see in like the
Starting point is 01:01:12 jungles in africa i mean they will tear you up now those are the ones that are scared spectracide would be the front line of defense yeah ants can't hide from spectracide do you think you'd get drafted yeah i think so i think you'd be a general. You're talking about these kind of ants right here with these pinchers on them? Yeah, I mean, now those- Yeah, these are terrifying. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, I've seen them tear apart animals on National Geographic.
Starting point is 01:01:34 But just imagine if this thing had hopes and dreams and aspirations. Yeah, I know. And ambition. But I think the ants would get jealous of each other. And they would be like, well, the army ants are really taking over. I don't like that. There's going to be some internal issues with these ants. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:49 Yeah, but you're acting like we're doing just in general a great job as a country. We're holding it together better than these ants are. We're a mess right now. The ants are loyal. You think ants are sitting around having this discussion right now? I think there's loyalty. I think there's loyalty between ants. I think push comes to shove.
Starting point is 01:02:03 There's loyalty among humans too. I have to believe that. Right now we're faced with the ant war. Somebody comes on the news tomorrow and goes, the ants have risen up. They're smarter than us. We don't care about aliens. There's not 20 quadrillion aliens on the planet. We don't know.
Starting point is 01:02:19 There's a lot of big space out there. It's true. And we started throwing trash at them. That's a good point. I think we could take the ants. Yeah. You think you could beat two and a half million ants?
Starting point is 01:02:31 I think so. I say no. Sugar ants? The sheer number would just overdo it. There is smart, anything that you can think of, they can think of. So just remember that.
Starting point is 01:02:39 I would say give me- So they could figure out talking or they could figure out- I think 25 to 30 smart ants would take me out. 25 to 30? Do I get a weapon? They would take my gun. They would pistol whip me.
Starting point is 01:02:54 25 to 30, yeah. Ants right now. He's not even talking about this fictional thing. I think you could find 25 to 30 ants that could take me. We can go out right now and try this. What's the biggest ant? There's also these ants called like a cow ant. And they're like a little bit furry.
Starting point is 01:03:11 And I think they can sting. They're pretty scary. Yeah, so there's two and a half. So just think about those. There's more of those. Because each ant, there's two and a half million ants to a person. So, I mean, there's- They have the giant Amazonian ants.
Starting point is 01:03:31 1.2 to 1.6 inches in total body length. What about the cow ant? Let's look at the cow ant. That thing is terrifying. Yeah. Sounds like a relative. And I'll be honest with you, what if they get the flies involved? You're in big trouble.
Starting point is 01:03:47 That's the other thing. You forget that most of these ants can fly. A lot of ants can fly. So that's going to really change stuff. I mean, this is a cow killer ant. Look at that thing. And that's a female velvet cow killer ant. It kills a cow.
Starting point is 01:04:09 Is that what they- It would seem. I don't think so, though. I never heard of that. I never heard of an ant killing a cow. This name is misleading because velvet ants are actually wasps. These aren't even ants. Wow.
Starting point is 01:04:20 But their label was an ant. But they would team up with the ants if the ants were smart. Yeah. Who do you think they're – yeah, that's what I mean. Like, you got to realize these ants – I mean, two and a half million ants came in this house right now. Yeah. It would be – We'd be done.
Starting point is 01:04:33 It'd be a big problem. Yeah. And then you go outside, and there's just two and a half million there. And that's their territory. There's nowhere for you to go. Right. You're just always running into two and a half million ants. You have to go in the air.. You have to go in the air.
Starting point is 01:04:45 You just go in the air, but like, you would, but it's, it would wipe out, I mean, if this was a movie, the first 30 minutes of movies,
Starting point is 01:04:54 just it's killing half the population. Right. Just because you don't even know what's happening. So if you're lucky and survive, it's going to be
Starting point is 01:05:01 a pretty low movie. You could go to Antarctica. Yeah, a can of hairspray and a lighter would take out a lot of them. How much, but you're going to have pretty low. You could go to Antarctica. Yeah. A can of hairspray and a lighter would take out a lot of them. How much? But you're going to have to have, I mean, just unlimited supply of sticky traps.
Starting point is 01:05:12 Yeah, sticky traps. I could prepare myself as best I could, but it's going to be tough, man. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. I'm going to get messed up. You're going to be exhausted. I'm very allergic to fire ants, too. If they get the fire
Starting point is 01:05:25 ants involved i'm done what do you think they will sit on the sideline well fire ants aren't here in tennessee this is this is another question about global organization if i'm in alabama it's all fire ants down there i'm getting lit up tennessee i like my chances a little better so fire ants i have a little info here we're talking talking about insects today. Oh, wow. That worked out. Fire ants came here on a boat. You lined that last question up right there?
Starting point is 01:05:52 I did. I did. That's good. Fire ants came here on a boat from South America, came to Mobile, Alabama. Wow. Got off,
Starting point is 01:06:00 came up through Alabama. Are you serious? Yep. And now they're spread out in the southeast. I think there are some in Tennessee now. That's kind of how we got here. Yeah. That's kind of how my family got here.
Starting point is 01:06:09 The Bargett Cs. Did you bring the fire ants? Might have. I've never seen fire ants up here. I feel like in Alabama, they're a problem. Like you're walking around and there's just... Well, that's the central there. That's where it started.
Starting point is 01:06:23 In South Carolina and in Alabama, we sell a ton of fire ant killer. In Tennessee, not as much. That's true. Who? Spectracite. We. Once a spectracite, always a spectracite. I had dreams the other day that I wasn't hitting all my stores.
Starting point is 01:06:40 Still a company man. Yeah. Now, do you guys know the difference between a insect and a spider? The number of legs is a big body body segments. You're both correct. Yeah. Insect and arachnid spiders are part of the arachnid. So spiders or arachnids have eight legs.
Starting point is 01:07:01 Insects have six. And then insects have three body parts. Spiders just have two. They don't have a special head. It's just on their body. Who? Spiders. I'm all about insects.
Starting point is 01:07:16 Oh, the head is on their body. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. What about like a granddaddy long leg? Like our head is On our body
Starting point is 01:07:26 You're saying they don't have Their eyes are just a part of their Like chest Yeah that's what I'm trying to say Yeah Like if our Their eyes were just If we had eyes just in our chest
Starting point is 01:07:35 Yeah just right here Insects have a head A thorax and an abdomen Spiders just have a Thorax and an abdomen Yeah But then a granddaddy long leg Just kind of like a little dot
Starting point is 01:07:45 with eight legs. Yeah, they just get... Have y'all ever heard that they're poisonous? They're the most poisonous spider in the world, I think. To eat. Daddy longlegs.
Starting point is 01:07:57 That's just a myth. Is it really? Yeah. According to whom? Snopes. No. Science? Science?
Starting point is 01:08:04 According to science. They always said that their mouth wasn't big enough to bite you, but if you ate them, it would kill you. That's what I heard. Yeah. I don't know about eating them, but I don't know about if they bit you. Yeah. I heard their mouth wasn't big enough to bite you. Yeah. I mean, look, their face looks
Starting point is 01:08:19 like it's just a big nothing where their face is. Two little eyes, barely a mouth just a grand day long legs i was like if you even knew if i could get a hold of you i swear i would tear you up yes he goes every day he goes you think you walk over me like that if my mouth if my of them else was a little bigger, I'd light your old family up. So insects have been used throughout history in wars to win wars. Yeah, but we couldn't take the ants. They're literally using them.
Starting point is 01:09:00 We could beat the ants up. In World War II, Japanese came up with a program where they dropped plague-infested fleas from the air. And they dropped them on some Chinese cities, killed 440,000 people. I mean, right there, dude.
Starting point is 01:09:14 That's not, right there tells you that's your answer. Because they used it in a war. So they would have been, so you're, and these are dumb fleas.
Starting point is 01:09:24 These are not smart animals or insects. But plague-infected. Huh? But plague-infected. I know, but they're just your dumb, run-of-the-mill fleas that don't know anything. And they killed 400,000 people. We're talking about ants that are smart, that are like flying the plane. Their own plane.
Starting point is 01:09:45 They probably get their own plane. They're as smart as us. And they make a body. And then they all start talking. But this has literally happened with dumb insects. But I think it's with humans behind them. So I think if the ants and the humans teamed up, they could take out a lot of humans.
Starting point is 01:10:09 Yeah, but you are going to have that because they have the smarts of us. I think ants, if they even tried it being dumb ants, they could do it because it worked with this flea thing. Why do we never hear about that? 440,000 people killed? Because of fleas. Yeah, and they were working on dropping it on Southern California when the war ended. Wow.
Starting point is 01:10:33 They were going to try that on us, on San Diego. At least it was out there. There we go. Yeah, you just think about trying to get rid of, you know, getting rid of insects. You just can't. Fleas are particularly hard. Yeah. Yeah, talk to them a little bit.
Starting point is 01:10:54 Yeah. You got to be like, listen. Here's a dollar. Get out of here. Now, fleas serve a real purpose, right? Isn't there a reason we need them around? I don't know that. Are they decomposers in the way that ants are? I't know that okay they're good for ecosystem they're good okay what do they
Starting point is 01:11:10 do i don't know but i hear that about every animal yeah well some have no purpose they're like they're like your appendix like we could just get rid of them but i know you can't just get rid of all ants i assume that it would cause problems other insects eat them and that keep them going anteaters yeah we're keeping ants around just for anteaters dude i hope they know how much we're giving up i bet frogs eat ants and spiders yeah ants have no purpose ants have purpose yeah they do yeah they're decomposers yeah they break stuff down what does that mean they literally decompose things. Like if an animal dies, they eat it and rip it apart and break it down.
Starting point is 01:11:50 So if you killed someone, you could put them in a bunch of ants. Oh, yeah. And it'd be, take a while? Mm-hmm. Not that long. Not as long as you'd think. We used to do it. We'd be disappointed if the ants weren't interested in it.
Starting point is 01:12:00 Yeah. Come on. You got to put some butter on you yeah just right i mean yeah i'm sorry go ahead i was elementary school recess we used to have a competition of who could who could leave their hand in the ant pile yeah and uh let me tell you i won and i was like i said very allergic to him wow and it was a real big problem. I mean, I was swollen up like a balloon. I can tell you what. I would have gasped at an iPhone, too, if I knew that's what y'all were doing.
Starting point is 01:12:31 That story makes so much sense now that I know. Your entertainment was just putting your hand in a pile of ants. Came from humble beginnings. Now look at them. It's about the competition. That's right. You tell me I'm going to let some kid beat me. From that to Notre Dame is impressive.
Starting point is 01:12:49 That is impressive. That is impressive. Because I've done that a little bit too, but I didn't go to college. Who doesn't think? Dusty P's on them. Dusty, I wouldn't even probably have paid attention to what Dusty said. I would have been like, yeah, of course Dusty did. That's what.
Starting point is 01:13:05 So the deadliest animal in the world, I think you guessed this on another episode. Mosquito. Mosquito can kill up to a million people a year. Scientists say throughout the history of the world, there have been 108 billion humans that have ever lived. 52 billion of them died from malaria from a mosquito. God. Almost half. Mosquitoes versus humans, if they develop the intelligence, we're done. 32 billion of them died from malaria from a mosquito. Yeah. Almost half.
Starting point is 01:13:29 Now, mosquitoes versus humans, if they develop the intelligence, we're done. Yeah, I mean, I think ants are in the same boat, but yes, mosquitoes you can't even see. Yeah. We'd make special glasses. I bet that's the first thing you'd have to do. And citronella everywhere. And then you wouldn't want to, what? Citronella everywhere. That's what gets them?
Starting point is 01:13:45 Well, you know, that repels them. Yeah. I don't know what that is, but the Gates Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates have. The Gates Foundation, they're pushing artemisin, and it's a new anti-malaria drug that's helping to keep people from dying from malaria. You know what I just thought of in my head? If your name was Bill, it would make sense too. Me? I don't know why.
Starting point is 01:14:15 Bill Bates? Bill Bates. I think I thought of it. It's the reason why I thought. If you were a Bill, you'd be like, yeah, yeah. Yeah, of course. I don't know if I'd see another Aaron. It's like, this makes sense.
Starting point is 01:14:29 And then you're the one that you're like, you could be Bill too. Yeah. There was a football player, Bill Bates, played at University of Tennessee and played for the Cowboys. And I would say in my life, more than next to Brian, people who mistake me called me Bill. Yeah. Did you get his autograph?
Starting point is 01:14:45 I did, actually. He's in the Tennessee Sports call me Bill. Yeah. Yeah. Did you get his autograph? I did, actually. Dang it. He's in the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame. There he is. Bill Bates. Bill Bates. Bill Bates. Look at that.
Starting point is 01:14:53 Yeah. How old were you? I was a kid. They came. Okay. That's good. We're getting somewhere. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:01 I was in my 30s, like sometimes. But they came and played a charity basketball game. And I got a bunch of University of Tennessee players. How did you get tickets to that? It was at Lebanon High School. Yeah, I know. I'm joking. He played – won a Super Bowl.
Starting point is 01:15:18 Oh, played in Super Bowl. Oh, wow. It was on the – yeah. I think he was one of the guys that Herschel Walker famously ran over in college. No, he was a three-time Super Bowl champion. Yeah. Good. Pro bowler.
Starting point is 01:15:33 Yeah, he was – Two-time second-team All-SEC. Yeah. I mean, yeah. Guys, show some respect. He was a stud. As a coach, as a player, he was there. The Cowboys, when the Cowboys were the Cowboys.
Starting point is 01:15:45 Oh, yeah. Yeah. From Farragut. What county is that in? Knox County. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, he was in Knoxville.
Starting point is 01:15:54 Yeah. High school, Farragut. Yep. Undrafted. Undrafted, too. He still played 15 seasons. We're overachievers. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:04 That's what we do. Old Bill Bates. Old Bill Bates. Old Bill Bates. Is that him over there in that picture? This is a different Bill Bates. This is Willis Sherman Bill Bates. Oh, okay. This is Brian's high school graduation photo.
Starting point is 01:16:20 Circa 1907. This is Bill Bates was the head football coach at Fairmount College, now known as Wichita State University from 1905 to 1907. Bill Bates was the head football coach at Fairmount College, now known as Wichita State University from 1905 to 1908. So they have a history of being great. Bates. Being great. Yeah. Carrying it on, guys.
Starting point is 01:16:35 Carrying it on. I'm doing it. Yeah, you're the one signing the autographs. Look who's signing the autographs now. Bill. That's how he says it. He goes, Brian, calm down. Brian. Brian. Brian Bates. Brian Bates. That's how he says it he goes brian calm down brian brian bates brian bates that's how you
Starting point is 01:16:49 sign it give me five more dollars i'll give you the a i don't know i didn't have the money on me uh scorpions kill about 3200 people each year. Those numbers are low numbers. That's like, yeah. I don't even know if I would get, I don't think I might have guessed a scorpion to be a reptile. I don't even know what I would have thought. That's, that's. You think that's dumb?
Starting point is 01:17:16 We should almost edit that out. I mean, out of all the stuff that I've said in my life, and I've topped it off, I don't know if I ever thought a scorpion was a reptile I don't even know how you would think that I don't know
Starting point is 01:17:31 what do you think it is an insect I would I would have probably said definitely just not a reptile and you can go from there you would have started from there yeah
Starting point is 01:17:40 no it's not a reptile yeah might be a mammal out of thought of insect I guess what's not what is it is it it's own thing it's an arachnid it's not a reptile. Yeah. Might be a mammal. Out of thought of insect, I guess. What's not? What is it? Is it its own thing?
Starting point is 01:17:48 It's an arachnid. It's got eight legs there. It is a wild thing. A scorpion. It is. It is crazy. So there was... It doesn't remind me of a frog. The frog or reptile.
Starting point is 01:18:02 It's a heila monster right there. Huh? It's amphibian, right? Yeah. Those are different than reptiles. the frog or reptile it's a it's a it's a it's a monster right there yeah huh it's amphibian right yeah those are different than reptiles so yeah you know
Starting point is 01:18:10 but they're so closely associated the reptiles I think the amphibian is that it comes from but I can't have scorpions they hang out yeah they hang out
Starting point is 01:18:18 yeah amphibian like is a like a fish that turns into a reptile basically like a tadpole yeah starts is like a fish that turns into a reptile, basically. Like a tadpole?
Starting point is 01:18:28 Yeah. Starts out as a fish and stuff. You go, I know where you are. Yeah. It's like where it grew up to where it's now. You go, I know where the house you grew up in. And then they're trying to, he goes, no, no, I'm from out here where you guys. No, you ain't from here.
Starting point is 01:18:40 Yeah, you're from the water. You're from the water. That's right. Made a change. So there was a Roman emperor that attacked Mesopotamia. I hope I said that right. There's more and more wars that people have used insects. I know.
Starting point is 01:18:54 And on the other side, there was a 40-foot wall. They had a breach. And the other side, they were using scorpion bombs, just throwing scorpion bombs over the wall. Scorpion bombs? Just throwing live scorpions over there? Just put them in some type of makeshift bomb. Yeah, scorpions and throwing bombs over the wall. Scorpion bombs? Just throwing live scorpions over there? Just put them in some type of makeshift bomb. Yeah, scorpions and throwing them over the wall.
Starting point is 01:19:09 Well, why does there have to be a scorpion in there if there's a bomb? The bomb is the scorpion. What does that add to it? That's what I'm saying. They just throw live scorpions over there? Yeah, but on their ground in their hand, like they're putting them in something. There's no explosion.
Starting point is 01:19:23 Yeah. It's a ball of scorpions. Put them in like a hamster wheel explosion. Yeah. It's a ball. Probably wrap it on them. Put them in like a hamster wheel and throw. Yeah. Yeah,
Starting point is 01:19:27 probably some twigs or some, they tie them up and then you throw it and it kind of breaks and then the scorpions are just loose. You gotta put it
Starting point is 01:19:35 in some cake. Pretty good relationship. Oh, there's cake here. Yeah. Like a cake cake. Yeah. Yeah,
Starting point is 01:19:40 but with a scorpion in it. You gotta have a good relationship with those scorpions and make sure that they're gonna go do what they're supposed to go do. Yeah. You just hear people go, what's the crack?
Starting point is 01:19:50 Crack the stamp on them. They go, he's idiots. You just hear them talk. You guys are throwing snakes at us. Brian Bates. Brian. These reptiles. King Bates comes over.
Starting point is 01:20:01 What are you doing? What are you throwing turtles over at us? It worked. They eventually had a retreat, and they did not breach the wall. Wow. Wow. And then there was a dictator in Uzbekistan who had a, they called it the bug pit. And he would throw his prisoners down in this 20-foot deep pit with these crazy insects. And these insects would just bite people's skin and just torture them.
Starting point is 01:20:34 One guy was down there for three years. Three years. I wonder if you get used to it. You know? Like you just get like, you don't even, like you're feeling maybe a 10th of what you're actually getting. I didn't know how you could survive. Now that that's an argument for the other side, for the,
Starting point is 01:20:54 for the humans being ants. Cause if a guy can survive that for three years. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know how many he was throwing down there, but just enough to torture the guy. Oh, they kept throwing bugs down there
Starting point is 01:21:05 yeah they probably did enough to keep him alive was he tied up no he was down in a pit and then this guy came and rescued him and they called him
Starting point is 01:21:11 and threw him down there with him too he spent two years down there so he could have just killed the innocent that sounds like you describing that you work at the local L house
Starting point is 01:21:20 in the town you go I heard that guy over there prison bug prison over there. And he goes, you hear it? That other guy broke him out, dead gum.
Starting point is 01:21:29 Got to throw him in there too. And he goes, you want another one? What's an L house? Like you get beer. Like a tavern. Like you're at a tavern. They're like the letter L. It's just the way you said it sounded like it was a small town.
Starting point is 01:21:40 Like I could see you as a, you know, you're the town crier. Yeah. And you just, as you walk around, you know, you walk in. Maybe you don't work there. You sit next to him and he goes, did you hear about that bug prison? And he goes, yeah. Guy got out. He threw that guy and it got him out.
Starting point is 01:21:57 There's two guys over there. Can you believe that? Can you believe that? All right. Well, I'll tell you, this city. This city. I'll tell you what. I don't know. It's not the town I grew up in. I'll tell you that city this city I'll tell you what I don't know
Starting point is 01:22:06 it's not the town I grew up in I'll tell you that much there's the bug pit right there it's pretty horrifying so he couldn't just kill the bugs
Starting point is 01:22:12 I mean if you keep throwing bugs you can't bugs are they don't send you down there with spectracide
Starting point is 01:22:18 I just think he would just smash the bugs and eat them they don't have a dusty that comes and sprays
Starting point is 01:22:24 I guess you're right I mean he probably eventually killed them but they Eat them. They don't have a dusty that comes and sprays. I guess you're right. I mean, he probably eventually killed them, but each one takes a bite or two out of them before he can kill them. But I'm just saying, he's just down there. Was he asleep when they throw the bugs? I think he's in a dark pit. Oh, dark. Yeah, it's dark. Even if it was light, I don't think you're...
Starting point is 01:22:42 Well, if I'm in a pit and it's light and you throw a scorpion down there, I'm going to just go in. I think he's throwing a bunch of buckets. He's throwing buckets. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I think they probably started with one scorpion, and then they go, that's not enough.
Starting point is 01:22:53 He got that one pretty quick. He goes, all right, throw two more down there. Yeah. What'd this guy do? Is there any word on that? I mean, back then, who knows? Looked at, like, painted the wrong house. Stole some mail.
Starting point is 01:23:07 It didn't take much. Yeah. I mean, you were going into a bug prison. If there's a bug prison in your town, you're probably going to go in it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I don't think anybody that puts a bug prison in place is rational. Yeah. That's true.
Starting point is 01:23:23 That's true. in places rational. Yeah, that's true. That's true. In 1989, California had a sudden invasion of Mediterranean fruit flies called medflies. And scientists were like, where are all these medflies coming from? And then this group that called itself the breeders sent a letter to the local newspaper saying, if you don't stop your chemical spraying,
Starting point is 01:23:43 we're going to keep unleashing these fruit flies that destroy your crops and everything like that. And it worked. They stopped. After three days, they stopped doing it. Nobody still knows who the breeders are, but they threatened to keep doing it and releasing these med flies. Wow. Wow. The breeders, meaning they're breeding fruit flies. Yeah, I guess. That's what they call them. Fruit flies are about the most frustrating. One of the more frustrating.
Starting point is 01:24:10 Yeah. Mosquitoes are very frustrating too. Deal with a lot of fruit flies? When you deal with them and when you are amongst them, you got to leave the place. Where are you at? Where are you hanging out with fruit flies? Applebee's.
Starting point is 01:24:28 There you go. You got to leave the place. Where are you at? Where are you hanging out with fruit flies? Applebee's. They go, go eat at a restaurant. That's where I'm dealing with them. Go eat at a restaurant. I just ate at a restaurant this weekend, and there was fruit flies. I mean, they just come out of nowhere, and they like dive bomb you. You're just like, you just happen to swipe it. Is that just a fly? Like a gnat? No, no. it's like a gnat oh but it's like they're always you always said fruit flies because they're they would always be by the if the bar they had like the lemons and limes and
Starting point is 01:24:53 all that there'd be fruit is that a fruit fly yeah these are fruit flies so like by where they keep put all the stuff you know little cherries yeah And then there's just fruit flies would be over there. And you'd always be. It's just like they're annoying. Yeah. You know. That's like in South Carolina, they have no-see-ums. And that's like little gnats that bite.
Starting point is 01:25:16 And they just will swarm you. Yeah. You can swap, but they just come right back. And they're called no-see-ums. No-see-ums. Because you can't see them. Yeah. I think that's a real term for them. No-see-ums. Because you can't see them? Yeah. I think that's a real term for them.
Starting point is 01:25:27 No-see-ums. Like those cow killers? Well, yeah. I mean, yeah. Yeah. So during the Cold War, the United States was looking at ways to use bugs as warfare on Russia. So they did some experiments here in the United States. One of them was Operation Big Buzz, where they dropped 300,000 mosquitoes on Savannah, Georgia. Didn't tell anybody about it.
Starting point is 01:25:52 And they were testing to see if they could put yellow fever on them and see how far they spread out and could maybe kill people. So they did this test, and they dropped 330,000 unaffected mosquitoes on this town. The government did that? That doesn't seem right. Make sure you get those facts right. Savannah is a predominantly black city. During COVID, when they were trying to get people to get the shots, they wouldn't do it.
Starting point is 01:26:23 And some of the longtime people were saying, look, I lived here when you dropped mosquitoes on us and didn't even tell us about it. I wouldn't do it. I'm not going to trust the government. I agree. I mean, why would you? That's insane.
Starting point is 01:26:37 Yeah. And why are we doing this? Because we were going to do it? We were going to use it as maybe as warfare on Russia. We were going to use it as maybe as warfare on Russia. And so they were testing to see if they could put yellow fever mosquitoes and drop it somewhere and infect a lot of people. I mean, dude, how this is not just the biggest story on earth. I know.
Starting point is 01:26:59 It's kind of crazy. Well, I'm shocked that I didn't even know the Japanese one where they killed 440,000 Chinese people with fleas. Yeah. Yeah. That's crazy. Yeah. They did a few of these test. A couple of them in Savannah.
Starting point is 01:27:17 One of them was called Operation Big Itch. And this was fleas, determined if fleas could survive if you dropped them and put something on them. This was in, I think, Utah. They did this testing. And the fleas got out in the plane, bit the pilot, the bombardier, and observer. And so they had to stop doing it because the fleas got loose. 200,000 fleas. Where are you even getting these fleas at? Flea market? You think the flea market is they sell fleas? You think they sell fleas. You think they sell fleas.
Starting point is 01:27:51 Yeah. Where are you getting 200,000 fleas? Some lab somewhere. You breed them in a lab, yeah. Some scientist that we're supposed to trust is in a lab putting. He's also one of the scientists that's the well i'm a scientist you go yeah but you're you're breeding fleas yeah and pour them on people yeah what are you been working on well we're gonna try to put malaria into uh we're gonna drop half a million
Starting point is 01:28:16 mosquitoes into savannah georgia oh we at war with savannah georgia no we think god forbid somebody does this to us. Yeah. So let's do it to us to see. Yeah, we want to know what it'll do. What it'll do. What were the results of that? Well, it says going forward, they used guinea pigs after they actually started biting people.
Starting point is 01:28:38 They started calling humans guinea pigs. It says Big Itch proved successful. Tests showed that not only could the fleas survive the drop, but they also soon attached themselves to the host. So it looks like it would have worked.
Starting point is 01:28:52 The fleas only were active for about 24 hours. So I guess they retire pretty quick. What about the thing in Savannah, though?
Starting point is 01:29:01 What do you mean the fleas, what do you mean they were active? Well, I'm just reading that there, but I think it mean the fleas? What do you mean they were acting? Well, I'm just reading that there, but I think that means maybe fleas attach themselves to a host. And then after 24 hours,
Starting point is 01:29:10 they, I don't know if they die or they just stop doing it or. And you got to just hope that they don't breed. And I guess. Yeah. And completely destroy the town there. Yeah. Well,
Starting point is 01:29:18 I guess that's what the U S was hoping that would happen. Oh yeah. If they, if they did it, if they dropped it somewhere. Hmm. Hmm. Just wild. that would happen. Oh, yeah. If they did it, if they dropped it somewhere. It's just wild, man. It doesn't sound right.
Starting point is 01:29:30 I have more questions. I just trust the government so much. They also looked at dropping caterpillars. This was in Peru. Everybody's hearing about that news story on the radio. And that's where you're at Channel 5. And he goes, you know, they dropped cow pillows. Just boop.
Starting point is 01:29:51 Gotta get my pencil. In 1958, they released 600,000 mosquitoes in Avon Park, Florida. We've been doing this to ourselves for decades. Operation Dropkick, this is called. Mm-hmm. Good heavens. So next time a mosquito is bothering you, remember who's at fault here.
Starting point is 01:30:12 The United States government. Yeah. What's human experimentation in the United States? That means just a ton. Yeah. Yeah. The caterpillars was used for the war on drugs. They were going to be dropped in Peru.
Starting point is 01:30:28 Because they become beautiful like butterflies and everybody just gets off drugs because they go, what a beautiful place. Yeah, bring some peace into the world. Yeah. Now they're going to drop them on the opium fields to eat up all the poppy seeds or whatever. Okay. It's kind of a good way to end the war. I don't know. I mean, anytime.
Starting point is 01:30:50 You still got to go. When were they going to do this? As late as 2002, they were looking into it. I mean, look what the government's already done, dropping bugs, and now you're going, I think their message just got better, going, no, we're doing it for the opium. Yeah. And then you want to be like, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:31:06 Are you? Yeah, are you? And it's not worked if they did it. Yeah. It's not a drug problem now. Yeah. I don't know. I guess they tried it.
Starting point is 01:31:18 It didn't work. I don't think they're doing it now. Probably sprayed pesticides on those opium fields. Yeah. And they're like, hey hey we got a crop to take care of here yeah i would have told you as an anti-pesticide guy well i am kind of anti-pesticide now but i you know but i mean you had to make some money yeah and only he's going to hire the hard part about the people that will work pesticide is there's the people that don't
Starting point is 01:31:41 believe in pesticide but he ain't gonna get another job inside of a building you know that's exactly right yeah you gotta make the money while you can you know yeah that is a guy that's willing to spray just stuff around his body smell it all that you yeah i mean i really just sold it i mean mean, once in a while, a bottle would break. Yeah. But I was just like telling people that my stuff's the best. Yeah. I didn't grow the drugs. I just sold them. Right. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:32:14 I wasn't doing them. I was selling them. Did you do pesticide at your house? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I still do. Because there's no need to hire bug guys when you can just spray yourself.
Starting point is 01:32:28 Mm-hmm. Sure. Because you know how to do it. Yeah, I mean, it's pretty easy. I mean, they make it seem like it's complicated. So you feel good about your house if the ants come to life? Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:41 I mean, I'm ready to go. I'm ready to combat ants at any time. Mm-hmm. What about Japanese beetles? Well, the Japanese beetles are a real problem. I mean, I don't have them around here that I've had to deal with, but they make nets, Japanese beetle traps. Yeah. But you have a little lure in there that brings them to the trap.
Starting point is 01:33:01 So you just bring them all to your area and then you trap them. But the question is, are you bringing more than you would have otherwise? They just swarm, huh? Yeah. Oh, boy. We used to have what you called June bugs. And they say you could take a June bug and you tie a little string around one of its legs and let it fly around. I've done that.
Starting point is 01:33:22 Like a kite. Yeah. Really? Yeah. Hmm. I've done that like a kite yeah really yeah uh cockroaches have been around for 300 uh million years and they would survive a nuclear war you guys ever heard that yeah i think i had a joke about i think you did too i've never seen that yeah about nuclear war you said you said something like do you know that or do you just know that we can't look it up yeah yeah yeah i mean they always say that about cockroaches that they've been around forever that they could survive a nuclear war and i'm like yeah maybe a
Starting point is 01:33:58 lot of stuff would let's find out yeah Yeah, they would... Yeah. Why did they think they could survive? Something about just they can handle a high level of radiation. And they've got examples. When the bombs were dropped in Japan, they found perfectly healthy cockroaches from a thousand feet away from where the bomb dropped. Just minding their own business. Just like, what happened to the food i was eating
Starting point is 01:34:25 they can survive a month with no food or water in two weeks with their head cut off two weeks very frustrating two weeks yeah it's just what a mess yeah for the head and the body do they operate independently like is the head still going i don't know i don't think so independently? Like, is the head still going? I don't know. I don't think so. Two weeks. Now, there's 14,000 different species of ants.
Starting point is 01:34:49 So that could help us because they got to all get it together. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. They're not going to be friends. They're going to end up fighting each other. You know that. Yeah, but I think their first goal is to take over us. And then they run the world, and then from there, it's the inner. But who's the same?
Starting point is 01:35:11 They have the same bond. We have unity. They have the same bond. That's true. But let's say this, though. What if there's a group of ants? We've been stepping on them for years. We've been asking for it.
Starting point is 01:35:22 Years. There's a group of ants that is on our side our side and it's like we actually need the humans the humans create a lot of things that we eat uh-huh uh yeah like planet of the apes there's ever seen that yeah i've seen all of them actually the old and the new but they're the they have crops and stuff like that like i mean i don't know if we're creating. It's like everything will just grow up, and then they'll just eat the grass. But what if there are ants that have been living off the landfills or something, and they're like, we actually have grown to need the humans.
Starting point is 01:35:55 Yes. And now we're going to defend them. So we have a symbiotic relationship. Yeah. Yes. There have to be a bunch of them, because there's 20 quadrillion of them. I mean, that's so many. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:36:11 It's eight. It's an unimaginable number. It's a lot. 20, like, yeah. I always thought, we might talk about this one. If you could pick to have a penny of anything, what would you say? But I'd say a grain of sand because then you'd have an unimaginable number. But you could say ants and be like, you're doing good. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:36:39 You're doing good. You're doing great. If you're 20 quadrillion. Yeah. At $40. What would be a penny of every human, though? Like 8 billion. What's that?
Starting point is 01:36:49 How much money is that? 8 billion pennies. 80 million or something. I'll take it. Yeah. It's not as crazy, though. If someone said that. If they told you to do this, if someone said, all right, a genie comes and goes,
Starting point is 01:37:03 you get a penny of anything and first guy goes humans the second one's like a grain of sand you're like damn coming yeah yeah because then you're back to as poor as you just were yeah if they get here's your 80 million dollars and they go here's your quadrillion dollars. You're like, I mean, get out of here with your $80 million. You would be poor. You wouldn't even be able to ask for stuff. Yeah, $80 million.
Starting point is 01:37:34 Nothing. But it's like that guy would be super rich, but I would still have $80 million. In comparison to him, I'd be poor. I'd just be like, I'm going to live in a different part of the world than you. But I wonder if each of you, I mean, you just sit there just going, you have $80 million. You're like, you know people that have $80 million. There's people that have $80 million. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:55 That guy, he's the richest ever. Yeah, he's almost just as like an arbitrarily just infinite number. But now there's a target on his back. Yeah, but you go, that guy could be like, I'll give you a trillion dollars, just quit talking. And he wouldn't even notice that's gone. Yeah. Because he has 80 quadrillion.
Starting point is 01:38:18 So key would be to talk a lot around this guy. Yeah, and go, I wish I would have thought about it. I didn't know we could say grain of sand. I have said you know stars i would have said something like that i was trying to be nice you just got to complain enough yeah and you go all right dude here's a billion dollars trillion dollars i just want to be done with this yeah would you have to pay taxes on that you think if the government found out that you had a genie, they'd be like, well, we heard about your wish. Yeah. You got to give the taxes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:52 Yeah. You could probably just, yeah, you would just be like, nah, you could just buy an arm. You just go, I'm not going to pay taxes on it. You just take over America. Yeah, the world. I mean, you just go, I'll pay, you know. You could probably pay people a million dollars to me. I'll give you $150,000 a year tax-free and be my army. Do you accept pennies, though? Can I pay in pennies?
Starting point is 01:39:17 Can I pay in pennies? It's all in pennies. Might I pay in change? Yeah. It's all in, yeah. That's the only downside. Yeah. That's the downside.
Starting point is 01:39:25 Do you think that guy could defeat all the ants? I mean, he'd need, you need like a year to get prepared. Just go up on your penny mountain. Yeah. I think he would, he would have to live on some, he'd live in the water. He'd have his own island. He'd have his own island he'd have his own island and those ants
Starting point is 01:39:45 can't get across water I don't care how smart you are you can't swim across water but if there's so many of them if they're smart as us you'd find a way they'd build their own
Starting point is 01:39:53 little boat what do they do blow up a life raft and ride it over no they take over a boat they build an ant bridge there's boats everywhere now everybody's dead
Starting point is 01:40:00 so the ants have a way they look up the schedule of the ferry and then they're like well if you can look up the schedule of the way. They look up the schedule of the ferry. And then they're like, well, the leaves are 3 o'clock. If you can look up the schedule of the ferry, they can look up the schedule of the ferry. What are they? They go to a laptop and type it in? No.
Starting point is 01:40:12 They can go wait for a ferry. They just take over the boat. I don't think they're waiting in line. I don't think they're just going. Ants can build bridges, though. They link themselves to each other. So in this hypothetical, they not only have the intelligence of human beings, they have all of our knowledge, too. A way to learn it.
Starting point is 01:40:31 A way to learn it, but they're starting from, golly, we're 30,000 years ahead of them. Yeah, yeah. But they can dig into our research. They can Google. They're smart enough to Google. Okay, they're smart enough. Wikipedia. They're us smart. I would say they're just equally as smart as us. So're smart enough to Google. Okay, they're smart enough. All right. Wikipedia. They're us smart.
Starting point is 01:40:45 I would say they're just equally as smart as us. So it's us versus them. It's like human brains and ant bodies. Human brains and ants. That's tough. That's tough. There's just so many. But they're that little.
Starting point is 01:40:57 So that's the thing. Yeah. So the shortest lifespan of any insect, the mayfly, it lives 24 hours. That's fun. It's a tough day. It's a good day. Yeah. It's a good day.
Starting point is 01:41:12 You live the life that you've been given. Live every day like it's your last. That should be the mayfly slogan. Live every day like it's your last. You never know when you're not going to be here. It gets hidden to 40 minutes. Imagine killing a mayfly. It's like he only had a day.
Starting point is 01:41:34 If a mayfly could let me know it's a mayfly, I would let it be. Just let it ride out. But how do most of them die? Old age? Heart attack. They're born, they breed, and then they die. They have heart attack? They get too excited.
Starting point is 01:41:50 They fly around too much. Do insects have hearts? I would say yes. I don't think so. I don't think they look like ours. It's like more of a robot thing inside of it. Yeah. Here's a grasshopper.
Starting point is 01:42:08 It's got a heart. It doesn't look anything like our heart. We're just agreeing to call it a heart. The heart seems like it has three, and it's kind of in the back. Yeah. Where some other stuff is. Yeah. Well, that's why they can make all the noise in the back.
Starting point is 01:42:23 Yeah, they're like. And those legs. That's how their legs get- Yeah. They get going. You ever seen the front of a grasshopper? It's like a drunk. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:31 The back's like, come on, man. Get it together. I love how the diagram is kind of like, yeah, it's in this area. Yeah. Heart's around here. It's around here. Yeah. There's a squid inside of this.
Starting point is 01:42:42 We're not sure. Maybe the heart is the whole length. Oh, no, that's aorta. Aorta. Aorta. Mm-hmm. Yeah, the heart's somewhere around there. Maybe it is the aorta and the heart are all one.
Starting point is 01:42:55 Being an insect's got to be just a panic of just every day is like, oh, such a big day. Yeah. You know? Yeah. You can't take a day off as an incident there's no day you really can't you can't you can't go son i'm just gonna rest today yeah watching football but these ants they all have a point like there's worker ants and there's the queen ant and uh-huh they all have they all have a role yeah role to play and i hope one day to stop that i think you introduce human intelligence the human ego
Starting point is 01:43:29 the human attitude a lot of those institutions just go out the down the drain they're not going to follow a queen you know not blindly not blindly no england still does but they eventually you know they agreed that queen you're not really doing much. But the unity that we have that you're saying we would have over the ants, they would have that over us. We've been doing way more to the ants than they've done to us for years. So they're going to be mad. But you're saying also they'll have ego. So they'll be infighting.
Starting point is 01:44:04 Yeah. I'm not going to be a worker ant. I don't think they're going to be a perfect unit. Yeah, so say a billion of them have egos and they fight it off. There's still 20 quadrillion
Starting point is 01:44:20 of them. There's still 19 quadrillion. So, I mean, it's just... But the queens are going to be on a power them. There's still 19 quadrillion. So, I mean, like, it's just, you know, like. But the queens are going to be on a power trip. That's what I think. But it's like the military. So, like, they're militarized. So, they come from a military background.
Starting point is 01:44:34 So, it's like, follow the, so it is the, we have the egos because you're like, we're not, if we were all in the military, I think it'd be much different. But we're not. So, everybody's coming from all these different things. The ants are very militarized. You wake up. It's like, this is what'd be much different. But we're not. So everybody's coming from all these different things. The ants are very militarized. You wake up, it's like, this is what time we get up, everybody, alarm goes off, we're hitting it. But I think there's no leadership structure in place for these ants. The queen.
Starting point is 01:44:55 Collectively. Those are for individual colonies. There's no main queen. Yeah. There's no overarching. But there could be. I bet one of the big ants becomes a main queen. Do you think they'd do it democratically, they'd have an election, and then everyone would be happy with it? There's no overarching. But there could be. I bet one of the big ants becomes a main point.
Starting point is 01:45:05 Do you think they'd do it democratically, they'd have an election, and then everyone would be happy with it? I think whatever the big... They'd be a war of the ants. There could be an alignment. I think it would be about, hey, we need to get rid of these humans. And then maybe there's a point where they go, we could use the humans to get rid of the ants that become a problem. Okay. Because they can start becoming a problem of the ants that become a problem because they can start
Starting point is 01:45:25 becoming a problem for the ants. So then maybe there's a side group of ants that are like, you know, they got protest signs of being like, well, you know. Yeah, they're against war. Yeah, they're against war. The military industrial complex of these ants. Eventually it would get, you know. I think it would be a war of the ants before they went to war with the humans.
Starting point is 01:45:45 And then while they were decimated after the war, we go on the attack. And just think the breeding of them when there's no threat of, I mean, it's just 20 quadrillion becomes 40 quadrillion overnight. Like that, yeah. Imagine though that the ants just became. Because now they're doing it with purpose. What if they just became our friends and the ants came in here and were on the podcast? They had little microphones. You better hope so.
Starting point is 01:46:08 Yeah. Just like the Geico commercial. Yeah. Get a little microphone set up here. What's that? Male ants live a few weeks. Worker ants, between one and three years. And the queen can live up to 30 years.
Starting point is 01:46:25 Wow. How many babies does she live up to 30 years. Wow. How many babies does she have in that 30 years? Millions. Millions? I think so. This is another part we're not thinking about. So being with that lifespan all of a sudden gains consciousness. I think they're grappling with existential dread the whole time. I'm going to be dead in a week.
Starting point is 01:46:44 What's the point? think they're grappling with existential dread the whole time i'm gonna be dead in a week what's the point but you look at these look at some other countries where they had where it's war-torn their whole life but they're not living a month they turn no i know yeah yeah but even alcohol but humans even can get to where like life doesn't mean what it means to like you know us in a house and like you get so it's uh but do you think if every human being on Earth knew they were going to die next week, there'd be so much war and bloodshed?
Starting point is 01:47:12 But if we knew something was the reason we were going to die, then we would unite because none of us want to die. So like ants could, if they get it, they go like, we're not going to... We have to know the answer as smart as we are. So we go, we got to, we got to fix this ant thing.
Starting point is 01:47:30 And they're like, they're coming after us. So we have to take over. Then those ants would be like, we're only going to be around a few years. Why would we do the bidding of this queen who's going to be around for 30 years? I think you'd, in fact. I think the psychological dynamic is... I think they would learn how to live longer. Because then just like that, they become smarter. So then they're like...
Starting point is 01:47:50 Well, they're not dying from falling off cliffs. You know, like they're dying because their bodies are built to... It's just the way they're built. They die that young. But they would find the right supplements. They get their supplements. Eat athletic greens. You know, every morning we jog.
Starting point is 01:48:06 AG1. AG1, we jog, we do stuff like that. Yeah. AB. Yeah. Fun to think about. This has been, I mean, I've loved this discussion. I mean, the ants versus humans war is, I want to see the movie.
Starting point is 01:48:23 Yeah, it'd be a good movie. Yeah, I can't wait to see it yeah it'd be a good movie yeah I can't wait to see it it'd be a good movie did we read all the ads I didn't have yeah we had two okay so it's just
Starting point is 01:48:33 we only had the two this time yeah okay I only remember one being read I guess that's it then all right that was a fun one that was a fun one
Starting point is 01:48:41 all right so this is next so this comes out uh next week and so monday i think 31st that's tuesday i think right yeah yeah jade red 31st amazon prime uh it will be i don't know the time so i don't know what amazon does you know i know uh I don't know the time, so I don't know what Amazon does. I know Netflix does like 3 a.m. or something like that, or midnight Pacific, 3 a.m. Eastern.
Starting point is 01:49:13 So I don't know what Amazon does. So I should know soon what time it's going to come out. But January 31st, Amazon Prime. Go check it out if you can. Tell people. Hope it's fun. It's exciting. Yeah. It'll be good.
Starting point is 01:49:31 You'll see a little Derek in it. You saw earlier. A little Derek and Abigail make an appearance. All right. What about your son? My son? Man, Chase, people still ask. We haven't been selling merch either at shows.
Starting point is 01:49:49 Some people have seen that. We do it online. We sell it online. You know, merch worked out. Like, maybe we would do it again, but right now, merch just wasn't. It just doesn't work as good for how much we were having to bring. Yeah. It didn't really. It doesn't scale were having to bring. Yeah. The,
Starting point is 01:50:06 it didn't really. It doesn't scale that well. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It just was, but we're, but we're,
Starting point is 01:50:11 we're still going to be adding merch and we got stuff on the website. We're doing that kind of thing. So we're still going to be, we still, you can still buy merch and do all that stuff. We just haven't been doing it live at shows that, that didn't really make sense at the moment. So, but neighbor, I see Hello World, Amazon, Prime Video.
Starting point is 01:50:30 And yeah, so go. It's the big one. So go check that out. Awesome, man. This Saturday, Waukesha, Wisconsin at Fox River Christian Church. Next Saturday, no, next Friday, Lexington Opera House with Dusty Slay and Aaron Weber. All right. That's nice.
Starting point is 01:50:48 Raleigh, North Carolina this weekend. Good Nights Comedy Club. Then I'm in Lexington with Dusty and Brian. Then I'm in Omaha, Nebraska, Charlottesville, Asheville, West Bend, Wisconsin, Lowell, Arkansas, Nashville, St st louis lexington i'm everywhere boom come hang i'm gonna be in grand rapids this weekend at grand rapids michigan at dr grins great club i love it the last time i was in dr grins they said they were going to close and then they did not close so i'm very excited and i'll be back. And then Lexington with Brian and Aaron. And then Atlanta, Georgia.
Starting point is 01:51:30 So it's going to be two hot weekends, even though it'll be very cold. Are those your first theater shows, Dusty? I think officially, yeah. That's awesome. There it is. Yeah, so it's going to be great. It's awesome, man. So let's make it a success so we can do more of them.
Starting point is 01:51:46 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So that people don't show up and go, ooh, maybe jumped there a little too quick, huh? Yee-yee. Yeah. Yee-yee. One guy, yee-yee. Yee-yee.
Starting point is 01:51:57 You said the middle, right? Yee-yee. Yeah. All right. As always, and Joe and his son solid question we didn't talk about the ant thing
Starting point is 01:52:07 the whole time the whole episode pretty much yeah alright we love you and yeah have a good week
Starting point is 01:52:15 and see you next week when do I go? air and you roll as well? yep cool oh just whenever? yeah just whenever you're ready I'm so used to
Starting point is 01:52:25 the music intro for some reason I thought you played it in the room Nate Land is produced by Nate Land Productions and by me
Starting point is 01:52:42 Nate Bargetzi and my wife Laura on the Audio the Audioboom platform. Recording and editing for the show is done by Genovations Media. Thanks for tuning in. Be sure to catch us next week on the Nateland Podcast.

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