The Sevan Podcast - Greg Glassman #56 | Live Call In

Episode Date: January 2, 2025

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Bam, we're live. And it's cold in here. I guess I thought it would be a good idea to turn the heat off before I left the room yesterday. Whoo, it's cold. Good morning, guys. Holy cow. Burnout Diaz and happy new year. Burnout Diaz.
Starting point is 00:00:20 Burnout days? I'll tell you what, I went to bed way too late. Hey, good morning. How are you? Exhausted. Yeah. I feel pretty good. Did you stay up till midnight?
Starting point is 00:00:36 No, but I was awake at midnight. Oh, like in bed? There was a, sound like a parade of motorcycles. Oh, really? I don't know what it was. It had to be friendlies though. I can't imagine wanting to start your New Year's as a notorious outlaw gang by driving through Scottsdale on the, you know, 2025.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Right. Maybe it was a motorcycle escort for the president. I could see him being there on a, on New Year's. I would, I listen to, if I listen hard, I can hear on Camelback race cars all night long in the spring. It's a good road for it. Yeah, I have no complaints. Hey, what's up with your hat? The Coors hat? Yeah, where'd you get that? I don't know, at Montage.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Oh, quick, crazy. Guys, look at it, I drank a life supply of that shit. Yeah, I haven't seen that since my dad drank it. Yeah, and I got a Ham's one too. Oh, that's cool kids had never heard of either one which was interesting. Yeah good. Yeah My 11 year olds never my 11 year old has never heard of course It's trippy, right? Yeah You I remember mom when my dad drank it, the can was different. Hey, listen to this.
Starting point is 00:02:07 You should take that thing off. I drank this shit out of that shit. I suspected it was making me fat. I see a guy with a medical textbook at a Starbucks and I'm like, hey, watch this. And I, hey, what are you studying? The fucking guy's studying hyperinsulinism. And he turns me on to Rick Johnson.
Starting point is 00:02:27 And I threw my CrossFit contacts, get this guy Chris hooked up with the Maori in New Zealand to help them with their diabetes. He's making a fucking huge difference. It's like a miracle that he and I met. And that was the last beer I drank. I remember that. I met him because he explained that the fructose,
Starting point is 00:02:49 brewer's yeast and MSG all started this cascade of, that leads to unregulated production of AMP. And told me about the guy I made friends with him, right? He's been to the house. Yeah. Rick Johnson. And that single bit of research in that encounter changed my life. So I bring him to the Mallory and then he comes home and some chick accidentally calls
Starting point is 00:03:18 him to a birthday party because she's thinking of some chick Chris and not him Chris. And they had gone out once. And so he gets invited anyways, wrong Chris, but come, ha, ha, ha. Her love interest there, and he getting some kind of argument, the love interest challenges him to step outside. Chris takes him up at it. And he gets gunned down, staggers back into the restaurant, and the dude shoots him point blank a couple times. He then gets tackled by a chef at the restaurant who's a crossfitter
Starting point is 00:03:52 and a friend of Jimmy Letchford's. Oh, I always forget that part of the story. Yeah. And the end of the good work with the Maori and the guy that got me to never drink another one of these just by I was just being a chuckle head going up and talking to him. I remember it all. I remember his dogs. I remember the book. Yeah, then we run into him the next day at at the restaurant in that alley.
Starting point is 00:04:22 Yeah, was that a pizza place? It was pizza and Mexican and Chinese. It's great. God, that was a trippy spot. Yeah, I remember. I remember it's wild. Hey, I wonder if they remember when you used to tear the tops of cans off and then just be done with them instead of like pop it down and fold it. I wonder if that was a
Starting point is 00:04:52 environmental thing Yeah, I wonder if that's why they came up with that I think yeah, I Was kind of scared of those things as a kid. The same way I'm still a little afraid of tennis ball, the tops of tennis balls, like when my kids open it, I immediately want to get that thing from them. Environmentalism had its peak moment when the trash can lid,
Starting point is 00:05:19 it's Starbucks had the three locations all going into one black bag. Right. You just picked your whole to feel good. Oh, recycling. You're like you were voting, but it was still one fucking bag. I still don't. What are the three?
Starting point is 00:05:36 There's landfill, recycle, and is there another? What's that third one? I don't remember. Trash or something. I don't remember. I just played a video on this show recently where it showed they put GPS into five recycling trucks and Five different like garbage places and none of them recycled the plastic none
Starting point is 00:05:56 Dude, we were we were paying these we were paying a Some foreign super giant country a fortune to come get our recyclables out of San Francisco. And someone noticed the boats were coming back too quick. They couldn't have gone all the way there and back. And what they're doing is just going out to that Pacific gyre out 400 miles and dumping and off into the ocean. Is this any different than California shutting down power plants and my lovely Arizona is building an empire out here.
Starting point is 00:06:55 We got cranes everywhere building because of the electricity that we buy from you cheap during the day when your windmills and your magic sunbeam collectors are working. Yeah. And then it gets dark, you can't keep the fucking lights on and we sell it from our nuclear power plant, expensive. It's just expensive electricity. You spend a lot of, I sound like Trump.
Starting point is 00:07:17 You're spending a lot of money to be green. A shit ton of money to be green. Enough to allow Arizona to bring the Taiwanese semiconductor industry to Arizona and no one really notices. the consuming some of their causing storage of a yeah. The fucking crazy amounts and they're building cities around these things. Cause of all the jobs they're creating. Because they're going to, they're going to start building semiconductors here when parts elsewhere become impossible. And the deepest pockets you can imagine are building these things and going to lease them to, to Taiwan semiconductor and others.
Starting point is 00:08:06 It looks like a move to bring the whole industry to Arizona. They're gonna need a lot of brain power for that, right? These houses, there's nothing wrong with them. I mean, it's like, you know, new school, new house, new pools, new rec center. I've lived in worse. Yeah, they're doing what happened in Austin. I used to look at Orange County and just, you know, the soulless metropolis of every fucking homeless like another Tuscan home, right? And it's an easy thing to look down on,
Starting point is 00:08:46 but my family came from shitting in a hole in the ground and using kerosene lights to that. And I went to a brand new school in a brand new neighborhood, and we lived in a brand new house when I was five years old. And my parents honestly didn't have shit, you know? Oh, someone drove through a, sorry, shifting subject here. Someone drove through a crowd in New Orleans?
Starting point is 00:09:17 Mm-hmm. Just a drunk dude or? Just a drunk dude. or? Oh really? Vehicle rams New Orleans revelers in New Orleans killing 10 before dying in firefight with police. Oh shit. Wow. The driver of the vehicle was killed in a firefight with police following the attack around 3 15 a.m. Wednesday along Bourbon Street. Oh Geez he was shooting a gun to While he was going through the crowd like out the window of the truck, that's what I read
Starting point is 00:09:59 They have to outlaw cars they have to make cars so you have to get a license to get one have to outlaw cars. They have to make cars so you have to get a license to get one. Man, what if they did? I'm all for mental health checks before you get your driver's license. I'm giving in. I'm a Waymo guy. Hey, someone told me yesterday that they went and visited some friends last week in, oh, you know these people, they visited some friends who just moved to Tampa and they got a brand new Tesla. And they said you can get in it. They got in their Tesla punched in a location and the Tesla drives there.
Starting point is 00:10:41 You don't have to do anything. It does everything. I didn't know Teslas were doing that. Is this is this Joe and miss? Yes. Yes. They were telling me that all you have to do is sit in the car and keep your head like this. If your eyes closed, the car pulls over. But they said they got in their new Tesla and it drove all the way there. I didn't even know Tesla's were doing that. The Waymo has all of those spinning things on it everywhere, right? And the Tesla's just doing it with cameras?
Starting point is 00:11:18 What are those spinning things? I think the argument is that Elon says it can all be done with visible light. And the Waymo, which is a Google and Apple collaboration, is using all kinds of shit. Sonar, radar, visible. Like they're like they're doubling is one of them safer? Right. They're gonna they're gonna mix them. Um, Michael was showing me a butanol. I think it was showing me a Tesla avoiding something that anyone else would have hit. Not a Tesla.
Starting point is 00:12:02 I'm sorry. A Waymo. Some video. Did you? Yeah. I haven't seen that. else would have hit not a Tesla I'm sorry a Waymo some video did you hear I haven't seen that like a crazy move around a sudden obstacle a 50 year old Saudi doctor plowed into a Christmas marking market Germany oh is this guy is this guy an Islamic guy the guy who did this thing in New Orleans? Anti-Islamic, bizarrely enough. I had no sense of what religion the other side was, the poor people that got killed.
Starting point is 00:12:36 But I'm not, as a not religious guy, you just can't imagine my lack of enthusiasm for religion wars. I can't imagine my lack of enthusiasm for religion wars. Yeah. You know, Donald Duck versus Harry Potter, but real people are dying. Right. Innocent, decent people. God, how would they have it? How did they have a police shootout with all of those people around? Dude, some guy stands up and shoots at a cop and he's shooting back and he's not.
Starting point is 00:13:25 This is why you don't want to when the cops come running with their guns out, you don't want to poke your head out if you recall. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You were teaching me that lesson. Oh, man. The the wiki guys back in the news again Larry Sanger I guess basically you know it came out yesterday I think Elon reported it or someone reported it that of the hundred and seventy seven million dollars that wiki has in their yearly budget fifty million was spent on DEI and I guess that Larry Sanger interview
Starting point is 00:14:04 has resurfaced again where Larry's like, hey, Wiki is just a complete propaganda left-wing. Listen, I mean, I can find clear soda contamination or interests that desire to create an impossible scenario with hyperglycemia. And I have no idea what the current state of the article is. Many of my favorites have been now edited to be less my favorite, including the one on Popper
Starting point is 00:14:35 and after the book to which my broken science crew owns the rights. But listen on Wiki, here's my thing with it because I use it often, and I don't want to, I was going to say like the concept too, but what matters is that it's a standard that would hold no bias of mine. Some things it gets right, many, many things he gets wrong, some things he gets horribly wrong, but at each point, at each stop, and I don't care what the issue is, demarcation problem or interpretations of probability, or it's a great place to have a discussion.
Starting point is 00:15:21 And sometimes it's more useful when it gets it completely wrong, when it gets it completely right. But it's a place to start a discussion on a bias that is not my own. Right. And let's do it. I mean, it's a, in many times, in many ways, it reflects the, the current fucked up notion. Someone is asking about what my business plan is. And I laugh at that. And I said, listen, I'm a purveyor of profound truths known to few and I sell them on the cheap. And what the fuck kind of model that is, I don't know. But I love the, I love the current era.
Starting point is 00:16:13 It's exciting what we're going through. Like January 6th, like if you read any articles on Wiki about January 6th, it's not like, hey, there was a rally and it went there and there's a debate on whether it's an insurrection or not. It's more like it's an insurrection and then there's a bunch of people who are insurrection denialists or whatever. You know what I mean? It's not like, hey, here's the facts, you assess yourself. You know what I mean? There's no... You know what I mean? There's no, it's just coming at you with the fucking left-wing premises everywhere. We went through mostly peaceful protests.
Starting point is 00:16:55 Yeah. Where, you know, what was the body count on that? I don't know, but a billion dollars in burned down businesses, small businesses in many, and Ferguson alone. But yeah, none of those minority young, right? No, yeah, a lot of minority. Mostly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:14 Yeah. And nobody gave a fuck. And so someone went past the velvet ropes, you know, and then a cop who was a disgrace to humanity, much less the fucking police force, shot that that woman who shouldn't have been pounding on the door, coming through the window, whatever the story is, whatever you see in the video tape, it had been better for everyone had she not been doing that. That guy that shot her is a disgrace to the human being. Read his record. is the disgrace of the human being. Right. Read his record.
Starting point is 00:17:46 The news reports that it was the first time he'd fired his weapon on duty, which is technically correct. But he shot at a car he was annoyed at, parked outside of his fucking house. Oh, jeez. And hit the car and denied shooting at it. And his own department says, dude, you lied, man.
Starting point is 00:18:03 He got shot from behind. How does he not lose his job for that? How does he not lose a job? Well, he stayed home without some pay. And he's done in multiple things like that of that nature. Unbelievable. And then he's, and then he's protecting the capital. It's a miracle that he still had a fucking job somehow.
Starting point is 00:18:26 And with some bizarre payments to him too. This is what, fast right-wing conspiracy? No, not really. A matter of public record. And he's the one that shoots Ashley Babbitt. Him being there was worse than what she was doing. And you know what else? It's a fucking building.
Starting point is 00:18:46 It's a fucking building. It's a fucking building. Yeah. Yeah. I don't wanna do like the Russians did. The Russians killed everyone in the building, hostages and all that, gassed the whole lot. And my dad said that we didn't realize that the hostage was the building, not the people inside. These guys would blow up the building.
Starting point is 00:19:11 Gas everyone in it. Walk through, shoot the bad guys that aren't dead yet. And then, and then vent the room. Are you drinking coffee? No, it's hot tea. I was going to say, I've never seen you drink coffee. I don't drink coffee. I don't smoke cigarettes.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Oh, someone said Waymo only works in a few cities, but let me I just pulled this up. This is just a Google's AI. Waymo's recalled its vehicles multiple times, including 672 vehicles in June of 2024. Waymo recalled 672 vehicles after a pole collision. They said it was a software issue. They recalled 444 vehicles in February of 2024 after two minor collisions in Arizona. Another software issue.
Starting point is 00:20:02 I heard it's running in San Francisco. My thought is, is if you can run in San Francisco, you're good. It was there before here, I think, brother. Because the roads in San Francisco are just crazy. And help me, isn't that a Google Apple collab? It sure apps up like it. Like it's the best thing you've ever done on your iPhone. Uh, WaymoLC, formerly known as Google Self as Google self-driving car projects is an American autonomous driving technology company headquartered in Mountain View It is a subsidiary of alphabet I'm sure there's got to be so I mean
Starting point is 00:20:39 Apples there, right? I've read of it being in a Google Apple Co lab Apple's there, right? I've read of it being a Google Apple collab, but if they, you know, and getting it to market, you don't do better than be an iPhone friendly, right? Yeah. They raised 5.5 billion in funding in their first round, and another 5.6 billion in their second round.
Starting point is 00:21:05 Wow. I told you the cop was screaming at my car at the airport. I was loving it. And he didn't know it was a waymo and there's no one. I don't know man. If he's spinning like a top, it looks like a fucking robot and he's blowing a whistle and screaming at it. Telling it to move? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:26 And it just put itself somewhere. I mean, it's just amazing. It's like this super talented, crazy, rude Uber driver. It drives great. I mean, I'm not saying that I'm not going to get in a wrecking one, but I enjoy the experience. I chuckle at some of the moves, sees a hole is taking it, you know? It's far from timid, which is I think school.
Starting point is 00:21:56 I wonder if it's the number one, I wonder if there's any competitor. Have you ever seen any cities with competitors, self-driving cars? You know what, I haven't had to put my foot on the dash and scream pedestrians once right and that's not a unheard of experience for me. Oh I guess Louisville also has Waymo. It's cooler than shit, buddy It's the best it's the best airport pick up and drop off experience possible
Starting point is 00:22:21 You know how you're like, hey, I have a blue shirt on and they're like, I'm in the silver truck and that my door all that. Yeah, fuck all that. It sees where you are and here it comes. You see that thing spinning. It's hilarious. There was one driving down your street in Arizona. I think it was one that you had gotten out of and I was walking to your house and I stepped in front of the car and it stopped. I had in my neighborhood, we were only going like this speed limit, very slow. Kid runs parallel to the sidewalk. My car slows way down. He stops at the like at the curb, like stops.
Starting point is 00:22:58 Yeah. Parallel path and my car stops. Like that's the stop, dart left. It fucking anticipated that it's pretty cool. Then slowly takes off and then accelerated like get away from that kid. But if it was almost as if you're in 10 were to get hit it you would you'd run a foul of it. You're not going to run alongside of it and then dart in front. Yeah. This says Uber and Waymo are in a partnership to bring autonomous vehicles to Austin and
Starting point is 00:23:29 Atlanta. Oh, I guess they have their own wireless fleet also called cruise vehicles. I want to have a thing on my phone where I just fucking tap a button some number of times in case of tacos come to the house on a vehicle with it's all electric and no people on it and the food's actually made along the way as it's driving. Fresh. Waymo's doing 100,000 rides a week now. I'm gonna sit in the back seat and I'm gonna talk to the fucking driver. It's great not having to.
Starting point is 00:24:12 Yeah. Yeah, it's everywhere. They got, uh, now it's in Austin and Atlanta. It's great. It's great. It's great. It's great. It's great.
Starting point is 00:24:24 It's great. It's great. It's great. It's great. It's everywhere. They got now it's in Austin and Atlanta. According to Reason magazine. It's seamless. It's an amazing experience. You can pick whether the door pops open or not when you walk up with your phone. What's the other option? You open the door yourself? Yeah. You open the door and it's, hi Greg. It makes me laugh every fucking time. And then if you take your seatbelt off, doesn't it tell you or something? I don't know, but I don't. Yeah. It says put your seatbelt on. I do. And then there's a button push start. Then there's a pull over immediately. Help, you know, contact. And I've seen it do some unusual things. I mean I had a like a weird little ride one time
Starting point is 00:25:25 unusual things. I mean, I had a like a weird little ride one time, but I enjoyed it. Like it missed a turn? Yeah, it wouldn't turn left on the from a 64th and it sped up, went straight, turned around a little trailer park. And then it was like it was thinking then it was like, oh, it makes the left perfectly smooth and the right and we were back on track. But I sought not know what the fuck to do for them Did it did it make you you turn or a three-point turn it pulled into a spot? I would didn't know you could turn around and stop collected its thoughts and then went back at it again from the other direction It was a left. It didn't want to make for some reason
Starting point is 00:26:03 Dude, I don't know what it was. Seve, how many cups of coffee have you had this morning? I started my morning with one. And then normally I drink one during the show. But I put two shots of espresso in this morning of paper sheet coffee. I'm exhausted. We I Susan and I and Tyler Watkins, we did a show until like one in the morning. I drank three little shot glasses of, uh, McKellen or something. My sinuses shut down.
Starting point is 00:26:36 Mal, whatever that shit is in there that orange, my sinuses completely shut down. It's like, no, you can't breathe through your nose anymore. Yeah. I did not enjoy it. I get that off Red Wine. A sip of wine, like one of your nostrils closes. Yeah. Oh yeah, and 200 of my friends, yeah. We had a pretty big crew last night at midnight
Starting point is 00:27:06 Just hanging out. We started at 858 Stayed on till 12 15. Yeah Yikes It was fun, but I'm exhausted and then in the middle of the night one of my kids was screaming one of my kids rolled off a bed I Jumped up And then in the middle of the night, one of my kids was screaming. One of my kids rolled off a bed. I jumped up and ran into the room. And then I thought the dog, I heard the dog panting, but that the dog was dying.
Starting point is 00:27:36 We go with our second dose of Fembendazole. We did four, you do, I guess three or four days on, and then three or four days off, I can't remember. And the first run was great. All the dogs, Edema went away. All the little bumps got smaller. Now we're going for a second round today. Second round, three days of... am I saying it right? Fembendazole? Yeah, you know, I was exploring its mechanism. I'm not ready to fucking lecture on it, so I'll be careful. But it's fascinating to me. It reminds me of metronidazole, which is another anti-parasitic that they use sometimes for infection, right? Where the stuff's not reaching.
Starting point is 00:28:17 And different mechanisms, but the same thing's kind of targeted. It's mitochondrial related, and that's where I should stop talking. But nothing related to parasites. We can dysregulate them mitochondrally too. Interesting. Right? Don't make me say too much because I would embarrass myself. It's not my subject. But I'm interested enough to come up here and peek at it again and again.
Starting point is 00:28:51 Yeah. Hey, I'm going to call you after the show is over. I want to hear that because people are like, hey, what happened? I'm like, I gave my dog anti-parasitics. But I'm thinking to myself, God, is that misrepresenting it? Because I have no idea what the mechanism is. Cause I assume it's not parasites. It's...
Starting point is 00:29:15 Yeah, we'll talk after this show. I'm not about, you know, I'm not the false hope guy. You know what I mean? Yeah. about you know I'm not the false hope guy you know what I mean? Yeah. Maybe it's... I'm back up in the office you see that? Maybe this is a mitochondrial expert. Oh yeah I do see it.
Starting point is 00:29:35 Yeah you're sure there's a mitochondrial expert will show up? Hold on one second guys hold on let me... It used to be that world for me. Mitochondrial experts? No, we could put out words subtly as to what talents we needed and they were there in abundance. Russ Green referred to as his school of overachievers.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Taipei and beyond. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Seve, your assumption is wrong. Oh, good. Caller, I wanna to bring you in caller. I don't know what the phone. Oh, hold on. I want to bring you in caller. I'm trying. Technology I can't even disconnect the Bluetooth. I guess I could carry the phone, but then you won't be able to disconnect.
Starting point is 00:30:42 No, it's not you. Hold on one second. It's not you. It's um this road caster won't let me disconnect and reconnect the phone. I wish it was um Maybe it's connected. I don't know what's going on. Give me one second. Hello? How about now? Oh, yeah, I can't hear you. Okay, I'll hold the phone up. Actually, let me I'm gonna turn my hold on one second. Oh, I'm gonna turn off my roadcaster. Can you hear me now, Greg? I can't. You can hear me? Oh great, because I can't hear you.
Starting point is 00:31:27 It's kind of nice. I can't hear you. He can hear you. Go ahead. Greg can hear you now. Yes. Can you hear me now? Yes. You can hear him, Greg?
Starting point is 00:32:19 I can hear him now. Oh, I can't hear Greg now. I lost Greg. Jesus. How did that happen? I hear you though. Oh, you can hear us? now. I lost Greg. Jesus. Jesus. Can I have that happen? I hear you though Oh, you can hear us. I lost Greg and all that We got the caller, but we lost Greg
Starting point is 00:32:32 All right, not a good trade. No Hey Greg, will you log out and recheck your link? Yeah. Oh, there you're back. OK, caller, go. Oh, hey, there we go. There we go. We got it.
Starting point is 00:32:52 Wow. Two minutes. Hey, good to meet you, gentlemen. Happy New Year. Mike. All right, I think, let me just cut out. No, I'm here. Oh, OK, good.
Starting point is 00:33:04 Hey, this is Dan Winn is good to talk to you guys again Greg had a quick question for you. I saw a graphic or part of a Leel that you posted on Instagram through broken either broken science or through metric and I know it's a slight change in that description of nutrition Or it used to say, some fruit, little starch, no sugar. And now it says, little fruit, some starch, no sugar.
Starting point is 00:33:32 Is that the approach? That happened while I was at the helm, and I think we even put an entry on it. What I came across was Lustig taking fructose away from kids, but leaving them the fucking bullshit Pringles and just, I don't know, not that I'm looking to pick up a lawsuit and hope they said he doesn't lose a sponsor, but the shit they were allowed to eat was unreal. I mean, just bad garbage, but right with every kind of fucking oil, horrible, horrible. But they took the fructose away. And there were cardiac markers that he was interested in. I hadn't even heard of. I mean, he was he was really impressed. I was too. I had to put the fructose above the starches as a risk.
Starting point is 00:34:29 And, you know, I mean, so God know berries. No, I'm not saying that. you know, grandma's sweet cornbread is a problem greater than a few grapes and less than probably rice. Am I making sense? Sort of. So if I'm... The problem is fructose in particular. And where I can get that from is all over the fucking chart and back. And there's a way to do it with fruit to keep yourself ill. And I would like, for instance, once we're juicing, there's no little fruit about it. It's not even some fruit. It's a shitload of fucking fruit and a Pepsi or Coca-Cola and any other product with high
Starting point is 00:35:37 fructose corn syrup. And so without naming brands, you look to bad guys and then fructose is a fucking bad guy, very much like MSG, oddly enough, like a brewer's yeast, and that they start this cascade of biochemistry that leads to this unregulated production of AMP with uric acid, an important byproduct along the way. And so we shifted those around at a point of an enormous influx of material about the horrors of fructose on metabolism and health.
Starting point is 00:36:23 And nobody seemed to care notice, but that was probably a decade ago. Wow. So when planning out my diet and I'm very excited what my carbs are, I guess what I had been doing under the some fruit little starts with, you know, a lot of my carbs would come from fruit, usually grapes or bananas, those are my favorite go-to. And then I minimize how much starch it took in. Are you suggesting I reverse that? I don't know how profound the difference would be
Starting point is 00:37:02 outside of the oddities of someone's diet. If you read that and go, oh, fuck, now I'm a fruititarian, that's great, now I'll eat some, I've cooked those corn soup gummies with amino acids and I'm off to the races. Yeah, this is what you've been waiting for. But it was more addressed kind of to real world. And it was also, I was very comfortable with the fact that nobody noticed or cared even when we announced it and talked about it. And it can come up today, hey, you know what, you can do it either way. Okay, then we're already avoiding all the crap that's got added sugar and fruit toasting. Yeah, you don't need any fructose really in any form, whether it's from sucrose or from high fructose corn syrup, or if you're squeezing 65 oranges to get that fucking glass.
Starting point is 00:38:00 Fruit's too important to you, and you're being delta-blow metabolically. Cliff Sheets said years and years ago, 25 years ago, if you think there's a difference between having a big glass of orange juice and a Coca-Cola for breakfast, keep on thinking that, but it ain't. There's not. And I'm like, you know, okay. And so, and I can't, you know, in the same time, I'm recognizing things like, man, GLA is there in abundance in oatmeal. You know, and so the guy's like,
Starting point is 00:38:32 sears that don't like grains except for oatmeal because of the GLA. He's also the view that we're GLA deficient largely. What's GLA? Gamma linoleic acid. And I'll tell you what, supplementing with it's been fucking touchy. You spill over and you can get kind of the too much and it doesn't, it works. It's like you don't have enough. Yeah. When it comes to, uh, I really don't do juice. I prefer to chew my calories with the exception of the occasional protein shake. I had to pay for a gal several times. We did CrossFitters. We took your affiliate fees and we funded people
Starting point is 00:39:14 that the law was coming after. And I know of two well-known instances where I ended up at Institute for Justice and we're writing checks and making friends and talking to people. And both times it prevailed and others have done that. We're not the only people to, you know, I offered to help a friend in trouble with authorities over telling the truth about metabolism and nutrition.
Starting point is 00:39:40 I offered to, we did CrossFit to fund a trial. It turned out the guy had more money than CrossFit. But finding out why it is that is, that why you can speak truth about nutrition and find life difficult in various degrees is kind of a fascinating thing. And for me, chasing down broken science, I feel like I'm doing cancer research
Starting point is 00:40:10 and nutrition research a favor. I think I'm doing anyone a favor that has any honest interest in those subjects. I appreciate you pick up the good fight. You know what, it's, yeah. Thank you very much for that. That's kind. But it's, I mean, truly I can do anything and that's what I'm doing. And I would do it if I had nothing.
Starting point is 00:40:38 It's more fun having everything doing it than having nothing and doing it. That's for sure. It's great intellectual stimulation. To have an awareness of something profound that few appreciate in its profundity and that it's actually important to you, that's an enjoyable thing for me. CrossFit was no less than that. And this is no different than that.
Starting point is 00:41:02 less than that. And this is no different than that. All right, gentlemen, have a great day. Hey, happy new year. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks. Thanks for being patient with the phone. Eaton Beaver donation $1.99 for new phone system in 2025. I think was the best there is. I wish for the scale of this podcast. Misfit Jim, appreciate these weekly conversations. Thank you, Sevan and Greg. Can't wait for the Metfix and BSI seminars this year. Stoke for the future. Misfit Jim Windham.
Starting point is 00:41:42 There was one more in here. Jake Chapman, Greg, for GPP members attending 3.5 times per week, which would you attend to first, thoracic mobility or ankle-dorsiflexion? Thoracic mobility? I can't tell if that's a joke or not. Ankle-dorsiflexion. And who attends 3.5 times per week? I think the reference is sexual. Oh.
Starting point is 00:42:17 I'll go with it, I like it. Hey, like, with thoracic mobility, you mean like being able to inhale? mobility, you mean like being able to inhale? And an ankle ankle dorsiflexion. So I like be able to tear my toes without touch my toes without ripping my calf muscle. Or inhale. I think I'm gonna go with inhale. Jake has a follow up statement that's fascinating itself. It's like going down on a woman when you have a 12-inch penis. I would love to know. I see. Now I understand. Inhale mobility.
Starting point is 00:43:01 Barry McCaulkin. Barry McCaulker. You have any you're not going anywhere for a long time, huh? You don't have any trips planned? No, I want to get I want to get those posters in the easels. Hey, will you rent Jackson? I and I'll make it worth his while a guy he shouldn't take that to get a U-Haul. Oh, okay. I want the, I want the easel, those big charts that are in storage.
Starting point is 00:43:33 I think they might be in Nolan and Christie's, uh, over an app toss and that easel member, the cool easel he made for those things. Yeah. When you say Nolan and Christie's you're talking about the place in Aptos. Yeah. The granite way. Okay. things yeah when you say Nolan and Christie's you're talking about the place in Aptos yeah in a granite way okay and i and also the two bikes those pretty fucking gold pink and whatever bikes that's all really i should have brought all that
Starting point is 00:44:02 Should have brought all that Which two bikes are they I can picture one Yeah, there's one leaning up by your Yeah, just leaning out there at risk and then there's another one hanging someone and they need like a blanket thrown over Okay I just sent a text to Jackson and Haley. Cool. I'm ready to have a 10-hour involvement with folks on the subject of what is science. Yeah, it's coming up quick. I look around in space that I haven't concentrated in for more than moments for a couple of years, maybe.
Starting point is 00:44:51 Been down in the school room, right? Yep. And if the kids' schoolwork and my efforts here is distinct enough yet on opposite ends, reaching each other enough that I had to separate a little bit. But being here, I really get this sense of I've stayed digging into the same material with commendable consistency for a couple years now. What that does is it gives me a lot of flexibility in the discussion too. My favorite part about true nutrition is the ability to
Starting point is 00:45:31 customize my own supplement. I've been looking all over for specific greens supplement that have the kale powder, spinach powder, and broccoli powder that I needed to feel my workouts in feel great. The problem is I could never get those three ingredients to the exact specifications that I needed to feel my workouts in feel great. The problem is I could never get those three ingredients to the exact specifications that I needed. But with True Nutrition, I'm able to pick and choose the ingredients for my supplements. So it's built by me for me.
Starting point is 00:45:56 That's the best part. Whether you're customizing your own pre-workout or your own green string, like in the case of what I did, True Nutrition has everything to offer, from your flavor to this certain amount of ingredients. And the best part about it is as you build it on the website, your nutrition label updates in real time. So you can get the exact quantities necessary to optimize your performance.
Starting point is 00:46:18 And that's only available at truenutrition.com. Ever dream of designing your own protein powder or greens that is unique to your dietary needs with only the highest quality ingredients? Today's sponsor, True Nutrition, lets you do just that. True Nutrition was founded on relentlessly sourcing the highest quality ingredients, third-party testing those ingredients,
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Starting point is 00:47:49 Take the guesswork out of nutrition with TRU NUTRITION. Broken science. Or an amazing thing that there's so much effort in meta science and concerns for replication crisis and lots and lots of clucking and flapping involvement and nowhere a strong definition of science. There doesn't have to be right or wrong, because there's no such thing, thank Thank God for people that make shitty definitions. But they're useful or not, consistent or not. They can give you leverage towards understanding or not.
Starting point is 00:48:34 It's all baked into their utility. We can look at a line and call it any fucking thing we want, right? Yep. I can remember you talking about that with Mulvaney, you know, 10 years ago. What is science? It was something that the old man published for us. I mean, the CrossFit weighed in on this. We had a weekend event over it in 2009.
Starting point is 00:49:00 Was that in San Francisco? No, it was in Austin. It's the university. It's trippy. And it is also a certain amount of enjoyment to attempt to bring to the lay public something that people much smarter than I am couldn't make happen. I may be more like Taylor Swift than I realize.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Exactly like her, it's just whether the public's gonna realize that. Kristen Kettler, happy new year to two of my favorite dudes, excited to see what Metfix has in store for 2025. Hopefully my gym gets into the next batch of affiliates. Yeah, we're thinking of, we're gonna turn that spigot, is my sense of it. It'd be my hope.
Starting point is 00:49:53 I don't, there's nothing, you know, the exclusivity comes in the quality of understanding that has you recognizing that what you're doing in the gym are actually the independent variables that control dependent variables known as blood pressure, triglycerides, A1C, from there it gets boring, and why people are dying, etc. That, you know, there's an elegance in that, it's fucking deeply profound. And the ones that are engaged in that practice have no allies institutionally. Crazy thing, but it's true.
Starting point is 00:50:32 Because. Maybe outside of MedFix. Because. I mean, and I'm not like, MedFix is, and I'm there because that's a profound reality that's ignored institutionally. Yeah, but why don't you think they have any allies there? I'm not sure how you make money off it.
Starting point is 00:50:53 Right. You're not going to get a sponsor. I mean, you get the guys that make cookies without sugar, but you're definitely not going to get a sponsor after making fun of the Games athletes a few weeks ago that's what the internet is saying me oh that's desperate for sponsorship that's it that's a toxic group of dim-witted folks to the extent that they've organized of all the things to organize. They're not organized. I'd love to see it. They're organized like the riot is in Ferguson.
Starting point is 00:51:33 They're three generations away from being able to have a fucking intelligent conversation, organize. I've sat at the athletes table. The counting table is more interesting. Also they're very young people. It's true. Yeah. Limited, limited time on planet earth for fucking intelligent acquisition of intelligence.
Starting point is 00:52:03 Seve, can I jump on here? Sure. And ask Greg Sure. I was wondering if he ever read a book by Jerry Mueller, Tyranny of Metrics, Greg seems like a data metrics guy is wondering if he has ever thought of thought of thought of I'll look that up. I don't think it sounds familiar somewhere, but it's not ringing a bell. It's a funny title. Yeah, I just we have as a culture, a problem with conditional probabilities. I've been on here talking about this before, but problem with conditional probabilities. I've been on here talking about this before, but I'm here again.
Starting point is 00:52:49 And that is the probability of it being cloudy given that it's raining versus the probability of it raining given that it's cloudy. And that's an example that little kids can see. The problem is not inherent to clouds and raining, but it's that the probability of A given B is likely to make sense of things like the prosecutor's fallacy and binary diagnostics, you know, like a sensitivity and specificity of a test given its positive predictive value. Come to a layman's comfort with Bayes and Bayesian concepts and Bayes theorem, it requires this simplest twist of mathematics
Starting point is 00:53:49 ever. You have to multiply both sides of an equation by its denominator to make the denominator go away. That's what you have to be able to do. And that's something that anyone can be taught to do, but the underpinning logic needs to sit and plant itself in your brain and make you sensitive to this distinction. And then, and then at some point you end up immune to P values. You're like, wait a minute, that can't be done. That's not until. And so my belief that this can be taught with fourth graders, it might actually require an insertion in a fourth grade mind, whether you're 65 or five, and percolate for a number of years.
Starting point is 00:54:35 So that might be the best thing able to offer on a weekend even. But boy, people are going to come away knowing that the probability of A given B is not the probability of B given A. This is something that prosecutors and, and judges and lawyers and smart people have fucked up by confusing the probability of the of the evidence, which is low given given the innocence and flipping around and say the probability of the innocence is low Jake really likes this example the nuke the nuke if you got killed by a nuke you're Japanese
Starting point is 00:55:12 But if you're Japanese, you won't necessarily get killed by a nuke It's true Yeah Put in the if-then sense. The cool thing about the conditional probability is that we have the tools available to draw a picture of it. Not only is the rain and the cloud thing easy to see, but to see visually geometrically in probability space what that looks like is like, it's fucking huge. It's like, got it, got it. And then we can bring to bear on that formal fallacy, we can bring to bear some real world examples incrementally,
Starting point is 00:55:53 like doing pull-ups, right? You're using rubber bands at first here. But we can then expose you to things like, OK, I'll find it. Oh, shit, they are. They just flipped that around. They went from the probability of his guilt, given the evidence, you know, I mean, his evidence given that he's guilty and flipped it around.
Starting point is 00:56:14 How do you get to do that? The people in the world of philosophy and thinking, they're willing to do deep dives on utter bullshit and explain it so that there's no longer a chance for someone thinking to absorb that. We owe them a great deal. The powerful debunkers. David Stove is one. From what I can tell, he gave a lifetime to it.
Starting point is 00:56:49 And it makes him, for me, one of the greatest philosophers of the English language. Rank him above Hume, because he gave his life to undoing the legacy that Hume left. Waiting into other people's bullshit or miscalculations and unfucking them? You know, Stove says that the problem with with unfucking someone's thinking, my words not his, but I'm relating to our New Year's Day obedience here. The problem lies in that their thinking goes astray from a premise that they have no idea is even a premise. And so there's something that causes them to start with their starting points and reason to this endpoint,
Starting point is 00:57:38 it's a nightmare and you have to work back and figure out where it is. And he does that for Popper, Kuhn, Lakatos, and Fire Oven. Does a handsome, handsome job of it. And along the way, helps David Hume out. Let me take you back here really quick. So this is Greg seems like data and metrics guy and was wondering if he was, if he has ever thought of the implications of totalitarian measures through data and metrics. Implications of totalitarian measures through data metrics.
Starting point is 00:58:20 Does it mean like manipulation? Does it mean like manipulation? I don't have the AI fears that some people have and not in a sense they do. I'm afraid for stupid people and I understand how the smart folks are going to make this work for them. It's more revenge of the nerds. That's good. It's more revenge of the nerds it is it is the AI people I I Understand exactly what they're doing and how they do it and why and it's it's exactly the the the James that I've been talking about and and James robot is the machine learning
Starting point is 00:59:22 That crowd took him seriously. There's a philosophical perversion that's come out of Western universities that has us all thinking odd about a number of things. And science is one of those things. And the motivations for those that got it wrong are clear and easy to follow, once you've been shown. It's deductionism, deductivism. And there's a toxic allure to certainty. It's crazy, it makes philosophers drunk.
Starting point is 01:00:23 And Popper and those that followed him in academia tried to ground science deductively, that is in pursuit of certainty. And it caused for a hundred years, the development or pursuit of the management of uncertainty, it held it at an arm's length. But it didn't stop. It just kind of went unnoticed. And now it's kind of up your ass in AI. And for a lot of people, code can be written that responds to the real world in a better fashion than they do.
Starting point is 01:01:06 And so the best of the requirements of the potential of the human mind sits far, far, far outside of anything AI. It's a fun thing to tease. It's a fun thing to play with AI. But it can get some shit just perfectly wonderfully completely wrong. It's interesting. It's fun to play with. I'm just talking about the large language end of it. Not the repairing of fuzzy photographs or re-examining data from a supernova that happened in 1987 and finding orders of magnitude more data concerning the actual supernova than had ever been imagined to be sitting in the fucking
Starting point is 01:01:55 data. Imagine that. Those kinds of methods. Yeah. Hey, we know those people, which is really cool. I've found myself driven in a direction philosophically that ends with scientists that are really fucking doing shit, which is really comforting because where we come from, the Kuhn, Popper, Feyerabend, Lakatos world, those are philosophers, not scientists. And they went that crazy falsificationist route. I know there's too much here I should stop and explain, but I'm not going to. But it's an amazing story.
Starting point is 01:02:29 It really is quite a drama. If I could do anything with this project, it would maybe be to sharpen and harden and enlarge the resistance to the next attempt at herd management as public health, as medicine, as science. So many of my intellectual brethren, if I could be so bold, is to put myself, I mean, I brought us all together and continue to work at that. And so I feel somewhat equal.
Starting point is 01:03:13 But we all saw through the COVID response and the likely origins simultaneously with no discussion. And what we held was a capacity for truth and logic against the party line on other issues that brought us together in the first place. And so, of course, this was easy to see. And yet for slightly different factual, like, you know, I'd listen to them and I'm like, yeah, okay, of course, that makes sense to me. I didn't know that. And we all saw something different. That's the kind of the nature of a hairball, right? Big fucking lie. Almost everyone involved knows that wasn't the story, right? Right. From different
Starting point is 01:03:57 angles. Right. I saw him shoot up in my fucking living room. What are you talking about? Yeah, well, that's the night he crashed my car. You know, I had to go pick up his girlfriend. Like everyone's everyone had some some engagement. And this was like that. There's a there's this this is a hard turn. There's this documentary on YouTube right now made by a guy named Josh Peters who is I think is a complete douchebag. He's just a United Kingdom. Just a woke up. But anyway, he made this documentary about this girl,
Starting point is 01:04:47 Lily Phillips. I don't know if that's her name. Oh, I think that's the chick that did all the dudes and then cried about it. Yeah. And do you know why she, someone asked me if I watched the documentary. I watched the beginning and the end. I watched like five minutes in the beginning
Starting point is 01:05:03 and the last 10 minutes and it was crazy. She was crying When he said why are you crying? I was expecting like some crazy Like emotional response or something But she said that she was upset because she only gave five minutes to guys and some guys were guilt-tripping her because they could didn't Have time to finish and so she felt bad that they didn't that that they didn't get to finish It was it was bizarre. It was it was it was vile. Did you did you watch any of it? No, what what makes it vile?
Starting point is 01:05:35 Like um he he walked the the the camera guy walks in the room like they don't show any sex right? It's on YouTube. It's completely you know, yeah in visuals but he he walks in the room. Like they don't show any sex, right? It's on YouTube. It's completely, you know, in visuals. But he walks in the room, and the floor is just covered in used condoms. And he starts to gag because of the smell. They start talking about the smell in there. And then you see she's crying. And it was just like, I don't know, I felt horrible for everyone involved. I went from like, Oh, this is going to be interesting to, oh, God, humanity has taken a bad turn. Yeah, I get that.
Starting point is 01:06:14 You know what I mean? Like, hey, this is going to be cool to see Evil Knievel jump over the Grand Canyon. And then by the end, you're like, oh, fuck. I think we're going to see some day, like, like, there's a thing you have to, you pay to not see instead of pay-per-view. Hey, I'm, I'm on this text thread and someone sent a dick pic the other day. And another guy I'm like, Hey, are you going to leave the thread? I know, I know you're not into dick pics. And he said, no, he has a filter on his phone.
Starting point is 01:06:45 Even in text I didn't even know this existed where you can have Apple like censorship for you that comes into your iMessage did you know that I think that's a cord or thing and uh so he sent me a screenshot of his phone and he can't see the dick it just says sensitive photo or something photo or something. That's what I want. I don't need anything blocked for me. Yeah, you know, there's a point before it gets to that that you that you realize you need to throw your iPhone into the Monterey Bay dead center. But before what? you start using the their AI sensor you need help blocking and stopping and yeah monitoring and I Don't think I don't think that a Two and a half by five and a half inch piece of technology
Starting point is 01:07:40 Should be your portal to the real world. I should be your portal to the real world. I think there's things to see with your eyes and to smell and look at and do. And within that context, like look for a book. I don't know. It's weird. You know, imagine being locked in a cell with a fucking 3x5 portal you got your face plastered
Starting point is 01:08:09 into. For all your waking hours. For all your waking hours. Was it a, was it a, like it wasn't a better world, was it? When the information was cloistered and you'd have to go get on your bike and go down to the library and pull some kind of goddamn Dewey decimal thing off the shelf? No.
Starting point is 01:08:32 My favorite part about technology now and the way things are going is how fast people can redeem themselves now. Think of an example. Um, J. Bhangchari is the, is the best one. Think of an example. Jay Bhanchari is the best one. Like if what happened to him, if his cancelling would have been happened in like 1920, like he had died in a shack like in the middle of nowhere. And yet his fucking story went full cycle because of information and technology and
Starting point is 01:08:58 media that now he's head of the NIH. Yeah, I think he was un noted unnoticed all along by the mob Let me put this way if what happened to Nixon happened today in five years, he'd be a fucking hero Do you know what I mean it's like like like now they couldn't like so he was involved in some sort of break-in at Some fucking hotel well now Within six months the entire Internet would figured out that, hey, that guy Woodward was a fucking Navy fucking spy one week and the next week he's a top reporter
Starting point is 01:09:33 at the fucking Washington Post. You know what I mean? And they would have talked about how Nixon, you know, made the biggest national park ever. I mean, it just you couldn't you can't hold someone down with bullshit as easy as you can. And I just love that I'd love where we're at with the fact that you don't have to go down to the library like you're saying and pull up microfiche Increasingly this
Starting point is 01:09:56 We hear him say Just grab him by the pussy Yeah, dude. Yeah And they convict them and you know, split hairs was a rape or sexual harassment. He he forced his way into the dressing room to help her try and address, I guess. I don't know what you know, think what you want. Right. And I don't know that any judgment to in the media says he's a Nazi. And you the end of democracy and like chirp away, fucking say it, who are the authorities? It ain't CNN. So there's a certain there's a certain degree
Starting point is 01:10:35 of freeness that's kind of cool. I mean, how many things were characterized as a vast right-wing conspiracy or some kind of fruit of Russian intelligence that turned out to be not just the left being criminals. That was her name, Eugene Carroll, that Eugene Carroll story? The girl he banged in the dressing room, Trump banged in the dressing room? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:11:04 So that story, that story about a year ago, I was looking into that story and I watched this whole thing where she tells the entire story of what happened. And it has the date that she, you know, that she first, and then it has, I looked up the date she first reported it and I used all liberal sources, you know what I mean? CNN, all that. And then I heard that there was an LA Law episode that was her exact story that was like six years prior to that or something.
Starting point is 01:11:30 So I went from my little 3.5 inch, you know, this thing, and I researched the whole thing and I went to that LA Law episode and it was an identical fuck, it was identical the story that she said about Trump was in an LA Law episode six years prior to her saying it about Trump It's crazy right and I just think it's cool that you can do that you don't even have to believe them you can just
Starting point is 01:11:53 Go facts. Check it. You'd be like a camera to rent that Yes, it was the whole dressing room it was exactly what she said they went to a fucking department store to try on clothes together He snuck into the fucking and it was like what she said they went to a fucking department store to try on clothes together he snuck into the fucking and it was like a in the LA Lobster was like debating whether it was like rape or not because she took him into the but it was crazy because it wasn't even her store Oh E Jean Carol yeah did he did she take him into the dressing room in her store the the way I remember it is is like he said this is I think he claims he never even took her shopping, but she claims that he offered to take her shopping and they went shopping and they were in a department store
Starting point is 01:12:30 and he came into the dressing room while she was trying clothes on and pushed her up against the wall and put the tip in her. Geez. And now she talks to rocks. Paints rocks in her backyard and talks to them. Does she?
Starting point is 01:12:49 Yeah, yeah. There's a whole thing. Yeah, she's wild. I get that. If Trump would rape me in a dressing room, I'd paint rocks in the backyard and talk to him too, I think. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:13:05 I hope it's not true. Pat Lang, he didn't rape her. He just grabbed her by the pussy. No biggie locker room talk. I think he's being facetious. Yeah, she's Looney Tunes for sure. She's crazy. They shouldn't let her on TV anymore. She's not helping her cause. You know, I believe that woman on 60 Minutes spoke about Bill Clinton raping her.
Starting point is 01:13:56 Oh, who was that? Forget her name. Not Linda Tripp. But I believed it. And I called up my buddy who's a good, pretty good friend. He worked in the DA's office. And I asked him if he saw it. And he said, as a matter of fact, we put it to the vote in the DA's office.
Starting point is 01:14:27 Forget statute of limitations and the fame associated. If that were, were prosecutable, is that, do we have an indictable offense? And they were 11 zip, yep. And then I asked him, well, how the fuck can you vote for him? And you know what he did? He hung up on me. And you know what he did? He hung up on me. Wow.
Starting point is 01:14:47 Like, hey, I'm not talking about that. We never spoke again. He knew the whole family. Knew him well. Wow. Paula Jones? Is that her? No.
Starting point is 01:15:10 Juanita Broderick? Yes. Ken Star declined to further investigate the issue and mention it only in a footnote in his final report. She recanted the statement. What was the statement? Broderick filed an affidavit with Paula Jones Jones lawyer stating there were unfounded rumors and stories circulating that Mr. Clinton had made unwelcome sexual advances toward me in the late 70s these allegations are untrue An American former nursing home administrator alleged that she was raped by US President Bill Clinton on April 25th 1978 when he was attorney general of Arkansas. Clinton declined to comment on the issue.
Starting point is 01:16:11 It's interesting. They don't use a picture of her. Oh shit, she's 82 now. Yeah, that's, I don't think I'm remembering that name in a different context. Okay. She was a campaign worker, I think, on a governor's campaign, is that right? And she'd said something at the time, reported it initially.
Starting point is 01:16:42 Man, she gives a deep pretty detailed. He said he bitter on the bottom. Yeah. You better get some ice on that. I don't see any boning. Someone in the comments will know. Yeah, look, I put in woman claimed rape by Clinton on 60 minutes. I get a very...
Starting point is 01:17:21 Oh, was she on 60 minutes too? I believe so. I believe that's what I saw. She says Hillary tried to silence her. Oh yeah, you can't, you can't, you can't. I mean, that's a good wife. That's one of the, that's one of the, uh, that's one of the, I asked the Clinton supporter in the DA's office and what did you think of her testimony? Cause I like, what do I know?
Starting point is 01:17:56 Right. And he's, we were 11 zip indict, indictable and something then how the fuck do you vote for him? Click. Yeah. But it's so I get that. Is that a famous attorney? Do I know who it is? By if he told me the name? Nobody's his brother was like globally famous. He was just a good, good man. Just good, good DA. And he thought Clinton rapist and voted for him, apparently, or didn't, and then couldn't talk to me again. I don't know which it was or what it was.
Starting point is 01:18:40 There was a really good documentary I watched years ago about all of Bill Clinton's past issues. I wish I could remember the name of it. It's all about trains. That was the name of the doc? No. Hey, how about the Soaked in Bleach? There's my documentary of the week. That's the name of it? Yeah, Soaked in Bleach. What's your takeaway of it? Yeah. Soaked in bleach. What's your takeaway from that?
Starting point is 01:19:06 I signed, I signed it to Jim. What? Oh, that's the Nirvana one. Yeah. Documentary thriller. I think I watched that at your house in Del Mar. It's done by a LAPD homicide detective become private investigator hired by Courtney love to discover to check in on Keith make sure he was okay Keith does you Oh no, I got his name wrong.
Starting point is 01:19:45 Oh shit. They're going to come after you. He's from Seattle, right? Yes, you got the city. I don't actually know if he's from Seattle. That's a no Portland, Greg. It's not the same. Really?
Starting point is 01:19:58 Yeah. Yeah. I sold my house in Portland to this fucking family that was fleeing shit from Walnut Creek and they bought it at the exact right time. It was so sad. How cool was that house? That house was amazing. Do they still live there?
Starting point is 01:20:23 Do you ever look it up? Do they still not live there? I don't know. They probably hate me. At 818 a.m. on January 1st, Greg called Kurt Cobain, Charlie Cobain, and said he was from Toronto instead of Portland. I called him Keith. You shouldn't be making fun of someone who died who's such a heavy contributor to the music scene. I already feel bad. That's very disrespectful.
Starting point is 01:20:49 I'm preparing my fuck off. So I'll come back next week at that. So she hires this guy and it goes sideways, right? He ends up being like, yo, you did it. Everyone should interpret it for themselves. Okay. But you get to hear a lot of her own words, her on tape and her attorney.
Starting point is 01:21:13 I like, damn. I wonder what happened to her. Nothing. It's great, she's a billionaire. Oh, she is? I wonder what happened to her. Nothing. It's great. She's a billionaire. Oh, she is. She's filthy.
Starting point is 01:21:30 She's got the rights. Nirvana is hers. Wow. Crazy. Were they married? Yeah. Yeah. Were they married? Yeah, huh? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:49 You just watch the thing. It's not you're not going to scroll through it if you didn't get shit. You got to watch this thing and you judge for yourself. You get to hear or untake. He says, Nope, the daughter has I read. I read the book about Cobain weird that he had a bad childhood No, I don't know Who owns
Starting point is 01:22:14 Nirvana writes is it the daughter and she's the executor Oh that's owned by a number of parties. The widow of Kurt Cobain love is primary beneficiary of his estate and owns more than 98% of the band's publishing rights. Holy shit. Holy shit. She then went on to sell 25% of her share to primary way of music publishing. How much? The remaining rights of the uh it doesn't say right here the remaining rights to the band are owned by Nova Selic and
Starting point is 01:22:52 Grohl. They each collect 12.5 percent of the royalties of the band songs. This is just AI shit. Who knows what's um who knows what's real. Uh Many artists go to continue earning money after their death. The beneficiary of these typical typically the estate or the entity dictated in a will in 2015, Michael Jackson made one hundred and fifteen million in spite of being dead since 2009. I think the AI, the most sweeping and broad generalization of some philosophical point, you could Like it's just a wild jump. Frustration and the AI response, and this is Google's AI, was yeah,
Starting point is 01:23:34 that's basically accurate. And I just, I fucking died laughing. It was so good. What was the question you asked? I don't really want to share that. It's probably, it's one of the parts of my up that might be funny. Okay. I'm keeping everything tight chested. I like it. I have to, I have to make something that might be the least interesting topic on earth fascinating.
Starting point is 01:23:59 My curse. And you know what, by compelled by one thing alone, and that's the profundity of it, which is nothing short of its importance. There we asshole out there. Hey, your last business model was to sell personal accountability and responsibility. Who would have thought you could make a killing doing that? Yeah. What are you doing? Something you already got?
Starting point is 01:24:20 Yeah. I got a point. I got to remind you, you got it. The importance of it. that. Yeah. What are you doing? Something you already got? Yeah. I got a point. I got to remind you, you got it. The importance of it. Thanks. Yeah, life's good, man. Now I'm going to breakfast. All right, good. I'm going to, I'm going back to sleep. Are you really? Yeah. My eyes are burning. I have 30 minutes my wife Haley still just told me she's leaving the house at 9am. So I have 30 I have 30 minutes just a power
Starting point is 01:24:50 nap. You know what I mean? Go inside. I'll put an eye pillow on. It's called re racking. That's what it's called. Yes, it's all healthy. I just hear racking I think boobs. It's good. I like that. All right. Thank you. I'll be in touch with you within a few hours today. Nothing but here.
Starting point is 01:25:14 All right, dude. Love you. Thanks for coming on. Bye. Damn. Greg single-handedly carried the show today. Holy shit. Can we call in? No. Damn. Greg single-handedly carried the show today. Holy shit.
Starting point is 01:25:33 Can we call in? Uh, yeah, no. Not, yes, but no. But yes. Hello, Mr. Noodles. Uh, Jake Chapman, how come gay men can sit down and teach women how to give a BJ, but when I do it I'm escorted to the security out of the care home. Excuse me. Take a few gummies. I only have... okay later for sure. Fine. I can only... I only take creatine gummies. Okay. Bye. Uh, okay.
Starting point is 01:26:05 Bye. Um. See you guys later. No, dude. Like my head's doing that wah wah wah thing because I haven't slept enough. I think we got Grazy Walton coming on the show soon. I wonder if that's tomorrow. Uh, no. Oh, oh, you know who we have coming on tomorrow? Uh, uh, Julian Alcares from Street Parking.
Starting point is 01:26:39 Oh, uh, can we get Stream Yard set up with a bunch of shows? Oh, tomorrow's gonna be fun. I don't think I've ever had Julian on by himself. I drank too much last night and did a 32 minute workout today. I think what I'm going to do today is I'm going to do five rounds of Cindy as fast as I can, rest three minutes three times and see what happens. You think I have?
Starting point is 01:27:17 I had him on by himself before. I know I've had him and Miranda on. Oh, and I think Hunter and Hiller should probably be coming on soon too together And Taylor has a show Friday morning and then kill Taylor on Saturday Yeah, you gotta get all that lined up. All right, I'll talk to you guys soon. Thank you Thanks, Greg for carrying the show this morning. Love you guys. Bye

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